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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Numbers Midday" game were:
4-1-0
(four, one, zero)
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Numbers Midday" game were:
4-1-0
(four, one, zero)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Numbers-Midday-game-17251024.php
| 2022-06-18T19:12:38
|
en
| 0.923353
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
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https://sportspyder.com/mcb/syracuse-orangemen-basketball/articles/39831020
| 2022-06-18T19:12:43
|
en
| 0.738227
|
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Texas Lottery's "Pick 3 Day" game were:
1-7-7, FIREBALL: 8
(one, seven, seven; FIREBALL: eight)
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Texas Lottery's "Pick 3 Day" game were:
1-7-7, FIREBALL: 8
(one, seven, seven; FIREBALL: eight)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-3-Day-game-17250942.php
| 2022-06-18T19:12:44
|
en
| 0.897447
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39832844
| 2022-06-18T19:12:49
|
en
| 0.738227
|
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
9-0-3
(nine, zero, three)
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
9-0-3
(nine, zero, three)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-3-Midday-game-17250964.php
| 2022-06-18T19:12:50
|
en
| 0.912243
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39833118
| 2022-06-18T19:12:55
|
en
| 0.738227
|
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
0-8-6
(zero, eight, six)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
0-8-6
(zero, eight, six)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-3-Midday-game-17250980.php
| 2022-06-18T19:12:56
|
en
| 0.867512
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39833188
| 2022-06-18T19:13:01
|
en
| 0.738227
|
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
3-7-1-7
(three, seven, one, seven)
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
3-7-1-7
(three, seven, one, seven)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-4-Midday-game-17250965.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:02
|
en
| 0.923968
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39833325
| 2022-06-18T19:13:07
|
en
| 0.738227
|
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
2-2-0-2
(two, two, zero, two)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
2-2-0-2
(two, two, zero, two)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-4-Midday-game-17250981.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:09
|
en
| 0.905537
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nfl/buffalo-bills/articles/39832851
| 2022-06-18T19:13:13
|
en
| 0.738227
|
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the "Pick Four-Midday" game were:
1-0-1-7, Fireball: 7
(one, zero, one, seven; Fireball: seven)
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the "Pick Four-Midday" game were:
1-0-1-7, Fireball: 7
(one, zero, one, seven; Fireball: seven)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-Four-Midday-game-17250977.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:15
|
en
| 0.814121
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nfl/buffalo-bills/articles/39833059
| 2022-06-18T19:13:20
|
en
| 0.738227
|
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the "Pick Three-Midday" game were:
9-8-7, Fireball: 1
(nine, eight, seven; Fireball: one)
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the "Pick Three-Midday" game were:
9-8-7, Fireball: 1
(nine, eight, seven; Fireball: one)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-Three-Midday-game-17250976.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:21
|
en
| 0.851952
|
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. Capitol Police say officers arrested seven unauthorized people in a congressional office building Thursday night and charged them with unlawful entry.
The people identified themselves as being affiliated with CBS' "Late Show with Stephen Colbert," a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.
Nine people were reportedly stopped by Capitol Police, including several producers and the man who voices Triumph the Insult Comic Dog, Robert Smigel.
The person could not discuss details of the investigation publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The incident Thursday night followed the third public hearing by the House panel investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection.
Police said seven people were found in the Longworth House Office Building after it was closed. They added that the group of individuals had been asked earlier in the day by the agency to leave the building.
CBS told The Hollywood Reporter via a statement that the crew was there to shoot a comedy segment for the late-night show.
The network added that they were authorized to be there.
The USCP statement says the case remains "an active criminal investigation, and may result in additional criminal charges."
|
https://www.wsfltv.com/news/national/7-arrested-in-house-office-building-linked-to-colbert-show
| 2022-06-18T19:13:25
|
en
| 0.980114
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nfl/buffalo-bills/articles/39833281
| 2022-06-18T19:13:26
|
en
| 0.738227
|
ROCKY HILL, Conn. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Connecticut Lottery's "Play3 Day" game were:
6-9-9, WB: 9
(six, nine, nine; WB: nine)
ROCKY HILL, Conn. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Connecticut Lottery's "Play3 Day" game were:
6-9-9, WB: 9
(six, nine, nine; WB: nine)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Play3-Day-game-17251000.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:27
|
en
| 0.867109
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nfl/new-york-jets/articles/39832775
| 2022-06-18T19:13:32
|
en
| 0.738227
|
ROCKY HILL, Conn. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Connecticut Lottery's "Play4 Day" game were:
4-9-2-8, WB: 6
(four, nine, two, eight; WB: six)
ROCKY HILL, Conn. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Connecticut Lottery's "Play4 Day" game were:
4-9-2-8, WB: 6
(four, nine, two, eight; WB: six)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Play4-Day-game-17251001.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:33
|
en
| 0.891231
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nfl/new-york-jets/articles/39832851
| 2022-06-18T19:13:38
|
en
| 0.738227
|
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Indiana Lottery's "Quick Draw Midday" game were:
03-04-08-09-10-15-16-23-28-30-34-37-42-49-52-61-65-73-76-78, BE: 34
(three, four, eight, nine, ten, fifteen, sixteen, twenty-three, twenty-eight, thirty, thirty-four, thirty-seven, forty-two, forty-nine, fifty-two, sixty-one, sixty-five, seventy-three, seventy-six, seventy-eight; BE: thirty-four)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Quick-Draw-Midday-game-17250979.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:40
|
en
| 0.852652
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nfl/new-york-jets/articles/39833450
| 2022-06-18T19:13:44
|
en
| 0.738227
|
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Take 5 Midday" game were:
01-20-21-33-34
(one, twenty, twenty-one, thirty-three, thirty-four)
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Take 5 Midday" game were:
01-20-21-33-34
(one, twenty, twenty-one, thirty-three, thirty-four)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Take-5-Midday-game-17251025.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:46
|
en
| 0.916802
|
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|
https://sportspyder.com/cf/oklahoma-sooners-football/articles/39832044
| 2022-06-18T19:13:50
|
en
| 0.738227
|
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Win 4 Midday" game were:
5-1-5-4
(five, one, five, four)
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Win 4 Midday" game were:
5-1-5-4
(five, one, five, four)
|
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Win-4-Midday-game-17251023.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:52
|
en
| 0.94431
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/oklahoma-sooners-football/articles/39832061
| 2022-06-18T19:13:56
|
en
| 0.738227
|
BUCKEYE, Ariz. (AP) — Authorities say a small plane crashed in the desert on the western edge of metro Phoenix on Saturday morning, killing one person and leaving another person in critical condition.
