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Colorado cop found guilty after train hits patrol car with suspect inside DENVER (AP) - A Colorado police officer who put a handcuffed woman in a parked police vehicle that was hit by a freight train was found guilty of reckless endangerment and assault but was acquitted of a third charge of criminal attempt to commit manslaughter during a trial Friday. Jordan Steinke was the first of two officers to go to trial over the Sept. 16, 2022, crash that left Yareni Rios-Gonzalez seriously injured. "There’s no reasonable doubt that placing a handcuffed person in the back of a patrol car, parked on railroad tracks, creates a substantial and unjustifiable risk of harm by the train," said Judge Timothy Kerns. RELATED: Video shows train hit Colorado officer’s car with suspect inside But the evidence didn't convince Kerns that Steinke "knowingly intended to harm Ms. Rios-Gonzalez," and he added that Stienke had shown "shock and remorse." Steinke testified that she did not know that the patrol car of another officer she was helping was parked on the tracks even though they can be seen on her body camera footage along with two railroad crossing signs. Steinke said she was focused on the threat that could come from Rios-Gonzalez and her pickup truck, not the ground. Steinke said she put Rios-Gonzalez in the other officer’s vehicle because it was the nearest spot to temporarily hold her. She said she didn’t know the train was coming until just before it hit. The judge found that Steinke observed the tracks, but failed to "appreciate the risk." There was no jury in Steinke’s trial, which started Monday. Instead, Kerns listened to the evidence and issued the verdict. Mallory Revel, Steinke’s attorney, didn’t immediately respond to requests by phone and email for comment. Steinke, who was working for the Fort Lupton Police Department at the time of the crash, was charged with criminal attempt to commit manslaughter, a felony; and reckless endangerment and third-degree assault, both misdemeanors. The other officer, Pablo Vazquez, who worked for the police department in nearby Platteville, is being prosecuted for misdemeanor counts of reckless endangerment and traffic offenses. He hasn’t entered a plea yet. His lawyer, Reid Elkus, didn't immediately respond to a request by phone for comment. Vazquez pulled over Rios-Gonzalez on a rural road that intersects U.S. Highway 85 after she was accused of pointing a gun at another driver. Trains pass on tracks that parallel the highway about a dozen times a day, prosecutors said, and the sound of their horns is common in the area north of Denver. Rios-Gonzalez, who suffered a traumatic brain injury, is suing over her treatment. She later pleaded no contest to misdemeanor menacing, said one of her lawyers, Chris Ponce, who was in court to watch the trial. Rios-Gonzalez did not testify or attend herself. Steinke said she placed Rios-Gonzalez in the other police car temporarily because it was the nearest place to keep her secure, a move that is standard practice for high-risk traffic stops, said defense expert witness Steve Ijames. He also testified that in dangerous situations officers can become hyperfocused on particular threats and overlook things that turn out to be important in hindsight. Steinke, who drove at around 100 mph (161 kph) at times on her way to backup Vazquez, testified that she was surprised to see him sitting in his vehicle when she arrived, rather than pointing a gun at Rios-Gonzalez’s truck. She said she quickly parked her patrol vehicle behind his and got out because it was the quickest way "to get a gun in the fight." Steinke also said she did not notice the tracks or the ground when she squatted down to arrest a kneeling Rios-Gonzalez along the tracks after the suspect was ordered out of her pickup truck. When pressed by Deputy District Attorney Christopher Jewkes, Steinke replied, "I am sure I saw the tracks sir, but I did not perceive them." She said she was focused on the suspect and the potential threat she posed and was "fairly certain" that the traffic stop would end in gunfire. "I never in a million years thought a train was going to come plowing through my scene," Steinke said. The Weld County District Attorney’s office didn’t immediately respond to a request by phone for comment.
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/colorado-cop-found-guilty-after-train-hits-patrol-car-with-suspect-inside
2023-07-29T20:16:35
0
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/colorado-cop-found-guilty-after-train-hits-patrol-car-with-suspect-inside
NEW YORK – Chatter on one of Prabha Rao's WhatsApp groups exploded last week when India announced that it was severely curtailing some rice exports to the rest of the world, triggering worry among the Indian diaspora in the United States that access to a food staple from home might soon be cut off. As in any crisis situation — think bottled water and toilet paper— some rushed to supermarkets to stock up, stacking carts with bags and bags of rice. In some places, lines formed outside some stores as panic buying ensued. But Rao, who lives near Syracuse, New York, was reassured when the proprietor of her Indian market sent out an email to customers to let them know there was no need to worry: There was an ample supply of rice. At least for now. An earlier than expected El Niño brought drier, warmer weather in some parts of Asia and is expected to harm rice production. But in some parts of India, where the monsoon season was especially brutal, flooding destroyed some crops, adding to production woes and rising prices. Hoping to stave off inflationary pressures on a diet staple, the Indian government earlier this month imposed export bans on non-Basmati white rice varieties, prompting hoarding in some parts of the world. The move was taken “to ensure adequate availability” and “to allay the rise in prices in the domestic market,” India's Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution announced July 20. Over the past year, prices have increased by more than 11%, and by 3% over the past month, the government said. Non-Basmati white rice constitutes about a fourth of the rice exported by India. “On WhatsApp, I got a lot of messages saying that rice was not going to be available. I think there was a lot of confusion in the beginning because, as you know, rice is very important for us,” Rao said. “When we first heard the news, there was just mild confusion and people started panic buying because they thought that it may not be available,” she said. There are scores of different varieties of rice, with people having their preference depending on taste and texture. India's export ban does not apply to Basmati rice, a long-grain variety that is more aromatic. The ban applies to short-grain rice that is starchier and has a relatively neutral flavor — which Rao says is preferable in some dishes or favored in specific regions of India, especially in southern areas of the country. At Little India, a grocery store in New York City's Curry Hill neighborhood in Manhattan, there was no shortage of Basmati rice and other varieties. That wasn't the case at other Indian groceries. On its Facebook page, India Bazaar, an Indian grocery chain in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, told customers not to panic. “We are working hard to meet all our shoppers' demands,” the post said. Customers cleared shelves and waited in long lines to stockpile bags of rice, reported NBC Dallas affiliate KXAS. “They really wanted to purchase ten, 12, 15 bags,” India Bazaar's president, Anand Pabari, told the station. “It was a really crazy situation.” India’s move came days after Russia backed out of a deal to allow Ukrainian wheat safe passage through the Black Sea, prompting warnings that the action could lead to surging prices. Some economists say the ban might further hurt food supplies around the world, and some governments have urged the Indian government to reconsider the export ban. At least in the United States, the supply of imported rice from India may not yet be a problem — despite the panic buying — but a long-term ban would certainly deplete that stock. Roa says she and others will just have to adapt by purchasing rice grown in the United States or imported from other countries. “I might have to substitute Basmati rice," she said, "but it doesn’t taste that good, especially with South Indian dishes.” A U.S. resident for three decades, Rao said she is accustomed to improvising. “When we first came here, there was not even that much rice from India,” she said. "So I’ve learned to substitute, and I’m fine with the other brands that we get.”
https://www.wsls.com/business/2023/07/29/india-cuts-rice-exports-triggering-panic-buying-of-food-staple-by-some-indian-expats-in-the-us/
2023-07-29T20:16:35
0
https://www.wsls.com/business/2023/07/29/india-cuts-rice-exports-triggering-panic-buying-of-food-staple-by-some-indian-expats-in-the-us/
PHOENIX — A Phoenix police officer is recovering after being attacked by a dog at a west Phoenix home early Saturday morning. Police said around 3:15 a.m., officers responded to a home near 43rd Avenue and Camelback Road to investigate a domestic violence call. When officers tried to contact the people involved, a dog inside the home attacked one of the officers, said Phoenix Police Sgt. Robert Scherer. The officer was transported to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Scherer said he is expected to be released Saturday afternoon. The suspect in the case left before officers arrived, Scherer said. Officers are continuing to follow up on the case. Get to know 12News At 12News, we listen, we seek, we solve for all Arizonans. 12News is the Phoenix NBC affiliate owned by TEGNA Inc. 12News is built on a legacy of trust. We serve more than 4.6 million people every month on air, on our 12News app, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, and 12News.com. We are committed to serving all of the Valley's communities, because we live here, too. 12News is the Official Home of the Arizona Cardinals and the proud recipient of the 2018 Rocky Mountain Emmy Award for Overall Excellence. Stay connected by downloading the 12News app, available on Google Play and the Apple Store. Catch up on any stories you missed on the show on the 12News Youtube channel. Read content curated for our Spanish-speaking audience on the Español page. Or see us on the 12News Plus app available on Roku or Amazon Fire. More ways to get 12News On your phone: Download the 12News app for the latest local breaking news straight to your phone. On your streaming device: Download 12News+ to your streaming device The free 12News+ app from 12News lets users stream live events — including daily newscasts like "Today in AZ" and "12 News" and our daily lifestyle program, "Arizona Midday"—on Roku and Amazon Fire TV. 12News+ showcases live video throughout the day for breaking news, local news, weather and even an occasional moment of Zen showcasing breathtaking sights from across Arizona. Up to Speed Catch up on the latest news and stories on the 12News YouTube channel. Subscribe today.
https://www.12news.com/article/news/local/dog-attacks-phoenix-officer-responding-to-domestic-violence-call-43rd-avenue-and-camelback-road/75-fa54e79c-87d4-417c-9139-edfdec8ddb5b
2023-07-29T20:16:35
0
https://www.12news.com/article/news/local/dog-attacks-phoenix-officer-responding-to-domestic-violence-call-43rd-avenue-and-camelback-road/75-fa54e79c-87d4-417c-9139-edfdec8ddb5b
Melting ice near Matterhorn reveals remains of climber missing for 37 years (CNN) - The remains of a climber who disappeared while hiking along a glacier near Switzerland’s Matterhorn 37 years ago have been found. Police say the melting ice on the glacier helped lead to the discovery of the remains. They were found on July 12 by climbers hiking along the Theodul Glacier. Several pieces of equipment were also found. Police say a DNA analysis helped identify the remains as belonging to a 38-year-old German mountain climber who was reported missing in September 1986. Police also say they had searched for the climber at the time, but they were unsuccessful. No further details about the climber’s identity or his cause of death have been revealed. Police say the melting glaciers have led to the reemergence of bodies of those who were reported missing several decades ago. Scientists announced earlier this week that July is on track to be Earth’s hottest month ever recorded. Copyright 2023 CNN Newsource. All rights reserved.
https://www.mysuncoast.com/2023/07/29/melting-ice-near-matterhorn-reveals-remains-climber-missing-37-years/
2023-07-29T20:16:35
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https://www.mysuncoast.com/2023/07/29/melting-ice-near-matterhorn-reveals-remains-climber-missing-37-years/
Crew missing after Australian army helicopter ditched off the Queensland coast CANBERRA, Australia (AP) - Four air crew members were missing after an Australian army helicopter ditched into waters off the Queensland state coast during joint military exercises with the United States, officials said Saturday. The MRH-90 Taipan helicopter went down near Lindeman Island, a Great Barrier Reef tourist resort, at about 11 p.m. Friday, exercise director Australian Army Brigadier Damian Hill said. A search involving U.S., Canadian and Australian personnel was underway to find the crew who are all Australian men, officials said. Debris that appeared to be from a helicopter had been recovered, Queensland Police Assistant Commissioner Douglas McDonald said. The Taipan was taking part in Talisman Sabre, a biennial joint U.S.-Australian military exercise that is largely based in Queensland. This year’s exercise involves 13 nations and more than 30,000 military personnel. RELATED: US to send Taiwan $345 million military aid package Defense Minister Richard Marles said the helicopter ditched, which refers to an emergency landing on water. "Defense exercises, which are so necessary for the readiness of our defense force, are serious. They carry risk," Marles told reporters in Brisbane. "As we desperately hope for better news during the course of this day we are reminded about the gravity of the act which comes with wearing our nation’s uniform." Hill said the exercise was postponed on Saturday morning but had restarted limited activity later in the day. Australia had grounded its Taipan fleet as a precaution, Hill said. It was the second emergency involving an Australian Taipan this year, after one ditched into the sea off the New South Wales state coast in March. That helicopter was taking part in a nighttime counterterrorism training exercise when it ran into trouble. All 10 passengers and crew members were rescued. U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was in Brisbane for a meeting on Saturday and is due to travel with Marles to north Queensland on Sunday to see the exercise. Austin and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken paid tribute to the missing air crew at the outset of a meeting with their Australian counterparts, Marles and Foreign Minister Penny Wong. RELATED: Video shows artist's tribute to Sinéad O'Connor on Irish beach "It’s always tough when you have accidents in training, but … the reason that we train to such high standards is so that we can be successful and we can protect lives when we are called to answer any kind of crisis," Austin said. "Our guys tend to make this look easy and they make it look easy because they’re so well exercised and rehearsed and trained, and this is unfortunately a part of that, what it takes to get them to where we need them to be," Austin added. Blinken said, "We’re so grateful to them for their dedication, for their service, for everything they’ve been doing to stand up for the freedom that we share and that is what unites us more than anything else." Marles thanked the United States for their contribution to the search and rescue effort. RELATED: Ancient Nero's Theater ruins discovered under garden near Vatican The missing helicopter had just dropped off two Australian commandos before it hit the water, Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported. Australia announced in January that its army and navy would stop flying the European-built Taipans by December 2024, 13 years earlier than originally planned, because they had proven unreliable. They will be replaced by 40 U.S. Black Hawks. Marles said at the time the Lockheed Martin-designed Black Hawks "have a really good proven track record in terms of their reliability." Australia’s Taipans had been plagued by problems since the first helicopter arrived in the country in 2007. Australia’s entire fleet of 47 Taipans was grounded in 2019 to fix a problem with their tail rotor blades. A year later, 27 Taipans were grounded because of a problem with doors.
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/crew-missing-after-australian-army-helicopter-ditched-off-the-queensland-coast
2023-07-29T20:16:37
1
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/crew-missing-after-australian-army-helicopter-ditched-off-the-queensland-coast
One Person Dies in SCAT Bus-Involved Crash Published: Jul. 29, 2023 at 4:00 PM EDT|Updated: 16 minutes ago BRADENTON, Fla. (WWSB) - Florida Highway Patrol has confirmed that a pedestrian was pronounced dead on the scene after a crash near the intersection of 53rd Avenue West and 14th Street West Friday night. FHP also said two people on the bus were also transported to a near-by hospital with non-threatening injuries. The crash occurred around 6:30 p.m. Florida Highway Patrol is still investigating the crash. ABC7 will update this story as more information is received. Copyright 2023 WWSB. All rights reserved.
https://www.mysuncoast.com/2023/07/29/one-person-dies-scat-bus-involved-crash/
2023-07-29T20:16:37
0
https://www.mysuncoast.com/2023/07/29/one-person-dies-scat-bus-involved-crash/
SUN CITY, Ariz. — The Maricopa County Sheriff's Office is investigating a crash involving a golf cart and an SUV in Sun City, authorities said. The crash happened Saturday afternoon near 103rd Avenue and Cherry Hills Drive. MCSO is asking commuters to avoid the area. The roads will be shut down during the investigation. The cause of the crash is under investigation. Get to know 12News At 12News, we listen, we seek, we solve for all Arizonans. 12News is the Phoenix NBC affiliate owned by TEGNA Inc. 12News is built on a legacy of trust. We serve more than 4.6 million people every month on air, on our 12News app, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, and 12News.com. We are committed to serving all of the Valley's communities, because we live here, too. 12News is the Official Home of the Arizona Cardinals and the proud recipient of the 2018 Rocky Mountain Emmy Award for Overall Excellence. Stay connected by downloading the 12News app, available on Google Play and the Apple Store. Catch up on any stories you missed on the show on the 12News Youtube channel. Read content curated for our Spanish-speaking audience on the Español page. Or see us on the 12News Plus app available on Roku or Amazon Fire. More ways to get 12News On your phone: Download the 12News app for the latest local breaking news straight to your phone. On your streaming device: Download 12News+ to your streaming device The free 12News+ app from 12News lets users stream live events — including daily newscasts like "Today in AZ" and "12 News" and our daily lifestyle program, "Arizona Midday"—on Roku and Amazon Fire TV. 12News+ showcases live video throughout the day for breaking news, local news, weather and even an occasional moment of Zen showcasing breathtaking sights from across Arizona. Up to Speed Catch up on the latest news and stories on the 12News YouTube channel. Subscribe today.
https://www.12news.com/article/traffic/mcso-investigating-crash-involving-golf-cart-and-suv-sun-city/75-807fa495-6893-4789-95e3-cab48f9a19b4
2023-07-29T20:16:37
0
https://www.12news.com/article/traffic/mcso-investigating-crash-involving-golf-cart-and-suv-sun-city/75-807fa495-6893-4789-95e3-cab48f9a19b4
RICHMOND, Va. – Denny Hamlin is not offering any apologies for the move he made last weekend at Pocono that caused Kyle Larson to hit the wall and let Hamlin sail on to victory. Truth be told, it's what NASCAR was hoping to see more of when it established the system that divides races into three stages, rewards drivers with points for doing well in those stages and allows them to accrue playoff points, Hamlin said. “That is what it was geared to do — give us the sense of urgency to ramp up and that regular season performance matters to get to the final four with a shot,” he said at Richmond Raceway. "The system is doing what it was designed to do.” Hamlin also has changed, he said, after getting spun several times while leading. “If you have one person willing to be aggressive and one person not, aggressive will win every time," he said. Larson, who said things are “fine” between he and Hamlin after they exchanged text messages Friday night, agreed that the point system encourages the aggressive approach Hamlin took, but added that it "makes the guys on the receiving end more mad as well just because of what's at stake and what's taken." Larson said four or five restart battles with Kyle Busch at World Wide Technology Raceway in June showed how cleanly he tries to race other drivers. “I respect Kyle and that's why I raced him with respect at Gateway, and I respect Denny every bit as much, if not more, or I did,” he said. “I tend to blow things over pretty quickly," Larson said. “This time, I probably have let it linger on my attitude a little bit this week just because it's happened more often with him than any other driver in my career and also a win was taken.” Larson won the first Richmond race this season in April. POINTS RACE William Byron has dropped 30 points behind Martin Truex Jr. in the points race with five races remaining before the playoffs begin. The regular season champion gets a 15-point bonus, but Byron doesn't expect to make any changes to the way he's racing while trying to secure that top spot and bonus. “It’s really important but we can’t get too focused on the result of the regular season points,” he said. “We obviously want those points, but our process has been like it is to this point, and if we start focusing on that carrot out in front of us too much, it’s going to get us off-track.” CHASING SPEED Chase Elliott said Richmond is “such a weird place” where his car never feels good, but he was pleased to make the second round of qualifying. He'll start fourth. “Any position you can gain is good ahead of 10th," Elliott said. "I also know this is a place where you can qualify really good and be really bad.” Elliott missed six races with an injury and another while serving a suspension. He hasn't won yet and likely will need to win to make the playoffs. He's 21st in points. "There's a few guys that I feel like have been consistently good at this track and the rest of us are kind of hit or miss," Elliott said. “Hopefully we can hit it tomorrow and just put together a solid day, try to get some stage points and just get up in the mix.” HEAT CHECK The temperature was near 100 degrees when the cars went out for qualifying, and the heat index made it feel even hotter. It's expected to be about 90 on Sunday. “There’s less grip and more emphasis on tire management," Brad Keselowski said. "It will be a different race here than it was in the spring, for sure.” ODDS AND ENDS Truex and Larson are the betting favorites Sunday, according to FanDuel Sportsbook. ___ AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.wsls.com/sports/2023/07/29/unapologetic-hamlin-says-nascars-point-system-encourages-in-race-urgency-and-aggression/
2023-07-29T20:16:37
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https://www.wsls.com/sports/2023/07/29/unapologetic-hamlin-says-nascars-point-system-encourages-in-race-urgency-and-aggression/
Driver killed after crashing into Phoenix city bus PHOENIX - A man has died after his car struck a Phoenix city bus overnight on Saturday, police said. The collision happened at 12:30 a.m. near 7th Street and Bell Road. Detectives say Christian Leal-Coronado, 23, was driving his car southbound down 7th Street when he crossed into the opposite lanes and into the northbound curb lane. The cause for this is currently being investigated. The vehicle slammed into a city bus that was heading northbound, killing Leal-Coronado. The bus driver and the lone passenger on the bus were unhurt. When it happened:
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/driver-killed-after-crashing-into-phoenix-city-bus
2023-07-29T20:16:38
1
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/driver-killed-after-crashing-into-phoenix-city-bus
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawmakers broke for their August recess this week with work on funding the government largely incomplete, fueling worries about whether Congress will be able to avoid a partial government shutdown this fall. Congress has until Oct. 1, the start of the new fiscal year, to act on government funding. They could pass spending bills to fund government agencies into next year, or simply pass a stopgap measure that keeps agencies running until they strike a longer-term agreement. No matter which route they take, it won’t be easy. “We’re going to scare the hell out of the American people before we get this done,” said Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del. Coons’ assessment is widely shared in Congress, reflecting the gulf between the Republican-led House and the Democratic-led Senate, which are charting vastly different — and mostly incompatible — paths on spending. The Senate is adhering mostly to the top-line spending levels that President Joe Biden negotiated with House Republicans in late May as part of the debt-ceiling deal that extended the government’s borrowing authority and avoided an economically devastating default. That agreement holds discretionary spending generally flat for the coming year while allowing increases for military and veterans accounts. On top of that, the Senate is looking to add $13.7 billion in additional emergency appropriations, including $8 billion for defense and $5.7 billion for nondefense. House Republicans, many of whom opposed the debt-ceiling deal and refused to vote for it, are going a different way. GOP leaders have teed up bills with far less spending than the agreement allows in an effort to win over members who insist on rolling back spending to fiscal year 2022 levels. They are also adding scores of policy add-ons broadly opposed by Democrats. There are proposals to reduce access to abortion pills, bans on the funding of hormone therapy and certain surgeries for transgender veterans, and a prohibition on training programs promoting diversity in the federal workplace, among many others. At a press conference at the Capitol this past week, some members of the House Freedom Caucus, a conservative faction within the House GOP, said that voters elected a Republican majority in that chamber to rein in government spending and it was time for House Republicans to use every tool available to get the spending cuts they want. “We should not fear a government shutdown,” said Rep. Bob Good, R-Va. “Most of the American people won’t even miss if the government is shut down temporarily.” Many House Republicans disagree with that assessment. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, called it an oversimplification to say most Americans wouldn’t feel an impact. And he warned Republicans would take the blame for a shutdown. “We always get blamed for it, no matter what,” Simpson said. ”So it’s bad policy, it’s bad politics.” But the slim five-seat majority Republicans hold amplifies the power that a small group can wield. Even though the debt ceiling agreement passed with a significant majority of both Republicans and Democrats, conservatives opponents were so unhappy in the aftermath that they shut down House votes for a few days, stalling the entire GOP agenda. Shortly thereafter, McCarthy argued the numbers he negotiated with the White House amounted to a cap and “you can always do less.” GOP Rep. Kay Granger of Texas, who chairs the House Appropriations Committee, followed that she would seek to limit nondefense spending at 2022 budget levels, saying the debt agreement “set a top-line spending cap — a ceiling, not a floor.” The decision to cut spending below levels in the the debt ceiling deal helped get the House moving again, but put them on a collision course with the Senate, where the spending bills hew much closer to the agreement. “What the House has done is they essentially tore up that agreement as soon as it was signed,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. “And so we are in for a bumpy ride.” Even as House Republicans have been moving their spending bills out of committee on party-line votes, the key committee in the Senate has been operating in a bipartisan fashion, drafting spending bills with sometimes unanimous support. “The way to make this work is do it in a bipartisan way like we are doing in the Senate. If you do it in a partisan way, you’re heading to a shutdown. And I am really worried that that’s where the House Republicans are headed,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters this week. McCarthy countered that people had the same doubts about whether House Republicans and the White House could reach an agreement to pass a debt ceiling extension and avoid a default. “We’ve got ’til Sept. 30. I think we can get this all done,” McCarthy said. In a subsequent press conference, McCarthy said he had just met with Schumer to talk about the road ahead on an array of bills, including the spending bills. “I don’t want the government to shut down,” McCarthy said. “I want to find that we can find common ground.” In all, there are 12 spending bills. The House has passed one so far, and moved others out of committee. The Senate has passed none, though it has advanced all 12 out of committee, something that hasn’t happened since 2018. Still, the difficulty ahead was evident on the House side, where Republicans gave up until after the recess on trying to pass a spending measure to fund federal agriculture and rural programs and the Food and Drug Administration, amid disagreements over its contents. They began their August recess a day early instead of holding votes Friday. Simpson said some of his Republican colleagues don’t want to take money approved already outside the appropriations process to cover some of this year’s spending and avoid deeper cuts. For example, the House bills would take almost all of the money approved last year for the Internal Revenue Service in Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act and use the savings to avoid deeper spending cuts elsewhere. Simpson said that without such rescissions, as they are called in Washington, he couldn’t vote for the agriculture spending bill because the cuts “would have just been devastating.” “That’s the challenge we’re going to have when we get back in September,” he said. Further complicating things in the House, a few Republicans are opposed to some of the policy riders being included in the spending bills. For example, the agriculture spending bill would reverse the FDA’s decision to allow abortion pills to be dispensed in certified pharmacies, instead of only by prescribers in hospitals, clinics, and medical offices. “I had a problem with abortion being put inside an ag bill,” said Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa. “I think that’s ridiculous.” It’s a strong possibility that Congress will have to pass a stopgap spending bill before the new fiscal year begins Oct. 1. The Senate can vote first on the measure, which would put the onus on House Republicans to bring it up for a vote or allow for a shutdown.
https://who13.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-members-of-congress-break-for-august-with-no-clear-path-to-avoiding-a-shutdown-this-fall/
2023-07-29T20:16:39
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https://who13.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-members-of-congress-break-for-august-with-no-clear-path-to-avoiding-a-shutdown-this-fall/
WASHINGTON, July 29, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Amid a coordinated effort to undermine No Labels' work to secure ballot access in states nationwide, we have named Jay Nixon – a lifelong Democrat who spent 30 years serving Missouri as a governor, attorney general and state senator – as director of our new Ballot Integrity Project. Since early last year, No Labels has gathered over 700,000 signatures and qualified for the ballot in five states. We have a strategy to get on the ballot in all 50 states, plus Washington, D.C., with the aim of potentially offering our line to an independent Unity presidential ticket in 2024. No Labels is responding to the overwhelming desire of Americans for more choices and voices in our politics – with two-thirds of voters saying they don't want a rematch of the 2020 election – but we now face organized opposition from a group of political operatives and former elected officials intent on keeping us off the ballot. "At a moment when so many Americans' are losing trust in our democracy, we need to hold even tighter to the pillars that have held our democracy up for almost 250 years. In our country, you win by persuading more people and getting more votes, not by limiting voters' choices and denying competitors a place on the ballot," said Nixon. "Americans have the constitutional right to put any person or party on the ballot and to vote for whomever they want. Anyone who is against that isn't standing up for democracy. They are standing in the way." Former Gov. Larry Hogan will welcome Nixon to the No Labels community in his first scheduled public appearance at a town hall on Tuesday, August 1, at 5 p.m. ET. Register here to join the town hall. In Nixon's decorated public service career, he established a stellar record as a champion for the civil and voting rights of Americans. In his new role with No Labels, Nixon will work closely with No Labels national co-chair and civil rights icon, Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr., to monitor legal developments, provide strategic counsel and serve as a public advocate for No Labels' ballot access efforts. Since the start of its ballot access effort, No Labels has rigorously followed the letter and spirit of all applicable election laws. In recent months, however, it has become the target of an undemocratic campaign by organized and powerful partisan interests determined to keep No Labels off the ballot. Local parties and partisan election officials have filed baseless lawsuits, invented spurious charges and delayed certification without justification in Arizona, Maine and North Carolina. Now, a new well-resourced group, organized under the name "Citizens to Save our Republic," has embarked on an effort to pressure No Labels and its members to abandon our ballot access effort. "No Labels is a movement dedicated to democracy, and democracy can't stop because the powers that be think it's 'dangerous' to have competition," said Chavis. "The way to unite this country and to restore Americans faith in our future is to have more democracy, not less. I'm eager to begin working side by side with former Gov. Nixon to protect Americans' most fundamental constitutional rights." On July 18, No Labels launched its Common Sense policy booklet at an overflow town hall event at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H., featuring Dr. Chavis, his fellow No Labels co-chairs former Gov. Pat McCrory and Sen. Joe Lieberman and special guests Sen. Joe Manchin and Gov. Jon Huntsman. It was the first of many town halls No Labels will host in the months ahead – with different leaders in different states – to spur a long overdue discussion about where America needs to go in 2024 and beyond. By early 2024, No Labels will gauge the mood of the American public and their openness to an independent Unity ticket and will offer our ballot line to a ticket if and only if, such a ticket has a viable path to victory in the 2024 presidential election. Since its founding in 2009, No Labels has spent 13 years working to give voice to America's commonsense majority. We are now getting ballot access in states across the country to ensure Americans have the choice to vote for a 2024 presidential ticket that features strong, effective, and honest leaders who will commit to working closely with both parties to find commonsense solutions to America's biggest problems. www.nolabels.org. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE No Labels
https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2023/07/29/former-missouri-governor-attorney-general-jay-nixon-joins-no-labels-protect-constitutional-right-americans-choose-their-leaders/
2023-07-29T20:16:38
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https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2023/07/29/former-missouri-governor-attorney-general-jay-nixon-joins-no-labels-protect-constitutional-right-americans-choose-their-leaders/
Salt River Tubing bans marshmallows, citing littering issues MESA, Ariz. - Salt River Tubing is ending a local tradition of throwing marshmallows after authorities reported finding an "excess amount" of them in the water. Officials announced that the sweet treat would be prohibited starting July 29. "We’ve heard that local law enforcement will start enforcing criminal littering," Salt River Tubing wrote in a Facebook post. "Throwing marshmallows falls under it. With that news, we don’t want a guest subject to a citation and day ruined for something they didn’t realize or thought was innocent fun." Officials say they won't be allowed on buses and Salt River Tubing property, but it's still unclear how or when the rule would be enforced by the Forest Service. Nobody seems to know how it began, but it's a tradition for some to throw marshmallows at other tubers with mentions of the practice dating back to 2000.
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/salt-river-tubing-bans-marshmallows-citing-littering-issues
2023-07-29T20:16:39
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https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/salt-river-tubing-bans-marshmallows-citing-littering-issues
LOMPOC, Calif., July 29, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Return to Freedom Wild Horse Conservation this week thanked the Senate Interior Appropriations Committee for including language in its Fiscal Year 2024 funding package that can improve the management of America's wild horses and burros. A national nonprofit advocacy organization, Return to Freedom (RTF) works with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to press the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) on the immediate scaling up of safe, proven and humane fertility control for wild horses and burros as well as with a diverse array of public lands stakeholders to create broader acceptance of fertility control use. If implemented correctly and robustly, fertility control would slow (not stop) the growth of wild herds, keeping them on their home ranges rather than relying on the costly and traumatic capture, removal and warehousing of wild horses and burros. "We are grateful to the Senate for again supporting protections for wild horses by taking the vitally important step of directing — in clear language — that the Bureau of Land Management implement thoughtful management that results in the kinds of humane approaches for which Return to Freedom has tirelessly advocated," said Neda DeMayo, president of RTF. The Senate Committee's guiding report language calls for $11 million "to be spent to continue implementation of a robust and humane fertility control strategy of reversible immunocontraceptive vaccines." The Senate Committee's report emphasized that it "expects" the BLM to place "specific attention on:" - "increasing the use of fertility control, including measurable objectives in reducing population growth with fertility controls, - "targeting removals from the most heavily ecologically impacted and populated areas, - "expanding long-term, off-range humane holding, and continuing adoptions while fully implementing and enforcing existing safeguards." The Senate Committee on Thursday approved a total of $148 million for wild horse and burro management for 2024. Congress allocated the same amount in 2023. By comparison, the House Interior Appropriations Committee on June 19 approved $155 million for wild horse management in 2024. The House Committee's report language also sets aside $11 million for fertility control; however, it does not specify using the funding solely for immediate on-range implementation. The House also allows the money to be used for research, including on permanent sterilization, which RTF strongly opposes. The Senate and House must now reconcile their differences. RTF is calling on the House and Senate conferees to adopt the House's funding level alongside the Senate's guiding report language. RTF will continue to advocate for stricter wild horse and burro protections and for greater funding until the final bill is approved later this year. Background As it has for decades, the BLM continues to emphasize capture-and-removal, putting off fertility control use while also failing to reach the agency's own wild horse population targets. In FY 2022, for example, 20,193 wild horses and burros were removed from their home ranges while just 1,622 mares were treated and released with some form of fertility control. Out of the BLM-estimated 141,000 federally protected wild horses and burros that the agency is charged with overseeing, 58,000 now live not on the range but in overcrowded government corrals or on leased pastures. The cost to taxpayers of continued off-range holding of captured wild horses has climbed to more than $83 million annually. That has left little funding for prioritizing range management, restoration, personnel and administration, let alone fertility control. Population modeling by RTF and other stakeholders has shown that immediately implementing fertility control alongside any removal that BLM conducts is the only way to catch up with and stabilize herd growth so that on-range management can replace removals. Return to Freedom Wild Horse Conservation (RTF) is a national nonprofit organization dedicated to wild horse preservation through sanctuary, education, conservation, and advocacy since 1998. It also operates the American Wild Horse Sanctuary at three California locations, caring for more than 450 wild horses and burros managing the population with fertility control since 1999. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for updates about wild horses and burros on the range and at our sanctuary. View original content: SOURCE Return to Freedom Wild Horse Conservation
https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2023/07/29/return-freedom-applauds-senates-continued-emphasis-wild-horse-fertility-control/
2023-07-29T20:16:39
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https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2023/07/29/return-freedom-applauds-senates-continued-emphasis-wild-horse-fertility-control/
NEW YORK (AP) — St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Miles Mikolas was suspended for five games and fined an undisclosed amount by Major League Baseball on Friday for intentionally throwing at Ian Happ of the Chicago Cubs. Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol was suspended for one game and fined as a result of Mikolas’ actions Thursday night. Mikolas appealed his penalties, while Marmol served his suspension Friday night against the Cubs. In the first inning in the Cardinals’ 10-3 loss, Happ bloodied St. Louis catcher Willson Contreras when he hit him in the head with a long follow-through on a swing, then was soon hit himself by a pitch from Mikolas. Andrew Knizner took over behind the plate for Contreras, and Mikolas brushed back Happ with the first pitch when play resumed to run the count to 3-1. With the next pitch, Mikolas hit Happ in the rear end. ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-cardinals-mikolas-suspended-5-games-and-fined-for-intentionally-throwing-at-cubs-happ/
2023-07-29T20:16:41
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-cardinals-mikolas-suspended-5-games-and-fined-for-intentionally-throwing-at-cubs-happ/
UFO whistleblower testimony 'insulting' and not credible, Pentagon officials say A top Pentagon official has attacked this week's widely watched congressional hearing on UFOs, calling the claims "insulting" to employees who are investigating sightings and accusing a key witness of not cooperating with the official U.S. government investigation. Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick's letter, published on his personal LinkedIn page and circulated Friday across social media, criticizes much of the testimony from a retired Air Force intelligence officer that energized believers in extraterrestrial life and produced headlines around the world. Retired Air Force Maj. David Grusch testified Wednesday that the U.S. has concealed what he called a "multi-decade" program to collect and reverse-engineer "UAPs," or unidentified aerial phenomena, the official government term for UFOs. Part of what the U.S. has recovered, Grusch testified, were non-human "biologics," which he said he had not seen but had learned about from "people with direct knowledge of the program." David Grusch, former National Reconnaissance Office representative on the Defense Departments Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force, testifies during the House Oversight and Accountability Subcommittee on National Security, the Border, and Foreign A career intelligence officer, Kirkpatrick was named a year ago to lead the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, which was intended to centralize investigations into UAPs. The Pentagon and U.S. intelligence agencies have been pushed by Congress in recent years to better investigate reports of devices flying at unusual speeds or trajectories as a national security concern. Kirkpatrick wrote the letter Thursday and the Defense Department confirmed Friday that he posted it in a personal capacity. Kirkpatrick declined to comment on the letter Friday. He writes in part, "I cannot let yesterday’s hearing pass without sharing how insulting it was to the officers of the Department of Defense and Intelligence Community who chose to join AARO, many with not unreasonable anxieties about the career risks this would entail." READ MORE: World UFO Day: New investigations show growing acceptance in science, government "They are truth-seekers, as am I," Kirkpatrick said. "But you certainly would not get that impression from yesterday’s hearing." In a separate statement, Pentagon spokeswoman Sue Gough denied other allegations made by Grusch before a House Oversight subcommittee. The Pentagon "has no information that any individual has been harmed or killed as a result of providing information" about UFO objects, Gough said. Nor has the Pentagon discovered "any verifiable information to substantiate claims that any programs regarding the possession or reverse-engineering of extraterrestrial materials have existed in the past or exist currently." Kirkpatrick wrote, "AARO has yet to find any credible evidence to support the allegations of any reverse engineering program for non-human technology." He had briefed reporters in December that the Pentagon was investigating "several hundreds" of new reports following a push to have pilots and others come forward with any sightings. Kirkpatrick wrote in his letter that allegations of "retaliation, to include physical assault and hints of murder, are extraordinarily serious, which is why law enforcement is a critical member of the AARO team, specifically to address and take swift action should anyone come forward with such claims." "Yet, contrary to assertions made in the hearing, the central source of those allegations has refused to speak with AARO," Kirkpatrick said. He did not explicitly name Grusch, who alleged he faced retaliation and declined to answer when a congressman asked him if anyone had been murdered to hide information about UFOs. Messages left at a phone number and email address for Grusch were not returned Friday.
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/ufo-whistleblower-testimony-pentagon
2023-07-29T20:16:45
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https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/ufo-whistleblower-testimony-pentagon
PHOENIX (AP) — A historic heat wave that turned the U.S. Southwest into a blast furnace throughout July is beginning to abate with the late arrival of monsoon rains. Forecasters expect that by Monday at the latest, people in metro Phoenix will begin seeing high temperatures under 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43.3 degrees Celsius) for the first time in a month. As of Friday, the high temperature in the desert city had been at or above that mark for 29 consecutive days. Already this week, the overnight low at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport fell under 90 (32.2 C) for the first time in 16 days, finally allowing people some respite from the stifling heat once the sun goes down. Temperatures are also expected to ease in Las Vegas, Albuquerque and Death Valley, California. The downward trend started Wednesday night, when Phoenix saw its first major monsoon storm since the traditional start of the season on June 15. While more than half of the greater Phoenix area saw no rainfall from that storm, some eastern suburbs were pummeled by high winds, swirling dust and localized downfalls of up to an inch (2.5 centimeters) of precipitation. Storms gradually increasing in strength are expected over the weekend. Scientists calculate that July will prove to be the hottest globally on record and perhaps the warmest human civilization has seen. The extreme heat is now hitting the eastern part of the U.S, as soaring temperatures moved from the Midwest into the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, where some places are seeing their warmest days so far this year. The new heat records being set this summer are just some of the extreme weather being seen around the U.S. this month, such as flash floods in Pennsylvania and parts of the Northeast. And while relief may be on the way for the Southwest, for now it’s still dangerously hot. Phoenix’s high temperature reached 116 (46.7 C) Friday afternoon, which is far above the average temperature of 106 (41.1 C). “Anyone can be at risk outside in this record heat,” the fire department in Goodyear, a Phoenix suburb, warned residents on social media while offering ideas to stay safe. For many people such as older adults, those with health issues and those without access to air conditioning, the heat can be dangerous or even deadly. Maricopa County, the most populous in Arizona and home to Phoenix, reported this week that its public health department had confirmed 25 heat-associated deaths this year as of July 21, with 249 more under investigation. Results from toxicological tests that can takes weeks or months after an autopsy is conducted could eventually result in many deaths listed as under investigation as heat associated being changed to confirmed. Maricopa County confirmed 425 heat-associated deaths last year, and more than half of them occurred in July. Elsewhere in Arizona next week, the agricultural desert community of Yuma is expecting highs ranging from 104 to 112 (40 C to 44.4 C) and Tucson is looking at highs ranging from 99 to 111 (37.2 C to 43.9 C). The highs in Las Vegas are forecast to slip as low as 94 (34.4 C) next Tuesday after a long spell of highs above 110 (43.3 C). Death Valley, which hit 128 (53.3 C) in mid-July, will cool as well, though only to a still blistering hot 116 (46.7 C). In New Mexico, the highs in Albuquerque next week are expected to be in the mid to high 90s (around 35 C), with party cloudy skies.
https://who13.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-the-extreme-heat-wave-that-blasted-the-southwest-is-abating-with-late-arriving-monsoon-rains/
2023-07-29T20:16:45
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https://who13.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-the-extreme-heat-wave-that-blasted-the-southwest-is-abating-with-late-arriving-monsoon-rains/
NEW YORK, July 29, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- WHY: Rosen Law Firm, a global investor rights law firm, reminds purchasers of securities of Tingo Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: TIO) between December 1, 2022 and June 6, 2023, both dates inclusive (the "Class Period"), of the important August 7, 2023 lead plaintiff deadline. SO WHAT: If you purchased Tingo securities during the Class Period you may be entitled to compensation without payment of any out of pocket fees or costs through a contingency fee arrangement. WHAT TO DO NEXT: To join the Tingo class action, go to https://rosenlegal.com/submit-form/?case_id=16856 or call Phillip Kim, Esq. toll-free at 866-767-3653 or email pkim@rosenlegal.com or cases@rosenlegal.com for information on the class action. A class action lawsuit has already been filed. If you wish to serve as lead plaintiff, you must move the Court no later than August 7, 2023. A lead plaintiff is a representative party acting on behalf of other class members in directing the litigation. WHY ROSEN LAW: We encourage investors to select qualified counsel with a track record of success in leadership roles. Often, firms issuing notices do not have comparable experience, resources or any meaningful peer recognition. Many of these firms do not actually litigate securities class actions, but are merely middlemen that refer clients or partner with law firms that actually litigate the cases. Be wise in selecting counsel. The Rosen Law Firm represents investors throughout the globe, concentrating its practice in securities class actions and shareholder derivative litigation. Rosen Law Firm has achieved the largest ever securities class action settlement against a Chinese Company. Rosen Law Firm was Ranked No. 1 by ISS Securities Class Action Services for number of securities class action settlements in 2017. The firm has been ranked in the top 4 each year since 2013 and has recovered hundreds of millions of dollars for investors. In 2019 alone the firm secured over $438 million for investors. In 2020, founding partner Laurence Rosen was named by law360 as a Titan of Plaintiffs' Bar. Many of the firm's attorneys have been recognized by Lawdragon and Super Lawyers. DETAILS OF THE CASE: According to the lawsuit, defendants throughout the Class Period made false and/or misleading statements and/or failed to disclose that: (1) Tingo overstated its revenue and other accounting metrics, creating a false impression of success; (2) Tingo was not meaningfully engaged in many of the business activities that it claimed would drive future growth; (3) many of Tingo's supposed contracts with customers and suppliers did not exist; and (4) in light of the above, defendants' positive statements about Tingo's business, operations, and prospects were materially misleading and/or lacked a reasonable basis. When the true details entered the market, the lawsuit claims that investors suffered damages. To join the Tingo class action, go to https://rosenlegal.com/submit-form/?case_id=16856 or call Phillip Kim, Esq. toll-free at 866-767-3653 or email pkim@rosenlegal.com or cases@rosenlegal.com for information on the class action. No Class Has Been Certified. Until a class is certified, you are not represented by counsel unless you retain one. You may select counsel of your choice. You may also remain an absent class member and do nothing at this point. An investor's ability to share in any potential future recovery is not dependent upon serving as lead plaintiff. Follow us for updates on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-rosen-law-firm, on Twitter: https://twitter.com/rosen_firm or on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rosenlawfirm/. Attorney Advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Contact Information: Laurence Rosen, Esq. Phillip Kim, Esq. The Rosen Law Firm, P.A. 275 Madison Avenue, 40th Floor New York, NY 10016 Tel: (212) 686-1060 Toll Free: (866) 767-3653 Fax: (212) 202-3827 lrosen@rosenlegal.com pkim@rosenlegal.com cases@rosenlegal.com www.rosenlegal.com View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Rosen Law Firm, P.A.
https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2023/07/29/tio-deadline-rosen-ranked-leading-firm-encourages-tingo-group-inc-investors-with-losses-secure-counsel-before-important-august-7-deadline-securities-class-action-tio/
2023-07-29T20:16:46
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https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2023/07/29/tio-deadline-rosen-ranked-leading-firm-encourages-tingo-group-inc-investors-with-losses-secure-counsel-before-important-august-7-deadline-securities-class-action-tio/
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles Dodgers, who have made pitching a priority in advance of the trade deadline, acquired starter Lance Lynn and reliever Joe Kelly on Friday in a swap with the Chicago White Sox. The NL West leaders sent outfielder Trayce Thompson, pitcher Nick Nastrini and reliever Jordan Leasure to the White Sox. Lynn and Kelly join utilityman Kiké Hernández from the Boston Red Sox and infielder-outfielder Amed Rosario from the Cleveland Guardians in Los Angeles, ahead of Tuesday’s trade deadline. “I would argue we have raised the floor and the ceiling,” manager Dave Roberts said. The Dodgers may not be done, either, with a need for more starting pitching. “I think there’s always a chance,” Roberts said. “There’s still time on the clock.” Lynn has been mostly underwhelming this season. The 36-year-old right-hander is 6-9 with a 6.18 ERA and leads the American League in earned runs (79) and home runs allowed (28). Roberts called Lynn a “victim of sort of the circumstance” with the sub-.500 White Sox, who are 13 games back of AL Central leader Minnesota. “I just feel like getting in this environment, playing meaningful games will bring out the best in him,” Roberts said. Lynn has 139 strikeouts in 115 innings and 10.9 per nine innings. In June, Lynn struck out 16 in a game against Seattle, setting a major-league mark for most strikeouts in a game by a pitcher with an ERA above 6.00. He was an All-Star for the White Sox in 2021 and shortly after signed a $38 million, two-year contract extension that included a club option. “I’m happy to have had the time that I had here, but it is a business and sometimes these things happen,” Lynn said. “I’m just looking forward to the possibility of making a playoff push.” Lynn began the 2022 season on the injured list with a meniscus tear suffered in spring training. He returned in mid-June and finished the season with an 8-7 record in 21 starts and a 3.99 ERA. He recorded 121 strikeouts in 121 2/3 innings. Lynn has spent most of his career in the AL. Besides the White Sox, he has pitched for Minnesota, the New York Yankees and Texas. He began his career with St. Louis, and missed the 2016 season with them after undergoing Tommy John surgery. Lynn won a World Series with the Cardinals in 2011, his debut season in the majors. The following year he earned his first All-Star berth. The Dodgers have not yet decided who Lynn will replace in the rotation. He’ll arrive in Los Angeles this weekend and discuss a possible start against Oakland next week. Kelly returns to Los Angeles for his second stint with the Dodgers. The hard-throwing right-handed reliever recently returned from the injured list for elbow inflammation. He has one save, a 4.97 ERA and 41 strikeouts this season. Like Lynn, Kelly is eager to join a contending team. “It’s something that I thrive on,” he said. “I think my personality type is to love the adrenaline, love the big moments. So, I’m super, super stoked to go back for sure.” Kelly pitched for the Dodgers from 2019-21, winning the World Series during the pandemic-delayed 2020 season. He had a 3.59 ERA in 105 1/3 innings during that span. “I would argue that his stuff is even better than it was then when he was with us, the velocity, the curveball, all that stuff,” Roberts said. “He’s a guy, like most players when they’re in a winning environment, they thrive.” Kelly isn’t the only former Dodger to land back in Los Angeles. Hernández returns three years after he departed for the East Coast. Rosario was set to start at shortstop Friday night in the series opener against the Reds. But the plan is for him to get acclimated to second base and also play some center field. He’ll mostly start against left-handed pitching. “It’s certainly a big upgrade for our ballclub,” Roberts said. “He’s been good versus right-handed pitching, but he’s been a killer versus lefties and that’s something we want to capture.” ___ AP Baseball Writer Jay Cohen, AP Sports Writer Eric Olson and AP freelancer Seth Engle contributed to this report. ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-lance-lynn-and-joe-kelly-are-heading-to-the-dodgers-in-a-trade-with-the-white-sox-source-tells-ap/
2023-07-29T20:16:48
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-lance-lynn-and-joe-kelly-are-heading-to-the-dodgers-in-a-trade-with-the-white-sox-source-tells-ap/
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The cosmos is offering up a double feature in August: a pair of supermoons culminating in a rare blue moon. Catch the first show Tuesday evening as the full moon rises in the southeast, appearing slightly brighter and bigger than normal. That’s because it will be closer than usual, just 222,159 miles (357,530 kilometers) away, thus the supermoon label. The moon will be even closer the night of Aug. 30 — a scant 222,043 miles (357,344 kilometers) distant. Because it’s the second full moon in the same month, it will be what’s called a blue moon. “Warm summer nights are the ideal time to watch the full moon rise in the eastern sky within minutes of sunset. And it happens twice in August,” said retired NASA astrophysicist Fred Espenak, dubbed Mr. Eclipse for his eclipse-chasing expertise. The last time two full supermoons graced the sky in the same month was in 2018. It won’t happen again until 2037, according to Italian astronomer Gianluca Masi, founder of the Virtual Telescope Project. Masi will provide a live webcast of Tuesday evening’s supermoon, as it rises over the Coliseum in Rome. “My plans are to capture the beauty of this … hopefully bringing the emotion of the show to our viewers,” Masi said in an email. “The supermoon offers us a great opportunity to look up and discover the sky,” he added. This year’s first supermoon was in July. The fourth and last will be in September. The two in August will be closer than either of those. Provided clear skies, binoculars or backyard telescopes can enhance the experience, Espenak said, revealing such features as lunar maria — the dark plains formed by ancient volcanic lava flows — and rays emanating from lunar craters. According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the August full moon is traditionally known as the sturgeon moon. That’s because of the abundance of that fish in the Great Lakes in August, hundreds of years ago. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
https://who13.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-two-supermoons-in-august-mean-double-the-stargazing-fun/
2023-07-29T20:16:51
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https://who13.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-two-supermoons-in-august-mean-double-the-stargazing-fun/
BLAINE, Minn. (AP) — With the FedEx Cup two weeks away, Lee Hodges can breathe easier. Justin Thomas can’t. Hodges birdied four of his last six holes for a 7-under 64 and a four-stroke lead over Tyler Duncan on Friday after almost two rounds of the 3M Open. A nearly two-hour afternoon weather delay led to play being suspended due to darkness with six players yet to finish — none within 10 shots of the lead. Hodges, 74th in the FedEx Cup points race, opened with a 63 for the first-round lead and had a 15-under 127 total to break the tournament 36-hole record of 128 set by Bryson DeChambeau in 2019. Hodges was 3 under on the front nine and added a 33-foot birdie putt on No. 13, followed by birdies from 14 feet on No. 14 and 11 feet on No. 17. “I’ve got a great attitude out there. Me and my caddie (Andrew Medley), we’re 70-something on the points list, like what do we have to lose, you know?” Hodges said. “We’ve committed to every shot we’ve hit so far, which has been great. We’ll continue to do it, because what do we have to lose.” A lengthy last-hole putt was not enough to overcome a couple bad holes as Thomas aims to make the FedEx Cup playoffs for the eighth straight season. He birdied four of his last five holes to shoot a shot an even-par 71, leaving him 2 under for the tournament and two strokes short. Thomas, at No. 75 in the FedEx Cup standings, has missed five cuts in his last seven starts. The top 70 next week after the Wyndham Championship will advance to the playoffs. Looking to stay in strong consideration for the U.S. Ryder Cup team, Thomas has just two top-10 finishes in 14 tournaments since mid-February. Starting on the back nine, Thomas put two balls in the water on the par-5 18th, falling to 1 under. An errant tee shot and poor chip led to another double bogey on the par-3 fourth, before a strong finishing stretch was punctuated by a 30-foot putt on No. 9. “This is a good chance for me to learn a little bit about myself and push myself and become better,” Thomas said before the tournament. “I mean, this game, nothing’s given to you. I’ve had great chances to win the FedEx Cup the last five or six years and now I’m trying to make the playoffs. That’s just the way that this sport is. And it can happen to anybody, so you’ve just got to go out and get it.” He wasn’t the only player to put untimely dents in possible playoff plans by missing the cut. No. 70 K.H. Lee (1 under), No. 72 Davis Thompson (2 under) and No. 90 Gary Woodland (3 over) also get the weekend off. Duncan, who has missed six cuts in his past eight events and 17 of 27 this season, shot a 67. He has back-to-back bogey-free rounds. “You never know when it’s coming, but I’ve been putting in the work and you always hope it shows up,” Duncan said. “But it doesn’t always show up when you want it to.” Defending champion Tony Finau (66), J.T. Poston (66), Brandt Snedeker (68) and Kevin Streelman (68) were 10 under. With one top-10 in 25 starts this season, Streelman is in a rare position. “I haven’t been in the final groups in a while on a Saturday, so looking forward to that. At my age I don’t have much to lose, so go out and have some fun this weekend,” the 44-year-old Streelman said. ___ AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-lee-hodges-leads-the-3m-open-while-justin-thomas-misses-the-cut-to-hurt-his-playoff-hopes/
2023-07-29T20:16:55
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-lee-hodges-leads-the-3m-open-while-justin-thomas-misses-the-cut-to-hurt-his-playoff-hopes/
2023 Amundi Evian Championship Betting Odds, Favorites & Insights – Round 4 Celine Boutier is the current leader (-100) at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship after three rounds of play. Want to place a bet on the Amundi Evian Championship? Use our link for a special offer when you sign up with BetMGM Sportsbook! Amundi Evian Championship Fourth Round Information - Start Time: 12:45 AM ET - Venue: Evian Resort Golf Club - Location: Évian-les-Bains, France - Par/Distance: Par 71/6,527 yards Watch live golf without cable on all your devices with a free trial to Fubo! Amundi Evian Championship Best Odds to Win Celine Boutier - Tee Time: 6:25 AM ET - Current Rank: 1st (-11) - Odds to Win: -100 Boutier Round by Round Results Click here to bet on Boutier at the Amundi Evian Championship with BetMGM Sportsbook! Nasa Hataoka - Tee Time: 6:25 AM ET - Current Rank: 2nd (-8) - Odds to Win: +400 Hataoka Round by Round Results Click here to bet on Hataoka with BetMGM Sportsbook! Minjee Lee - Tee Time: 6:15 AM ET - Current Rank: 3rd (-7) - Odds to Win: +700 Lee Round by Round Results Want to place a bet on Lee in the Amundi Evian Championship? Click here to sign up with BetMGM Sportsbook! Brooke Mackenzie Henderson - Tee Time: 6:15 AM ET - Current Rank: 3rd (-7) - Odds to Win: +800 Mackenzie Henderson Round by Round Results Think Mackenzie Henderson can win the Amundi Evian Championship? Click here to bet with BetMGM Sportsbook! Nelly Korda - Tee Time: 6:05 AM ET - Current Rank: 5th (-6) - Odds to Win: +1200 Korda Round by Round Results Click here to bet on Korda at the Amundi Evian Championship with BetMGM Sportsbook! Amundi Evian Championship Odds (Rest of Field) Put together your best lineup of golfers and you could win cash prizes! Sign up for FanDuel Fantasy using our link for the best first-time player offer. Not all offers available in all states, please visit BetMGM for the latest promotions for your area. Must be 21+ to gamble, please wager responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, contact 1-800-GAMBLER. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.mysuncoast.com/sports/betting/2023/07/30/amundi-evian-championship-lpga-tournament-betting-odds-round-4/
2023-07-29T20:16:55
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https://www.mysuncoast.com/sports/betting/2023/07/30/amundi-evian-championship-lpga-tournament-betting-odds-round-4/
HUARINA, Bolivia (AP) — A 70-year-old man’s feet sink into the soil as he passes abandoned boats where there used to be the water of Lake Titicaca. The highest navigable lake in the world has receded to what Bolivian authorities say are critically low levels due to a persistent drought. “It’s completely dry,” Jaime Mamani said in exasperation while walking along the new shoreline in Huarina, a farming town 70 kilometers (43 miles) west of La Paz where he is a community leader. The National Service of Naval Hydrography declared an alert this week for the iconic lake after its surface fell 2 centimeters (0.8 inches) below the drought warning stage, or 3,807.8 meters (12492.7 feet) above sea level. But the agency says this is just the beginning of a situation that is worrying Indigenous Aymara communities that rely on the lake for their livelihoods and fear the dry spell could permanently impact the region’s flora and fauna. The hydrology unit of Bolivia’s navy warned that water levels could reach historically low levels in the coming months. By December, there is a “high probability” Lake Titicaca will be 64 centimeters (more than 25 inches) below the drought alert level, breaking a low water record set in 1998 by 33 centimeters (almost 13 inches). “In three months, the water has decreased by 30 centimeters (11.8 inches), and considering that radiation is much stronger during this time of the year … we expect it to keep decreasing,” Carlos Carrasco, a hydraulic engineer for the hydrography service said. The drought is the result of a combination of factors, including natural phenomena like La Niña and El Niño, which arrived unusually early this year and have been particularly strong due in part to climate change, according to Lucía Walper, who heads up the Hydrological Forecasting Unit at Bolivia’s National Meteorology and Hydrology Service. But the vast lake is vital for this region of the Bolivian highlands, where hundreds of Aymara rural communities have relied on the blue body of water for millennia to practice subsistence farming and raise livestock. Authorities in the Peruvian city of Puno also issued a warning about the declining water levels and expressed concern about the potential impact on tourism. “We’re reaching a critical point. There will be a significant loss of water,” said Juan José Ocola, president of the Binational Authority of Lake Titicaca. The lake serves as the border between Bolivia and Peru. Mateo Vargas, 56, a fisherman who has lived off the Lake Titicaca for 28 years, said he used to catch “lots” of fish daily. Now he considers himself lucky if he can catch six. Vargas’ wife, Justina Condori, shares his concerns. “The fish have vanished,” Condori, 58, said, predicting there will be famine if the current conditions persist. Condori makes a living by renting boats to tourists. She worries fewer people will come to visit the lake, which at an elevation of 3,810 meters above sea level, is the largest body of freshwater in the Andes mountain range. Evidence of the receding lake is seemingly everywhere. Women who sell fried fish and other snacks by the lake face rising costs for ingredients. Those who make a living transporting people from one side of the lake to the other are altering their routes because their rafts and boats no longer reach their usual docks. Livestock farmers who rely on the plants that grow on the shores of the Titicaca to feed their animals are also seeing their livelihoods threatened. The economic hardship is causing many residents of Huarina to migrate to other areas of the country, leaving behind mostly older townspeople, Mamani said. The waters of the Titicaca have always been shallow around the town, so the drought is even more visible there. “There is a detriment to the economy of the inhabitants of the region,” he said. Vargas, the fisherman, is also concerned about what the declining water levels will mean for the future. “It looks like it will continue to decrease, day by day,” he said. “We’re worried because if we continue like this, what’s going to happen to our children?” ___ Follow AP’s coverage of the climate and environment at https://apnews.com/climate-and-environment
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-a-drought-alert-for-receding-lake-titicaca-has-indigenous-communities-worried-for-their-future/
2023-07-29T20:16:58
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-a-drought-alert-for-receding-lake-titicaca-has-indigenous-communities-worried-for-their-future/
MIAMI (AP) — Miguel Cabrera’s farewell tour has reached a special location. The Detroit Tigers’ slugger is approaching the last two months of his major league career. And in his final season, Cabrera has received numerous tributes in visiting stadiums. This weekend, the honors bring added significance. The Tigers opened a three-game series Friday in Miami against the Marlins. The 40-year-old Cabrera is returning to the city where he spent his first five seasons and is facing the organization that signed him shortly after his 16th birthday. “It is very emotional because this is where it all started,” Cabrera, a native of Venezuela, said before the Tigers lost to the Marlins 6-5 in Friday’s series opener. “To be back here is awesome.” The Marlins brought up the then-20-year-old Cabrera two months into the 2003 season. Cabrera made an immediate impact, hitting a walk-off home run to help the Marlins beat Tampa Bay in his major league debut. “I remember it well because in all the stadiums I’ve visited, that is the first video presented,” said Cabrera, who went 0 for 3 and was hit by a pitch. “My teammates kid me because I was so skinny back then.” It was a sign of things to come. Cabrera played a key role in the Marlins’ postseason run in 2003 that culminated with a World Series championship. Cabrera was a four-time All-Star during his time with the Marlins. But the club, fearing it would lose Cabrera to free agency once he became eligible, dealt him to Detroit following the 2007 season. “When I received that call, I had many questions on why I was being traded,” Cabrera said. “The club had a good young group and was growing tremendously. Had the group stayed together, we had a chance to contend for the division. They told me to be calm, that you’re going to a good club with a chance to win.” Cabrera flourished in Detroit, becoming one of the game’s top hitters and a two-time AL MVP. In 2012, Cabrera won the AL Triple Crown, the first to accomplish the feat since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967. But the offensive production, which included four AL batting titles, declined as Cabrera reached his late 30s. Nonetheless, Cabrera reached the career 3,000-hit and 500-homer milestones over the last two seasons. Now limited to a parttime role, Cabrera will play the three games against Miami. The second game on Saturday also will be promoted as Venezuelan Heritage Day. “It is going to be great for me and my family,” Cabrera said of the ceremony,” Cabrera said. “You have to enjoy this moment, every second, every minute. After that, you prepare for the game and do your best to help our team win.” ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-miguel-cabreras-farewell-tour-makes-a-stop-miami-where-his-career-started-years-ago/
2023-07-29T20:17:02
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-miguel-cabreras-farewell-tour-makes-a-stop-miami-where-his-career-started-years-ago/
NIAMEY, Niger (AP) — The African Union has issued a 15-day ultimatum to the junta in Niger to reinstall the country’s democratically elected government just as the coup leaders met with senior civil servants to discuss how they would run the country and as the U.S. and the European Union threatened sanctions against the regime. Brig. Gen. Mohamed Toumba, one of the soldiers who ousted President Mohamed Bazoum on Wednesday, told state television that the junta met with civil servants on Friday and asked them to continue their work as usual following the suspension of the constitution. “The message given was not to stop the processes underway, to keep on with things,” said Brig. Gen. Toumba. “Everything that must be done will be done,” he said, signaling the intention of the regime led by Gen. Abdourahmane Tchiani, who also goes by Omar, to remain in power. After its meeting on Friday, the African Union Peace and Security Council said it was concerned by the “alarming resurgence” of coups that undermine democracy and stability on the continent. It asked the soldiers to “return immediately and unconditionally to their barracks and restore constitutional authority, within a maximum of fifteen (15) days.” Bazoum, whose condition and that of his officials remains unknown since the government was overthrown, should also be released immediately and unconditionally, the AU said. Failure to do so would compel the bloc to take “necessary action, including punitive measures against the perpetrators.” On the streets of the Nigerien capital Niamey on Saturday, things appeared to be returning to normal, though many in the international community were still on lockdown with hotels full of foreigners, many given instructions not to leave. Locals say they’re waiting to see what unfolds, with many still in support of Bazoum who has not yet resigned. “I’m with him, he does a good work. (But) what can we do?” said Mohamed Cisse, a street seller. “This is (the new leader’s) time, Bazoum’s time is over,” he said. Tchiani, the junta leader and commander of Niger’s presidential guard, is close to former Nigerien president Mahamadou Issoufou, who stepped down in 2021 after a decade in office. Tchiani’s takeover of power will reinforce speculation that Issoufou is behind the coup, said Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel program at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, a German think tank and consultancy. The U.S. threatened to halt its economic support to Niger while the European Union announced the immediate indefinite suspension of budgetary support and security assistance. U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, who is in Australia as part of a Pacific tour, estimated America’s economic and security partnership with Niger at hundreds of millions of dollars and said its continuity depends on “the continuation of the democratic governance and constitutional order.” “So that assistance, that support, is in clear jeopardy as a result of these actions, which is another reason why they need to be immediately reversed,” Blinken said. While there are no signs of the junta backing down amid growing international pressure, analysts called for synergy in the interventions of the international community and continental organizations such as the AU and the regional bloc of ECOWAS, which is scheduled to meet over the coup on Sunday. A successful coup in Niger and the sanctions in the aftermath could cause more hardship for millions of poor and hungry people in West Africa and could further threaten international relations with the region, which is seeing a resurgence of coups in recent years, according to Idayat Hassan, senior Africa program fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “A non-reversal of the coup also means that we are defining a new world order in West Africa in particular as you are pitching the west and other countries against few military regimes which may be backed by Russia,” said Hassan. ——— Asadu reported from Abuja, Nigeria. Baba Ahmed in Bamako, Mali contributed.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-african-union-gives-15-day-ultimatum-to-niger-junta-to-end-regime-but-soldiers-seek-continuity/
2023-07-29T20:17:04
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-african-union-gives-15-day-ultimatum-to-niger-junta-to-end-regime-but-soldiers-seek-continuity/
Chiefs complete first day of full pads at 2023 training camp ST. JOSEPH, MO. (WIBW) - Day five of training camp for the Kansas City Chiefs brought the pads out for the first time on Friday. As expected, it brought a different type of energy to the Super Bowl champions. “Naturally it does that. But I liked the way they did it, how they got after each other,” said head coach Andy Reid. The rising energy also brought along some more intensity. Travis Kelce got into a little scuffle with DiCaprio Bootle when the cornerback continued to go after Kelce after a play. “Fighting’s a waste of time. You get thrown out of games doing it, you get hurt out here doing it. But they’re gonna jaw. It’s hot, humid, they’re gonna jaw a little bit. Just as long as there’s no punches thrown, we’re alright,” Coach Reid said about the scuffle. “It was kinda nice for me to really get in the scuffle a little bit. I was like alright cool I see you Kelce,” said safety Bryan Cook with a laugh. “It encouraged us to be more passionate about it, because it’s a blessing to be out there.” The intensity was upped for everyone on the field. “It was one of those days,” said linebacker Willie Gay. “We got better today. It was a Coach Reid’s training camp practice today.” “You could tell some guys were definitely excited,” Cook added. Doesn’t matter if it’s a rookie or a veteran, this point in training camp is when they’re reminded what it takes to win a Super Bowl. Especially when they’re trying to go back-to-back like this squad is. “It’s exciting to say you want to win a Super Bowl,” said Gay. “When you already got one, then you really wanna win another one.” It’s also a wake-up call for some players. “The first time you put on the pads obviously you’re a little rusty. Someone made a comment earlier that the last time we really played in pads was the Super Bowl. I was like dang that’s been a while,” said guard Trey Smith. “It’s always good putting the pads back on. It’s always good knowing the season’s around the corner.” Some were hoping the first day of full pads would finally bring Chris Jones to camp, but the defensive lineman is still holding out for that new contract. And he’s still being fined $50,000 a day. Injuries wise, there was nothing too major from Friday’s practice. Drue Tranquill strained his neck, Jody Fortson hurt his shoulder, and Mike Danna strained his calf. Copyright 2023 WIBW. All rights reserved.