The Federal Aviation Administration say the Cessna aircraft crashed near the municipal airport in Buckeye, located about 35 miles (56 kilometers) west of downtown Phoenix.
Buckeye police say the injured person was brought to a hospital for treatment.
Identities haven’t been released for the two people on board the plane. The FAA and National Safety Transportation Board are investigating the crash.
|
https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/1-dead-1-hospitalized-in-plane-crash-17250961.php
| 2022-06-18T19:13:58
|
en
| 0.943756
|
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/oklahoma-sooners-football/articles/39833155
| 2022-06-18T19:14:02
|
en
| 0.738227
|
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/oklahoma-sooners-football/articles/39833521
| 2022-06-18T19:14:08
|
en
| 0.738227
|
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SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Behind the raw public frustration and anger over election security that has played out this week in New Mexico was a hint of something deeper -- a growing divide between the state’s Democratic power structure and conservative rural residents who feel their way of life is under attack.
In Otero County, where the crisis over certifying the state’s June 7 primary election began, County Commissioner Vickie Marquardt struck a defiant tone as she relented under pressure from the state’s Democratic attorney general, Democratic secretary of state and a state Supreme Court dominated by Democratic appointees.
One of the main explanations she gave for reversing course had nothing to do with questions over the security of voting machines — the reason the all-Republican, three-member commission had originally refused to certify its election.
“If we get removed from office, nobody is going to be here fighting for the ranchers, and that’s where our fight should be right now,” said Marquardt, the commission chairwoman in a county where former President Donald Trump won nearly 62% of the vote in 2020.
Otero County is similar to the handful of other New Mexico counties where residents have questioned the accuracy of election results and given voice to unfounded conspiracy theories about voting systems that have rippled across the country since former President Donald Trump lost re-election in 2020.
In the state’s vast, rural stretches, frustration over voting and political representation has been building for years. Residents have felt marginalized and overrun by government decisions that have placed limits on livelihoods — curtailing access to water for livestock, shrinking the amount of forest land available for grazing, or halting timber operations and energy developments due to endangered species concerns.
Tensions have mounted as Democrats in New Mexico consolidate control over every statewide office and the Supreme Court. Democrats have dominated the Legislature for generations.
Even as they voted to certify their elections, sometimes reluctantly, commissioners from several New Mexico counties said they were bound by the law to take that step — thanks to legislation passed by Democrats. They urged their residents to take the fight to the statehouse.
Some bemoaned what they felt was an encroachment by the state on the powers of local government. Marquardt, from Otero County, complained of her commission’s meager “rubber stamping” authority under laws enacted by Democrats and an election certification “railroaded” through by larger forces.
Otero County is among more than a dozen self-proclaimed 2nd Amendment “sanctuary” counties in rural New Mexico to approve defiant resolutions against recent state gun control laws. The county also has embraced resistance to President Joe Biden’s goals for conservation of more private land and waterways for natural habitat, arguing it will cordon off already limited private land.
Amid alienation, skepticism about the security of elections has taken flight.
On Friday, Otero County Commissioner Couy Griffin was the lone dissenting vote in the election certification, though he acknowledged that he had no evidence of problems or factual basis for questioning the results of the election. His vote came after the county elections clerk said the primary went off without a hitch and that the results were confirmed afterward.
The former rodeo rider and co-founder of Cowboys for Trump dialed into the meeting because he was in Washington, D.C., where hours before he had been sentenced for entering restricted U.S. Capitol grounds during the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.
Applause rang out when Griffin declared, “I think we need to hold our ground.”
The developments in New Mexico can be traced to far-right conspiracy theories over voting machines that have spread across the country over the past two years. Various Trump allies have claimed that Dominion voting systems had somehow been manipulated as part of an elaborate scheme to steal the election, which Biden won.
There has been no evidence of widespread fraud that would have changed the results of the 2020 presidential election, and testimony before the congressional committee investigating the insurrection has made clear that many in Trump’s inner circle told him the same as he schemed to retain power.
The election clash that erupted this past week worries Dian Burwell, a registered independent and coffee shop manager in the Otero County seat of Alamogordo.
“We want people to vote and when they see all this, they’ll just say, ‘Why bother?’” Burwell said.
Despite New Mexico counties’ eventual votes to certify their primary results, election officials and experts fear the mini-rebellion is just the start of efforts nationwide to sow chaos around voting and vote-counting, building toward the 2024 presidential election. The New Mexico secretary of state’s office said it had been inundated with calls from officials around the country concerned that certification controversies will become a new front in the attacks on democratic norms.