https://www.wibw.com/2023/07/29/chiefs-complete-first-day-full-pads-2023-training-camp/
2023-07-29T20:17:05
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https://www.wibw.com/2023/07/29/chiefs-complete-first-day-full-pads-2023-training-camp/
NEW YORK (AP) — The NBA told teams Friday that Damian Lillard and his agent confirmed that the All-Star guard would honor his contract in any potential trade, despite the agent saying Lillard only wanted to be dealt to the Miami Heat. A memo sent to general managers and obtained by The Associated Press also warned that Lillard would be subject to discipline by the league if he or Aaron Goodwin make additional comments suggesting he won’t fully perform the requirements of his contract in the event of a trade. Lillard told the Portland Trail Blazers earlier this month he wanted to be traded and Goodwin subsequently made clear his preference was Miami. “Dame’s position won’t change,” Goodwin told AP on July 6. “This entire situation was about building an opportunity for Portland to win or giving him another opportunity that he wants, which is Miami.” The league said it interviewed Lillard and Goodwin, along with several teams with whom Goodwin spoke. Goodwin denied telling teams that Lillard would refuse to play for them and the teams provided descriptions that were “mostly, though not entirely, consistent with Goodwin’s statements to us.” Players are not allowed to publicly request trades. The league also stated in the memo that it told the Players Association that further comments such as Goodwin’s will be subject to discipline. ___ More AP NBA: https://apnews.com/NBA and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-nba-tells-teams-lillard-would-honor-contract-in-any-trade-warns-of-discipline-for-saying-otherwise/
2023-07-29T20:17:09
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-nba-tells-teams-lillard-would-honor-contract-in-any-trade-warns-of-discipline-for-saying-otherwise/
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Salvage crews were preparing Saturday to tow a car-carrying cargo ship that has been burning for days to an anchor point in the North Sea after flames and smoke on board subsided, the Dutch government said. Fire erupted in the Fremantle Highway late Tuesday night near a chain of islands in the northern Netherlands and has been blazing ever since. The ship is carrying 3,783 new vehicles, including 498 electric vehicles, the company that chartered the vessel said. One crew member died and others were injured after the fire broke out on the ship that was heading from Bremerhaven in Germany to Singapore. The crew was evacuated in the early hours of Wednesday. The cause of the fire has not been established. Measurements Friday showed that heat, flames and smoke had subsided enough for salvage experts to board the ship for the first time and establish a strong towing connection with a tugboat, the Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management said. It will be towed, likely over the weekend, to a new position 16 kilometers (10 miles) north of the island of Schiermonnikoog , the ministry said in a statement. The timing of the operation that is expected to take 12-14 hours depends on smoke development and weather, the ministry added. The aim is ultimately “once conditions on board allow,” to tow the ship to a port, though the destination has not yet been decided. The ministry said the ship is stable and intact below the waterline. The burning vessel is close to the shallow Wadden Sea, a World Heritage-listed area that is considered one of the world’s most significant habitats for migratory birds. It’s also near the Netherlands’ border with Germany, whose environment minister, Steffi Lemke, has warned of “an environmental catastrophe of unknown proportions,” if the ship were to sink.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-burning-cargo-ship-off-dutch-coast-will-be-towed-to-a-new-location-after-flames-and-smoke-subsided/
2023-07-29T20:17:11
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-burning-cargo-ship-off-dutch-coast-will-be-towed-to-a-new-location-after-flames-and-smoke-subsided/
TORONTO (AP) — Shohei Ohtani hit his major league-leading 39th home run for the Angels before leaving with leg cramps as the Toronto Blue Jays slugged three solo homers and rallied to beat Los Angeles 4-1 on Friday night. Ohtani was replaced by pinch-hitter Michael Stefanic when his at-bat came up with the bases loaded in the ninth inning. Ohtani was lifted because of cramping in both of his calves, Angels manager Phil Nevin said. “We’ll evaluate it tomorrow when he gets up,” Nevin said. “It’s just cramping right now. It’s kind of in both legs. He’s done a lot of work the last two days and wasn’t able to go.” A day earlier, Ohtani left the second game of a doubleheader at Detroit because of cramps. The two-way superstar threw a one-hitter in the opener Thursday for his first career MLB shutout, then homered twice in the second game. Nevin said Ohtani’s soreness developed after he grounded out to begin the eighth. “He came in and was trying to get some work done and just kept cramping up,” Nevin said. Stefanic struck out looking at a 3-2 pitch from right-hander Jordan Romano as Toronto ended the Angels’ four-game winning streak. After the game, an angry Nevin was seen holding up a tablet computer and yelling at plate umpire Mike Estabrook as the crew left the field. “I just explained to him that I thought the pitch to Stefanic was outside,” Nevin said. Matt Chapman, Danny Jansen and Whit Merrifield homered for the Blue Jays, who are 24-11 when they hit two or more home runs. “Our team has been playing a good brand of baseball for a while now,” Chapman said. “I think maybe we’re just starting to find ways to come out on top of some of those close games.” Chapman hit a two-out drive in the second, his 14th of the season. Jansen homered to lead off the third, his 14th. Both home runs came off right-hander Lucas Giolito, who made his first start for the Angels since being acquired from the White Sox earlier this week. Giolito (6-7) allowed three runs and six hits in 5 1/3 innings. He walked one and struck out five. “I felt relatively sharp, throwing a lot of strikes, but they hammered my mistakes pretty good,” Giolito said. Bo Bichette hit an RBI double off Giolito in the sixth and Merrifield made it 4-1 with a two-out homer off José Soriano in the seventh, his eighth. Merrifield finished 3 for 4 and has six home runs in his last 17 games. He hit a three-run homer in Thursday’s road win over the Dodgers. The Blue Jays began the day in the third AL wild-card spot, three games ahead of the Angels. Los Angeles trails Boston and the New York Yankees in the postseason race. After being greeted with a loud ovation from the sellout crowd of 42,106, Ohtani homered on the first pitch he faced, going deep in three straight at-bats over two games. Ohtani’s 397-foot drive came off Blue Jays right-hander Kevin Gausman. Ohtani homered in consecutive games for the ninth time this season. Ohtani’s streak of homers ended when he struck out swinging on a 2-2 pitch from Gausman in the third. Ohtani singled in the sixth and grounded out against left-hander Tim Mayza in the eighth. Gausman (8-5) allowed one run and five hits in six-plus innings to win for the first time since June 21 at Miami. Gausman walked three and struck out nine, increasing his AL-leading total to 171. Erik Swanson relieved Gausman after the Angels loaded the bases with no outs in the seventh. Swanson struck out Trey Cabbage and pinch-hitter Eduardo Escobar, then retired Luis Rengifo on a fly ball. “Not getting one across, that hurts,” Nevin said. Mayza worked one inning and Romano got two outs in the ninth before Yimi García finished for his third save in six chances. Romano was pitching for the fifth time since leaving the July 11 All-Star game because of a sore back. “He’s doing alright,” manager John Schneider said of Romano. “Just lower back discomfort, it kind of locked up on him a little bit. Just kind of wanted to play it safe there.” TRAINER’S ROOM Angels: Before the game, Nevin said Ohtani would get an extra day of rest before his next start, which was scheduled for next Thursday’s home game against Seattle. … SS Zach Neto (sore back) was scratched from the starting lineup and replaced by Andrew Velazquez. Rengifo took over in the leadoff spot. Blue Jays: LHP Hyun Jin Ryu (Tommy John surgery) will start on Tuesday against Baltimore, Schneider said. With the Blue Jays beginning a stretch of 17 games in 17 days Friday, Schneider said Ryu will be part of a six-man rotation. … RHP Chad Green (Tommy John surgery) will make a rehab appearance with Class-A Dunedin Saturday, his third. ANGRY WORDS Cameras caught Chapman yelling at Schneider in the dugout after the top of the first. “That’s just everybody being competitive, wanting to win baseball games,” Chapman said. “Just a heat-of-the-moment kind of thing. What was said and what it’s about, I’m just going to keep between us.” NEW-LOOK LINEUP Blue Jays OF George Springer, who came in stuck in an 0-for-16 slump, was dropped from the leadoff spot to fifth. Springer finished 0 for 4. Merrifield moved up to hit leadoff. ROSTER MOVES The Angels optioned RHP Gerardo Reyes to Triple-A Salt Lake to make room on the roster for Giolito. UP NEXT RHP Alek Manoah (2-8, 6.10 ERA) starts for the Blue Jays on Saturday afternoon. LHP Reid Detmers (2-7, 4.38) goes for the Angels. ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-ohtani-hits-majors-best-39th-hr-before-leaving-with-leg-cramps-in-angels-4-1-loss-to-blue-jays/
2023-07-29T20:17:16
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-ohtani-hits-majors-best-39th-hr-before-leaving-with-leg-cramps-in-angels-4-1-loss-to-blue-jays/
BAGHDAD (AP) — The leader of Lebanon’s Shiite militant group Hezbollah said Saturday that if governments of Muslim-majority nations do not act against countries that allow the desecration of the Quran, Muslims should “punish” those who facilitate attacks on Islam’s holy book. The comments by Hassan Nasrallah came in a video address to tens of thousands gathered in Beirut’s southern suburbs to mark Ashoura, a Shiite holy day commemorating the 7th century martyrdom of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson Hussein. Nasrallah often uses religious occasions to send political messages to followers, and on Saturday slammed recent incidents in which the Quran was burned or otherwise desecrated at authorized demonstrations in Sweden and Denmark. He said Muslims should watch for the outcome of an emergency meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, scheduled to take place in Baghdad on Monday to discuss the organization’s response to the Quran burnings. The organization and its member states should “send a firm, decisive and unequivocal message to these governments that any repeat of the attacks will be met with a boycott,” Nasrallah said. If they do not, he said, Muslim youth should “punish the desecrators.” He did not elaborate what such a boycott and punishment should entail. Members of the crowd, who carried banners with religious slogans alongside the flags of Hezbollah, Lebanon and Palestine, chanted, “Oh, Quran, we are at your service; Oh, Hussein, we are at your service.” Shiites represent over 10% of the world’s 1.8 billion Muslims and view Hussein as the rightful successor to the Prophet Muhammad. Hussein’s death in battle at the hands of Sunnis at Karbala, south of Baghdad, ingrained a deep rift in Islam and continues to this day to play a key role in shaping Shiite identity. Millions of Shiite Muslims in Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and around the world on Friday commemorated Ashoura, while Saturday marked the culmination of the observances in countries such as Lebanon, Iraq and Syria. Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims gathered in the Iraqi city of Karbala, where Hussein is entombed in a gold-domed shrine. In the streets of the Baghdad suburb of Sadr City, mourners gathered to watch reenactments of the Battle of Karbala and Hussein’s death. In the streets, young men clad in black and white slashed their heads with swords and knives to demonstrate their grief. Friends swabbed each other’s heads with tissues and handed each other water. In Syria’s capital, Damascus, the crowds were mourning not only the death of Hussein but a deadly attack in the suburb of Sayida Zeinab, home to a shrine to Zeinab, the daughter of the first Shiite imam, Ali, and granddaughter of the Prophet Muhammad. A bomb hidden in a motorcycle exploded there on Thursday, killing at least six people and wounding dozens more. On Tuesday, another bomb in a motorcycle had wounded two people. On Friday, the Islamic State group — a Sunni militant group that often targets Shiites — claimed responsibility for the attacks, saying Thursday’s bombing came “during their annual polytheistic rituals.” The group’s extreme interpretation of Islam holds Shiite Muslims to be apostates. ___ Associated Press writers Anmar Khalil in Karbala, Iraq, and Hassan Ammar in Beirut contributed to this report.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-lebanons-hezbollah-leader-urges-muslims-to-punish-quran-desecrators-if-governments-fail-to-do-so/
2023-07-29T20:17:18
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-lebanons-hezbollah-leader-urges-muslims-to-punish-quran-desecrators-if-governments-fail-to-do-so/
TORONTO (AP) — Shohei Ohtani hit his major league-leading 39th home run — for a streak of three homers in three at-bats over two games — before being sidelined due to cramping for a second consecutive game. Ohtani was replaced by pinch-hitter Michael Stefanic when his at-bat came up with the bases loaded in the ninth inning due to leg cramps. The Blue Jays beat the Angels 4-1 Friday. Los Angeles manager Phil Nevin said Ohtani was removed because of cramping in both of his calves. “We’ll evaluate it tomorrow when he gets up,” Nevin said. “It’s just cramping right now. It’s kind of in both legs. He’s done a lot of work the last two days and wasn’t able to go.” Ohtani homered twice in the second game of a doubleheader at Detroit on Thursday before leaving with cramps. He threw an eight-strikeout, one-hitter in the opener for his first career MLB shutout. The two-way superstar became the first player to throw a shutout in one game of a doubleheader and hit one homer — much less two — in the other. Thursday’s performance against the Tigers came hours after the team confirmed Ohtani will stay with the Angels for the rest of the season before he becomes a free agent. Nevin said Ohtani’s soreness developed after he grounded out to begin the eighth inning. “He came in and was trying to get some work done and just kept cramping up,” Nevin said. Stefanic struck out looking at a 3-2 pitch from right-hander Jordan Romano as Toronto ended the Angels’ four-game winning streak. On Friday, Ohtani homered on the first pitch he faced, going deep in three straight at-bats. His drive to right came off Blue Jays right-hander Kevin Gausman and traveled 397 feet. Ohtani streak of homers ended when he struck out swinging on a 2-2 pitch from Gausman in the third. He singled off Gausman in the sixth and grounded out to shortstop against left-hander Tim Mayza in the eighth, slowing up as he approached first base. ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-ohtani-hits-majors-leading-39th-home-run-against-blue-jays-extends-hr-streak-to-3-at-bats/
2023-07-29T20:17:24
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-ohtani-hits-majors-leading-39th-home-run-against-blue-jays-extends-hr-streak-to-3-at-bats/
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — A 9-year-old girl and her 10-year-old brother have been called as witnesses in a criminal case against their mother after she was accused of repeatedly “discrediting” the Russian army. Lidia Prudovskaya and her two children were summoned by investigators in the northern Russian region of Arkhangelsk on Friday to give testimony in the case, Russian news outlet Sota reported. Prudovskaya previously faced administrative charges on similar allegations after sharing anti-war posts on Russian social media platform VKontakte in September 2022. Discrediting the Russian military is a criminal offense under a law adopted after Russia sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022. The law is regularly used against Kremlin critics. In April, Russian authorities petitioned to restrict the parental rights of a single father convicted of discrediting the army following an anti-war sketch drawn by his daughter at school. Alexei Moskalyov, 54, was sentenced to two years in prison for social media comments he had made criticizing Moscow’s war in Ukraine, while his daughter Maria was placed in an orphanage. The 13-year-old was later moved to live with her mother.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-russian-investigators-call-children-as-witnesses-against-their-mother-accused-of-discrediting-army/
2023-07-29T20:17:25
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-russian-investigators-call-children-as-witnesses-against-their-mother-accused-of-discrediting-army/
NEW YORK (AP) — Chatter on one of Prabha Rao’s WhatsApp groups exploded last week when India announced that it was severely curtailing some rice exports to the rest of the world, triggering worry among the Indian diaspora in the United States that access to a food staple from home might soon be cut off. As in any crisis situation — think bottled water and toilet paper— some rushed to supermarkets to stock up, stacking carts with bags and bags of rice. In some places, lines formed outside some stores as panic buying ensued. But Rao, who lives near Syracuse, New York, was reassured when the proprietor of her Indian market sent out an email to customers to let them know there was no need to worry: There was an ample supply of rice. At least for now. An earlier than expected El Niño brought drier, warmer weather in some parts of Asia and is expected to harm rice production. But in some parts of India, where the monsoon season was especially brutal, flooding destroyed some crops, adding to production woes and rising prices. Hoping to stave off inflationary pressures on a diet staple, the Indian government earlier this month imposed export bans on non-Basmati white rice varieties, prompting hoarding in some parts of the world. The move was taken “to ensure adequate availability” and “to allay the rise in prices in the domestic market,” India’s Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution announced July 20. Over the past year, prices have increased by more than 11%, and by 3% over the past month, the government said. Non-Basmati white rice constitutes about a fourth of the rice exported by India. “On WhatsApp, I got a lot of messages saying that rice was not going to be available. I think there was a lot of confusion in the beginning because, as you know, rice is very important for us,” Rao said. “When we first heard the news, there was just mild confusion and people started panic buying because they thought that it may not be available,” she said. There are scores of different varieties of rice, with people having their preference depending on taste and texture. India’s export ban does not apply to Basmati rice, a long-grain variety that is more aromatic. The ban applies to short-grain rice that is starchier and has a relatively neutral flavor — which Rao says is preferable in some dishes or favored in specific regions of India, especially in southern areas of the country. At Little India, a grocery store in New York City’s Curry Hill neighborhood in Manhattan, there was no shortage of Basmati rice and other varieties. That wasn’t the case at other Indian groceries. On its Facebook page, India Bazaar, an Indian grocery chain in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, told customers not to panic. “We are working hard to meet all our shoppers’ demands,” the post said. Customers cleared shelves and waited in long lines to stockpile bags of rice, reported NBC Dallas affiliate KXAS. “They really wanted to purchase ten, 12, 15 bags,” India Bazaar’s president, Anand Pabari, told the station. “It was a really crazy situation.” India’s move came days after Russia backed out of a deal to allow Ukrainian wheat safe passage through the Black Sea, prompting warnings that the action could lead to surging prices. Some economists say the ban might further hurt food supplies around the world, and some governments have urged the Indian government to reconsider the export ban. At least in the United States, the supply of imported rice from India may not yet be a problem — despite the panic buying — but a long-term ban would certainly deplete that stock. Roa says she and others will just have to adapt by purchasing rice grown in the United States or imported from other countries. “I might have to substitute Basmati rice,” she said, “but it doesn’t taste that good, especially with South Indian dishes.” A U.S. resident for three decades, Rao said she is accustomed to improvising. “When we first came here, there was not even that much rice from India,” she said. “So I’ve learned to substitute, and I’m fine with the other brands that we get.”
https://www.seattletimes.com/business/india-cuts-rice-exports-triggering-panic-buying-of-food-staple-by-some-indian-expats-in-the-us/?utm_source=RSS&utm_medium=Referral&utm_campaign=RSS_business
2023-07-29T20:17:27
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ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Broncos coach Sean Payton said Friday he regrets disparaging his predecessor in an interview in which he called the work Nathaniel Hackett and his staff did in Denver last season “one of the worst coaching jobs in the NFL” and said there were “20 dirty hands” around Russell Wilson’s career-worst season. “Listen, I had one of those moments where I still had my Fox hat on and not my coaching hat,” said Payton, who’s returning to the sideline this season after a year’s sabbatical during which he worked as a studio football analyst for Fox Sports following a 15-year stint with the New Orleans Saints. Payton’s comments in an interview with USA Today’s Jarrett Bell rocked the NFL because he broke the coaches code in which they refrain from publicly lambasting one another and because he spent his first six months on the job admonishing his players not to look back at last year’s dismal season and to ignore “outside noise.” “I said this to the team in the meeting yesterday: we’ve had a great offseason relative to that, you know, and I’ve been preaching that message and here I am the veteran” doing just that, Payton said during a lengthy mea culpa in his first comments since he ignited the firestorm. “It was a learning experience for me. It was a mistake. Obviously, I needed a little bit more filter … I needed a little bit more restraint. And I regret that,” Payton continued. Payton said he’s usually pretty media savvy “and I just had one of those moments. Jarrett’s a good friend, real good at his job. And two lattes in the morning, first one I see and 40 minutes later, I’m regretting it.” In the interview, Payton also took potshots at the Jets, who hired Hackett as their offensive coordinator this year, and criticized Broncos general manager George Paton and team President Damani Leech for allowing Hackett and his staff to give Wilson so much free rein, including having his personal quarterback coach with him at team headquarters. That was one of many unconventional allowances — another was having his own office upstairs next to the coaches — that drew heavy scrutiny when Wilson looked nothing like the star he’d been in Seattle or like a QB who deserved the $245 million extension he signed last summer. Payton’s criticisms were part of a spirited defense of Wilson, whom he expects to have a big comeback this year and help the Broncos end a seven-year playoff drought. “Listen, I’m not afraid of the expectation,” Payton said Friday. “I’ve talked with several people about, you know, being used to contending for the postseason. You don’t take it for granted. But that mindset needs to be present here. And so yeah, I see this as a team that has that ability.” Payton didn’t specifically apologize for his critical comments but he did say he’ll reach out to Hackett and Jets head coach Robert Saleh “at the right time” to do so. The Broncos host the Jets on Oct. 8, and the row he started “certainly will bring more interest to the game when we play them,” Payton said. “But that seems like years from now.” Closer to home, Payton has some damage control to do with his GM and the team president who came on board late last summer. “The front office and the ownership are the two reasons I came here,” Paton said. “So, George and I are close. He was one of the big attractions, he and ownership. My point was it was across the board organizationally, it wasn’t just one person” responsible for Wilson’s dismal season. ___ AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-sean-payton-says-he-regrets-criticizing-predecessor-nathaniel-hackett-and-his-own-general-manager/
2023-07-29T20:17:31
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-sean-payton-says-he-regrets-criticizing-predecessor-nathaniel-hackett-and-his-own-general-manager/
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Senegal’s opposition leader Ousmane Sonko has been charged with conspiracy against the state and calls for insurrections among other offenses, the public prosecutor said Saturday. The announcement comes weeks after Sonko was convicted on separate charges of corrupting youth and sentenced to two years in prison, which ignited deadly protests across the nation. Prosecutor Abdou Karim Diop made the announcement on state television, a day after Sonko’s lawyer said he was taken into custody for questioning at the police courthouse in the capital, Dakar. In June, Sonko was acquitted on charges of raping a woman who worked at a massage parlor and making death threats against her. But he was convicted on a lighter sentence of corrupting young people, which includes using one’s position of power to have sex with people under age 21. Corrupting youth is a criminal offense in Senegal that is punishable by up to five years in prison and a fine of up to more than $6,000. The conviction led to deadly clashes across the country between Sonko supporters and police, where at least 23 people were killed and dozens injured. Sonko placed third in Senegal’s 2019 presidential election and is popular with the country’s youth. His supporters maintain the charges against him are part of a government effort to derail his candidacy in the 2024 presidential election. Sonko’s ongoing legal battles may bar him from running. Once in prison, he can ask for a retrial for his June conviction. Saturday’s charges are separate, said the public prosecutor. The accusations include calling an insurrection, criminal conspiracy to commit terrorism, compromising public security and theft. It is unclear what led to the charges. Sonko has mostly stayed in his house since being sentenced to prison. In a tweet posted shortly before his arrest on Friday afternoon, Sonko said a team of soldiers were breaking down the door following an altercation with secret service agents who were taking videoing him. Friday evening, an AP reporter saw around 20 protesters burning tires in the middle of the road in Parcelles Assainies, an outer neighborhood of Dakar.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-senegals-opposition-leader-charged-with-conspiracy-against-the-state-and-calls-for-insurrection/
2023-07-29T20:17:32
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-senegals-opposition-leader-charged-with-conspiracy-against-the-state-and-calls-for-insurrection/
Dozens of bullets were fired at a community outreach event late Friday in Seattle’s Rainier Beach neighborhood, injuring five people, two of whom were critically wounded, according to police. A pop-up event to provide food and services in the South Seattle neighborhood was underway when the shots were fired, Police Chief Adrian Diaz said at a news conference at about 10:30 p.m. “Honestly, this is really disturbing,” Diaz said, “when you have victims that were really just trying to do an outreach effort, trying to help people … get people on the right path — and this is what they end up getting hit with.” Investigators believe there were at least two shooters, but no suspect description has been released. Here’s what to know about know about the shooting. What happened The shooting started just before 8 p.m. in the 9200 block of Rainier Avenue South in a parking lot where the event is held every Friday, near what was once a King Donut shop. “Dozens and dozens” of bullets were fired, said Diaz, who responded to the scene Friday, as did Mayor Bruce Harrell. A 24-year-old woman and a 25-year-old man were taken to Harborview Medical center in critical condition. They were in satisfactory condition Saturday morning, according to a hospital spokesperson. Two other men in their 20s were treated at the hospital. One was discharged and the other was expected to be released Saturday. A fifth victim, a man in his 30s, according to police, was treated at the shooting scene. Diaz said it was not immediately known if the victims were targeted or what unfolded before the shots were fired. Who are the suspects? No suspects have been identified as of Saturday morning. The shooting is being investigated by SPD’s Gun Violence Reduction Unit. Police are asking anyone with information to call the SPD Violent Crimes Tip Line at (206) 233-5000. What was the event? Shantel Patu, executive director of Urban Family, a group that focuses on youth programs, neighborhood safety and family support, said the Friday event often gives away food, toys and clothes to the community. Patu came to the scene after her group was contacted Friday to aid police in their investigation by managing the crowd and helping people affected by the shooting. With shootings occurring so often in Seattle, it’s time for the community to do more and for parents to look inside their homes, at what their kids are doing and what they’re going through, she said. “This act of gun violence at an outreach event meant to be a safe place for South Seattle neighbors is appalling and unacceptable,” said Harrell in a statement posted Saturday on the X platform, formerly known as Twitter. “There are too many guns in hands where they do not belong, and we can never accept this violence as a normal fact of life.” Recent shootings Two weeks ago, three men in their 20s were shot a few blocks away from Friday’s shooting scene, in the 9000 block of Seward Park Avenue South. No arrests have been made in that shooting. Last weekend, two men and two women were shot early Sunday during a street racing event on Capitol Hill, near Broadway and East Pike Street. One of the women, 20, died at Harborview Medical Center, according to police. The woman’s family identified her in an online crowdfunding campaign as Essence Naje Greene. No suspects have been identified in either of the shootings. With an alarming uptick in gun violence in the lead-up to summer, the Seattle Police Department in June created a community violence task force of officers and detectives pulled from units across the agency who will target people responsible for the shootings. The task force, composed of about 50 officers, is focusing efforts on four areas where violence is widespread: Aurora Avenue, downtown, the Central District and the city’s South End. Seattle police investigated 55 homicides in 2022, up from 41 the previous year. Fifty-four people were killed in Seattle homicides in 2020, 20 more than in 2019. Seattle Times staff reporter Daisy Zavala Magaña contributed to this story. Material from The Seattle Times archives was used in this reporting.
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2023-07-29T20:17:34
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https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/law-justice/what-we-know-about-the-seattle-mass-shooting-at-a-community-event/?utm_source=RSS&utm_medium=Referral&utm_campaign=RSS_seattle-news
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – In states across the country this year, Republicans have talked a lot about restricting drag performances in front of children. But that talk, and even their efforts, haven't amounted to much. Bills restricting drag have failed to pass, passed as watered-down laws, have been vetoed or, in the case of three states that did manage to pass meaningful restrictions, laws have been temporarily halted by federal judges. Friday, in fact, a judge temporarily blocked a law in the last remaining state with enforceable restrictions – Montana – just days before the start of Pride festivities. A few states' lawmakers are still in session, though, so more efforts could be afoot. In Arkansas, where Republican state Sen. Gary Stubblefield championed and sponsored a bill earlier this year, he said drag shows harm kids and "take away their innocence." "I can't think of any redeeming quality, anything good that can come from taking children and putting them in front of a bunch of grown men that are dressed like women," Stubblefield said back in January as he introduced his bill on the floor of the Arkansas Senate. 'Prurient interest' and the First Amendment Stubblefield's bill contained key language that showed up in a lot of states' attempted drag restrictions – an appeal to the "prurient interest." (Texas, Tennessee, Montana, Arizona, South Dakota, for example.) "That word – prurient interest – means excessive interest in sexual matters," Stubblefield explained to lawmakers in committee. "Most drag shows do not appeal to the prurient interest," says JT Morris, an attorney for the free-speech group Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. "Even if they did, saying something appeals to the 'prurient interest' under the First Amendment is not enough to regulate it," he says, noting that this kind of language makes it harder for a bill to hold up to basic legal scrutiny. "You can't pass a state law based on disagreement with somebody's viewpoint. It's a textbook First Amendment violation." And that disagreement has been palpable across the country. In Arkansas, Stubblefield's bill was met with large public backlash from those who say drag is about showmanship, not sex. "I do drag as an art form," says Jeremy Stuthard, an Arkansas drag performer. "I take a decent-looking guy and turn him into a statue-esk Barbie doll, and have a great time and put smiles on people's faces and that's all I really try to do." Stuthard says most of the children he meets at drag brunches and story hours aren't there to indulge a 'prurient interest', but to have fun listening to a story read by a costumed actor. Drag restrictions put on hold and watered down In Tennessee, the day before that state's drag restrictions were due to go into effect, a Trump-appointed U.S. District Judge temporarily struck down the law due to its constitutional vagueness. In his ruling, U.S. District Judge Thomas Parker wrote, "Whether some of us may like it or not," the U.S. Supreme Court has interpreted the First Amendment "as protecting speech that is indecent but not obscene." A similar law in Florida has been temporarily blocked. For a while, that left Montana as the only state in the country with an enforceable drag law, until the courts temporarily blocked that one, too. In Arkansas, Sen. Stubblefield's drag ban bill was amended until it hardly resembled a drag ban. The final version of the law, which passed by large margins, now regulates stripping, not drag shows. "[The]Amended House Bill is the only way to really protect minors. For another reason, it's the only draft that will stand up in court," Stubblefield said of the amendment, which he didn't write but ultimately agreed to. "None of us like to pass a bill that's going to get struck down by a judge and not help any children at all." Josie Lenora is the politics/government reporter at KUAR in Little Rock, Ark. Copyright 2023 KUAR
https://www.kvpr.org/npr-news/npr-news/2023-07-29/despite-all-the-talk-no-states-have-active-laws-banning-drag-in-front-of-kids
2023-07-29T20:17:37
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https://www.kvpr.org/npr-news/npr-news/2023-07-29/despite-all-the-talk-no-states-have-active-laws-banning-drag-in-front-of-kids
‘I’m still in shock’: Woman wins lottery jackpot while taking break from work WILMINGTON, N.C. (WECT/Gray News) - A North Carolina woman won a triple-digit jackpot thanks to purchasing a lucky scratch-off ticket. According to the North Carolina Educational Lottery, Jodi Owens won a $100,000 prize by putting her break time to good use and buying a lottery ticket. Officials said Owens, a retired nurse practitioner, took a break from doing some work around her house and stopped at a Civietown Mini Mart in Shallotte. She picked up a few items including a Black Titanium scratch-off. She returned home to scratch her winning ticket. “I’m still in shock,” Owens said. “It’s truly a blessing.” Owens claimed her prize on Friday and took home $71,259 after taxes. “I’m going to pay my mortgage off and pay my car off,” she said. “I’m thinking about getting a manicure and pedicure too!” Lottery officials said the Black Titanium scratch-off game just launched last month and is available for $30. Copyright 2023 WECT via Gray Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/2023/07/29/im-still-shock-woman-wins-lottery-jackpot-while-taking-break-work/
2023-07-29T20:17:37
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https://www.cleveland19.com/2023/07/29/im-still-shock-woman-wins-lottery-jackpot-while-taking-break-work/
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombian police arrested the president’s son Saturday as part of a high-profile money laundering probe into funds he allegedly collected from convicted drug traffickers during last year’s presidential campaign. President Gustavo Petro, a former rebel who rose through Colombia’s political ranks as an anti-corruption crusader, said he wouldn’t interfere with the investigation. “As an individual and father, it pains me to see so much self destruction and one of my sons going to jail,” Petro said in an early morning message on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. “As president of the republic, I’ve assured the chief prosecutor’s office that it will have all of the guarantees so it can proceed according to the law.” The arrest of Nicolas Petro is a major blow to the government, which has been buffeted by conservative attacks from day one at the same time it has struggled to maintain bipartisan support for Colombia in the U.S., a longtime ally in the war on drugs and fight against illegal armed groups. The investigation stems from shocking declarations made by Nicolas Petro’s ex-wife, Daysuris del Carmen Vasquez, to local media outlet Semana earlier this year. In the extended interview, Vasquez detailed how she was present at meetings when her husband arranged a donation of more than 600 million pesos (around $150,000) from a politician once convicted in Washington of drug trafficking and who was seeking the Petro campaign’s support to resume his political career. She said President Petro was unaware of her son’s dealings and the money he collected in his campaign’s name was kept inside a safe inside the couple’s home in the coastal city of Barranquilla. Nicolas Petro has denied his ex wife’s claims as unfounded. The chief prosecutor’s office said in a statement that Nicolas Petro and his ex-wife were taken into custody on orders of a court in Bogota around 6 a.m. local time Saturday. It said that once brought before a judge, prosecutors would seek their provisional detention as it investigates the two for money laundering.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-son-of-colombias-president-arrested-as-part-of-money-laundering-probe/
2023-07-29T20:17:38
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-son-of-colombias-president-arrested-as-part-of-money-laundering-probe/
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid watched his team work out in pads for the first time since their Super Bowl triumph last February and saw his players’ energy rise. “Naturally it does that,” Reid said. “But I like the way they did it, how they got after each other.” The defending champions ratcheted up the competition for an hour, 40 minutes in sweltering conditions as the heat index soared into the mid-90s. The air wasn’t all that was hot, like when cornerback Dicaprio Bootle continued hacking at the football in the grasp of tight end Travis Kelce after a play. Cornerback Lamar Jackson raised eyebrows when he delivered a late hit on receiver Kekoa Crawford out of bounds. Reid doesn’t mind trash-talking and spirited play as long as players keep their wits about them. “They’re going to jaw,” Reid said. “It’s hot, humid, they’re going to jaw a little bit. As long as there are no punches thrown we’re all right.” The Chiefs dug in during practice for three separate periods of 11-on-11, along with a nine-on-seven run session. However, the most anticipated session in Friday’s practice focused on offensive and defensive linemen facing off in pass-rushing scenarios. “It’s you mano a mano,” guard Trey Smith said. “All the technical details, every little piece matters. Being able to lock in those little seconds and get your job done.” Linebacker Willie Gay said the hard, hot practice was tailor made for Reid. Although it was grueling, “I told the guys, as long as we continue to get better, it’s going to make the games and preseason even easier, and we’ll start winning,” he continued. There’s rust to knock off whenever the pads first come on. “You have some things that you got to clean up, some things you can be a little tighter technique-wise, but it’s always good to put the pads back on,” Smith said. “It’s always good knowing the season’s around the corner.” Off the field, defensive tackle Chris Jones held out for seventh day and Reid, who hasn’t communicated with Jones recently, didn’t know when the holdout would end. “We’re moving fast and furious even though he’s not here,” Reid said. The 29-year-old-Jones is set to earn $19.5 million in base salary this season in the final year of a four-year extension signed in 2020. The All-Pro is seeking an extension that would make him the league’s second-highest-paid defensive tackle behind Los Angeles Rams star Aaron Donald, whose contract sports an annual average value of $31.67 million. Jones has been fined $50,000 fine for each missed day of training camp missed, a total that’s grown to $350,000 00 so far. If Jones doesn’t report by Aug. 13, he will be assessed an additional fine of $1.147 for missing the team’s preseason opener against New Orleans. NOTES: Linebacker Nick Bolton returned to practice Friday following a brief illness, but fellow linebacker Drue Tranquill exited practice early due to a sprained neck. Defensive end Mike Danna left with a strained calf while tight end Jody Fortson is undergoing further examination on a shoulder injury. Wide receiver Kadarius Toney expects to miss the remainder of training camp after surgery Tuesday for a torn meniscus. ___ AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-super-bowl-champion-chiefs-hold-hot-tough-practice-in-1st-day-of-pads/
2023-07-29T20:17:38
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-super-bowl-champion-chiefs-hold-hot-tough-practice-in-1st-day-of-pads/
Melting ice near Matterhorn reveals remains of climber missing for 37 years (CNN) - The remains of a climber who disappeared while hiking along a glacier near Switzerland’s Matterhorn 37 years ago have been found. Police say the melting ice on the glacier helped lead to the discovery of the remains. They were found on July 12 by climbers hiking along the Theodul Glacier. Several pieces of equipment were also found. Police say a DNA analysis helped identify the remains as belonging to a 38-year-old German mountain climber who was reported missing in September 1986. Police also say they had searched for the climber at the time, but they were unsuccessful. No further details about the climber’s identity or his cause of death have been revealed. Police say the melting glaciers have led to the reemergence of bodies of those who were reported missing several decades ago. Scientists announced earlier this week that July is on track to be Earth’s hottest month ever recorded. Copyright 2023 CNN Newsource. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/2023/07/29/melting-ice-near-matterhorn-reveals-remains-climber-missing-37-years/
2023-07-29T20:17:44
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https://www.cleveland19.com/2023/07/29/melting-ice-near-matterhorn-reveals-remains-climber-missing-37-years/
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday signed a law moving the official Christmas Day holiday to Dec. 25 from Jan. 7, the day when the Russian Orthodox Church observes it. The explanatory note attached to the law said its goal is to “abandon the Russian heritage,” including that of “imposing the celebration of Christmas” on Jan. 7, and cited Ukrainians’ “relentless, successful struggle for their identity” and “the desire of all Ukrainians to live their lives with their own traditions, holidays,” fueled by Russia’s 17-month-old aggression against the country. Last year, some Ukrainians already observed Christmas on Dec. 25, in a gesture that represented separation from Russia, its culture and religious traditions. The law also moves the Day of Ukrainian Statehood to July 15 from July 28, and the Day of Defenders of Ukraine to Oct. 1 from Oct. 14. The Russian Orthodox Church, which claims sovereignty over Orthodoxy in Ukraine, and some other Eastern Orthodox churches continue to use the ancient Julian calendar. Christmas falls 13 days later on that calendar, or Jan. 7, than it does on the Gregorian calendar used by most church and secular groups. The Catholic Church first adopted the modern, more astronomically precise Gregorian calendar in the 16th century. Protestants and some Orthodox churches have since aligned their own calendars for the purpose of calculating Christmas and Easter. Ukraine’s religious landscape has fractured for years. There are two branches of Orthodox Christianity in the country, one aligned with the Russian church, even as it enjoys broad autonomy, the other completely independent of it. The Orthodox Church of Ukraine, the branch that is separate from the Russian church, announced earlier this year that it was switching to the Revised Julian calendar, which marks Christmas on Dec. 25. Its leadership last year allowed believers to celebrate the holiday on Dec. 25. Russia’s state news agency RIA Novosti reported on Saturday that the rival Orthodox Church, which is aligned with the Russian Orthodox Church, vowed to continue observing Christmas on Jan. 7. Zelenskyy on Saturday traveled to the war-torn Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine, which Russia has illegally annexed, but only partially occupies, and met with members of the country’s Special Operation Forces. Zelenskyy noted in an online statement that Saturday marks their official day of recognition and also the anniversary of the deadly attack on the Olenivka prison in the Russian-held part of the region in which dozens of prisoners of war were killed. Russia and Ukraine accused each other of the attack, with both sides saying that the assault was premeditated in a bid to cover up atrocities. A United Nations fact-finding mission requested by Russia and Ukraine was sent to investigate the killings, but the team was disbanded in January 2023 due to security concerns. Zelenskyy described the attack as one of Russia’s “most vile and cruel crimes” in a video statement Saturday.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-ukraine-moves-official-christmas-day-holiday-to-dec-25-denouncing-russian-imposed-traditions/
2023-07-29T20:17:45
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-ukraine-moves-official-christmas-day-holiday-to-dec-25-denouncing-russian-imposed-traditions/
LOS ANGELES (AP) — As Bronny James continues to recover after going into cardiac arrest, his Southern California teammates have been at practice to prepare for a 10-day exhibition tour of Greece and Croatia that begins next week. The tour will run from from Aug. 5-15 and see the Trojans visit Athens and Mykonos, Greece, and Dubrovnik, Croatia. Teams are allowed to go on a foreign tour once every four years under NCAA rules. James was discharged from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center on Thursday and is resting at home, according to a statement from the hospital. His father, Lakers superstar LeBron James, also posted on social media that his family is “safe and healthy.” Bronny James will continue to undergo tests to determine the cause of his cardiac arrest, which occurred Monday morning during a workout at USC’s Galen Center. Cardiac arrest occurs when the heart abruptly stops beating, because of a problem with its electrical activity. While uncommon in young people, sudden cardiac arrest is the leading medical cause of death in young athletes. Some studies have estimated one sudden cardiac death in 50,000 to 80,000 young athletes each year. No information has been made public about what may have caused Bronny James’ cardiac arrest. But one of the most common causes in young athletes is an underlying problem with the heart’s structure, such as a genetic condition called hypertrophic cardiomyopathy that leads to a thickened heart muscle more prone to irregular electrical activity. A more rare cause is commotio cordis, which occurs when someone receives a sharp blow to the chest during a specific part of the heartbeat’s cycle — what happened to Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin earlier this year. James was the second high-profile USC basketball recruit to go into cardiac arrest in the last year. Vincent Iwuchuwku also was stricken during a workout last July, but the 7-foot-1 center returned to the court six months later and appeared in 14 games. It’s too soon to know how James’ playing career could be affected, especially without a lot of information being made public. Various experts point to James’ quick move out of intensive care and being released three days later as encouraging. The upcoming trip is important for the Trojans as James recovers. USC had the nation’s fourth-ranked recruiting class, including the top-rated player in guard Isaiah Collier. James committed to the Trojans in May after the 6-foot-3 18-year-old became one of the nation’s top prospects as a two-way point guard for Sierra Canyon School in Chatsworth, California. He is the sixth McDonald’s All-American to come to USC since Andy Enfield became coach in 2013. With his family fame and huge social media following, Bronny James also has the top name, image and likeness valuation in sports at $6.3 million, as estimated by On3.com. He is the oldest of LeBron and Savannah James’ three children. ___ AP Sports Writer Greg Beacham and AP Health & Science Writer Lauran Neergard contributed to this report. ___ AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/lebron-james
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-usc-still-preparing-for-a-european-tour-as-bronny-james-recovers-at-home-after-cardiac-arrest/
2023-07-29T20:17:45
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/ap-usc-still-preparing-for-a-european-tour-as-bronny-james-recovers-at-home-after-cardiac-arrest/
Tyler Reddick will lead the field to the green flag for Sunday’s Cup race at Richmond (3 p.m. ET on USA Network). MORE: Richmond starting lineup Reddick won the pole in Saturday’s qualifying at Richmond. He’s in his first year at 23XI Racing and is joined on the front row by Kyle Busch, the driver who replaced Reddick at Richard Childress Racing. Denny Hamlin starts third and is followed by Chase Elliott, who is outside a playoff spot with five races left in the regular season, and Bubba Wallace, who drives for the Hamlin-owned 23XI Racing team and is Reddick’s teammate. Kevin Harvick, making his final Cup start at Richmond, will start eighth.
https://www.nbcsports.com/nascar/news/richmond-cup-starting-lineup
2023-07-29T20:17:50
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https://www.nbcsports.com/nascar/news/richmond-cup-starting-lineup
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Saturday pushed back against Australian demands for an end to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s prosecution, saying the Australian citizen was accused of “very serious criminal conduct” in publishing a trove of classified documents more than a decade ago. Australia’s center-left Labor Party government has been arguing since winning the elections last year that the United States should end its pursuit of the 52-year-old, who has spent four years in a British prison fighting extradition to the United States. Assange’s freedom is widely seen as a test of Australia’s leverage with President Joe Biden’s administration. Blinken confirmed on Saturday that Assange had been discussed in annual talks with Foreign Minister Penny Wong in Brisbane, Australia. “I understand the concerns and views of Australians. I think it’s very important that our friends here understand our concerns about this matter,” Blinken told reporters. “Mr. Assange was charged with very serious criminal conduct in the United States in connection with his alleged role in one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of our country,” he added. Wong said Assange’s prosecution had “dragged for too long” and that Australia wanted the charges “brought to a conclusion.” Australia remains ambiguous about whether the United States should drop the prosecution or strike a plea bargain. Assange faces 17 charges of espionage and one charge of computer misuse over WikiLeaks’ publication of of hundreds of thousands of classified diplomatic and military documents in 2010. American prosecutors allege he helped U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning steal classified diplomatic cables and military files that WikiLeaks later published, putting lives at risk. Australia argues there is a “disconnect” between the U.S. treatment of Assange and Manning. Then-U.S. President Barack Obama commuted Manning’s 35-year sentence to seven years, which allowed her release in 2017.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-us-secretary-of-state-tells-australia-that-wikileaks-founder-is-accused-of-very-serious-crime/
2023-07-29T20:17:51
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-us-secretary-of-state-tells-australia-that-wikileaks-founder-is-accused-of-very-serious-crime/
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Racing will resume at Churchill Downs in September, with no changes being made after a review of surfaces and safety protocols in the wake of 12 horse deaths, including seven in the days leading up to the Kentucky Derby in May. The Louisville track suspended racing operations on June 7 and moved the rest of its spring meet to Ellis Park in western Kentucky at the recommendation of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, the sport’s national overseer. Training continued at Churchill Downs during the track’s investigation. Churchill Downs Inc. CEO Bill Carstanjen called the deaths “a series of unfortunate circumstances” and said the review “didn’t find anything fundamentally wrong or different about our track from previous years.” “That, in a sense, can sometimes be unsatisfying,” he said. “But that’s business, and that’s sports.” Two of the horse deaths occurred in undercard races on Derby day. Another five died later. “The takeaway is, the track is very safe,” Carstanjen said Thursday on an earnings call with CDI investors. “What we needed to do was spend some of this time in the interim, while we ran the rest of the (spring) meet at Ellis to just go soup to nuts through every single thing we do at the racetrack. There was nothing that jumped out as an apparent cause of the injuries, of the breakdowns; and, as we went through and rebuilt our processes from the ground up to check everything that we do to make extra sure, we didn’t find anything material.” The track’s fall meet begins Sept. 14 and runs through Oct. 1. ___ AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/top-stories/ap-top-headlines/ap-churchill-downs-to-resume-racing-at-fall-meet-with-no-changes-after-horse-deaths/
2023-07-29T20:17:52
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https://www.ksn.com/top-stories/ap-top-headlines/ap-churchill-downs-to-resume-racing-at-fall-meet-with-no-changes-after-horse-deaths/
How to Watch the Astros vs. Rays Game: Streaming & TV Channel Info for July 29 Hunter Brown and the Houston Astros will hit the field against the Tampa Bay Rays and starting pitcher Taj Bradley on Saturday at Minute Maid Park. Sign up for Fubo to watch this matchup and make sure you don't miss any of the action all season long! Bet with theKing of Sportsbooks and use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Check out the latest odds and place your bets with BetMGM Sportsbook. Use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Astros vs. Rays Live Stream, TV Channel and Game Info: - Date: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Time: 7:15 PM ET - TV Channel: FOX - Location: Houston, Texas - Venue: Minute Maid Park - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! Bet on this matchup with BetMGM Sportsbook and use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Discover More About This Game Astros Batting & Pitching Performance - The Astros rank 10th-best in MLB action with 130 total home runs. - Houston's .411 slugging percentage ranks 14th in baseball. - The Astros are 18th in MLB with a .248 batting average. - Houston is the 12th-highest scoring team in baseball, averaging 4.7 runs per game (487 total). - The Astros' .317 on-base percentage ranks 16th in MLB. - The Astros strike out 7.9 times per game to rank fifth in baseball. - The 9.3 strikeouts per nine innings put together by Houston's pitching staff ranks sixth in MLB. - Houston has a 3.81 team ERA that ranks third across all MLB pitching staffs. - Pitchers for the Astros combine for the 14th-ranked WHIP in the majors (1.271). Rays Batting & Pitching Performance - The Rays rank fourth in Major League Baseball with 151 home runs. - Tampa Bay ranks fifth in the majors with a .444 team slugging percentage. - The Rays' .255 batting average is among the best in baseball, ranking 10th in MLB. - Tampa Bay has scored the fourth-most runs in baseball this season with 549. - The Rays have an on-base percentage of .327 this season, which ranks 10th in the league. - The Rays rank 17th in MLB in strikeouts per game with an average of 8.6 whiffs per contest. - Tampa Bay strikes out 9.2 batters per nine innings as a pitching staff, eighth-best in MLB. - Tampa Bay has the first-best ERA (3.69) in the majors this season. - Rays pitchers have a 1.178 WHIP this season, second-best in the majors. Astros Probable Starting Pitcher - Brown gets the start for the Astros, his 20th of the season. He is 6-7 with a 4.27 ERA and 122 strikeouts through 105 1/3 innings pitched. - His most recent appearance was on Sunday against the Oakland Athletics, when the righty threw six innings, surrendering two earned runs while giving up six hits. - Brown heads into this game with nine quality starts under his belt this year. - Brown is aiming for his third straight outing lasting five or more innings. He averages 5.5 frames per appearance on the mound. - He has had four appearances this season in which he did not surrender an earned run. Rays Probable Starting Pitcher - Bradley (5-6) will take to the mound for the Rays and make his 16th start of the season. - The right-hander gave up three earned runs and allowed five hits in five innings pitched against the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday. - He has earned a quality start one time in 15 starts this season. - Bradley will look to pitch five or more innings for the fourth start in a row. - He has two appearances with no earned runs allowed in 15 chances this season. Astros Schedule Rays Schedule Not all offers available in all states, please visit BetMGM for the latest promotions for your area. Must be 21+ to gamble, please wager responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, contact 1-800-GAMBLER. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/astros-vs-rays-mlb-live-stream-tv/
2023-07-29T20:17:56
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https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/astros-vs-rays-mlb-live-stream-tv/
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Over 100 mercenaries belonging to the Russian-linked Wagner group in Belarus have moved close to the border with Poland, the Polish prime minister said Saturday. Mateusz Morawiecki said at a news conference that the mercenaries had moved close to the Suwalki Gap, a strategic stretch of Polish territory situated between Belarus and Kaliningrad, a Russian territory separated from the mainland. Poland is a member of both the European Union and NATO, and it has worried about its security with Russian ally Belarus and Ukraine on its eastern border. Those fears have grown since Wagner group mercenaries arrived in Belarus since the group’s short-lived rebellion earlier this summer. The Poland-Belarus border has already been a tense place for a couple of years, ever since large numbers of immigrants from the Middle East and Africa began arriving, seeking to enter the EU by crossing into Poland, as well as Lithuania. Poland’s government accuses Russia and Belarus of using the migrants to destabilize Poland and other EU countries. It calls the migration a form of hybrid warfare, and has responded by building a high wall along part of its border with Belarus. “Now the situation becomes even more dangerous,” Morawiecki told reporters. He added that “this is certainly a step towards a further hybrid attack on Polish territory.” Morawiecki spoke during a visit to an arms factory in Gliwice, in southern Poland, where Leopard tanks used by the Ukrainian army are being repaired.
https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-wagner-mercenaries-in-belarus-move-closer-to-the-polish-border-polands-prime-minister-says/
2023-07-29T20:17:58
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https://who13.com/news/international-news/ap-international/ap-wagner-mercenaries-in-belarus-move-closer-to-the-polish-border-polands-prime-minister-says/
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Ballots from Spaniards living abroad were counted Friday, and they gave a new twist to the inconclusive results from the general election. The conservative Popular Party gained an additional seat from Madrid’s constituency late in the day at the expense of the Socialist Workers’ Party. That change gives the right-wing coalition of the PP and the far-right Vox party 172 seats in the lower house of parliament and drops left-wing forces to 171. Forming a stable governing coalition will require one of the blocks to have the support of 176 lawmakers in the 350-seat body, and it’s not clear that either side will be able to obtain enough backing from smaller parties. The country’s main political parties had been waiting for the count in the hope they might win seats from opponents and recompose the final picture. Results coming in from different constituencies during the day showed no changes across Spain — until Madrid added the last-gasp surprise. The switch likely will make it even tougher to cobble together a government. Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is considered the only leader with a chance to form a coalition, since the Popular Party led by Alberto Núñez Feijóo is being shunned by other parties for allying with Vox. But Sánchez does not have it easy. He needs help from secessionist parties in the Basque Country and Catalonia, and it could be politically risky to bid for support from the Catalan party Junts, which is headed by Carles Puigdemont, a leader of 2017’s failed secession bid in Catalonia. His party has seven seats, but its goal of forcing Spain to allow a secession referendum is Catalonia is highly unpopular, including in Sánchez’s party. The new parliament is to convene Aug. 17 and it will have three months to vote in a new prime minister. Otherwise, new elections would be called.
https://www.ksn.com/top-stories/ap-top-headlines/ap-count-of-ballots-from-spaniards-abroad-gives-edge-to-right-wing-block-and-deepens-the-stalemate/
2023-07-29T20:17:59
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https://www.ksn.com/top-stories/ap-top-headlines/ap-count-of-ballots-from-spaniards-abroad-gives-edge-to-right-wing-block-and-deepens-the-stalemate/
The Cardinals have some injury issues at linebacker, so they added a healthy body to the group on Saturday. The team announced the signing of David Anenih to their 90-man roster. Cornerback Dylan Mabin was let go in a corresponding move. Anenih spent time with the Titans, Steelers, and Falcons after going undrafted out of Houston last year. He did not see regular season time in any of those stops. The Cardinals have rookie B.J. Ojulari on the PUP list and Myjai Sanders injured his hand in practice earlier this week. Anenih gives them another body for practice and he could turn out to be more than that with a good showing in the coming days.
https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/cardinals-sign-lb-david-anenih
2023-07-29T20:18:00
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https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/cardinals-sign-lb-david-anenih
The intense heat wave continued its grip on many parts of the country, including in New York City, where temperatures were expected to surge into the lower 90s (around 35 C) on Saturday, but the humid, thick air could make it feel well over the century mark. The sizzling air has heated up everything from the ocean to pools, making it difficult to cool off. One woman in the Southwest has been throwing blocks of ice in her pool. Metro Phoenix could see its 30th day of 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43.3 degrees Celsius) or higher on Saturday before temperatures start dropping in the city and other areas that saw some of the most extreme temperatures in July. Scientists expect this month will be the hottest globally on record and likely the warmest human civilization has seen. Here’s what’s happening related to extreme weather and the climate right now: — Heat advisories continued in New York City, where high humidity has made it uncomfortable and dangerous. Some 500 cooling centers have opened across the city’s five boroughs, and the governor authorized the state’s swimming pools to stay open later. The extreme heat was forecast to ease Sunday. — Parts of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut were under a heat advisory through Saturday night. In northern New England, temperatures were down 10 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit after getting into the 90s (around 35 C) on Friday, but the humidity lingered throughout the region. Afternoon and evening storms were forecast and could bring a chance of flash flooding. — The weather was equally stifling and muggy in the center of the United States. An excessive heat warning was issued for much of Missouri, Kansas and western Illinois, where the sweaty mix of heat and humidity could make it feel like up to 112 degrees Fahrenheit (about 44 C) in parts. St. Louis health director Dr. Mati Hlatshwayo Davis said the risk of heat stroke was high and warned that interior car temperatures could reach lethal levels in minutes. — Temperatures are forecast to start to drop in the hottest areas in the southwest of the United States, including Phoenix, Las Vegas, Albuquerque and Death Valley, California. — With the scorching heat, even going for a swim offered little to no relief. Sea surface temperatures rose above 100 degrees Fahrenheit (about 38 C) at a spot off Florida’s southern tip, while pools in the Southwest gave the sensation of being in soup. — The high temperatures are reaching across the globe, including in Bolivia, where a drought alert has been declared for Lake Titicaca after water levels of the world’s highest navigable lake receded to a critically low threshold. ___ Associated Press writers Bobby Caina Calvan in New York; Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas; Ken Ritter in Las Vegas; and Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire contributed to this report. ___ Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content. ) Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
https://www.mynews13.com/fl/orlando/ap-top-news/2023/07/29/climate-glimpse-heres-what-you-need-to-see-and-know-today
2023-07-29T20:18:01
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https://www.mynews13.com/fl/orlando/ap-top-news/2023/07/29/climate-glimpse-heres-what-you-need-to-see-and-know-today
Gabriel Arias Player Prop Bets: Guardians vs. White Sox - July 29 Published: Jul. 29, 2023 at 3:37 PM EDT|Updated: 40 minutes ago The Cleveland Guardians, including Gabriel Arias (.217 slugging percentage in past 10 games, including no home run), battle starter Mike Clevinger and the Chicago White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field, Saturday at 7:10 PM ET. He had a hitless showing in his previous game (0-for-2) against the White Sox. Gabriel Arias Game Info & Props vs. the White Sox - Game Day: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Game Time: 7:10 PM ET - Stadium: Guaranteed Rate Field - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! - White Sox Starter: Mike Clevinger - TV Channel: NBCS-CHI - Hits Prop: Over/under 0.5 hits (Over odds: -133) - Home Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +575) - RBI Prop: Over/under 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +250) - Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 runs (Over odds: +170) Looking to place a prop bet on Gabriel Arias? Check out what's available at BetMGM and use bonus code "GNPLAY" when you sign up with this link! Explore More About This Game Gabriel Arias At The Plate - Arias has six doubles, four home runs and 23 walks while batting .193. - In 40.4% of his games this year (23 of 57), Arias has picked up at least one hit, and in six of those games (10.5%) he recorded at least two. - He has homered in 7.0% of his games in 2023 (four of 57), and 2.3% of his trips to the plate. - Arias has driven in a run in four games this season (7.0%), including two games with multiple runs batted in. - He has scored in 12 of 57 games (21.1%), including multiple runs twice. Ready to play FanDuel Daily Fantasy? Get in the game using our link. Gabriel Arias Home/Away Batting Splits White Sox Pitching Rankings - The 9.7 strikeouts per nine innings compiled by the White Sox pitching staff leads MLB. - The White Sox have the 24th-ranked team ERA across all MLB pitching staffs (4.63). - The White Sox allow the third-most home runs in baseball (145 total, 1.4 per game). - Clevinger gets the start for the White Sox, his 13th of the season. He is 3-4 with a 3.88 ERA and 53 strikeouts in 62 2/3 innings pitched. - His last appearance came on Thursday, June 15 against the Los Angeles Dodgers, when the righty went 4 2/3 scoreless innings while allowing three hits. - The 32-year-old has put up a 3.88 ERA and 7.6 strikeouts per nine innings across 12 games this season, while giving up a batting average of .244 to his opponents. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/gabriel-arias-mlb-player-prop-bets/
2023-07-29T20:18:03
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https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/gabriel-arias-mlb-player-prop-bets/
ATLANTA (AP) — “Excuse me, are you a city of Atlanta voter? Do you know about ‘Cop City?’” Clipboards in hand, canvassers Sienna Giraldi and Gabriel Sanchez approached shopper after shopper at a Kroger supermarket lot on a recent evening collecting signatures for a referendum over whether to cancel the city’s lease of a proposed police and firefighter training center that’s become a national rallying cry for environmentalists and anti-police protesters. Most people kept on walking. Others said they weren’t registered to vote or didn’t live within the city limits, both of which are required. Many seemed to have no idea what “Cop City” was and weren’t interested in finding out. The fact that it began raining certainly didn’t help. By the end of a 90-minute shift, 21 people had signed. “We definitely need to come back here,” Sanchez said. “I was on a roll before the rain started.” Over the past month, hundreds of people like them — many volunteers, some paid — have spread out across the city of about 500,000, in hopes of persuading more than 70,000 registered voters to sign on to the petition drive. The deadline had been mid-August, but the effort got a boost Thursday when a federal judge extended it to late September, though significant logistical and legal hurdles remain. Technically, organizers say, they need just 58,203 signatures by Aug. 14 to qualify for the November ballot — the equivalent of 15% of registered voters as of the last city election — but they set the higher goal knowing some will be disqualified. If that’s not reached until late August or September, the referendum wouldn’t happen until March, when a competitive GOP presidential primary could turn out conservative voters and hurt its chances. The city also could move forward with construction in the meantime, unless a judge intervenes. As of July 25, the drive had collected more than 30,000 signatures, according to Paul Glaze, a spokesperson for the Vote to Stop Cop City Coalition. And with the paid canvassing effort still ramping up, he expects the pace to pick up significantly. “We’re confident of hitting our number,” Glaze said. “How much extra padding we’re able to get is still a question. … Our experience is that when you talk about this with people, when they hear the price tag, when you ask them if they would choose this or something else to spend the money on, the vast majority are against it.” Organizers of the drive say Mayor Andre Dickens and the City Council have failed to listen to a groundswell of opposition to the $90 million, 85-acre (34-hectare) training center, which they fear will lead to greater militarization of the police and exacerbate environmental damage in the South River Forest in a poor, predominantly Black area. Officials counter that the campus would replace outdated, far-flung facilities and boost police morale, which is beset by hiring and retention struggles, especially in the wake of 2020 protests over racial injustice. Dickens has said that the facility will teach the “most progressive training and curriculum in the country” and that officials have repeatedly revised their plans to address concerns about noise pollution and environmental impact. In June, after hearing about 14 hours of public testimony that was overwhelmingly against the training center, council members voted 11-4 to approve $67 million toward the project. Outraged but not surprised, organizers of the petition drive announced it the next day. Outside the Kroger, located in a majority-Black neighborhood a few miles south of a Wendy’s parking lot where officers fatally shot Rayshard Brooks in 2020, Giraldi chatted with Lee Little, a Black construction worker who stopped to talk despite the rain, his hands full of bagged groceries. Little was working near the proposed training center in March and saw the helicopters and mass of armed officers that descended on the area after about 150 masked activists stormed the site and torched construction equipment. He hadn’t thought about it much since, but he signed the petition after hearing Giraldi’s pitch. “She was just saying that City Council approved 60-something million dollars without listening to the taxpayers. Does that sound fair to you? That should be for the voters to decide,” Little said afterward. Another who signed was Makela Atchison, who was wearing a “Black Voters Matter” T-shirt as she left the store with her two children. “I’m not saying I’m for it or against it,” Atchison said, “but I want to be able to have my input.” The signature drive is the most ambitious in terms of numbers that has ever been launched in a Georgia city, but it has precedent from last year in Camden County, where voters overwhelmingly rejected a planned launchpad for blasting commercial rockets into space. The Georgia Supreme Court in February unanimously upheld the legality of that referendum, though it remains an open question whether citizens can veto decisions of city governments. In a recent court filing seeking to quash the Atlanta referendum, attorneys for the city said residents can’t force officials to retroactively revoke the lease agreement, which was made in 2021. They called organizers’ efforts “futile” and “invalid.” The state agreed with the city in a separate filing, though that dispute is on hold for now. Still, activists see the referendum as the best remaining option to block the project. They’ve gotten support from numerous groups, including the Working Families Party and the New Georgia Project Action Fund, which pledged to get 15,000 signatures over the next few weeks. Activist Hannah Riley tries to collect a handful of them whenever she is out in public, including on a recent afternoon as she worked remotely from Muchacho, a popular taco restaurant in the ultra-liberal Reynoldstown neighborhood. At the end of her table, she taped a sign that read: “Voter? Sign Stop Cop City Petition Here.” “This is a bit of a Hail Mary, but it’s a Hail Mary that makes a lot of sense,” Riley said. “They’ve begun to clear-cut the trees. They’re getting close to pouring concrete. … Our options are quite limited right now, so this does feel like the most practical, effective next step.” At the same time, a small number of activists have continued taking a more violent tack, including torching eight police motorcycles over the Fourth of July weekend, actions that canvass organizers have not condemned. Curtis Duncan, 40, said the first day he went out canvassing, a man approached and accused him of being one of the vandals. “I said, ‘Well, sir, respectfully, I wasn’t burning cars, and the majority of people within this movement have not been engaging in any type of violent actions,’” Duncan said. He added that troopers fatally shot an activist in the forest and that authorities have brought dozens of “very flimsy” domestic terrorism charges against “Stop Cop City” protesters this year — actions he considers far worse. Sanchez, who works for a voting rights nonprofit, said that even if the signature drive falls short, it will have made an important impact. “I feel like we’ve exhausted all the other options, aside from full-on revolution, which I don’t think we need for this,” he said. “There’s a lot of obstacles in our way. … If we only get to 50,000, I think that still shows a real warning sign for these politicians for the 2025 election.”