In another New Mexico county where residents angrily denounced the certification, commissioners were denounced as “cowards and traitors” by a hostile crowd before voting. Torrance County Commissioner LeRoy Candelaria, a Republican and Vietnam veteran, voted to certify the results without apologies, despite the personal insults.
The semi-retired rancher and highway maintenance foreman said he has taken time outside commission meetings to explain his position that New Mexico’s vote-counting machines are well-tested and monitored.
“Our county clerk did an excellent job. I don’t think there’s a vote that went wrong in any way,” Candelaria said later in a telephone interview. “My personal opinion is there are people who are still mad about the last presidential election. ... Let’s worry about the next election and not take things personally.”
___
Associated Press writers Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Anita Snow and Terry Tang in Phoenix contributed to this report.
|
https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Building-anger-in-rural-New-Mexico-erupts-in-17250993.php
| 2022-06-18T19:14:17
|
en
| 0.971739
|
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The day after Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg met with airline leaders to quiz them about widespread flight disruptions, his own flight was canceled and he wound up driving from Washington to New York.
“That is happening to a lot of people, and that is exactly why we are paying close attention here to what can be done and how to make sure that the airlines are delivering,” Buttigieg told The Associated Press in an interview Saturday.
Buttigieg said he is pushing the airlines to stress-test their summer schedules to ensure they can operate all their planned flights with the employees they have, and to add customer-service workers. That could put pressure on airlines to make additional cuts in their summer schedules.
Buttigieg said his department could take enforcement actions against airlines that fail to live up to consumer-protection standards. But first, he said, he wants to see whether there are major flight disruptions over the July Fourth holiday weekend and the rest of the summer.
Enforcement actions can results in fines, although they tend to be small. Air Canada agreed to pay a $2 million fine last year over slow refunds.
During Thursday's virtual meeting, airline executives described steps they are taking to avoid a repeat of the Memorial Day weekend, when about 2,800 flights were canceled. “Now we're going to see how those steps measure up,” Buttigieg said.
Travel is back. On Friday, more than 2.4 million people passed through security checkpoints at U.S. airports, coming within about 12,500 of breaking the pandemic-era high recorded on the Sunday after Thanksgiving last year.
The record surely would have been broken had airlines not canceled 1,400 flights, many of them because thunderstorms hit parts of the East Coast. A day earlier, airlines scrubbed more than 1,700 flights, according to tracking service FlightAware.
Weather is always a wild card when it comes to flying in summer, but airlines have also acknowledged staffing shortages as travel roared back faster than expected from pandemic lows. Airlines are scrambling to hire pilots and other workers to replace employees whom they encouraged to quit after the pandemic hit.
It takes months to hire and train a pilot to meet federal safety standards, but the Transportation Department sees no reason the airlines cannot immediately add customer-service representatives to help passengers rebook if their flight is canceled.
The government has its own staffing challenges.
Shortages at the Federal Aviation Administration, part of Buttigieg's department, have contributed to flight delays in Florida. The FAA promises to increase staffing there. The Transportation Security Administration, an agency within the Department of Homeland Security, has created a roving force of 1,000 screeners who can be dispatched to airports where checkpoint lines get too long.
|
https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Buttigieg-US-may-act-against-airlines-on-17251004.php
| 2022-06-18T19:14:23
|
en
| 0.96595
|
CALABASAS, Calif. (AP) — A mountain lion that was part of a National Park Service study was fatally struck by a vehicle in Southern California's Santa Monica Mountains along the same road where her mother was similarly killed.
The adult female cougar, dubbed P-54, died Friday on Las Virgenes Road, south of Mulholland Highway, the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area said.
P-54 was outfitted with a radio tracking collar by biologists who are studying how the big cats live in habitat fragmented by urban sprawl, barriers that limit genetic diversity and with hazards ranging from poisons to roads and freeways.
The park service said P-54 was the 29th mountain lion killed by vehicles since 2002 in the study area, which includes the Santa Monica range, Simi Hills, Santa Susana Mountains, Verdugo Mountains and Griffith Park in Los Angeles.
P-54 was born in January 2017. Her mother, P-23, was killed by a vehicle farther south on Las Virgenes Road in January 2018.
In May 2020, P-54 gave birth to a litter that researchers believe did not survive. Later that year, she gave birth to two males. One of them, P-97, was killed two months ago on the Interstate 405 freeway in LA near the Getty Center.
|
https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Mountain-lion-in-Southern-California-study-killed-17250983.php
| 2022-06-18T19:14:29
|
en
| 0.978948
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BATH, Maine (AP) — The christening of a Navy destroyer on Saturday highlighted the sacrifices of two generations — the ship’s namesake killed in World War II and another Marine who died more than 60 years later.
The future USS Basilone bears the name of a Marine who was awarded the Medal of Honor before his death on Iwo Jima.
Breaking a bottle on the ship's bow for good luck was a woman who lost her brother in an ambush in Fallujah, Iraq.
The legacy and sacrifice of such Marines are never forgotten, Sgt. Major of the Marine Corps Troy Black told a crowd of 2,000 gathered next to the warship at Navy shipbuilder Bath Iron Works in Maine.
Gunnery Sgt. John Basilone was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism while defending Henderson Field against a fierce assault by a 3,000-strong Japanese force during the Battle of Guadalcanal in 1942.
The New Jersey resident returned home to a hero’s welcome and a parade. But he asked to rejoin his comrades and died on the opening day of the invasion of Iwo Jima in February 1945.
His 92-year-old brother Donald and others at the ceremony spoke of Basilone's patriotism and bravery.
That included his insistence on returning to combat. “He really wanted to go back,” Don Basilone said in statement read by his niece.
Ryan Manion, who lost her brother in Iraq, said both her brother and the ship’s namesake were cut from the same cloth even though they were from different generations.
“John Basilone was a young patriot who joined the military to do his job when his country needed him the most,” she said.
The ceremony marked a milestone in construction of the 509-foot guided-missile destroyer. Dignitaries included admirals, family members, Democratic Gov. Janet Mills and Republican Sen. Susan Collins.
Manion, who is one of the ship’s sponsors, is president of the Pennsylvania-based Travis Manion Foundation, which aims to empower veterans and families of fallen heroes, using her brother's words, “If not me, then who?”
Her brother was killed by a sniper when he exposed himself enemy fire to divert attention from his unit during an ambush in 2007 in Iraq.
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https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Navy-destroyer-bears-name-of-decorated-Marine-17251013.php
| 2022-06-18T19:14:36
|
en
| 0.976281
|
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett was arrested Friday night for allegedly driving under the influence after leaving a music festival in the state.
Hargett was booked into the Coffee County Jail shortly after midnight Saturday and posted a $2,000 bail several hours later, according to booking records.
Hargett’s office released a statement on the arrest Saturday.
“On Friday night after leaving the Bonnaroo Music Festival, I was stopped by the Tullahoma Police Department and subsequently arrested for DUI," Hargett said in the statement. "Driving Under the Influence is a serious matter, and I regret the circumstances that led to my arrest. I respect law enforcement and will trust the legal process as we move forward.”
Hargett is scheduled to appear in court on July 14, WKRN-TV reported.
Hargett was elected by the Tennessee General Assembly to serve as secretary of state in 2009 and reelected in 2013, 2017 and 2021, according to the secretary of state's website. Hargett is the chief executive officer of the Department of State with oversight of more than 300 employees.
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https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Tennessee-secretary-of-state-arrested-on-DUI-17251011.php
| 2022-06-18T19:14:42
|
en
| 0.980914
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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Three people are expected to recover after being shot in the parking lot of a bar in Omaha.
Police say officers were called just before 1 a.m. Saturday to Gate 10 Bar on 10th Street. A vehicle reportedly involved in the shooting was leaving the area, prompting a police pursuit.
Once the vehicle was stopped, police say two shooting victims were found inside of it. The men, ages 27 and 31, were taken to University of Nebraska Medical Center with what police describe as non-life threatening gunshot wounds.
A third victim, a 28-year-old man, later arrived at the hospital with a gunshot injury also not believed to be life-threatening. That man said he also had been at Gate 10 Bar.
No arrests have been made and an investigation continues.
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https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Three-people-injured-in-shooting-near-Omaha-bar-17250938.php
| 2022-06-18T19:14:48
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en
| 0.992174
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MILWAUKEE (AP) — Two more killings in Milwaukee have brought this year's total number of homicides to 96 — a pace far worse than even last year's alarming figure.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports that an 18-year-old old man and a 20-year-old were killed Friday night in Sherman Park. Police have not disclosed how the men died. Autopsies are planned.
Two other people died in killings within the previous 24 hours.
The 96 homicides so far in 2022 compares to 77 at this time last year. By the end of 2021, a record 197 people were killed in homicides.
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https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Two-killed-in-Milwaukee-96-homicides-so-far-in-17251022.php
| 2022-06-18T19:14:54
|
en
| 0.974394
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MONTREAL (AP) — Pierre Gasly is “100% confirmed” to return to AlphaTauri next season, and teams believe Oscar Piastri is ready for a promotion into a Formula One seat.
But Williams expects its lineup to remain unchanged through the end of the year — great news, if true, for Nicholas Latifi — and McLaren boss Zak Brown said his relationship with embattled driver Daniel Ricciardo has never been better.
All that was revealed Saturday at the Canadian Grand Prix, the ninth event on this year's calendar and a solid six weeks before F1's “silly season” of driver movement is expected to hit full swing.
Speculation has swirled since last month when Brown publicly put Ricciardo on notice to pick up his performance with McLaren. Although the Australian has a contract that runs through 2023, Brown revealed there are “mechanisms" for McLaren to end the deal early.
But as the series returned to Canada for the first time since 2019, Toronto native Latifi has admitted that his seat with Williams is not secure. There have been suggestions Latifi could be replaced after Sunday's race by Piastri, the reigning F2 champion. Piastri has a one-year deal with Alpine as the reserve and test driver, but the team had promised to help him find an F1 seat for 2023.
Alpine principal Otmar Szafnauer said “yes” when asked if Piastri was ready for the promotion, but said he had no information beyond the speculation swirling through the paddock that the Australian was set to replace Latifi.
And Jost Capito, head of Williams, seemed to dismiss the notion Latifi will be out of work following Sunday's race at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. Capito acknowledged Piastri was “ready to go into Formula One” and was “one on the list for sure” of any team seeking a driver.
But could Piastri be in a Williams seat as soon as the British Grand Prix? Capito said both Alex Albon and Latifi are under contract.
“We are focused on this year, we have a driver lineup for this year,” Capito said. “We don't have any other plans. Both have a contract for the season and that's what our plan is, to fulfill that.”
GASLY LOCKED DOWN
The situation is not at all murky for Gasly at AlphaTauri, as team principal Franz Tost was firm in that the Frenchman will be back in 2023.
“This is 100% confirmed,” Tost said Saturday.
Gasly himself had not seemed so sure just one week ago in Baku, as the 26-year-old stressed he wants to race for wins and not just points. That led to speculation Gasly could try to break free from Red Bull, which has backed him for most of his career but does not have an open F1 seat and just extended the contract of Sergio Perez.