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-atlanta-cop-city-activists-say-theyre-confident-of-getting-70k-signatures-but-big-hurdles-remain/
2023-07-29T20:18:05
1
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-atlanta-cop-city-activists-say-theyre-confident-of-getting-70k-signatures-but-big-hurdles-remain/
CHICAGO (AP) — Leading up to the 2020 election, Facebook ads targeting Latino and Asian American voters described Joe Biden as a communist. A local station claimed a Black Lives Matter co-founder practiced witchcraft. Doctored images showed dogs urinating on Donald Trump campaign posters. None of these claims was true, but they scorched through social media sites that advocates say have fueled election misinformation in communities of color. As the 2024 election approaches, community organizations are preparing for what they expect to be a worsening onslaught of disinformation targeting communities of color and immigrant communities. They say the tailored campaigns challenge assumptions of what kinds of voters are susceptible to election conspiracies and distrust in voting systems. “They’re getting more complex, more sophisticated and spreading like wildfire,” said Sarah Shah, director of policy and community engagement at the advocacy group Indian American Impact, which runs the fact-checking site Desifacts.org. “ What we saw in 2020, unfortunately, will probably be fairly mild in comparison to what we will see in the months leading up to 2024.” A growing subset of communities of color, especially immigrants for whom English is not their first language, are questioning the integrity of U.S. voting processes and subscribing to Trump’s lies of a stolen 2020 election, said Jenny Liu, mis/disinformation policy manager at the nonprofit Asian Americans Advancing Justice. Still, she said these communities are largely left out of conversations about misinformation. “When you think of the typical consumer of a conspiracy theory, you think of someone who’s older, maybe from a rural area, maybe a white man,” she said. “You don’t think of Chinese Americans scrolling through WeChat. That’s why this narrative glosses over and erases a lot of the disinformation harms that many communities of colors face.” In addition to general misinformation themes about voting machines and mail-in voting, groups are catering their messaging to communities of color, experts say. For example, immigrants from authoritarian regimes in countries like Venezuela or who have lived through the Chinese Cultural Revolution may be “more vulnerable to misinformation claiming politicians are wanting to turn the U.S. into a Socialist state,” said Inga Trauthig, head of research for the Propaganda Research Lab at the Center for Media Engagement at the University of Texas at Austin. People from countries that have not recently had free and fair elections may have a preexisting distrust of elections and authority that may make them vulnerable to misinformation as well, Trauthig said. Disinformation efforts often hinge on topics most important to each community, whether that is public safety, immigration, abortion, education, inflation or alleged extramarital affairs, said Laura Zommer, co-founder of the Spanish-language fact-checking group Factchequeado. “It takes advantage of their very real fear and trauma from their experiences in their home countries,” Zommer said. Other vulnerabilities include language barriers and a lack of knowledge of the U.S. media landscape and how to find credible U.S. news sources, several misinformation experts told The Associated Press. Many immigrants rely on translated content for voting information, leaving space for bad actors to inject misinformation. “These tactics exploit information vacuums when there’s a lot of uncertainty around how these processes work, especially because a lot of election materials may not be translated in the languages our communities speak or be available in forms they are likely to access,” said Clara Jiménez Cruz, another co-founder of Factchequeado. Misinformation can also arise from mistranslations. The Brookings Institute, a nonprofit think tank, found examples of mistranslations in Colombian, Cuban and Venezuelan WhatsApp groups, where “progressive” was translated to “progresista,” which carries “far-left connotations that are closer to the Spanish words ‘socialista’ and ‘comunista.’” Disinformation, often in languages like Spanish, Mandarin or Hindi, flows onto social media apps like WhatsApp and WeChat heavily used by communities of color. Minority communities that believe their views and perspectives aren’t represented by the mainstream are likely to “retreat into more private spaces” found on messaging apps or groups on social media sites like Facebook, Trauthig said. “But disinformation also targets them on these platforms, even though it may feel to them to be that safer space,” she said. Messages on WhatsApp are also encrypted and can’t be easily seen or traced by moderators or fact-checkers. “As a result, messages on apps like WhatsApp often fly under the radar and are allowed to spread and spread, largely unchecked,” said Randy Abreu, policy counsel for the National Hispanic Media Coalition, which leads the Spanish Language Disinformation Coalition. Abreu also raised concerns about Spanish YouTube channels and radio shows that are growing in popularity. He said the coalition is tracking more and more YouTube and radio personalities who are spreading misinformation in Spanish. A 2022 report by the left-leaning watchdog group Media Matters tracked 40 Spanish-language YouTube videos spreading misinformation about U.S. elections. Many of these videos remained on the platform, despite violating YouTube election misinformation policy, the report said. Amid changes in voting policies at state and local levels, advocates are sounding the alarm on how disinformation about voting in 2024 may target communities of color. Many of these efforts have surged as Asian American, Black and Latino communities have grown in political power, said María Teresa Kumar, founding president of the nonprofit advocacy group Voto Latino. “Disinformation is, at its core, meant to be a sort of voter suppression tactic for communities of color,” she said. “It targets communities of color in a way that feeds into their already justifiable concerns that the system is stacked against them.” The tactics also feed into a history “as old as the Jim Crow era of attempting to disenfranchise people of color, going back to voter intimidation and suppression efforts after the Civil Rights Act of 1866,” said Atiba Ellis, a professor of law at Case Western Reserve University School of Law. While many of the same recycled claims around alleged fraud in the 2020 and 2022 elections are expected to resurface, experts say disinformation campaigns will likely be more sophisticated and granular in attempts to target specific groups of voters of color. Trauthig also raised concerns about how layoffs and instability at social media platforms like Twitter may leave them less prepared to tackle misinformation in 2024. It also remains to be seen how new social media platforms like Threads will approach the threat of misinformation. Changes in policies like WhatsApp launching a “Communities” function connecting multiple groups and expanding group chat sizes may also “have big implications for how quickly misinformation will spread on the platform,” she said. In response to the mounting threat of misinformation, Indian American Impact is ramping up its fact-checking efforts through what the organization says is the first fact-checking website specifically for South Asian Americans. Shah said the group is drawing inspiration from 2022 projects, including a voting toolkit using memes with Bollywood characters and passing out Parle-G crackers with voting information stickers at Indian grocery stores. Cruz of Factchequeado is paying close attention to misinformation in swing states with significant Latino populations like Nevada and Arizona. And Liu of Asian Americans Advancing Justice is reviewing misinformation trends from previous elections to strategize about how to inoculate Asian American voters against them. Still, they say there is more work to be done. Critics are urging social media companies to invest in content moderation and fact-checking in languages other than English. Government and election officials should also make voting information more accessible to non-English speakers, organize media literacy trainings in community spaces and identify “trusted messengers” in communities of color to help approach trends in misinformation narratives, experts said. “These are not monolithic groups,” Cruz said. “This disinformation is very specifically tailored to each of these communities and their fears. So we also need to be partnering with grassroots organizations in each of these communities to tailor our approaches. If we don’t take the time to do this work, our democracy is at stake.” ___ The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
https://www.ksn.com/top-stories/ap-top-headlines/ap-election-disinformation-campaigns-targeted-voters-of-color-in-2020-experts-expect-2024-to-be-worse/
2023-07-29T20:18:05
0
https://www.ksn.com/top-stories/ap-top-headlines/ap-election-disinformation-campaigns-targeted-voters-of-color-in-2020-experts-expect-2024-to-be-worse/
Not long ago, Marine Col. Jennifer Nash, a combat engineer with war deployments under her belt, made a vow to fellow officers as they headed to a dinner in Atlanta: She would get two new recruiting contacts by the end of the evening. She admits recruiting is not the job that she or other Marines had in mind when they enlisted. But after stints as a recruiter and senior officer at the Eastern recruiting command, she has become emblematic of the Corps' tradition of putting its best, battle-tested Marines on enlistment duty. They get results. Marine leaders say they will make their recruiting goal this year, while the active-duty Army, Navy and Air Force all expect to fall short. The services have struggled in the tight job market to compete with higher-paying businesses for the dwindling number of young people who can meet the military’s physical, mental and moral standards. On that night, Nash achieved her own goal. She had gotten the valet at the hotel and the hostess at the restaurant to provide their phone numbers and to consider a Marine career. Nash’s boss, Brig. Gen. Walker Field, who head the Eastern recruiting region, says the Corps has historically put an emphasis on selecting top-performing Marines to fill recruiting jobs. He says that has been a key to the Marines’ recruiting success, along with efforts to increase the number of recruiters, extend those who do well and speed their return to high schools, where in-person recruiting stopped during the COVID-19 pandemic. He said his recruiters — who cover the territory between Canada and Puerto Rico and as far west as Mississippi — will meet their mission and expect to have 30% of their 2024 goal when they start the next fiscal year, Oct. 1. More broadly, Marine officials say they expect the Corps to achieve its recruiting target of more than 33,000. Last year, the Navy, Air Force and Marines had to eat into their pools of delayed entry applicants in order to make their goals. The Marines will avoid that this year. “That would be a great ending,” said Field, speaking to The Associated Press on a recent steamy day at South Carolina's Parris Island, along the Atlantic Coast. “I’m bearish for not only concluding FY23 on a strong footing, but also how we set the conditions for FY24.” The Marine Corps may get some help from its small size. The Army, for example, has a recruiting goal of 65,000 this year, which is nearly double the Corps', and expects to fall substantially short of that. Air Force and Navy officials say they will also miss their goals, although the Space Force, which is the smallest service and does its recruiting within Air Force stations, is expected to meet its goal of about 500 recruits. Sitting in the shadow of Parris Island's replica of the Iwo Jima monument, Field said his biggest challenge is that a number of Marine hopefuls cannot pass the military’s academic test, known as the Armed Services Voluntary Aptitude Battery. That is a widespread problem, but the Army recently set up a program that targets recruits who score below 30 on the test and provides schooling for several weeks to help them pass. Already more than 8,800 recruits have successfully gone through the classes, raised their scores and moved on to basic training. The Navy is taking another route with a pilot program that allows up to 20% of their recruits to score below 30 on the test, as long as they meet specific standards for their chosen naval job. Marine leaders, however, do not take those lowest scoring recruits, and so far have no plans for any type of formal improvement program such as the Army's. Field said the Marines are repositioning recruiting stations, moving them around based on where population totals have increased in the latest census. More important, he said, the Corps maintains its focus on choosing the right recruiters, encouraging successful ones to stay in the job and increasing the number of Marine reservists tapped for recruit duties from the current 31 to 96 by the end of next year. Nash, who until last month was assistant chief of staff for the Eastern region, said Marines are hand-selected for recruiting command jobs. Many three- and four-star Marines, including former Defense Secretary James Mattis, will cite their years doing enlistment duty. “We put our best and brightest in those positions,” said Nash, adding that those chosen for recruiting posts have a proven track record of success in previous assignments and have demonstrated critical leadership skills. “That's why they got selected, because they were above their peers.” She acknowledged that the first time she was picked for a recruiting job she was “voluntold.” But now, recounting her sales pitch in Atlanta, her rapid fire pitch comes without taking a breath. “I say, 'Hey, ever thought about being Marine? We're a bunch of Marines. And, you know, I think you potentially could be a good Marine. You ever thought about it?' And usually you get, ‘Yeah, I thought about it.’ And I'm, like, ‘What’s holding you back? Would you like to learn more about your opportunities?' ‘Absolutely.’ `OK. Mind giving me your name and phone number? I’ll have one of my recruiters give you a phone call.'” The Marines have resisted increasing bonuses to attract recruits — something the other services have found helpful. Gen. Eric Smith, the acting Marine Corps commandant, got some ribbing for his response when he was asked about bonuses during a naval conference in February. “Your bonus is you get to call yourself a Marine,” he said. "That’s your bonus, right? There’s no dollar amount that goes with that.” Field, Nash and others also say the Corps prefers to give a lot of recruits a few thousand dollars, rather than increasing the amount and giving money to far fewer people. Field said that getting Marine recruiters in uniform back into high schools this year, after several years of COVID-19 restrictions, has been a key driver. There, young people line up to compete in pull-up contests, vying for a free T-shirt if they can do 20. And recruiters say many are drawn to the cache of being a Marine. “If you told me you’ll give me $10 million worth of advertising and I can do something with it, or you'll give me 10 great-looking Marines in a Marine uniform — what’s going to get the most value? Give me those 10 Marines and give me a day,” Nash said. "We’ll go out and we’ll get more out of that, I think, than $10 million in advertising."
https://www.mynews13.com/fl/orlando/news/2023/07/29/-the-few--the-proud--aren-t-so-few--marines-recruiting-surges-while-other-services-struggle
2023-07-29T20:18:07
1
https://www.mynews13.com/fl/orlando/news/2023/07/29/-the-few--the-proud--aren-t-so-few--marines-recruiting-surges-while-other-services-struggle
Edge rusher Frank Clark put a new spin on “If you can’t beat them, join them” this offseason. Clark spent the last four seasons with the Chiefs and notched eight wins over the Broncos during that time, so he’s familiar with the hard times that have been going on in Denver in recent years. That didn’t stop Clark from signing with the Broncos as a free agent and he doesn’t see the fact that the two teams share a division as a reason to say there’s a rivalry between the clubs. The Broncos haven’t beaten the Chiefs since 2015 and Clark says that has to change for anyone to call it a rivalry. “I wouldn’t call it a rivalry,” Clark said, via Chris Tomasson of the Denver Gazette. “A rivalry is competitive. And I’ve been on the other side and we didn’t call it a rivalry then. I’m with the Broncos now. Until we become competitive enough, we have to beat the team.” The Broncos’ last win over the Chiefs was their seventh in a row, so there is a history of long runs on both sides of the matchup. Denver is hoping new faces like Clark and head coach Sean Payton can help them turn things back around.
https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/frank-clark-broncos-chiefs-isnt-a-rivalry-rivalries-are-competitive
2023-07-29T20:18:10
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https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/frank-clark-broncos-chiefs-isnt-a-rivalry-rivalries-are-competitive
The intense heat wave continued its grip on many parts of the country, including in New York City, where temperatures were expected to surge into the lower 90s (around 35 C) on Saturday, but the humid, thick air could make it feel well over the century mark. The sizzling air has heated up everything from the ocean to pools, making it difficult to cool off. One woman in the Southwest has been throwing blocks of ice in her pool. Metro Phoenix could see its 30th day of 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43.3 degrees Celsius) or higher on Saturday before temperatures start dropping in the city and other areas that saw some of the most extreme temperatures in July. Scientists expect this month will be the hottest globally on record and likely the warmest human civilization has seen. Here’s what’s happening related to extreme weather and the climate right now: — Heat advisories continued in New York City, where high humidity has made it uncomfortable and dangerous. Some 500 cooling centers have opened across the city’s five boroughs, and the governor authorized the state’s swimming pools to stay open later. The extreme heat was forecast to ease Sunday. — Parts of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut were under a heat advisory through Saturday night. In northern New England, temperatures were down 10 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit after getting into the 90s (around 35 C) on Friday, but the humidity lingered throughout the region. Afternoon and evening storms were forecast and could bring a chance of flash flooding. — The weather was equally stifling and muggy in the center of the United States. An excessive heat warning was issued for much of Missouri, Kansas and western Illinois, where the sweaty mix of heat and humidity could make it feel like up to 112 degrees Fahrenheit (about 44 C) in parts. St. Louis health director Dr. Mati Hlatshwayo Davis said the risk of heat stroke was high and warned that interior car temperatures could reach lethal levels in minutes. — Temperatures are forecast to start to drop in the hottest areas in the southwest of the United States, including Phoenix, Las Vegas, Albuquerque and Death Valley, California. — With the scorching heat, even going for a swim offered little to no relief. Sea surface temperatures rose above 100 degrees Fahrenheit (about 38 C) at a spot off Florida’s southern tip, while pools in the Southwest gave the sensation of being in soup. — The high temperatures are reaching across the globe, including in Bolivia, where a drought alert has been declared for Lake Titicaca after water levels of the world’s highest navigable lake receded to a critically low threshold. ___ Associated Press writers Bobby Caina Calvan in New York; Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas; Ken Ritter in Las Vegas; and Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire contributed to this report. ___ Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content. )
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-climate-glimpse-heres-what-you-need-to-see-and-know-today-8/
2023-07-29T20:18:12
0
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-climate-glimpse-heres-what-you-need-to-see-and-know-today-8/
Click here to subscribe today or Login. “I recently came into some money that I had been expecting for a while. My husband really wants us to use it to invest in a second property. We would be there only a small part of the year. We both work, and he will retire before I do in a few years. “I am excited about getting a vacation place at the beach. The good thing is we agree on where we would want to buy. The problem is that he wants to let our family and friends use the place, pretty much whenever we are not wanting to be there exclusively by ourselves. “I am really not happy with that idea at all. I can already see that it would get overused. We have a large extended family as it is, and then add in our good friends. This will be costly and I would be responsible for the upkeep. “We are at a standstill, till I think my husband thinks I’ll give in to him. How can I convince him that his open sharing policy is setting us up for some big headaches?” G: First, congrats on having the financial means to indulge yourself. How you came upon this money, whether through inheritance, investments, or a company perk, I am glad you are defining this as your money. Why? Because that means you will ultimately get the final word on what the terms of this investment will be for both of you. That does not mean that you should not be considerate of your husband’s input and needs, and factor those into your decision, but the bottom line is this is ultimately your call. That is how the game of finances go in the real world. What’s yours is yours. And what you decide to do with what is yours says as much about your respect for the integrity of your marriage, your personal finances, and your sense of fairness, as it does about your generosity. Having said that, your disagreement with your husband about your windfall can easily develop into a threshold issue that can jeopardize your intimacy. This future purchase is already creating some discord between you, and the suffering it can bring to your marriage, even before you put in an offer on a beach retreat, is nearly unlimited. It is important that you navigate your communication with him, and your decision, with great caution. Money, like sex, is one of those awfully sticky challenges in relationships. It’s a delicate tango of not only figuring out each other’s steps, but deciding on who has to bend the furthest to meet the other’s needs, and how often. Many marriages falter under the pressure of not enough money or sex. But many marriages falter just as easily when there is an excess of either. Sometimes it takes the cash windfall, whether expected or unexpected, to show a couple where they stand in relationship to each other and their material aspirations. These tensions can quickly spill over to your intimacy. In addition to that stress on your relationship, part of the difficulty with having a second place, especially when it is located in a highly desirable spot, is that saying “No” is not always a comfortable position to be put in by those we love and care about. Your husband may be less comfortable declining others than you are, so open that up for discussion. Is he the one that is going to be saying “No” to others, or does he expect you to be the buzz kill? Before you even get to the stage where you are looking at actual properties to buy, there may already be those in your circle who know about your plans. If that’s the case, don’t be surprised to learn that they are already eager to have access to the beach. It is a good idea to begin tempering any of those visions of freebie vacations as soon as possible. But before you say anything, it would be a good idea to let your husband know that you are going to get the word out now, that you are not going to have a revolving door of guests, with or without you there. You do not need to explain to anyone what your reasons are, just be clear with your friends and family that you are getting a place as a retreat for you and your husband. You can mention that you are not planning on renting it out to anyone. Figure out for yourself, and then with your husband, how many “guests” you both are comfortable sharing your place with. Work out on what terms, such as length of stay, dates, and whether or not they can bring their pets. Let’s make the reasonable assumption that you likely will need to hire a house cleaning service after each stay. One way to handle this, without it becoming awkward, is to let your “guests” know in advance that you would need for them to pick up that expense. Do some homework and find out what fees are typical in that area. Tell them the cost so there won’t be any surprises. Should they seem surprised, gripe or balk at this, well then you are right to think that they may not be suitable “guests” for your place. You can always reconsider any invitations. Money is often an indicator of where a relationship, a friendship, stands. Do not be surprised if there are those in your circle who may begrudge your boundaries. Some may come around to understand and accept the limitations on the use of your beach retreat. But do be generous where you are certain to feel good about it, instead of becoming resentful or regretful. Let your husband know that your goal is to keep the beach a place of peace, not stress, and hopefully he will come around to seeing it more your way. Before you move on, we invite you to become a Times Leader Advocate. You'll receive some great benefits, including our Diamond Card with local discounts and deals, access to our E-Edition, a faster, reduced ad experience on timesleader.com, and more. Click now to support or get more information.Email Giselle with your question at [email protected] or send mail: Giselle Massi, P.O. Box 991, Evergreen, CO 80437. For more info and to read previous columns, go to www.gisellemassi.com
https://www.timesleader.com/features/1615615/tell-giselle-how-generous-are-we-to-be
2023-07-29T20:18:15
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https://www.timesleader.com/features/1615615/tell-giselle-how-generous-are-we-to-be
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https://tj.news/bugle-observer/102147077
2023-07-29T20:18:15
0
https://tj.news/bugle-observer/102147077
3 reasons to be optimistic about Oregon State football in 2023 Oregon State’s football program begins fall camp Thursday, and the optimism surrounding this team is higher than it has been in years. The Beavers enter their sixth season under head coach Jonathan Smith coming off a 10-3 season, their first 10-win season since 2006. Oregon State also finished No. 17 in the Associated Press poll, its best finish since 2000, when the Beavers were No. 4. Oregon State has less than five weeks to get ready for its season opener at 12:30 p.m. Sept. 3 at San Jose State, a rare Sunday game. The Beavers’ home opener is at 6 p.m. Sept. 9 against UC Davis. Here are the three biggest reasons for Oregon State fans to be optimistic about this season. 1: Quarterback position is much stronger The one thing that held Oregon State back last season was the quarterback position. Chance Nolan completed 59% of his passes for 939 yards, and Ben Gulbranson completed 62% of his passes for 1,455 yards. The two of them combined for 16 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. Even with the poor quarterback play, the Beavers lost just three games, and two of them were by three points each — 17-14 to USC and 24-21 to Washington. Oregon State fans can only imagine what the Beavers would have done with a better quarterback. This season, Oregon State has a much better quarterback room, and although the competition isn’t over yet, incoming transfer DJ Uiagalelei is the front runner to become the starter. Uiagalelei was at Clemson last season, where he threw for 2,521 yards, 22 touchdowns and seven interceptions. Uiagalelei’s likely backup is freshman Aidan Chiles, a four-star talent who should push Uiagalelei in the competition and likely is the future of the Beavers at quarterback. Gulbranson, who was the Las Vegas Bowl MVP last season, likely will be the third-string quarterback. If he is, how many programs in the nation will have a third-string quarterback with a bowl game victory on his resume? 2: Damien Martinez and offensive linemen are beasts Damien Martinez rushed for 982 yards and seven touchdowns last season as a freshman, and he returns this season for the Beavers. But what makes his numbers even more impressive is what he did as the season progressed. In the first five games, Martinez had 145 yards and one touchdown. Then over the next seven weeks, he had 825 yards and six touchdowns for Oregon State. He got injured in the bowl game against Florida, totaling just 12 yards on three carries, but he did great with his opportunities as the season went on, and he has high expectations this season. Even with better quarterback play this season, the Beavers’ offense still likely will be focused more on the run, making Martinez incredibly valuable. The thought of Martinez, who is a preseason first-team all-Pac-12 selection, going off in the ground game, coupled with a better playmaker at quarterback, certainly should have Beavers fans excited. Especially considering Oregon State has a strong offensive line — Joshua Gray and Taliese Fuaga are both preseason first-team all-Pac-12 selections, Jake Levengood is second-team and Heneli Bloomfield is honorable mention. 3: Defensive front newcomers There are three key newcomers on defense that could help Oregon State put pressure on opposing quarterbacks. The Beavers had the top rated defense in the Pac-12 last season, but were just seventh in sacks with 20. That clearly was a need this offseason, and Oregon State added three players who could help in that department — defensive lineman Kelze Howard, edge rusher Oluwaseyi Omotosho and outside linebacker Nikko Taylor. Howard is a four-star talent who was ranked No. 22 at his position in the 2023 recruiting class. From Las Vegas, Howard had 14 sacks during his senior season in high school. Omotosho transferred from Wyoming, where he had 6.5 sacks last season for the Cowboys. Taylor transferred to Oregon State from Hutchinson Community College in Kansas. He had seven sacks last season and was rated the nation’s top junior college outside linebacker. Statesman Journal reporter Pete Martini covers college and high school sports. He can be reached at pmartini@StatesmanJournal.com.