Tost silenced the speculation.
“He will be a driver of us, of Scuderia AlphaTauri, in 2023,” Tost said.
But when asked how Gasly was convinced to stay, the team boss was curt: “He has a valid contract, there’s nothing more to say.”
RICCIARDO'S FUTURE
Ricciardo has been asked about his future in both F1 and with McLaren nearly every week since Brown publicly assessed the Australian's time with the team as underwhelming.
Ricciardo says his contract is clear through 2023, but Brown has indicated there are clauses that could create an early exit. Asked how their relationship has been in the month since Brown was publicly critical of the popular driver, Brown said “the relationship with Daniel has never been better” and the two recently had dinner together in London.
Brown also said McLaren bears some responsibility for Ricciardo's struggles. McLaren is not presently giving Ricciardo or Lando Norris cars to compete with Red Bull and Ferrari.
“We need to produce a faster race car,” Brown said. “Last year in Monza when we had a strong race car we could see what Daniel and Lando could do with it. We need to focus on giving our drivers better race cars and I think Daniel is highly motivated and he has all of our support. We're having fun and have a great relationship with him and hopefully we'll have a good weekend.”
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More AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
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| 2022-06-18T19:15:07
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WFO LAS VEGAS Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 18, 2022
_____
WIND ADVISORY
URGENT - WEATHER MESSAGE
National Weather Service Las Vegas NV
1044 AM PDT Sat Jun 18 2022
...WIND ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 3 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO
11 PM PDT THIS EVENING...
* WHAT...West winds 20 to 30 mph with gusts up to 50 mph
expected.
* WHERE...Eastern Sierra Slopes and Owens Valley.
* WHEN...From 3 PM this afternoon to 11 PM PDT this evening.
* IMPACTS...Gusty winds could blow around unsecured objects.
Tree limbs could be blown down and a few power outages may
result. Pockets of blowing dust and hazardous crosswinds could
impact travel on sections of US-395.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
Use extra caution when driving, especially if operating a high
profile vehicle. Secure outdoor objects.
_____
Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
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https://www.expressnews.com/weather/article/CA-WFO-LAS-VEGAS-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17250951.php
| 2022-06-18T19:15:19
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WFO BUFFALO Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 18, 2022
_____
BEACH HAZARDS STATEMENT
Coastal Hazard Message
National Weather Service Buffalo NY
133 PM EDT Sat Jun 18 2022
...BEACH HAZARDS STATEMENT REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 11 PM EDT THIS
EVENING...
* WHAT...Strong currents and dangerous swimming conditions.
* WHERE...Beaches of Chautauqua county.
* WHEN...Until 11 PM EDT this evening.
* IMPACTS...Strong currents and dangerous swimming conditions.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
Stay out of the water to avoid dangerous swimming conditions.
...BEACH HAZARDS STATEMENT REMAINS IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY
MORNING...
* WHERE...Beaches of Northern Cayuga and Oswego counties.
* WHEN...Through Sunday morning.
* WHERE...Beaches of Niagara and Orleans counties.
* WHERE...Beaches of Monroe and Wayne counties.
_____
Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
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| 2022-06-18T19:15:21
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WFO SPOKANE Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 18, 2022
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AREAL FLOOD ADVISORY
Flood Advisory
National Weather Service Spokane WA
1113 AM PDT Sat Jun 18 2022
...FLOOD ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 215 PM PDT THIS AFTERNOON...
* WHAT...Flooding caused by excessive rainfall is expected.
* WHERE...A portion of Northeast Washington, including the following
county, Ferry.
* WHEN...Until 215 PM PDT.
* IMPACTS...Minor flooding in low-lying and poor drainage areas
including burn scars.
* ADDITIONAL DETAILS...
- At 1111 AM PDT, Doppler radar indicated heavy rain due to
thunderstorms. Minor flooding is ongoing or expected to begin
shortly in the advisory area.
- Some locations that will experience flooding include...
Inchelium. Hail Creek Road, Sitdown Creek Road, Lynx Creek
Road near the Summit Trail Burn Scar.
- http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
Turn around, don't drown when encountering flooded roads. Most flood
deaths occur in vehicles.
_____
Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
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https://www.expressnews.com/weather/article/WA-WFO-SPOKANE-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17250996.php
| 2022-06-18T19:15:27
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| 0.902605
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WFO SPOKANE Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 18, 2022
_____
AREAL FLOOD ADVISORY
Flood Advisory
National Weather Service Spokane WA
1140 AM PDT Sat Jun 18 2022
...FLOOD ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 245 PM PDT THIS AFTERNOON...
* WHAT...Flooding caused by excessive rainfall is expected.
* WHERE...A portion of Northeast Washington, including the following
county, Ferry.
* WHEN...Until 245 PM PDT.
* IMPACTS...Minor flooding in low-lying and poor drainage areas.
* ADDITIONAL DETAILS...
- At 1139 AM PDT, Doppler radar indicated heavy rain due to
slow moving showers and thunderstorms. Minor flooding is
ongoing or expected to begin shortly in the advisory area.
- Some locations that will experience flooding include...
Sherman Pass, Davis Lake and Lake Ellen Campground.
- http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
Turn around, don't drown when encountering flooded roads. Most flood
deaths occur in vehicles.
_____
Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
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| 2022-06-18T19:15:33
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NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. health advisers on Saturday recommended COVID-19 vaccines for infants, toddlers, and preschoolers — the last group without the shots.
The advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention unanimously decided that coronavirus vaccines should be opened to children as young as 6 months. The final signoff was expected later in the day from CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky.
While the Food and Drug Administration OKs vaccines, it’s the CDC that decides who should get them.
The government has been gearing up for the start of the shots early next week, with millions of doses ordered for distribution to doctors, hospitals and community health clinics around the country.
Roughly 18 million kids will be eligible, but it remains to be seen how many will ultimately get the vaccines. Less than a third of children ages 5 to 11 have done so since vaccination opened up to them last November.
Here are some things to know:
What kinds are available?
Two brands — Pfizer and Moderna — got the green light Friday from the FDA. The vaccines use the same technology but are being offered at different dose sizes and number of shots for the youngest kids.
Pfizer’s vaccine is for 6 months through 4 years. The dose is one-tenth of the adult dose, and three shots are needed. The first two are given three weeks apart, and the last at least two months later.
Moderna’s is two shots, each a quarter of its adult dose, given about four weeks apart for kids 6 months through 5. The FDA also approved a third dose, at least a month after the second shot, for kids with immune conditions that make them more vulnerable to serious illness.
How well do they work?
In studies, vaccinated youngsters developed levels of virus-fighting antibodies as strong as young adults, suggesting that the kid-size doses protect against coronavirus infections.
However, exactly how well they work is hard to pin down, especially when it comes to the Pfizer vaccine.
Two doses of Moderna appeared to be only about 40% effective at preventing milder infections at a time when the omicron variant was causing most COVID-19 illnesses. Pfizer presented study information suggesting the company saw 80% with its three shots. But the Pfizer data was so limited — and based on such a small number of cases — that experts and federal officials say they don’t feel there is a reliable estimate yet.
Should my little one be vaccinated?
Yes, according to the CDC’s advisers. While COVID-19 has been the most dangerous for older adults, younger people, including children, can also get very sick.
Hospitalizations surged during the omicron wave. Since the start of the pandemic, about 480 children under age 5 are counted among the nation’s more than 1 million COVID-19 deaths, federal data shows.
“It is worth vaccinating, even though the number of deaths are relatively rare, because these deaths are preventable through vaccination,” said Dr. Matthew Daley, a Kaiser Permanente Colorado researcher who sits on the advisory committee.
Which vaccine should my child get?
Either one, says Dr. Peter Marks, the FDA’s vaccine chief.
“Whatever vaccine your health care provider, pediatrician has, that’s what I would give my child,’’ Marks said Friday.
The doses haven’t been tested against each other, so experts say there’s no way to tell if one is better.
One consideration: It takes roughly three months to complete the Pfizer three-shot series, but just one month for Moderna’s two shots. So families eager to get children protected quickly might want Moderna.
Who’s giving the shots?
Pediatricians, other primary care physicians and children’s hospitals are planning to provide the vaccines. Limited drugstores will offer them for at least some of the under-5 group.
U.S. officials expect most shots to take place at pediatricians’ offices. Many parents may be more comfortable getting the vaccine for their kids at their regular doctor, White House COVID-19 coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha said. He predicted the pace of vaccination to be far slower than it was for older populations.
“We’re going see vaccinations ramp up over weeks and even potentially over a couple of months,” Jha said.
Can children get other vaccines at the same time?
It’s common for little kids to get more than one vaccine during a doctor’s visit.
In studies of the Moderna and Pfizer shots in infants and toddlers, other vaccinations were not given at the same time, so there is no data on potential side effects when that happens.
But problems have not been identified in older children or adults when COVID-19 shots and other vaccinations were given together, and the CDC is advising that it’s safe for younger children as well.
What if my child recently had COVID-19?
About three-quarters of children of all ages are estimated to have been infected at some point. For older ages, the CDC has recommended vaccination anyway to lower the chances of reinfection.
Experts have noted re-infections among previously infected people and say the highest levels of protection occur in those who were both vaccinated and previously infected.
The CDC has said people may consider waiting about three months after an infection to be vaccinated.
AP reporter Zeke Miller in Washington contributed.
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https://www.krqe.com/health/coronavirus/cdc-officially-recommends-covid-19-shots-for-children-under-5-heres-what-to-know/
| 2022-06-18T19:18:19
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WORCESTER, Ma. (NEXSTAR) — A Massachusetts school for boys experiencing economic insecurity had its Catholic affiliation revoked on Thursday — after an area bishop said the school’s flying of an LGBTQ Pride flag and a Black Lives Matter flag are “inconsistent” with Catholic teachings.
In a decree, Bishop Robert J. McManus, of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester, says Worcester-based The Nativity School can no longer call itself “Catholic” and all mass and sacraments are now prohibited on site. The school is also banned from diocese activities like fundraising or being listed/advertised in its directory.
“It is my contention that the ‘Gay Pride’ flag represents support of gay marriage and actively living a LGBTQ+ lifestyle. This is also true of ‘Black Lives Matter,'” wrote McManus.
McManus says while the school “stands unequivocally behind the phrase ‘Black lives matter’ and strongly affirms that all lives matter,” he believes the Black Lives Matter movement has been “co-opted” to “directly contradict Catholic social teaching.”
The bishop claims The Nativity School is sending mixed messages because Black Lives Matter works to “disrupt” and “contradict” the importance of the nuclear family.
McManus says despite warnings, the school kept the flags up, leaving him “no other option but to take canonical action.”
The tuition-free school had already been flying the flags for over a year at the request of students, Nativity School President Thomas McKenney wrote Thursday. The majority of students are people of color, McKenney explained.