https://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/sports/college/oregon-state/2023/07/29/3-reasons-to-be-optimistic-about-oregon-state-beavers-football-in-2023/70367751007/
2023-07-29T20:18:16
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https://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/sports/college/oregon-state/2023/07/29/3-reasons-to-be-optimistic-about-oregon-state-beavers-football-in-2023/70367751007/
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – In states across the country this year, Republicans have talked a lot about restricting drag performances in front of children. But that talk, and even their efforts, haven't amounted to much. Bills restricting drag have failed to pass, passed as watered-down laws, have been vetoed or, in the case of three states that did manage to pass meaningful restrictions, laws have been temporarily halted by federal judges. Friday, in fact, a judge temporarily blocked a law in the last remaining state with enforceable restrictions – Montana – just days before the start of Pride festivities. A few states' lawmakers are still in session, though, so more efforts could be afoot. In Arkansas, where Republican state Sen. Gary Stubblefield championed and sponsored a bill earlier this year, he said drag shows harm kids and "take away their innocence." "I can't think of any redeeming quality, anything good that can come from taking children and putting them in front of a bunch of grown men that are dressed like women," Stubblefield said back in January as he introduced his bill on the floor of the Arkansas Senate. 'Prurient interest' and the First Amendment Stubblefield's bill contained key language that showed up in a lot of states' attempted drag restrictions – an appeal to the "prurient interest." (Texas, Tennessee, Montana, Arizona, South Dakota, for example.) "That word – prurient interest – means excessive interest in sexual matters," Stubblefield explained to lawmakers in committee. "Most drag shows do not appeal to the prurient interest," says JT Morris, an attorney for the free-speech group Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. "Even if they did, saying something appeals to the 'prurient interest' under the First Amendment is not enough to regulate it," he says, noting that this kind of language makes it harder for a bill to hold up to basic legal scrutiny. "You can't pass a state law based on disagreement with somebody's viewpoint. It's a textbook First Amendment violation." And that disagreement has been palpable across the country. In Arkansas, Stubblefield's bill was met with large public backlash from those who say drag is about showmanship, not sex. "I do drag as an art form," says Jeremy Stuthard, an Arkansas drag performer. "I take a decent-looking guy and turn him into a statue-esk Barbie doll, and have a great time and put smiles on people's faces and that's all I really try to do." Stuthard says most of the children he meets at drag brunches and story hours aren't there to indulge a 'prurient interest', but to have fun listening to a story read by a costumed actor. Drag restrictions put on hold and watered down In Tennessee, the day before that state's drag restrictions were due to go into effect, a Trump-appointed U.S. District Judge temporarily struck down the law due to its constitutional vagueness. In his ruling, U.S. District Judge Thomas Parker wrote, "Whether some of us may like it or not," the U.S. Supreme Court has interpreted the First Amendment "as protecting speech that is indecent but not obscene." A similar law in Florida has been temporarily blocked. For a while, that left Montana as the only state in the country with an enforceable drag law, until the courts temporarily blocked that one, too. In Arkansas, Sen. Stubblefield's drag ban bill was amended until it hardly resembled a drag ban. The final version of the law, which passed by large margins, now regulates stripping, not drag shows. "[The]Amended House Bill is the only way to really protect minors. For another reason, it's the only draft that will stand up in court," Stubblefield said of the amendment, which he didn't write but ultimately agreed to. "None of us like to pass a bill that's going to get struck down by a judge and not help any children at all." Josie Lenora is the politics/government reporter at KUAR in Little Rock, Ark. Copyright 2023 KUAR
https://www.kbia.org/2023-07-29/despite-all-the-talk-no-states-have-active-laws-banning-drag-in-front-of-kids
2023-07-29T20:18:16
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https://www.kbia.org/2023-07-29/despite-all-the-talk-no-states-have-active-laws-banning-drag-in-front-of-kids
Josh Bell Player Prop Bets: Guardians vs. White Sox - July 29 Published: Jul. 29, 2023 at 3:38 PM EDT|Updated: 39 minutes ago Josh Bell -- with a slugging percentage of .486 in his past 10 games, including two home runs -- will be in action for the Cleveland Guardians against the Chicago White Sox, with Mike Clevinger on the mound, on July 29 at 7:10 PM ET. He had a hitless showing in his previous game (0-for-4) against the White Sox. Josh Bell Game Info & Props vs. the White Sox - Game Day: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Game Time: 7:10 PM ET - Stadium: Guaranteed Rate Field - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! - White Sox Starter: Mike Clevinger - TV Channel: NBCS-CHI - Hits Prop: Over/under 0.5 hits (Over odds: -208) - Home Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +375) - RBI Prop: Over/under 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +160) - Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 runs (Over odds: +120) Looking to place a prop bet on Josh Bell? Check out what's available at BetMGM and use bonus code "GNPLAY" when you sign up with this link! Discover More About This Game Josh Bell At The Plate - Bell is hitting .236 with 19 doubles, 11 home runs and 43 walks. - Bell has picked up a hit in 63.8% of his 94 games this season, with multiple hits in 16.0% of those games. - He has hit a long ball in 11 games this season (11.7%), homering in 2.9% of his chances at the plate. - Bell has driven home a run in 37 games this year (39.4%), including more than one RBI in 9.6% of his games and producing three or more of his team's runs on one occasion.. - He has scored in 20 games this year (21.3%), including multiple runs in three games. Ready to play FanDuel Daily Fantasy? Get in the game using our link. Josh Bell Home/Away Batting Splits White Sox Pitching Rankings - The White Sox pitching staff leads MLB with a collective 9.7 strikeouts per nine innings. - The White Sox's 4.63 team ERA ranks 24th across all league pitching staffs. - White Sox pitchers combine to give up 145 total home runs at a rate of 1.4 per game (third-most in baseball). - Clevinger (3-4 with a 3.88 ERA and 53 strikeouts in 62 2/3 innings pitched) makes the start for the White Sox, his 13th of the season. - In his last appearance on Thursday, June 15, the right-hander tossed 4 2/3 scoreless innings against the Los Angeles Dodgers while surrendering three hits. - In 12 games this season, the 32-year-old has put up a 3.88 ERA and 7.6 strikeouts per nine innings, while allowing a batting average of .244 to opposing batters. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/josh-bell-mlb-player-prop-bets/
2023-07-29T20:18:16
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https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/josh-bell-mlb-player-prop-bets/
Compared with the devil, angels carry more credence in America. Angels even get more credence than, well, hell. More than astrology, reincarnation, and the belief that physical things can have spiritual energies. In fact, about 7 in 10 U.S. adults say they believe in angels, according to a new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. “People are yearning for something greater than themselves — beyond their own understanding,” said Jack Grogger, a chaplain for the Los Angeles Angels and a longtime Southern California fire captain who has aided many people in their gravest moments. That search for something bigger, he said, can take on many forms, from following a religion to crafting a self-driven purpose to believing in, of course, angels. “For a lot of people, angels are a lot safer to worship,” said Grogger, who also pastors a nondenominational church in Orange, California, and is a chaplain for the NHL’s Anaheim Ducks. People turn to angels for comfort, he said. They are familiar, regularly showing up in pop culture as well as in the Bible. Comparably, worshipping Jesus is far more involved; when Grogger preaches about angels it is with the context that they are part of God’s kingdom. American’s belief in angels (69%) is about on par with belief in heaven and the power of prayer, but bested by belief in God or a higher power (79%). Fewer U.S. adults believe in the devil or Satan (56%), astrology (34%), reincarnation (34%), and that physical things can have spiritual energies, such as plants, rivers or crystals (42%). The widespread acceptance of angels shown in the AP-NORC poll makes sense to Susan Garrett, an angel expert and New Testament professor at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Kentucky. It tracks with historical surveys, she said, adding that the U.S. remains a faith-filled country even as more Americans reject organized religion. But if the devil is in the details, so are people’s understandings of angels. “They’re very malleable,” Garrett said of angels. “You can have any one of a number of quite different worldviews in terms of your understanding of how the cosmos is arranged, whether there’s spirit beings, whether there’s life after death, whether there’s a God … and still find a place for angels in that worldview.” Talk of angels, Garrett said, is often also about something else, like the ways God interacts with the world and other hard-to-articulate ideas. The large number of U.S. adults who say they believe in angels includes 84% of those with a religious affiliation — 94% of evangelical Protestants, 81% of mainline Protestants and 82% of Catholics — and 33% of those without one. And of those angel-believing religiously unaffiliated, that includes 2% of atheists, 25% of agnostics and 50% of those identified as “nothing in particular.” The broad acceptance is what fascinates San Francisco-based witch and author Devin Hunter: Angels show up independently in different religions and traditions, making them part of the fabric that unites humanity. “We’re all getting to the same conclusion,” said Hunter, who spent 16 years as a professional medium, and started communicating as a child with what he believed were angels. Hunter estimates that a belief in angels applies to about half of those practicing modern witchcraft today, and for some who don’t believe, their rejection is often rooted in the religious trauma they experienced growing up. “Angels become a very big deal” for long-time practitioners who’ve made occultism their primary focus, said Hunter, an angel-loving occultist. “We cannot escape them in any way, shape or form.” Jennifer Goodwin of Oviedo, Florida, also is among the roughly seven in 10 U.S. adults who say they believe in angels. She isn’t sure if God exists and rejects the afterlife dichotomy of heaven and hell, but the recent deaths of her parents solidified her views on these celestial beings. Goodwin believes her parents are still keeping an eye on the family — not in any physical way or as a supernatural apparition, but that they manifest in those moments when she feels a general sense of comfort. “I think that they are around us, but it’s in a way that we can’t understand,” Goodwin said. “I don’t know what else to call it except an angel.” Angels mean different things to different people, and the idea of loved ones becoming heavenly angels after death is neither an unusual belief nor a universally held one. In his reading of Scripture as an evangelical Protestant, Grogger said he believes angels are something else entirely — they have never been human and are on another level in heaven’s hierarchy. “We are higher than angels,” he said. “We do not become an angel.” Angels do interact with humans though, said Grogger, but what “that looks like we’re not 100% sure.” They worship God who created this angelic legion of unknown numbers, he said, adding that evangelicals often attribute the demonic forces in the world to the angels who fell from heaven when the devil rebelled. The Western ideas about angels can be traced through the Bible — and to the worldviews of its monotheistic authors, Garrett said. Those beliefs have changed and developed for millennia, influenced by cultures, theologians and even the ancient polytheistic beliefs that came before the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, she said. “There are sort of lines of continuity from the Bible that you can trace all the way up to the New Age movement,” said Susan Garrett, who wrote “No Ordinary Angel: Celestial Spirits and Christian Claims about Jesus.” The angels in the Bible do God’s bidding, and angelic violence is one part of their job description, said Esther Hamori, author of the upcoming book, “God’s Monsters: Vengeful Spirits, Deadly Angels, Hybrid Creatures, and Divine Hitmen of the Bible.” “The angels of the Bible are just as likely to assassinate individuals and slaughter entire populations as they are to offer help and protect and deliver,” said Hamori. She doesn’t believe in these angels, but studies them as a Hebrew Bible professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York where she teaches a popular “Monster Heaven” class. “They’re just God’s obedient soldiers doing the task at hand, and sometimes that task is in human beings’ best interests, and sometimes it’s not,” she said. The perception that angels act angelic and look like the idyllic, winged figurines atop Christmas trees could be attributed to an early centuries belief that people are assigned one good angel and one bad — or have a good and bad spirit to guide them, Garrett said. This idea shows up on the shoulders of cartoon characters and is likely what Abraham Lincoln was alluding to in his famous appeal for unity when he referenced “the better angels of our nature” in his first inaugural address, she said. “It’s also tied in with ideas about guardian angels, which again, very ancient views that got developed over the centuries,” Garrett said. For Sheila Avery of Chicago, angels are protectors, capable of keeping someone from harm. Avery, who belongs to a nondenominational church, credits them with those moments like when a person’s plans fall through, but ultimately it saves them from being in the thick of an unexpected disaster. “They turn on the news and a terrible tragedy happened at that particular place,” Avery said, suggesting it was an “angel that was probably watching over them.” ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-do-you-believe-in-angels-about-7-in-10-u-s-adults-do-a-new-ap-norc-poll-shows/
2023-07-29T20:18:19
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https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-do-you-believe-in-angels-about-7-in-10-u-s-adults-do-a-new-ap-norc-poll-shows/
Danielle Hunter is unhappy with his contract, which could lead to the Vikings’ edge rusher getting a new home. Jeremy Fowler of ESPN reports the team is looking into trade options for Hunter, letting other teams know he is available. Hunter, who is in the final year of his contract, wants more than the $4.9 million base salary he is due this season. The Vikings have attempted to extend Hunter’s deal, per Fowler, but are not close to agreement. Hunter reported to training camp on time but is not practicing. His “hold-in” comes after he skipped organized team activities and the mandatory minicamp. Coach Kevin O’Connell this week called Hunter’s dispute a “day-to-day” situation this week. Hunter, who had his deal reworked two offseasons ago, returned last season after two seasons of injuries to make 10.5 sacks. He has 71 sacks in 102 career games with the Vikings.
https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/report-vikings-exploring-trade-options-for-danielle-hunter
2023-07-29T20:18:21
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https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/report-vikings-exploring-trade-options-for-danielle-hunter
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https://tj.news/bugle-observer/102147537
2023-07-29T20:18:21
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https://tj.news/bugle-observer/102147537
Gray wolves are returning to the Oregon Coast Range. What does it mean for for farmers? Few pockets of ancient rainforest in Oregon’s Coast Range remain the way they did millennia ago — massive conifer trees, waist-high ferns and the woody scent of dead snags adorned with mushrooms. Gray wolves once roamed these forests and canyons, patrolling cliffs above the ocean and hunting deep ravines for deer and elk before European Americans blitzed the predators using guns and poison, exterminating them by 1920. More than a century later, wolves are quietly returning to Oregon’s oceanside forests and communities. Oregon’s 2022 wolf report confirms wolf tracks in the Coast Range. "At least three radio-collared wolves have crossed west of I-5," said Michelle Dennehy, spokesperson for Oregon's Department of Fish and Wildlife. Sightings, scat and tracks have been observed by scientists and state game managers. Overall, the number of wolves documented in the state’s western half rose 39% in 2022 from the prior year. That has led to tension about what wolves on the coast might mean for farmers. A preview of what could happen is already playing out in the southern Cascade Range. Western Oregon's Rogue Pack — named for the famous traveling wolf OR-7 — has been one of the deadliest in the state when it comes to attacking livestock. There have also been odd incidents, including people apparently feeding a wolf in Umpqua National Forest, which led to "un-wolflike" behavior from a yearling wolf that even appeared on social media videos before ultimately being killed by a truck on Highway 138. "Western Oregon is going to be a huge challenge" for wolf management, said Veril Nelson, a spokesman for the Oregon Cattlemen's Association. Wolves 'like ghosts in the forest' as they establish As early wolf populations establish, they typically keep quiet by avoiding interactions with people so as to not make their presence known, according to Cristina Eisenberg of the College of Forestry at Oregon State University. "Like ghosts in the forest," Eisenberg said. The return of gray wolves to the Coast Range was not only an "extremely high probability" but also a workable situation, said Oregon State University professor of ecology Bill Ripple. Wolves like forested lands for the protection it provides from humans. Ripple believes the forests of the Coast Range are ideal because of the expansive amount of woodlands, few people and less cattle than on the east side of the Cascades. With less livestock, Ripple said public sentiment could tip in favor of the wolves' return. And with the "lack of ranching, it's a great setup for cohabitation," he said. At one point, Ripple estimated Oregon's Coast Range could support at least 100 wolves, based on its density of prey. Currently, the minimum estimate on the number of wolves statewide is 178, although the real number is likely higher. Wolf biologist Sam Dodenhoff said early seral habitat, or a forest in the first stages of rebounding after a disturbance like a wildfire or logging, can be attractive to wolf prey species such as deer and elk. And livestock. Wolves are opportunistic. They learn where the availability of vulnerable prey are, and if that includes livestock loose on Bureau of Land Management land, then that is what they'll hunt. State's most lethal wolf pack already in western Oregon It's illegal to kill a wolf in western Oregon, where they remain protected under the federal Endangered Species Act. Even when wolves attack livestock, ranchers are required to take non-lethal measures to minimize conflict such as installing fencing, setting alarms or scare devices, deploying guard dogs and hazing wolves in person. Ranchers say dealing with problem wolves is a burden. Oregon's most famous wolf, OR-7, established the Rogue Pack in 2014 in the southern Cascade Range. Relations between wolves and farmers haven't always been harmonious. A 2021 report from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said the Rogue Pack had been blamed for at least 40 depredations of livestock since 2016. Nelson, from Cattlemen's Association, deemed the Rogue pack the "most lethal" in the state. 'Un-wolflike behavior' As wolves push farther west they will encounter more people than in less-populated eastern Oregon. In late May, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife warned recreators about two wolves showing "a lack of wariness around people." The wolves are part of the Indigo Pack — a group of four first established in 2018. Their area of known activity is generally west of Diamond Lake and east of Glide. Videos and photos show one wolf, a yearling named by the state as OR-143, "approaching and laying down near vehicles and not reacting to human voice or honking horns," according to officials. The “very un-wolflike behavior" showed up in multiple social media videos. In June, the yearling was killed in a vehicle collision on Highway 138. Meghan Dugan, spokeswoman for ODFW, said the odd behavior was most likely from being fed by people and having “minimal to no negative interactions with people.” Dugan warned people to remain wary in the area because a 2-year-old male wolf that had been seen at times with OR-143 also displayed a lack of wariness toward people. Predicting where wolves will go in Oregon Because predicting where wolves will go is hard — the Rogue pack's home range spans some 500 miles — Dodenhoff, the wolf biologist, needed to get a collar on a member of the pack. Dodenhoff had only once come up on wolves driving his noisy UTV. I kept my eyes peeled as we drove through knee-high powdery snow in early April. We crossed coyote tracks between pockets of bright sunlight as we made our way to the first trail cam. It had caught video of elk, a snowstorm and us pulling up. The second cam had images of a wolf. It was blurry, a streak of gray pelage whisking by. The original breeding female of the pack was black; her offspring have been grayer. It also could have been the three-footed wolf that recently joined up. Dodenhoff would know more as soon as he could get a collar on a wolf. Returning to his truck, we headed back down to where he had seen the Rogue Pack earlier that week. We walked the grassy middle of a dirt road whose ruts were just muddy enough to show recent wolf prints. Seeing that first track stopped my breath. We didn't speak as we walked on. More tracks. "They were here yesterday," Dodenhoff said. "They probably have a kill nearby." Earlier I had asked if there was a way to predict where they would go next. Wolves were "like sticks to the wind," Dodenhoff said, suggesting their dispersal patterns were all over the map. They're looking for suitable habitat and a mate. Dodenhoff remains confident about the likelihood of resident wolves returning to the southern Oregon Coast Range, likely within Curry and Josephine counties. As far as wolves moving farther north, it could take a bit longer. But there remains a good chance those few patches of ancient forests could once again include the howl of a wolf — and everything that comes with it. Paul Lask is a freelance outdoors journalist and writing instructor at Oregon Coast Community College. Reach him and learn more about his work at www.prlask.com
https://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/travel/outdoors/2023/07/29/gray-wolf-population-oregon-coast-range-forests-farmers-livestock-ranching/70355539007/
2023-07-29T20:18:22
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https://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/travel/outdoors/2023/07/29/gray-wolf-population-oregon-coast-range-forests-farmers-livestock-ranching/70355539007/
Josh Naylor Player Prop Bets: Guardians vs. White Sox - July 29 Published: Jul. 29, 2023 at 3:34 PM EDT|Updated: 43 minutes ago The Cleveland Guardians and Josh Naylor, who went 3-for-4 with a double last time out, take on Mike Clevinger and the Chicago White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field, Saturday at 7:10 PM ET. He strung together three hits (going 3-for-4 with a double) in his last game against the White Sox. Josh Naylor Game Info & Props vs. the White Sox - Game Day: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Game Time: 7:10 PM ET - Stadium: Guaranteed Rate Field - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! - White Sox Starter: Mike Clevinger - TV Channel: NBCS-CHI - Hits Prop: Over/under 0.5 hits (Over odds: -250) - Home Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +400) - RBI Prop: Over/under 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +125) - Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 runs (Over odds: +105) Looking to place a prop bet on Josh Naylor? Check out what's available at BetMGM and use bonus code "GNPLAY" when you sign up with this link! Explore More About This Game Josh Naylor At The Plate - Naylor leads Cleveland in total hits (109) this season while batting .312 with 40 extra-base hits. - Among the qualifying hitters in MLB action, his batting average ranks seventh, his on-base percentage ranks 36th, and he is 15th in the league in slugging. - Naylor has had a hit in 62 of 93 games this year (66.7%), including multiple hits 34 times (36.6%). - He has homered in 15.1% of his games in 2023 (14 of 93), and 4% of his trips to the plate. - Naylor has had at least one RBI in 44.1% of his games this year (41 of 93), with more than one RBI 20 times (21.5%). He has also been responsible for three or more of his team's runs in 10 contests. - He has scored in 32 games this season (34.4%), including multiple runs in eight games. Ready to play FanDuel Daily Fantasy? Get in the game using our link. Josh Naylor Home/Away Batting Splits White Sox Pitching Rankings - The 9.7 strikeouts per nine innings compiled by the White Sox pitching staff leads the league. - The White Sox have the 24th-ranked team ERA among all league pitching staffs (4.63). - White Sox pitchers combine to surrender the third-most home runs in baseball (145 total, 1.4 per game). - Clevinger (3-4) gets the starting nod for the White Sox in his 13th start of the season. He has a 3.88 ERA in 62 2/3 innings pitched, with 53 strikeouts. - His most recent appearance came on Thursday, June 15 against the Los Angeles Dodgers, when the right-hander tossed 4 2/3 scoreless innings while giving up three hits. - The 32-year-old has put up a 3.88 ERA and 7.6 strikeouts per nine innings across 12 games this season, while giving up a batting average of .244 to his opponents. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/josh-naylor-mlb-player-prop-bets/
2023-07-29T20:18:23
0
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/josh-naylor-mlb-player-prop-bets/
NEW YORK (AP) — Trader Joe’s is recalling a broccoli cheddar soup that may contain insects and cooked falafel that may contain rocks, about one week after the grocery chain recalled two cookie products over similar concerns. The soup recall impacts Trader Joe’s Unexpected Broccoli Cheddar Soup with “Use By” dates ranging from July 18 to Sept. 15, according to a Thursday announcement from the company. On Friday, the grocer announced that Trader Joe’s Fully Cooked Falafel sold in 35 states and Washington, D.C., was also under recall. On July 21, Trader Joe’s announced that it was recalling Trader Joe’s Almond Windmill Cookies and Trader Joe’s Dark Chocolate Chunk and Almond Cookies with “sell by” dates ranging from Oct. 17 to Oct. 21. Like the falafel, the cookies may also contain rocks, the company said. When asked for further information about how the insects and rocks may have gotten into these products, a Trader Joe’s spokesperson said that “there was an issue in the manufacturing processes in the facilities.” Suppliers alerted Trader Joe’s of the possible foreign material for each recall, the company said. “We pulled the product from our shelves as soon as we were made aware of the issue. Once we understood the issue we notified our customers,” the spokesperson said in a statement sent to The Associated Press Saturday. All of the recalled cookies, soup and falafel have been removed from sale or destroyed, Trader Joe’s said in its announcements. But the Monrovia, California-based company is still urging consumers to check their kitchens for the products. Trader Joe’s says customers who have the recalled products should throw them away or return them to any store for a full refund. Lot codes and further details about the products under recall, as well as customer service contact information, can be found on the company’s website. Trader Joe’s did not specify how many products were impacted with each recall or identify suppliers. But one Food and Drug Administration notice cited by NBC News says that the Unexpected Broccoli Cheddar Soup recall impacts around 10,889 cases sold in seven states. Winter Gardens Quality Foods, Inc. is identified as the recalling firm, per the notice. No formal releases about the three recalls were published on the FDA’s Recalls, Market Withdrawals, & Safety Alerts page as of Saturday. The Associated Press reached out to the FDA and Winter Gardens Quality Foods for information on Saturday. “We have a close relationship with our vendors and they alerted us of these issues. We don’t hesitate or wait for regulatory agencies to tell us what to do,” the Trader Joe’s spokesperson said. “We will never leave to chance the safety of the products we offer.”
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-more-trader-joes-recalls-this-soup-may-contain-bugs-and-falafel-may-have-rocks-grocer-says/
2023-07-29T20:18:25
0
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ap-us-news/ap-more-trader-joes-recalls-this-soup-may-contain-bugs-and-falafel-may-have-rocks-grocer-says/
Butte Creek Falls didn’t burn in the 2020 wildfires. Why has it stayed closed 3 years? The good news came in late September of 2020: Butte Creek Falls had somehow avoided being burned during the Labor Day fires blowup. At the time, it seemed like a small miracle given the number of nearby waterfalls torched by the Beachie Creek Fire — Shellburg Falls, Henline Falls and the many cascades of the Opal Creek area. In pictures shared widely on social media, a smiling crew of firefighters posed in front of unburned upper Butte Creek Falls, seeming to promise that Oregonians could soon return to the popular recreation and campground area outside Scotts Mills. It hasn’t worked out that way. Nearly three years later, Butte Creek Falls has remained closed and will stay closed until at least this coming fall, officials said. It’s a head-scratching situation for hikers because almost all unburned sites reopened long ago, and even many places that were burned have had access restored. The Oregon Department of Forestry said the reason comes down to contractors taking “longer than expected” to complete hazard removal roadwork, and a quirky safety concern. Roads to Oregon's Butte Creek Falls burned While the waterfall and recreation area didn’t burn, many of the roads around it did — including Maple Camp, Sawmill and eventually Family Camp. ODF said it needed to remove hazard trees along the road to make it safe for travelers. En route to the falls, that work has largely been completed. The roads to and trails around Butte Creek Falls are mostly hazard free. Despite that, the gate on Family Camp Road has remained closed. The reason is that beyond Butte Creek Falls — on the same road — there are areas where hazards have not been cleared. Opening the gate and road would “allow travel all the way to the back end (of the road) where there are numerous hazards. So someone could unknowingly travel past recreational areas to an area that is still a significant hazard,” ODF spokesman Tim Hoffman said. “Not all people going through the gate are going to go to Butte Creek campground and Butte Creek Falls. Some will travel the same access point and eventually get into an area that is full of unmitigated hazards. “It is still not safe yet by ODF standards. We are encouraging/working with the operator to get that road hazard work done sooner — but that goes back to the contract issue.” The contract in question requires the work to be finished by Oct. 31. What will it take to open Butte Creek Falls? Why has it taken around three years for the work to be completed? “This is a tough one to answer, because it is very difficult for ODF to gauge the timeline it takes to fully restore such large areas of forest from such a catastrophic wildfire," Hoffman said. "It can be hard to anticipate and completely mitigate all the hazards that come with opening a public recreation area. Our first priority is always safety, and we will not open an area that is not safe.” Hoffman pointed out that ODF has opened many other burned areas, including Rocky Top, Natural Arch, Monument Peak Trailhead and Santiam Horse Camp. Shellburg Falls, which did burn, has remained closed but is also expected to reopen this coming fall. “ODF is also balancing the costs in time and resources to focus on a huge reforestation workload after the 2020 fires and maintain our core business of forest management,” Hoffman said. “Only a small but important part of that is focused on recreation areas.” Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Oregon for 15 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Podcast. Urness is the author of “Best Hikes with Kids: Oregon” and “Hiking Southern Oregon.” He can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or 503-399-6801. Find him on Twitter at @ZachsORoutdoors.
https://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/travel/outdoors/hikes/2023/07/29/butte-creek-falls-hike-oregon-2020-wildfires-beachie-creek-fire/70480347007/
2023-07-29T20:18:28
0
https://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/travel/outdoors/hikes/2023/07/29/butte-creek-falls-hike-oregon-2020-wildfires-beachie-creek-fire/70480347007/
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https://tj.news/bugle-observer/102147539
2023-07-29T20:18:28
1
https://tj.news/bugle-observer/102147539
How to Watch the Orioles vs. Yankees Game: Streaming & TV Channel Info for July 29 Adley Rutschman and the Baltimore Orioles will take on the New York Yankees and Aaron Judge on Saturday at 7:15 PM ET, at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Sign up for Fubo to watch this matchup and make sure you don't miss any of the action all year long! Bet with theKing of Sportsbooks and use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Check out the latest odds and place your bets with BetMGM Sportsbook. Use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Orioles vs. Yankees Live Stream, TV Channel and Game Info: - Date: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Time: 7:15 PM ET - TV Channel: FOX - Location: Baltimore, Maryland - Venue: Oriole Park at Camden Yards - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! Bet on this matchup with BetMGM Sportsbook and use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Discover More About This Game Orioles Batting & Pitching Performance - The Orioles are 13th in MLB action with 121 home runs. They average 1.2 per game. - Baltimore's .418 slugging percentage ranks 10th-best in MLB. - The Orioles have the 16th-ranked batting average in the majors (.249). - Baltimore scores the 10th-most runs in baseball (499 total, 4.8 per game). - The Orioles are 16th in MLB with an on-base percentage of .317. - The Orioles' 8.4 strikeouts per game rank 11th in MLB. - The pitching staff for Baltimore has a collective 9.1 K/9, which ranks 11th in MLB. - Baltimore has the 15th-ranked team ERA across all MLB pitching staffs (4.15). - Pitchers for the Orioles combine for the 19th-ranked WHIP in baseball (1.296). Yankees Batting & Pitching Performance - The Yankees' 141 home runs rank seventh in Major League Baseball. - New York ranks 18th in the majors with a .402 team slugging percentage. - The Yankees have a team batting average of just .229 this season, which ranks 29th among MLB teams. - New York ranks 21st in the majors with 446 total runs scored this season. - The Yankees have an on-base percentage of .301 this season, which ranks 26th in the league. - The Yankees rank eighth in MLB in strikeouts per game with an average of 8.1 whiffs per contest. - New York averages the 12th-most strikeouts per nine innings (8.9) in the majors this season. - New York has the eighth-best ERA (3.87) in the majors this season. - Yankees pitchers have a 1.245 WHIP this season, seventh-best in the majors. Orioles Probable Starting Pitcher - Tyler Wells makes the start for the Orioles, his 20th of the season. He is 7-5 with a 3.65 ERA and 110 strikeouts in 111 2/3 innings pitched. - His most recent appearance was on Sunday against the Tampa Bay Rays, when the right-hander went 4 1/3 innings, surrendering three earned runs while allowing only one hit. - Wells is looking to secure his ninth quality start of the season in this game. - Wells enters the matchup with 18 outings of five or more innings pitched this season. - In three of his 20 total appearances this season he has not allowed an earned run. Yankees Probable Starting Pitcher - The Yankees' Clarke Schmidt (6-6) will make his 21st start of the season. - The right-hander last pitched on Friday, July 21, when he gave up three earned runs and allowed five hits in 5 2/3 innings against the Kansas City Royals. - He has three quality starts in 20 chances this season. - Schmidt will look to pitch five or more innings for the third start in a row. - He has made 21 appearances and finished five of them without allowing an earned run. Orioles Schedule Yankees Schedule Not all offers available in all states, please visit BetMGM for the latest promotions for your area. Must be 21+ to gamble, please wager responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, contact 1-800-GAMBLER. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/orioles-vs-yankees-mlb-live-stream-tv/
2023-07-29T20:18:29
0
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/orioles-vs-yankees-mlb-live-stream-tv/
GUILFORD COUNTY, N.C. (WGHP) — A North Carolina man’s long-lost 1967 Mustang coupe was found after being stolen 21 years ago. Detectives in Guilford County, and the owner of the car, were also surprised to find the vehicle was still in decent shape. “Twenty-one years. That is unbelievable,” David Tucker said. The blue Mustang was Tucker’s dream car. He and his son even formed a bond during the boy’s childhood, riding together in the coupe. “Riding in it with my son … he was in a car seat in the back,” Tucker said. “He finally got out of the car seat and was able to sit up front with me. Just riding around with him, and seeing the look on his face. That’s the best.” In 2002, Tucker decided to sell the car. He left it sitting at a friend’s house in Oak Ridge, where it might have more visibility for potential buyers. But somebody decided to just take it. “I can’t even describe the sadness,” Tucker said. “That was like my baby, you know? A member of the family just got gone. I never thought I would see it again.” For years, Tucker worked along with the Guilford County Sheriff’s Office to try to find it. He checked in on his VIN number every year. “The VIN number had been changed on it,” said Detective Sergeant Ryan Seals with the Guilford County Sheriff’s Office. “The initial VIN number … came back to a vehicle that had already been scrapped.” But a few weeks back, deputies said that VIN number eventually led to a crack in the case: The car was found states away in Florida — and only a little worse for wear. In addition to a little bit of damage on the inside and outside, the car, too, had been painted white. “It’s nowhere near what it used to be. It’s going to take some work,” Tucker said. Tucker is currently trying to figure out how to get the car back to North Carolina. “It means a lot, there was a lot of memories.” he said. “That was my dream car, and my son loved it. We rode in and all the time. So I’m just anxious to get it back and maybe get it back to where it was when it got stolen.” Tucker is also working with DMV to get his title back. He says it could still take several weeks or even months to get his car back to North Carolina.