The president continues that the flags aren’t an endorsement of any organization or ideology but “fly in support of marginalized people.” He also notes that the school is not funded by the Diocese and operates fully independently of it.
“These flags simply state that all are welcome at Nativity and this value of inclusion is rooted in Catholic teaching,” writes McKenney. “Pope Francis has praised the outreach and inclusion of LGBTQ+ people. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops supports the spirit and movement of Black Lives Matter. Both flags are now widely understood to celebrate the human dignity of our relatives, friends and neighbors who have faced, and continue to face hate and discrimination.”
McKenney said the school plans to appeal the decision.
The Nativity School, which has been in operation since 2003, serves boys ages 5 through 8. The school says it will continue flying the flags, saying it hopes to give “visible witness” to community members.
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https://www.krqe.com/news/school-cant-fly-blm-lgbtq-flags-and-be-catholic-ma-bishop-says/
| 2022-06-18T19:18:25
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Hot sauce, tampon shortages lead growing list of out-of-stock items
Consumers, already being pummeled by surging prices, now have to worry about product shortages.
In recent months, a handful of common products have become harder to find and more may be added to the list.
Tampons
A spokesperson for Tampax, which is owned by P&G, told FOX Business in a statement that this is "a temporary situation, and the Tampax team is producing tampons 24/7 to meet the increased demand for our products."
The company says it's working with retail partners to maximize availability, which it says "has significantly increased over the last several months."
However, social media users have been taking notice.
"There a tampon shortage or something? I just went to five different Walgreens and the shelves are CLEARED," one Twitter user said.
Walgreens told the outlet it's working with its suppliers to ensure its stores have supplies available.
"However, similar to other retailers, we are experiencing some temporary brand-specific tampon shortages in certain geographies," the company said. "While we will continue to have products at shelf and online, it may only be in specific brands while we navigate the supply disruption."
NATIONAL SRIRACHA SAUCE SHORTAGE MAY LEAD TO SPICELESS SUMMER FOR SOME
CVS also said there have been "instances when suppliers haven’t been able to fulfill the full quantities of orders placed" in recent weeks, but that the company is working with "suppliers to ensure we have an ample supply of tampons in our stores."
The company added that if a store is temporarily out of specific products, it will "work to replenish those items as quickly as possible."
Baby Formula
Parents aren't getting much of a break as the out-of-stock rate for baby formula rose to 73% nationwide for the week ending May 29, according to the most recent data by retail data firm Datasembly. It's a significant increase from earlier in the month, when the national out-of-stock rate for baby formula stood at 45%
Retailers have been forced to put purchase limits on the products as shelves remain bare.
Abbott Nutrition's Sturgis, Michigan, factory, which exacerbated the industry-wide shortage, restarted production June 4. However, baby formula products from the plant won't return to store shelves until at least mid-July, according to the company's production timeline.
In May, President Joe Biden invoked the Defense Production Act to speed the production of infant formula and authorized flights to import supplies from overseas to help parents in desperate need.
Hot sauce
In April, Huy Fong Foods, Inc., the nation’s leading sriracha sauce manufacturer, sent a letter to customers about an impending shortage, which would directly impact retailers and restaurants.
"Unfortunately, we can confirm that there is an unprecedented shortage of our products," Huy Fong Foods told Fox News Digital in an email.
"We are still endeavoring to resolve this issue that has [been] caused by several spiraling events, including unexpected crop failure from the spring chili harvest," the email continued. "We hope for a fruitful fall season and thank our customers for their patience and continued support during this difficult time."
According to Huy Fong Foods, the issues began in July 2020, when the company began experiencing a shortage of chili pepper inventory. The shortage worsened in recent months after poor weather conditions adversely affected chili crops this year.
Wine bottles
According to Eat This, Not That, a glass bottle shortage is still ongoing.
Supply chain company Resilinc said that the "cost of glass bottles has risen by as much as 20%, driven mostly by shortages of raw materials needed to manufacture the glass."
Due to "raw material constraints, logistics issues and inflation, winemakers may be forced to pass down costs to consumers," the company added.
However, it will depend on the size of the operation.
"Larger winery operations with deeper pockets and longer lead time on orders aren’t feeling the impact as much," the company said. "Smaller wineries that have less purchasing power may be impacted differently. While they don’t want to necessarily pass along 100% of the incurred costs to consumers, they will likely have to raise prices along with taking a larger ding to profits."
"Three years ago, it was our cans for beer and wine, now it’s the actual bottles," Moersch Hospitality Group CEO Matthew Moersch told WSBT 22.
Beverages
According to Boxed CEO Chieh Huang, there may be more problems on the horizon.
"This summer, I think beverages, you're going to start to see kind of increased prices or shortages just because … already these factories are pumping it out at full capacity. You add in the increased demand of the summer, we don't know where that's going to go," Huang told "Varney & Co." earlier this month.
FOX Business' Cortney Moore and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
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https://www.fox5dc.com/news/hot-sauce-tampon-shortages-lead-growing-list-of-out-of-stock-items
| 2022-06-18T19:20:00
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4 inmates escape from Virginia federal prison camp
HOPEWELL, Va. - Four inmates have escaped from a federal prison’s satellite camp in Virginia.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons says inmates Corey Branch, Tavares Lajuane Graham, Lamonte Rashawn Willis and Kareem Allen Shaw were discovered missing from the Federal Correctional Complex Petersburg’s satellite camp in Hopewell, Virginia, around 1:45 a.m. Saturday.
Officials say the inmates walked away from the camp, but they didn't release any additional details. The minimum security facility houses 185 male offenders.