https://who13.com/news/national-news/dream-car-mans-stolen-mustang-found-21-years-later/
2023-07-29T20:18:32
1
https://who13.com/news/national-news/dream-car-mans-stolen-mustang-found-21-years-later/
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https://tj.news/daily-gleaner/102145406
2023-07-29T20:18:34
0
https://tj.news/daily-gleaner/102145406
Oscar Gonzalez Player Prop Bets: Guardians vs. White Sox - July 29 Published: Jul. 29, 2023 at 3:38 PM EDT|Updated: 40 minutes ago On Saturday, Oscar Gonzalez (batting .269 in his past 10 games) and the Cleveland Guardians face the Chicago White Sox, whose starting pitcher will be Mike Clevinger. First pitch is at 7:10 PM ET. In his most recent appearance, he went 1-for-4 against the White Sox. Oscar Gonzalez Game Info & Props vs. the White Sox - Game Day: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Game Time: 7:10 PM ET - Stadium: Guaranteed Rate Field - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! - White Sox Starter: Mike Clevinger - TV Channel: NBCS-CHI - Hits Prop: Over/under 0.5 hits (Over odds: -227) - Home Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +550) - RBI Prop: Over/under 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +175) - Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 runs (Over odds: +155) Looking to place a prop bet on Oscar Gonzalez? Check out what's available at BetMGM and use bonus code "GNPLAY" when you sign up with this link! Explore More About This Game Oscar Gonzalez At The Plate - Gonzalez is hitting .205 with two doubles, a triple, a home run and two walks. - Gonzalez enters this game on a four-game hitting streak. During his last games, he's hitting .400. - In 52.0% of his games this year (13 of 25), Gonzalez has picked up at least one hit, and in three of those games (12.0%) he recorded more than one. - He has hit a home run in one of 25 games, and in 1.3% of his plate appearances. - Gonzalez has driven in a run in four games this year (16.0%), including one multiple-RBI game. - He has scored in four games this season (16.0%), but has had no multi-run games. Ready to play FanDuel Daily Fantasy? Get in the game using our link. Oscar Gonzalez Home/Away Batting Splits White Sox Pitching Rankings - The 9.7 strikeouts per nine innings put together by the White Sox pitching staff ranks first in MLB. - The White Sox have the 24th-ranked team ERA among all MLB pitching staffs (4.63). - White Sox pitchers combine to allow the third-most home runs in baseball (145 total, 1.4 per game). - Clevinger (3-4 with a 3.88 ERA and 53 strikeouts in 62 2/3 innings pitched) gets the start for the White Sox, his 13th of the season. - His last time out was on Thursday, June 15 against the Los Angeles Dodgers, when the right-hander tossed 4 2/3 scoreless innings while allowing three hits. - In 12 games this season, the 32-year-old has an ERA of 3.88, with 7.6 strikeouts per nine innings. Opponents are hitting .244 against him. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/oscar-gonzalez-mlb-player-prop-bets/
2023-07-29T20:18:36
1
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/oscar-gonzalez-mlb-player-prop-bets/
(The Hill) – A majority of Americans believe former President Trump has done “something illegal” or “unethical,” according to a new poll. The NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist National Poll released Friday, found that 51% of Americans believe the former president has done “something illegal,” 27% said he’s done something “unethical,” but “not illegal,” and 19% said he’s done “nothing wrong.” The results of the new poll come just one day after the Department of Justice (DOJ) levied new charges against Trump in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case for attempting to delete surveillance footage. The superseding indictment brings the total number of counts facing the former president in the classified documents case to 40. The poll, however, was conducted before the new charges against Trump were announced. The survey also found that the percentage of Democrats who think Trump has done “something illegal” has increased — up from 78% in June to 84%. The number of independents that believe the same also increased from 50% to 52% in the same period, according to the poll. The number of Republicans that believe Trump’s actions are “illegal,” however, has remained steady at around 13%. But, as the poll notes, there was a dip the number of Republicans that believe Trump has done “nothing wrong” — going from 50% to 41% since June. DOJ special counsel Jack Smith has been investigating Trump and his allies’ efforts to upend the 2020 election. The former president also faces another indictment from New York district attorney Alvin Bragg for 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in connection to a 2016 hush money payment. The survey of 1,285 respondents was conducted from July 25-27, with a margin of error of 3.6 percentage points.
https://who13.com/news/national-news/majority-of-americans-believe-trump-has-done-something-illegal-poll/
2023-07-29T20:18:38
0
https://who13.com/news/national-news/majority-of-americans-believe-trump-has-done-something-illegal-poll/
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https://tj.news/daily-gleaner/102147179
2023-07-29T20:18:41
0
https://tj.news/daily-gleaner/102147179
How to Watch the Red Sox vs. Giants Game: Streaming & TV Channel Info for July 29 The Boston Red Sox and San Francisco Giants will play on Saturday at Oracle Park, at 7:15 PM ET, with Rafael Devers and Michael Conforto among those expected to step up at the plate. Sign up for Fubo to watch this game and make sure you don't miss any of the action all year long! Bet with theKing of Sportsbooks and use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Check out the latest odds and place your bets with BetMGM Sportsbook. Use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Red Sox vs. Giants Live Stream, TV Channel and Game Info: - Date: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Time: 7:15 PM ET - TV Channel: FOX - Location: San Francisco, California - Venue: Oracle Park - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! Bet on this matchup with BetMGM Sportsbook and use bonus code "GNPLAY" for special offers! Discover More About This Game Red Sox Batting & Pitching Performance - The Red Sox average 1.1 home runs per game to rank 20th in MLB play with 116 total home runs. - Boston's .437 slugging percentage is sixth-best in baseball. - The Red Sox have the third-best batting average in the league (.265). - Boston has the No. 6 offense in MLB action, scoring five runs per game (519 total runs). - The Red Sox are fourth in baseball with an on-base percentage of .333. - Red Sox batters strike out 8.2 times per game, the 10th-fewest strikeouts in baseball. - The pitching staff for Boston has a collective 8.8 K/9, which ranks 14th in the majors. - Boston's 4.26 team ERA ranks 17th among all MLB pitching staffs. - Pitchers for the Red Sox combine for the 18th-ranked WHIP in MLB (1.285). Giants Batting & Pitching Performance - The Giants have hit 120 homers this season, which ranks 14th in the league. - San Francisco ranks 22nd in the majors with a .397 team slugging percentage. - The Giants have a team batting average of .241 this season, which ranks 19th among MLB teams. - San Francisco ranks 15th in the majors with 469 total runs scored this season. - The Giants have an OBP of .317 this season, which ranks 16th in MLB. - The Giants rank just 28th in MLB in strikeouts per game with an average of 9.5 whiffs per contest. - San Francisco averages the 16th-most strikeouts per nine innings (8.7) in the majors this season. - San Francisco has the 11th-ranked ERA (4.01) in the majors this season. - The Giants have a combined WHIP of just 1.253 as a pitching staff, which is the eighth-best in baseball this season. Red Sox Probable Starting Pitcher - James Paxton (6-2) takes the mound for the Red Sox in his 13th start of the season. He's put together a 3.46 ERA in 65 2/3 innings pitched, with 75 strikeouts. - The lefty last pitched on Saturday against the New York Mets, when he went six innings, allowing two earned runs while giving up three hits. - Paxton is trying to pick up his eighth quality start of the season in this game. - Paxton heads into the matchup with nine outings of five or more innings pitched this season. - He has held his opponents without an earned run in two of his 12 outings this season. Giants Probable Starting Pitcher - The Giants will send Ryan Walker (3-0) to the mound for his seventh start this season. - The right-hander did not allow a run in 2 2/3 innings pitched on Thursday in his last outing, a matchup with the Oakland Athletics. - Walker has not earned a quality start in six starts this season. - In six starts this season, Walker has yet to pitch five or more innings. - He has 17 appearances this season with zero earned runs allowed out of his 24 chances this season. Red Sox Schedule Giants Schedule Not all offers available in all states, please visit BetMGM for the latest promotions for your area. Must be 21+ to gamble, please wager responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, contact 1-800-GAMBLER. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/red-sox-vs-giants-mlb-live-stream-tv/
2023-07-29T20:18:42
0
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/red-sox-vs-giants-mlb-live-stream-tv/
(NerdWallet) – Labor Day may mark the unofficial end of summer in the U.S. — but it’s hardly the end of airport crowds. In fact, given record-breaking crowds already this year, there’s a good chance this Labor Day weekend could be busier than any prior Labor Day weekend. Already this summer, U.S. airports have set fresh passenger records. June 30, the Friday before July 4, marked a new record high of passengers on a single day when more than 2.884 million people passed through Transportation Security Administration (TSA) checkpoints. That figure topped the previous record of 2.882 million people from the Sunday after 2019’s Thanksgiving, according to a NerdWallet analysis of TSA data showing the number of passengers screened at U.S. TSA checkpoints over the last four years. Roughly 12% more people passed through U.S. airports in June 2023 versus June 2022, which is perhaps unsurprising given the lingering effects of the pandemic through 2022. The more impressive feat, though, is that 2023’s crowds have exceeded 2019 levels. TSA screened 0.6% more passengers in June 2023 versus June 2019, proving that summer is back and bigger than ever. Expect Labor Day 2023 crowds to be no different, but some days around the long weekend are significantly busier than others. The best and worst days to fly Labor Day weekend TSA checkpoint data suggests most people use Labor Day — which is observed on the first Monday of September — as a long weekend. They depart on Friday, bask in two full days of vacation and return home on Monday. To avoid crowds, and likely save money, book Labor Day travel on days that aren’t the start and end of the weekend. Based on an average of the past four years, here were the most to least crowded days for the week surrounding Labor Day, ranked: - Friday before Labor Day (most crowded). - Thursday before. - Labor Day Monday. - Sunday after. - Friday after. - Monday after. - Monday before. - Thursday after. - Tuesday after. - Wednesday before. - Sunday before. - Saturday before. - Wednesday after. - Tuesday before. - Saturday after (least crowded). When broken out by pre- and post-Labor Day travel, here are the three least crowded days to travel ranked from least to most crowded: Pre-holiday: - Tuesday before (overall least crowded day pre-holiday). - Saturday before. - Sunday before. Post-holiday: - Saturday after (overall least crowded day post-holiday). - Wednesday after. - Tuesday after. During the seven days after and before Labor Day (including the holiday itself), the Friday before Labor Day has been the single busiest day to fly over each of the past four years. As far as the period starting on Labor Day itself and spanning the subsequent seven days, Labor Day Monday has been the busiest day to fly over the past three years. If Labor Day Monday is excluded from the rankings, the Sunday after has been the busiest over the past three years. In 2019, the trends were flipped: the Sunday after was the busiest, and the holiday itself was the second busiest. The smarter, cheaper Labor Day weekend itinerary If you work a standard Monday-Friday workweek and have the holiday off, leaving Friday after work and returning on Labor Day seems logical. But following the same itinerary as everyone else means you’ll likely pay — both in airfares and navigating airport crowds. For lighter crowds (and perhaps better deals), try these travel days instead: Fly on the Tuesday or Wednesday before: Let Labor Day weekend become closer to a week by jetting off earlier than the folks leaving Thursday or Friday, assuming you have enough vacation days to use (or can work remotely). You’ll have more time away from home and be more relaxed without the big airport crowds. Travel on Saturday: Crowds are light on Saturdays before and after the holiday. So, rather than rushing out of work on Friday afternoon to catch a flight, opt for the morning flight the next day. That Saturday morning flight might also reduce your risk of delays, too. According to travel booking site Hopper’s Flight Disruption Outlook for Spring 2023, flights departing after 9 a.m. are twice as likely to be delayed than departures scheduled from 5-8 a.m. Fly home the Sunday before: While most folks fly home on Labor Day Monday, you might get a head start by flying home on Sunday. Sure, you’ll have one less vacation day than folks following your same itinerary departing Monday, but that’s not a bad thing. By returning Sunday night, you’ll have a whole day to refresh and prepare for the week ahead by doing laundry, meal prepping or catching up on potential jetlag. Sometimes the nicest way to relax is by taking a vacation from your vacation.
https://who13.com/news/national-news/the-busiest-days-to-fly-around-labor-day-2023/
2023-07-29T20:18:44
1
https://who13.com/news/national-news/the-busiest-days-to-fly-around-labor-day-2023/
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https://tj.news/greater-saint-john/102147184
2023-07-29T20:18:47
1
https://tj.news/greater-saint-john/102147184
Steven Kwan Player Prop Bets: Guardians vs. White Sox - July 29 Published: Jul. 29, 2023 at 3:38 PM EDT|Updated: 40 minutes ago Steven Kwan -- with a slugging percentage of .465 in his past 10 games, including five extra-base hits -- will be in action for the Cleveland Guardians versus the Chicago White Sox, with Mike Clevinger on the hill, on July 29 at 7:10 PM ET. In his most recent game he had a hitless performance (0-for-3) against the White Sox. Steven Kwan Game Info & Props vs. the White Sox - Game Day: Saturday, July 29, 2023 - Game Time: 7:10 PM ET - Stadium: Guaranteed Rate Field - Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo! - White Sox Starter: Mike Clevinger - TV Channel: NBCS-CHI - Hits Prop: Over/under 1.5 hits (Over odds: +195) - Home Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +900) - RBI Prop: Over/under 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +250) - Runs Prop: Over/under 0.5 runs (Over odds: -110) Looking to place a prop bet on Steven Kwan? Check out what's available at BetMGM and use bonus code "GNPLAY" when you sign up with this link! Explore More About This Game Steven Kwan At The Plate - Kwan leads Cleveland in slugging percentage (.374) thanks to 32 extra-base hits. - Among the qualifying hitters in MLB action, he ranks 42nd in batting average, 44th in on-base percentage, and 120th in slugging. - Kwan has picked up a hit in 68.6% of his 102 games this year, with multiple hits in 31.4% of them. - In four games this year, he has gone deep (3.9%, and 0.9% of his trips to the plate). - In 22.5% of his games this year, Kwan has had at least one RBI. He's picked up more than one in 7.8% and driven in three or more of his team's runs in three contests. - He has scored in 52.0% of his games this year (53 of 102), with two or more runs 12 times (11.8%). Ready to play FanDuel Daily Fantasy? Get in the game using our link. Steven Kwan Home/Away Batting Splits White Sox Pitching Rankings - The White Sox pitching staff leads MLB with a collective 9.7 strikeouts per nine innings. - The White Sox have the 24th-ranked team ERA among all MLB pitching staffs (4.63). - The White Sox allow the third-most home runs in baseball (145 total, 1.4 per game). - Clevinger makes the start for the White Sox, his 13th of the season. He is 3-4 with a 3.88 ERA and 53 strikeouts through 62 2/3 innings pitched. - The right-hander last appeared on Thursday, June 15 against the Los Angeles Dodgers, when he went 4 2/3 scoreless innings while giving up three hits. - The 32-year-old has amassed an ERA of 3.88, with 7.6 strikeouts per nine innings, in 12 games this season. Opponents are hitting .244 against him. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/steven-kwan-mlb-player-prop-bets/
2023-07-29T20:18:49
1
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/29/steven-kwan-mlb-player-prop-bets/
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday signed a law moving the official Christmas Day holiday to Dec. 25 from Jan. 7, the day when the Russian Orthodox Church observes it. The explanatory note attached to the law said its goal is to “abandon the Russian heritage,” including that of “imposing the celebration of Christmas” on Jan. 7, and cited Ukrainians’ “relentless, successful struggle for their identity” and “the desire of all Ukrainians to live their lives with their own traditions, holidays,” fueled by Russia’s 17-month-old aggression against the country. Last year, some Ukrainians already observed Christmas on Dec. 25, in a gesture that represented separation from Russia, its culture and religious traditions. The law also moves the Day of Ukrainian Statehood to July 15 from July 28, and the Day of Defenders of Ukraine to Oct. 1 from Oct. 14. The Russian Orthodox Church, which claims sovereignty over Orthodoxy in Ukraine, and some other Eastern Orthodox churches continue to use the ancient Julian calendar. Christmas falls 13 days later on that calendar, or Jan. 7, than it does on the Gregorian calendar used by most church and secular groups. The Catholic Church first adopted the modern, more astronomically precise Gregorian calendar in the 16th century. Protestants and some Orthodox churches have since aligned their own calendars for the purpose of calculating Christmas and Easter. Ukraine’s religious landscape has fractured for years. There are two branches of Orthodox Christianity in the country, one aligned with the Russian church, even as it enjoys broad autonomy, the other completely independent of it. The Orthodox Church of Ukraine, the branch that is separate from the Russian church, announced earlier this year that it was switching to the Revised Julian calendar, which marks Christmas on Dec. 25. Its leadership last year allowed believers to celebrate the holiday on Dec. 25. Russia’s state news agency RIA Novosti reported on Saturday that the rival Orthodox Church, which is aligned with the Russian Orthodox Church, vowed to continue observing Christmas on Jan. 7. Zelenskyy on Saturday traveled to the war-torn Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine, which Russia has illegally annexed, but only partially occupies, and met with members of the country’s Special Operation Forces. Zelenskyy noted in an online statement that Saturday marks their official day of recognition and also the anniversary of the deadly attack on the Olenivka prison in the Russian-held part of the region in which dozens of prisoners of war were killed. Russia and Ukraine accused each other of the attack, with both sides saying that the assault was premeditated in a bid to cover up atrocities. A United Nations fact-finding mission requested by Russia and Ukraine was sent to investigate the killings, but the team was disbanded in January 2023 due to security concerns. Zelenskyy described the attack as one of Russia’s “most vile and cruel crimes” in a video statement Saturday.
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ukraine-moves-date-of-christmas-day-to-distance-itself-from-russian-tradition/
2023-07-29T20:18:50
1
https://who13.com/news/national-news/ukraine-moves-date-of-christmas-day-to-distance-itself-from-russian-tradition/
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https://tj.news/greater-saint-john/102147541
2023-07-29T20:18:53
0
https://tj.news/greater-saint-john/102147541
2023 Amundi Evian Championship Betting Odds, Favorites & Insights – Round 4 Celine Boutier is the current leader (-100) at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship after three rounds of play. Want to place a bet on the Amundi Evian Championship? Use our link for a special offer when you sign up with BetMGM Sportsbook! Amundi Evian Championship Fourth Round Information - Start Time: 12:45 AM ET - Venue: Evian Resort Golf Club - Location: Évian-les-Bains, France - Par/Distance: Par 71/6,527 yards Watch live golf without cable on all your devices with a free trial to Fubo! Amundi Evian Championship Best Odds to Win Celine Boutier - Tee Time: 6:25 AM ET - Current Rank: 1st (-11) - Odds to Win: -100 Boutier Round by Round Results Click here to bet on Boutier at the Amundi Evian Championship with BetMGM Sportsbook! Nasa Hataoka - Tee Time: 6:25 AM ET - Current Rank: 2nd (-8) - Odds to Win: +400 Hataoka Round by Round Results Click here to bet on Hataoka with BetMGM Sportsbook! Minjee Lee - Tee Time: 6:15 AM ET - Current Rank: 3rd (-7) - Odds to Win: +700 Lee Round by Round Results Want to place a bet on Lee in the Amundi Evian Championship? Click here to sign up with BetMGM Sportsbook! Brooke Mackenzie Henderson - Tee Time: 6:15 AM ET - Current Rank: 3rd (-7) - Odds to Win: +800 Mackenzie Henderson Round by Round Results Think Mackenzie Henderson can win the Amundi Evian Championship? Click here to bet with BetMGM Sportsbook! Nelly Korda - Tee Time: 6:05 AM ET - Current Rank: 5th (-6) - Odds to Win: +1200 Korda Round by Round Results Click here to bet on Korda at the Amundi Evian Championship with BetMGM Sportsbook! Amundi Evian Championship Odds (Rest of Field) Put together your best lineup of golfers and you could win cash prizes! Sign up for FanDuel Fantasy using our link for the best first-time player offer. Not all offers available in all states, please visit BetMGM for the latest promotions for your area. Must be 21+ to gamble, please wager responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, contact 1-800-GAMBLER. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/30/amundi-evian-championship-lpga-tournament-betting-odds-round-4/
2023-07-29T20:18:55
1
https://www.cleveland19.com/sports/betting/2023/07/30/amundi-evian-championship-lpga-tournament-betting-odds-round-4/
NEW YORK (AP) — Former Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon of Missouri is joining No Labels ‘ increasingly contentious effort to lay the groundwork for a moderate third-party presidential ticket in the 2024 election. He gives the embattled organization another prominent ally amid escalating concerns from Democratic officials that the No Labels campaign could unintentionally help Republican Donald Trump return to the White House. Nixon, a 67-year-old lawyer, is stepping back into national politics for the first time since leaving office in 2017 and will serve as No Labels’ director of ballot integrity. He said in an interview that he was drawn to the role after learning that well-funded groups aligned with Democrats were working to stop No Labels from securing ballot access in key states. He said that those seeking to block the group’s right to appear on the presidential ballot are attacking a pillar of American democracy. “What do I say to those Democrats? I say, ‘You’re entitled to your opinion. But we are also entitled to use our constitutional and statutory rights to allow Americans to have another choice,’” Nixon told The Associated Press. President Joe Biden and Trump have dominated the 2024 campaign conversation so far. But No Labels, a Washington-based group that promotes compromise, national unity and centrist policy solutions, has been preparing for the strongest third-party presidential bid at least since Texas businessman Ross Perot earned nearly 19% of the popular vote in 1992. Working with an operating budget of roughly $70 million, No Labels is taking steps to secure presidential ballot spots in roughly 20 states this year; the group has done so already in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Oregon and Utah. While No Labels has yet to nominate candidates for president and vice president, its leadership insists there is a path to victory for a centrist third-party ticket “if the two parties select unreasonably divisive presidential nominees.” The group’s critics across the Democratic Party are terrified that No Labels will siphon votes that would otherwise go to Biden, who narrowly beat Trump in 2020 with a coalition that included moderate Democrats, independents and disaffected Republicans. No Labels’ leadership has promised a series of checks and balances that would allow the organization to withdraw its presidential ticket if it appears the group’s participation would help Trump win. No Labels has not outlined a detailed plan about that, and leaders acknowledge privately there is some urgency to come out with their specific safeguards, which would vary state by state. They intend to do so by “early fall.” Anxious Democrats are unconvinced. On Thursday, two prominent Democratic groups, the centrist Third Way and more progressive MoveOn, hosted private meetings on Capitol Hill with dozens of chiefs of staff and senior aides to House and Senate Democrats to emphasize the need to stop No Label’s presidential ambitions. In a nod to the seriousness of the Democratic establishment’s concerns, the meetings were held in both the House and Senate Democrats’ campaign headquarters. “We told them what we have been saying consistently now for a long time: This is dangerous,” said Third Way co-founder Matt Bennett, who helped lead the briefing along with MoveOn’s executive director, Rahna Epting. The organizers detailed data showing that a No Labels ticket would undercut Biden in the general election and warned that it could handicap vulnerable House and Senate candidates is tight elections. They also questioned that No Labels’ promise to withdraw its ticket if necessary to stop Trump. No Labels’ leaders are furious. “They are telling the elected leaders of this country right now that our ballot is a runaway train. And that is categorically false. That is propaganda. And that is why we’re bringing on a director of ballot integrity to stop it because it’s outrageous,” said No Labels’ founder Nancy Jacobson, a former Democratic fundraiser. For now, Democrats are not willing to take Jacobson’s word for it. “I don’t want to be doing this. I’d much rather focus on other things. I am concerned, genuinely,” Epting said. “They’re in over their head. They have not given any assurances that they’re clear and sober in their analysis. And when they talk about being able to put the horse back in the barn, they are not consistent about when or how they’re going to do that.” “They’re just saying, ‘Trust us,’” Epting said. “We can’t. We don’t know you. And the stakes are too high.” Meanwhile, Nixon joins a growing roster of former elected officials in both parties now affiliated with No Labels. Among the others: Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.; former Govs. Jon Huntsman Jr., R-Utah, Larry Hogan, R-Md., and Pat McCrory, R-N.C.; and former Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, a Democrat who became an independent late in his political career. Manchin and Huntsman, ambassador to China under President Barack Obama and to Russia under Trump, hosted a town hall in New Hampshire this month, driving speculation they may ultimately become the No Labels presidential ticket. No Labels plans to hold a presidential nominating convention next April in Dallas, and the group is showing no signs of backing off its 2024 plans. With a massive budget fueled by anonymous donations, No Labels can afford to be patient in the fights ahead. Democrats in Arizona filed a complaint this month with the secretary of state asking to have the group suspended until it discloses it donors. In May, Maine’s top elections official sent a cease-and-desist letter regarding No Labels voter registration efforts after claiming the group was misleading voters. The group Citizens to Save Our Republic formed a super political action committee this month specifically designed to stop No Labels. The group’s members includes Bennett from Third Way, several advisers to the anti-Trump Lincoln Project and former House Majority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo. Nixon, who declined to criticize Biden or Trump, said he understands that he is walking into a political firestorm. But he said he is passionate about No Labels’ constitutional right to secure a place on the ballot. “I feel calm. I feel correct. I think we have a high moral ground here,” he said.
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-ex-missouri-gov-jay-nixon-joins-push-for-third-party-presidential-bid-as-democrats-try-to-stop-it/
2023-07-29T20:18:56
1
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-ex-missouri-gov-jay-nixon-joins-push-for-third-party-presidential-bid-as-democrats-try-to-stop-it/
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https://tj.news/kings-county-record/102147534
2023-07-29T20:18:59
0
https://tj.news/kings-county-record/102147534
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The oldest historically Black collegiate fraternity in the U.S. says it is relocating a planned convention in two years from Florida because of what it described as Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration’s “harmful, racist and insensitive” policies towards African Americans. Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity said this week that it would move its 2025 convention from Orlando to another location that is yet undecided. The convention draws between 4,000 and 6,000 people and has an economic impact of $4.6 million, the fraternity said. The decision comes after the NAACP and other civil rights organizations this spring issued a travel advisory for Florida, warning that recently passed laws and policies are openly hostile to African Americans, people of color and members of the LGBTQ+ community. Willis Lonzer, the fraternity’s general president, said in statement on Wednesday that the decision was motivated in part by Florida’s new education standards that require teachers to instruct middle school students that slaves developed skills that “could be applied for their personal benefit.” “Although we are moving our convention from Florida, Alpha Phi Alpha will continue to support the strong advocacy of Alpha Brothers and other advocates fighting against the continued assault on our communities in Florida by Governor Ron DeSantis,” Lonzer said. An email seeking comment on Saturday about the fraternity’s decision was sent to Jeremy Redfern, the governor’s press secretary and the governor’s office. DeSantis, who is running for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, has come under fire this week over Florida’s new education standards. Among those criticizing the Florida governor on Friday was a rival for the Republican nomination, U.S. Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, the sole Black Republican in the Senate. Responding to the criticism, DeSantis said Friday that he was “defending” Florida “against false accusations and against lies. And we’re going to continue to speak the truth.” In May, the NAACP joined the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), a Latino civil rights organization, and Equality Florida, a gay rights advocacy group, in issuing travel advisories for the Sunshine State, where tourism is one of the state’s largest job sectors. The groups cited recent laws that prohibited state colleges from having programs on diversity, equity and inclusion, as well as critical race theory, and the Stop WOKE Act that restricts certain race-based conversations and analysis in schools and businesses. They also cited laws that they say made life more difficult for immigrants in Florida and limited discussions on LGBTQ topics in schools. At least nine other organizations or associations have pulled the plug on hosting conventions in Orlando and Fort Lauderdale, two of the state’s most population convention cities, because of Florida’s political climate, according to local media reports. Florida is one of the most popular states in the U.S. for tourists, and tourism is one of its biggest industries. More than 137.5 million tourists visited Florida last year, marking a return to pre-pandemic levels, according to Visit Florida, the state’s tourism promotion agency. Tourism supports 1.6 million full-time and part-time jobs, and visitors spent $98.8 billion in Florida in 2019, the last year figures are available. ___ Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter at @MikeSchneiderAP
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-historically-black-fraternity-drops-florida-for-convention-because-of-desantis-policies/
2023-07-29T20:19:03
1
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-historically-black-fraternity-drops-florida-for-convention-because-of-desantis-policies/
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https://tj.news/miramichi-leader/102143741
2023-07-29T20:19:06
0
https://tj.news/miramichi-leader/102143741
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (AP) — Not long ago, Marine Col. Jennifer Nash, a combat engineer with war deployments under her belt, made a vow to fellow officers as they headed to a dinner in Atlanta: She would get two new recruiting contacts by the end of the evening. She admits recruiting is not the job that she or other Marines had in mind when they enlisted. But after stints as a recruiter and senior officer at the Eastern recruiting command, she has become emblematic of the Corps’ tradition of putting its best, battle-tested Marines on enlistment duty. They get results. Marine leaders say they will make their recruiting goal this year, while the active-duty Army, Navy and Air Force all expect to fall short. The services have struggled in the tight job market to compete with higher-paying businesses for the dwindling number of young people who can meet the military’s physical, mental and moral standards. On that night, Nash achieved her own goal. She had gotten the valet at the hotel and the hostess at the restaurant to provide their phone numbers and to consider a Marine career. Nash’s boss, Brig. Gen. Walker Field, who head the Eastern recruiting region, says the Corps has historically put an emphasis on selecting top-performing Marines to fill recruiting jobs. He says that has been a key to the Marines’ recruiting success, along with efforts to increase the number of recruiters, extend those who do well and speed their return to high schools, where in-person recruiting stopped during the COVID-19 pandemic. He said his recruiters — who cover the territory between Canada and Puerto Rico and as far west as Mississippi — will meet their mission and expect to have 30% of their 2024 goal when they start the next fiscal year, Oct. 1. More broadly, Marine officials say they expect the Corps to achieve its recruiting target of more than 33,000. Last year, the Navy, Air Force and Marines had to eat into their pools of delayed entry applicants in order to make their goals. The Marines will avoid that this year. “That would be a great ending,” said Field, speaking to The Associated Press on a recent steamy day at South Carolina’s Parris Island, along the Atlantic Coast. “I’m bearish for not only concluding FY23 on a strong footing, but also how we set the conditions for FY24.” The Marine Corps may get some help from its small size. The Army, for example, has a recruiting goal of 65,000 this year, which is nearly double the Corps’, and expects to fall substantially short of that. Air Force and Navy officials say they will also miss their goals, although the Space Force, which is the smallest service and does its recruiting within Air Force stations, is expected to meet its goal of about 500 recruits. Sitting in the shadow of Parris Island’s replica of the Iwo Jima monument, Field said his biggest challenge is that a number of Marine hopefuls cannot pass the military’s academic test, known as the Armed Services Voluntary Aptitude Battery. That is a widespread problem, but the Army recently set up a program that targets recruits who score below 30 on the test and provides schooling for several weeks to help them pass. Already more than 8,800 recruits have successfully gone through the classes, raised their scores and moved on to basic training. The Navy is taking another route with a pilot program that allows up to 20% of their recruits to score below 30 on the test, as long as they meet specific standards for their chosen naval job. Marine leaders, however, do not take those lowest scoring recruits, and so far have no plans for any type of formal improvement program such as the Army’s. Field said the Marines are repositioning recruiting stations, moving them around based on where population totals have increased in the latest census. More important, he said, the Corps maintains its focus on choosing the right recruiters, encouraging successful ones to stay in the job and increasing the number of Marine reservists tapped for recruit duties from the current 31 to 96 by the end of next year. Nash, who until last month was assistant chief of staff for the Eastern region, said Marines are hand-selected for recruiting command jobs. Many three- and four-star Marines, including former Defense Secretary James Mattis, will cite their years doing enlistment duty. “We put our best and brightest in those positions,” said Nash, adding that those chosen for recruiting posts have a proven track record of success in previous assignments and have demonstrated critical leadership skills. “That’s why they got selected, because they were above their peers.” She acknowledged that the first time she was picked for a recruiting job she was “voluntold.” But now, recounting her sales pitch in Atlanta, her rapid fire pitch comes without taking a breath. “I say, ‘Hey, ever thought about being Marine? We’re a bunch of Marines. And, you know, I think you potentially could be a good Marine. You ever thought about it?’ And usually you get, ‘Yeah, I thought about it.’ And I’m, like, ‘What’s holding you back? Would you like to learn more about your opportunities?’ ‘Absolutely.’ `OK. Mind giving me your name and phone number? I’ll have one of my recruiters give you a phone call.’” The Marines have resisted increasing bonuses to attract recruits — something the other services have found helpful. Gen. Eric Smith, the acting Marine Corps commandant, got some ribbing for his response when he was asked about bonuses during a naval conference in February. “Your bonus is you get to call yourself a Marine,” he said. “That’s your bonus, right? There’s no dollar amount that goes with that.” Field, Nash and others also say the Corps prefers to give a lot of recruits a few thousand dollars, rather than increasing the amount and giving money to far fewer people. Field said that getting Marine recruiters in uniform back into high schools this year, after several years of COVID-19 restrictions, has been a key driver. There, young people line up to compete in pull-up contests, vying for a free T-shirt if they can do 20. And recruiters say many are drawn to the cache of being a Marine. “If you told me you’ll give me $10 million worth of advertising and I can do something with it, or you’ll give me 10 great-looking Marines in a Marine uniform — what’s going to get the most value? Give me those 10 Marines and give me a day,” Nash said. “We’ll go out and we’ll get more out of that, I think, than $10 million in advertising.”
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-the-few-and-the-proud-arent-so-few-marines-recruiting-surges-while-other-services-struggle/
2023-07-29T20:19:10
0
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-the-few-and-the-proud-arent-so-few-marines-recruiting-surges-while-other-services-struggle/
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https://tj.news/national-post/102147610
2023-07-29T20:19:12
1
https://tj.news/national-post/102147610
Bronny James plays piano in a video posted by his father, LeBron James, on Saturday, four days after the teenager went into cardiac arrest during a basketball workout at the University of Southern California. The 18-year-old plays a brief melody in front of his family, smiles and gets up without speaking in the video posted on his father's Instagram account. The video doesn't indicate where or when it was shot. “A man of many talents,” the Los Angeles Lakers superstar can be heard saying in the background as Bronny finishes playing with his two younger siblings looking on. Get Tri-state area news and weather forecasts to your inbox. Sign up for NBC New York newsletters. TMZ posted photos of Bronny out to dinner with his family, which it says were taken Friday night. They show the teenager with his father outside celebrity hot spot Giorgio Baldi in Santa Monica. Wearing black pants and a zip-up hoodie, Bronny carried his phone while standing outside the Italian restaurant. Bronny was released from the hospital on Thursday. He will continue to undergo tests to determine the cause of his cardiac arrest, which occurred Monday morning during a workout at USC’s Galen Center. Sports Bronny, whose full name is LeBron James Jr., committed to USC in May after the 6-foot-3 guard became one of the nation’s top prospects out of Sierra Canyon School in nearby Chatsworth.
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/sports/bronny-james-plays-piano-dines-out-in-video-photos-emerging-days-after-he-suffers-cardiac-arrest/4547555/
2023-07-29T20:19:15
0
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/sports/bronny-james-plays-piano-dines-out-in-video-photos-emerging-days-after-he-suffers-cardiac-arrest/4547555/
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — The United States will expand its military industrial base by helping Australia manufacture guided missiles and rockets for both countries within two years, the allies announced on Saturday as they ramped up defense cooperation to counter China’s growing influence in the Indo-Pacific. The new cooperation on guided weapon production follows a trilateral partnership announcement in March that will see Britain provide Australia with a fleet of eight submarines powered by U.S. nuclear technology. The greater integration of U.S. and Australian militaries was announced after annual talks between U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken and their Australian counterparts, Defense Minister Richard Marles and Foreign Minister Penny Wong. They agreed to cooperate on Australia producing Guided Multiple Launch Rocket Systems by 2025, a communique said. U.S. companies Raytheon and Lockheed Martin only established an Australian enterprise to build such weapons last year. That followed the drain on Western countries’ munitions caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Austin said the move on missiles would strengthen the two allies’ defense industrial base and technological edge. “We’re racing to accelerate Australia’s priority access to munitions through a streamlined acquisition process,” Austin told reporters in Brisbane, Australia. Marles welcomed U.S. support to achieve Australian missile production within two years. “We are really pleased with the steps that we are taking in respect of establishing a guided weapons and explosive ordnance enterprise in this country,” Marles said. The two governments also agreed to upgrade joint military facilities in Australia and to increase U.S. nuclear submarine visits as the United States increases its focus on the South Pacific. The region came to the forefront of the U.S. competition with China for influence last year, when Beijing signed a security pact with Solomon Islands and raised the prospect of a Chinese naval base being established there. Austin became the first U.S. defense secretary to visit Papua New Guinea and Blinken visited New Zealand and Tonga before they arrived in Australia. Saturday’s meeting was overshadowed by the loss of an Australian Army helicopter with four air crew late Friday, during military exercises with the U.S. off the northeastern coast of Australia. U.S., Australian and Canadian militaries are taking part in the search for potential survivors near Whitsunday Islands off the Queensland state coast. Austin and Marles will travel to north Queensland on Sunday to inspect Talisman Sabre, a biennial military exercise between the two countries that this year includes 13 nations and more than 30,000 military personnel.
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-us-pledges-to-help-australia-manufacture-guided-missiles-by-2025/
2023-07-29T20:19:17
0
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-us-pledges-to-help-australia-manufacture-guided-missiles-by-2025/
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https://tj.news/northern-light/102147540
2023-07-29T20:19:18
0
https://tj.news/northern-light/102147540
LISBON, Portugal – Mississippi State men's basketball used a 26-4 run during the first and second quarters as the Bulldogs captured a 76-50 victory over the Lisbon All-Stars on Saturday to open its Portugal Foreign Tour. The Maroon and White showcased a balanced scoring attack with eight players scoring at least five points. State canned 10 of its 31 field goals from three-point territory. The Bulldogs also recorded 21 steals, 19 assists and six blocks. "We're glad that we're here," head coach Chris Jans said. "The kids have been looking forward to playing against someone else. We finished our eight weeks of training before coming over to Portugal. We had a long day of travel [yesterday]. Like most games, there was some good, bad and ugly. Today was no different. It was good to see everybody having some fun. I think most everybody got in the scoring column. We did make 10 three's which is a good sign as well." Josh Hubbard secured a team-leading 12 points coupled with three steals and two assists, while Andrew Taylor turned in a solid all-around effort with nine points, four assists and four rebounds. Jimmy Bell Jr. and Adrian Myers registered eight points apiece with Myers pulling down four rebounds. "We expect that from them. They [Taylor and Bell Jr.] have been there and done that," Jans said. "They've got a lot of experience under their belt. Both of them looked comfortable out there. Some of our newer guys did what new guys do. They played a little too fast and tried to make something out of nothing. You can't teach experience. Hopefully, these games over here will help them understand how they need to play for us to be productive." Tolu Smith and Jaquan Scott added six points each whereas Scott grabbed seven rebounds and notched a pair of blocks. D.J. Jeffries and Shawn Jones Jr. each tallied five points followed by KeShawn Murphy who chipped in four points and four assists. The Bulldogs will continue their foreign tour against the Portugal All-Stars on Sunday. Tip time is slated for 4:30 p.m. local time/10:30 a.m. CT. The game will be streamed live at YouTube.com/HailState. Newsletters Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request.
https://www.djournal.com/sports/college/mississippi-state/mississippi-state-mens-basketball-opens-portugal-trip-with-76-50-win/article_a3784d48-2e49-11ee-af20-07366332e232.html
2023-07-29T20:19:22
0
https://www.djournal.com/sports/college/mississippi-state/mississippi-state-mens-basketball-opens-portugal-trip-with-76-50-win/article_a3784d48-2e49-11ee-af20-07366332e232.html
WASHINGTON (AP) — Pamela Smith’s voice soared and quivered like a preacher in midsermon as she recalled her troubled childhood and how it helped prepare her for the challenges she faces as the new police chief in the nation’s capital. “I stand before you as a child who had no hopes, who had no dreams — they were far beyond my reach. But I believe that all things are possible,” she said at her introductory news conference in Washington, in cadences honed by years as an ordained Baptist minister. “I believe I bring a fresh perspective, a different kind of energy, a different level of passion to what I’m going to do.” Smith takes on the job at a precarious time. Violent crime is rising sharply, fueled by more homicides and carjackings. The District of Columbia’s mayor, Muriel Bowser, and the D.C. Council have, at times, been at odds about crime legislation. On Capitol Hill, the Republican-led House has begun citing the city’s crime statistics while aggressively reviewing local public safety laws. On July 24, the Mexican Consulate posted a tweet urging its nationals to “take precautions” in the city due to “a significant increase in crime in areas previously considered safe.” Smith, 55, now becomes one of the public faces of this long-term fight even before the Council votes on her nomination as chief. She brings an inspirational story to her new role leading the Metropolitan Police Department. Raised in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, by a single mother who battled substance abuse, Smith and her siblings were at one point removed from their home and spent time in foster care. Smith emerged as a track star and went on to a 24-year career in the U.S. Park Police, where she served as the agency’s first Black female chief before retiring in 2022 to take up a senior leadership position at the MPD. Law enforcement and government officials repeatedly point out that overall crime numbers in Washington have stayed relatively stable. But the crimes that have increased the most — murders and carjackings — are the ones most likely to damage public confidence. “The scariest crimes are going up and regardless of what’s happening with other crimes, that’s what’s going to fuel the overall perception,” U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves told The Associated Press. Graves’ office prosecutes most felonies in Washington, in a unique arrangement due to the district’s status as a nonstate. The city’s attorney general’s office prosecutes misdemeanors and juvenile crime, which is also on the rise. This intricate dynamic among two separate sets of prosecutors, the city’s police force, Bowser’s administration and the Council has been publicly tested as the crime numbers have stayed high — all with Congress taking an increasing interest in the district’s affairs. Public safety was a primary topic of debate last year when Bowser, 50, successfully ran for a third term in office. She has spent this term sparring with both the Council and the House Oversight and Accountability Committee over how best to address crime. July has been a particular bloody month, with 22 homicides as of Friday, including murders on the campuses of both Howard and Catholic universities. The victims include an Afghan man who survived years of working as a translator for the U.S. Army in Afghanistan only to be murdered in America while driving for Lyft. Nine people, including two children, were shot at a July Fourth party, when an assailant in an SUV opened fire on the crowd. A 12-year old girl remains hospitalized after being shot in the back Tuesday night by a bullet that penetrated the walls of her home. Although the local murder rate is well below the levels in the 1980s and early 1990s, when Washington regularly led the nation in murders per capita, it has climbed steadily in recent years. In 2022, there was a roughly 10% drop in homicides, but now, homicides are up 15 percent compared with this time a year ago and the city is on pace to surpass 200 for the third year in a row. Police also reported 140 carjacking incidents in the month of June — the highest monthly total in more than five years. Crime in Washington is now a national headline issue in Congress. In the spring, Bowser and Council members were summoned before the House Oversight and Accountability Committee for a heated session on local crime rates. Congress voted to completely overturn the Council’s comprehensive rewrite of the district’s criminal code. Bowser was caught in the middle of the dispute. She had vetoed the overhaul, saying the reduction of maximum penalties for certain violent crimes “sent the wrong message,” but was overridden by the Council. The mayor opposes congressional intervention in local affairs as part of Washington’s long push for statehood, but her initial veto was frequently cited by Republican lawmakers as proof that the rewrite was soft on crime. In an embarrassment for the heavily Democratic city, the move to cancel the criminal code revision drew support from dozens of congressional Democratic and was signed into law by President Joe Biden. Earlier this month, the Council, with Bowser’s support, passed emergency public safety legislation meant to serve as a temporary fix. The bill makes it a felony to fire a gun in public and makes it easier for judges, in cases where people are charged with a violent crime, to detain them before trial. As an emergency bill, the changes will only last 90 days and will not be subject to congressional review; plans to make the changes permanent in the fall will face scrutiny by lawmakers. “It is no secret … to the public that we are in a state of emergency right now,” said Brooke Pinto, the D.C. Council member who was the bill’s architect. “Like in any emergency, we have to act like it and we have to act urgently to address the problem we’re seeing.” But some pushing for a criminal justice overhaul said city lawmakers were reverting to mass incarceration policies that had long ago been discredited. “We’re way beyond thinking that we can just incarcerate more people,” said Patrice Sulton, executive director of the D.C. Justice Lab, who helped draft the now-canceled criminal code revision. “I think everybody who voted for it knows that it will not have an impact.” The local branch of the American Civil Liberties Union said in a statement on Twitter that the new bill “essentially flips due process on its head — treating people as guilty and detaining them.” All sides point to one primary factor fueling the violence: a flood to firearms entering Washington. Graves, the district’s federal prosecutor, said the number of guns being used in crimes has skyrocketed, turning petty disputes into deadly battles. This includes a new wave of “ghost guns” — firearms that can be ordered in kits and assembled at home. Other kits can easily turn a semiautomatic weapon into an automatic, enabling a rapid-fire and generally less accurate spray of dozens of bullets. In 2018, authorities recovered three such guns; in 2022, the number was 461. Graves compared the illegal guns to “a virus” in the neighborhood. “The more virus there is in the community, the more people are going to get sick,” he said. “The more illegal firearms are in the community, the more likelihood those illegal firearms are going to be used.”
https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-violent-crime-is-rising-in-the-nations-capital-dc-seeks-solutions-as-congress-keeps-close-watch/
2023-07-29T20:19:24
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https://who13.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-violent-crime-is-rising-in-the-nations-capital-dc-seeks-solutions-as-congress-keeps-close-watch/
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https://tj.news/telegraph-journal/102143956
2023-07-29T20:19:24
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https://tj.news/telegraph-journal/102143956
OXFORD — Former Clemson linebacker T.J. Dudley — a four-star recruit in the 2022 class — committed to Ole Miss Friday night, the redshirt freshman announced on social media. He will have four years of eligibility remaining. “It was a disappointing situation because he’s a good kid and a man,” Swinney said at ACC Media Days, according to The Greenville News. “He had a chance to be a great player for us this year, so that definitely hurts us. It’s unfortunate, but we’ve got rules and sometimes it’s just best to get a fresh start. We wish him well.” The addition of Dudley is a boost for a new-look Rebels linebacking corps. Troy Brown, last year’s leading tackler, has graduated. Austin Keys transferred to Auburn, leaving seniors Ashanti Cistrunk and Khari Coleman as the team’s most experienced linebackers. The Rebels added several players at the position via the transfer portal, headlined by Louisville’s Monty Montgomery and UCF’s Jeremiah Jean-Baptiste. Montgomery made 70 tackles for the Cardinals last season, including 11 for loss, and has 160 career tackles. He also had six sacks last year. Jean-Baptiste has 103 tackles over the last two seasons, including 11.5 for loss. Ole Miss also brings in highly-touted freshman Suntarine Perkins. Perkins was a five-star recruit from Raleigh, Mississippi who made 92 tackles and picked off four passes on defense while rushing for 2,078 yards as a running back. Newsletters Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request.
https://www.djournal.com/sports/college/ole-miss/former-clemson-linebacker-t-j-dudley-picks-ole-miss/article_01f2b6ac-2e3a-11ee-8c8d-739ff775de55.html
2023-07-29T20:19:28
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https://www.djournal.com/sports/college/ole-miss/former-clemson-linebacker-t-j-dudley-picks-ole-miss/article_01f2b6ac-2e3a-11ee-8c8d-739ff775de55.html
While the kids are on home instruction, there’s no better time than now to school them — on the 80s and 90s movies, that is. These decades are pop-culture treasure troves from which many of our fondest memories are plucked. That’s why you and the kiddos should curl up on the couch and revisit your favorite flicks. Believe it or not, many of them are rich in educational value, even if it’s a matter of drawing the line with feathered bangs. Our team rounded up essential 80s and 90s cinematic masterpieces for you to share with your kids as they begin their new favorite class, Film Studies 101: The Wonder Years. Shop this article: Sister Act (1993), 10 Things I Hate About You (1999) and Sixteen Candles (1984) Rated PG Sister Act (1993) Witness protection doesn’t need to be boring, especially when you send a Vegas lounge singer into a nunnery for selling out her mob boyfriend. Sister Mary Clarence brings a little jazz to the sisterhood, and you’ll probably sing along to this one — much to the chagrin of the kids. Other subjects covered: Music theory, criminal justice, religion Also available at Disney+ The Sandlot (1993) The summer of 1962 is a formative one for this motley crew of young baseball players. From awkward interactions with girls to dealing with bullying, it’s an all-ages relatable story. And yes, there are plenty of inside jokes that only true baseball fans will appreciate. Other subjects covered: Bildungsroman, baseball history, bullying Also available at Starz Beetlejuice (1988) Introduce the kiddos to Lydia, a teen undergoing major life adjustments. Moving and making new friends in less-than-ideal situations isn’t easy, especially when you befriend the ghosts of tenants past in your new home — some of whom have colorful personalities. Other subjects covered: Blended families, real estate ethics, exorcisms Life is Beautiful (1998) In an attempt to shield his son from the reality of Nazi occupation in Italy, a quirky Jewish bookshop owner turns their new way of life into a game. The lighthearted approach to keeping young Guido out of harm’s way without further traumatizing him is truly touching. Other subjects covered: WW2 history, European geography, family dynamics Hocus Pocus (1993) Soul-sucking witches from 1693 surface 300 years later to give young Max a run for his money in Salem, Mass. Kids will be enthralled with his journey, as it shows how the actions of a single person has the potential to impact — or save — an entire town. Other subjects covered: Early American history, time management, the effervescent Bette Midler Also available at Disney+ Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989) Whoa! Bill and Ted are the unintentional professors of this crash-course in world history. Join them as they adapt to ancient cultures and interact with historical figures — in a most excellent way. Other subjects covered: the French Revolution, Greek philosophy, DIY repairs Also available at Starz Jungle 2 Jungle (1997) The concrete jungle of New York City is a far cry from where Mimi-Siku was raised in the remote Canaima region of Venezuela. Upon arrival, he has to get used to Western traditions, a father he’s never met, and unexpected shenanigans involving the Russian mob. Other subjects covered: Cultural diffusion, New York City architecture, table manners Top Gun (1986) Follow Kenny Loggins’s advice: Ride into the danger zone. Few things are as cool as Maverick rocking Ray-Bans and breaking the sound barrier. Cruise through the skies in style — and in preparation for this summer’s second installment to the iconic 80s blockbuster. Other subjects covered: Aerospace engineering, gravity, classic 80s music Rated PG-13 10 Things I Hate About You (1999) A star-studded cast does Shakespeare justice in this modern spin on The Taming of the Shrew. High school can be the cruelest of times with unrequited love, impenetrable cliques, and popularity contests. Personality perseveres, though: being nice matters, and true love can prevail. Other subjects covered: Courtly love, sibling rivalries, puberty Also available at Disney+ Jurassic Park (1993) Who doesn’t love a nature versus nurture story told through misadventures in a dinosaur theme park? Kids can flex their problem-solving skills by coming up with ways to escape velociraptors running amok — and may emerge as budding paleontologists. Other subjects covered: Evolution, GMOs, the dangers of portable toilets Titanic (1997) Follow the larger-than-life story of Jack and Rose, star-crossed lovers divided by class, set on the ill-fated Titanic. Besides learning about the ship’s history, you’ll also explore how this mega-budget movie managed to pull off its special effects. Other subjects covered: Early 20th century history, cinematic history, anatomy of a ship Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986) Think it’s hard to relate to a high school slacker cutting class when you miss school? Think again. Ferris Bueller plays hooky and bites off more than he can chew trying to evade the principal. It’s a great lesson on the snowball effects of decision-making — not to mention joyriding. Other subjects covered: Driver’s education, historic Chicago, the dramatic fourth wall Clueless (1995) This satirical commentary on 90s Valley Girls is very loosely based on Jane Austen’s Emma. Slice through the vivacious verbiage to see the true heart of the story. Cher’s tireless mission as a social butterfly reveals good intentions, despite hang-ups with designer clothing. Other subjects covered: 90s fashion, British Romantic literature, epic closet organization Edward Scissorhands (1990) Running with scissors is not encouraged, and neither is falling in love when you have them for hands. This Franken-fantasy love story is endearing and illustrates the importance of not judging others by their appearance. Besides, we’re all one snip away from having our hearts broken, too. Other subjects covered: Human anatomy, Johnny Depp as a film icon, landscape architecture Wayne’s World (1992) Your kids will never hear an electric guitar the same way again. This 90s spectacle incorporates all things pop culture, including the music and fashion of the era. It’s also fascinating to draw similarities between this low-budget basement show and modern-day live-streaming. Other subjects covered: History of social media, 80s classic rock and metal, fashionable flannel Rated R Sixteen Candles (1984) Sixteen is already hard enough, and things get more complicated when your sister’s wedding overshadows your birthday. Follow Sam as she becomes embroiled in a challenging relationship with her crush and navigates the antics of nerdy teenage boys. Other subjects covered: Sex education, Molly Ringwald as a cultural icon, event planning Also available at Starz Coming to America (1988) When Crown Prince Akeem of Zamunda breaks with tradition and refuses an arranged marriage, he travels to none other than New York City to find an independent woman. East and West collide during Akeem’s courtship attempts, which are awkward and borderline inappropriate. Other subjects covered: Cultural diffusion, courtship, international travel Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1994) To be fair, this film is technically PG-13, but it should be R. Set in jolly England, this comical delight is an un-PC retelling of Robin Hood. Toilet humor abounds, including a character named Latrine. The puns are awful, the names are worse, and if you do nothing else, duck and cover when Blinkin picks up a crossbow. Other subjects covered: Medieval times, scriptwriting, personal hygiene Want to shop the best products at the best prices? Check out Daily Deals from BestReviews. Sign up here to receive the BestReviews weekly newsletter for useful advice on new products and noteworthy deals. Sian Babish writes for BestReviews. BestReviews has helped millions of consumers simplify their purchasing decisions, saving them time and money. Copyright 2023 BestReviews, a Nexstar company. All rights reserved.
https://who13.com/reviews/br/electronics-br/internet-streaming-br/best-movies-to-watch-with-your-kids/
2023-07-29T20:19:30
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https://who13.com/reviews/br/electronics-br/internet-streaming-br/best-movies-to-watch-with-your-kids/
Monarch butterflies have been few this year, but finally, on July 15th, I spotted two on my milkweed plants. This female was hopefully laying eggs. Jane LeBlanc, St. Martins Each summer many people in New Brunswick look forward to the arrival of monarch butterflies from the south. After wintering in Mexico and mating in the early spring, female monarchs instinctively fly northward as far as they can and lay eggs on milkweed plants in the southern United States in April. Then the females (and males) of that wintering generation die. Those eggs take a month to produce another generation of adult males and female monarchs, which in turn fly farther north and lay eggs before also dying naturally. The cycle continues and usually by July the monarchs begin to arrive in New Brunswick where they will hopefully have time to produce another final generation of the summer. This generation will instinctively migrate all the way to Mexico starting in mid-August, following the same route to the same winter destination as their great-grandparents did a year previous. So Jane and many others in the province rejoice when the first monarch arrives in early to mid-July to lay eggs on their garden milkweed plants. Our family is still waiting, but hopeful. Jim Photo: Submitted
https://tj.news/telegraph-journal/102145747
2023-07-29T20:19:31
1
https://tj.news/telegraph-journal/102145747
OXFORD, Miss. – Ole Miss women's basketball is headed international, with the Rebels jetting off to Italy July 30 through August 8 with visits to Rome, Florence and the Amalfi Coast for three exhibition games as part of its 2023 Foreign Tour. "With so many newcomers for next season, I'm excited about the opportunity that a tour abroad in Italy gives our team to learn our philosophy and our system," said head coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin. "The additional games and practices preparing for the tour gives us a unique avenue to build chemistry and will help our student-athletes to foster relationships with one another on and off the court." The Rebels start off in Rome where the team will experience a walking tour of the city with stops at the Spanish Steps, Trevi Fountain and the Colosseum. A visit to the Vatican follows before Ole Miss' first exhibition against Team Slammers-Iska. Florence awaits with another walking tour of the city and a visit to the Accademia to admire great Italian art and architecture. The squad will get their hands busy in the kitchen with a pizza making class prior to its second exhibition against the Spanish Select team. Ole Miss will then experience the Leaning Tower of Pisa with a day trip to the iconic landmark. The final stop follows as the Rebels head to the coast to Naples for their last game of the tour against the Italian Select team. Multiple excursions ensue for Ole Miss including a visit to Pompeii, and boat tours around Capri and Positano. Coming off of its first Sweet 16 appearance in 16 years, Ole Miss returns seven from last year's team and is strengthened with the addition of eight newcomers including three transfers and five freshmen. SEC All-Defensive standout Madison Scott returns for her senior season in Oxford, as well as starters in Marquesha Davis and Tyia Singleton. McPhee-McCuin increased the depth of the Rebels through the transfer portal, with the addition of two of ESPN's top-15 transfers in Kennedy Todd-Williams from North Carolina and KK Deans from Florida. Newsletters Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request.
https://www.djournal.com/sports/college/ole-miss/ole-miss-womens-basketball-using-italy-trip-to-break-in-newcomers-for-2023-season/article_1553a03a-2e3f-11ee-8b8b-0b6ba196e3b7.html
2023-07-29T20:19:34
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https://www.djournal.com/sports/college/ole-miss/ole-miss-womens-basketball-using-italy-trip-to-break-in-newcomers-for-2023-season/article_1553a03a-2e3f-11ee-8b8b-0b6ba196e3b7.html
Types of residential water heaters Residential water heaters come in tank, tankless and hybrid varieties. Each type has its own distinct characteristics; benefits as well as drawbacks. By looking at factors including cost, energy efficiency, maintenance and lifespan, you’ll be able to determine which type is right for your home. Shop this article: Rheem 50-Gallon Residential Electric Water Heater, Stiebel Eltron Tempra 36 Plus Tankless Heater, A.O. Smith 50-Gallon Hybrid Heat Pump Water Heater Tank water heaters Traditional water heaters feature a tank that stores hot water until it’s needed. They range in size from 30-50 gallons and run on either gas or electricity. These units cost less upfront compared to tankless and hybrid water heaters. Since they’re the most common type, costs associated with installation, repairs and maintenance are relatively low in comparison. Tank water heaters are associated with the most energy loss, referred to as standby heat loss. They waste energy by maintaining hot water in the tank when not in use. Traditional water heaters have the shortest lifespan compared to the other types, typically lasting 8-12 years. Exposure to water, oxygen and minerals corrodes the tank over time, causing it to leak; this process is usually what causes a tank water heater to cease functioning. Tankless water heaters Also referred to as on-demand water heaters, tankless models are powered by gas or electricity. According to the Department of Energy, “for homes that use 41 gallons or less of hot water daily, demand water heaters can be 24–34% more energy efficient than conventional storage tank water heaters.” While tankless water heaters cost more up-front and are pricier to install compared to tank units, energy savings make them more cost-effective in the long run. Tankless heaters also take up significantly less space compared to tank and hybrid models. Tankless water heaters have the longest lifespan, capable of lasting around 15 to 20 years. This is in part due to the fact that they do not operate constantly the way a traditional tank heater does. However, tankless water heater components may also experience corrosion, eventually. Hybrid water heaters Hybrid water heaters run on minimal electricity, consisting of a tank and a heat pump. They’re larger than tank water heaters, with sizes ranging from 50 to 80 gallons. Unlike tank and tankless units, they don’t directly generate heat — heat is taken from the surrounding air and transferred into the tank. For this reason, hybrid water heaters are among the most energy-efficient options on the market. However, they are costly and more expensive to install compared to traditional storage tank heaters. Hybrid water heaters function best when the temperature of the surrounding air remains at or above 40 degrees. Hybrid water heaters tend to last around 13-15 years. Similar to tankless water heaters, they do not run continuously, which increases their lifespan. They still contain a tank capable of corroding, though, so they won’t last as long as tankless units. Best tank water heaters Rheem 50-Gallon Residential Electric Water Heater This electric water heater has a 50-gallon capacity suitable for households of 3-5 people. The water heater includes a 6-year tank and parts warranty. Sold by Walmart Rheem 40-Gallon Residential Electric Water Heater If you’re looking for an electric model for a smaller household, this unit is a better option. It can reliably heat water for two to four people, with an included six-year tank and parts warranty. Sold by Walmart Rheem 40-Gallon Natural Gas Water Heater This natural gas heater with a 40-gallon capacity can support households of 2-4 people. It features a push-button ignition for an easier startup process. You’re covered with a 6-year tank and parts warranty, as well. Sold by Walmart Best tankless water heaters Stiebel Eltron Tempra 36 Plus Tankless Heater This tankless electric option provides a continuous output of hot water for three to four bathrooms in warm climates or two to three bathrooms in cooler climates. It has a digital display and preset temperature buttons that simplify operation. This heater comes with seven-year leakage and three-year parts warranties. Sold by Amazon EcoSmart ECO 27 Tankless Water Heater Another electric pick, this tankless model can heat up to 6 gallons of water per minute, ideal for apartment and condo units in warmer climates. It features a digital display and dial temperature controls. The lifetime warranty offers peace of mind. Sold by Amazon Eemax Electric Tankless Water Heater In cold climates, this tankless electric model produces enough hot water for one shower and two sinks to run simultaneously. In warmer climates, this heater can support up to four showers running at once. It features a digital display and dial controls, plus 5-year leak and 1-year parts warranties with purchase. Sold by Amazon Best hybrid water heater A.O. Smith 50-Gallon Hybrid Heat Pump Water Heater This hybrid water heater has a 50-gallon tank capable of servicing households of three to five people. You can access efficiency, hybrid, electric and vacation operating modes using the electronic interface. The electric heater comes with a six-year tank and parts warranty. Sold by Amazon Want to shop the best products at the best prices? Check out Daily Deals from BestReviews. Sign up here to receive the BestReviews weekly newsletter for useful advice on new products and noteworthy deals. Amy Evans writes for BestReviews. BestReviews has helped millions of consumers simplify their purchasing decisions, saving them time and money. Copyright 2023 BestReviews, a Nexstar company. All rights reserved.
https://who13.com/reviews/br/home-br/heating-cooling-air-quality-br/which-type-of-water-heater-is-best-for-you/
2023-07-29T20:19:36
0
https://who13.com/reviews/br/home-br/heating-cooling-air-quality-br/which-type-of-water-heater-is-best-for-you/
(KOIN) – She’s just gonna shake, shake, shake the earth. Taylor Swift’s July 22 and 23 concerts in Seattle allegedly produced seismic activity on par with a 2.3 magnitude earthquake, according to a Western Washington University geology professor and seismologist. Jackie Caplan-Auerbach tracked the seismic activity emanating from Swift’s Lumen Field performances earlier this month, finding similar and overlapping seismic waves on both dates. She later added that she couldn’t be sure whether the fans or the sound systems had caused the activity, but plans to continue investigating. “I’m not yet convinced that it’s all dancing – the signals between the two nights are ridiculously similar and people tend to be messy,” Caplan-Auerbach wrote on Twitter. She added that concertgoers were likely unaware of any geological activity at the time, saying the data recorded by the seismometer was “mostly below the range of human hearing.” Swift’s Seattle concerts, which were attended by over 144,000 people in total, broke Lumen Field’s attendance records, according to The Seattle Times. Caplan-Auerbach also compared the quake, which she dubbed the “Seismic Swift,” to 2010’s “Beast Quake,” when Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch scored a last-minute touchdown during a playoff game. Activity produced by Seahawks fans registered on a seismograph at a 2.0 magnitude. The next step for Caplan-Auerbach is attempting to line up the seismic activity beat-by-beat with Swift’s setlist to see how the songs impacted the shake, she said. She’s set up a Google Drive to collect videos to help with her research.
https://www.krqe.com/entertainment-news/taylor-swift-concerts-in-seattle-produced-seismic-activity-on-same-scale-as-a-small-earthquake-seismologist-finds/
2023-07-29T20:19:37
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https://www.krqe.com/entertainment-news/taylor-swift-concerts-in-seattle-produced-seismic-activity-on-same-scale-as-a-small-earthquake-seismologist-finds/