The U.S. Marshals Service, the FBI and other law enforcement agencies were notified and an internal investigation has been initiated.
Branch, 41, is serving 13 years for intent to distribute fentanyl and felon in possession of a firearm. Graham is serving a 10-year sentence for possession with intent to distribute cocaine and gun charges. Willis is serving an 18-year sentence for possessing and concealing a stolen firearm and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Shaw is serving a 16-year sentence for conspiracy to sell heroin.
Anyone with information can contact the U.S. Marshals Service at (804) 545-8501.
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https://www.fox5dc.com/news/inmates-escape-virginia-federal-prison-camp
| 2022-06-18T19:20:06
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Friendlies / Regular
Molineux / 16.06.2022
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England v Belgium LIVE – Lionesses ramp up preparations for Euro 2022 day after Sarina Wiegman names squad
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HELLO AND WELCOME
Preparations begin now. A day after Sarina Wiegman whittled her squad down to 23 players for the upcoming Euros, the Lionesses play Belgium in the first of their warm-up matches. Follow all the latest details here.
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https://www.eurosport.com/football/friendlies/2022/live-england-belgium_mtc1355442/live-commentary.shtml
| 2022-06-18T19:20:08
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Kroger, Walgreens brand pain relievers recalled over child packaging concerns
More than 400,000 bottles of Kroger and Walgreens brand aspirin, acetaminophen and ibuprofen bottles have been recalled because they aren’t child-resistant.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission said the bottles failed to meet the Poison Prevention Packaging Act guidelines and could poison young children if swallowed.
The drugs were sold at stores nationwide from December 2021 through March 2022 for between $14 and $17.
RELATED: Refrigerator recall: Ice makers could break into pieces, cause choking hazard
Which Kroger and Walgreens pain relievers are under recall?
The following brands are being recalled, according to the CPSC:
- Kroger Acetaminophen, 100-count bottlesKroger Aspirin, 300-count bottlesKroger Ibuprofen, 160-count bottlesKroger Arthritis Pain Acetaminophen, 225-count bottlesWalgreens Pain Reliever Acetaminophen, 150-count bottles
Consumers are asked to move the bottles out of reach of children and call Kroger or Aurohealth, the company that makes the Walgreens brand, for refunds.
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https://www.fox5dc.com/news/kroger-walgreens-brand-pain-relievers-recalled-child-packaging
| 2022-06-18T19:20:12
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Pharrell cancels student loan debt for 5 NCAAP youth leaders
WASHINGTON - Hours before his Something in the Water festival kicked off in D.C., Pharrell surprised five youth leaders at the NAACP with a life-changing gift.
READ MORE: Something in the Water 2022: Everything you need to know about this weekend's festival
During an NAACP panel about the Black student debt crisis held on Friday, Pharrell announced he is entirely paying off the student loan debts for the five college students.
The NAACP's National Director of Youth and College responded to the surprise saying it is a life-changing event, and called on President Biden to make student loan forgiveness a reality for all student debt holders.
"Pharrell forever changed their lives. This was a powerful moment. Now just imagine if President Biden made this a reality for all student debt holders in America. Student debt continues to disproportionately plague the Black community and crush opportunities for so many Black people. It is time to reduce the racial wealth gap, it is time for President Biden to fulfill his promise," said Wisdom Cole.
The NAACP released the names of the five leaders who had their debts canceled:
- Robyn Hughes, Southern University Junior
- Damarius Davis, North Carolina AT Alumni
- Jamie Turner, Norfolk State University Alumni
- Channing Hill, Howard University Senior
- Devan Vilfrard, Florida A&M University Senior
The event was held on Friday at the St. Regis hotel in D.C. as part of Pharrell's Something in the Water festival.
The announcement comes as the Biden administration is currently weighing how much federal student loan debt could be canceled and who should benefit.
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https://www.fox5dc.com/news/pharrell-cancels-student-loan-debt-for-5-ncaap-youth-leaders
| 2022-06-18T19:20:19
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39 years of American women in space: Honoring Sally Ride’s historic journey
Thirty-nine years ago Saturday, Sally Ride became the first American woman in space. The milestone marked a new era in spaceflight that has continued to encourage girls and women to pursue careers in spaceflight. But for Ride, she was doing the job she trained for.
Ride's spaceflight happened nearly 20 years after Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space and still is the only woman to fly a solo mission. Today the Russian space program has only a few women cosmonauts, and just four women cosmonauts have flown in space.
Ride described her experience as the first female American space explorer in an interview with Johnson Space Center in 2002.
Ride told interviewers she learned NASA was recruiting women to be astronauts in 1978 when she saw an advertisement in the Stanford University student newspaper.
After flying to Houston to be part of the final 200 candidates and going through a week of interviews, meetings and medical exams, Ride said she learned she was an astronaut candidate during an early morning phone call.
ASTRONAUTS TO GET A NEW SET OF WHEELS FOR RIDES TO LAUNCH PAD
"My biggest frustration was that it was five or six in the morning in California, so all my friends and family were asleep," Ride said in the 2002 interview. "I wasn’t sure that I should wake them up to give them the news!"
Ride was in the middle of earning her Ph.D. in physics when she applied to the program. After being selected, she said she defended her thesis before driving to Houston to start astronaut training.
The 1978 NASA astronaut class was notable for several reasons; it included the first women astronauts and the first people of color in NASA's human spaceflight program.
After completing her training and serving as Capsule Communicator (CAPCOM) for two space shuttle missions, Ride was selected in 1982 for the STS-7 mission.
The STS-7 crew included (from left) mission specialists Norman Thagard, John Fabian, and Sally Ride; pilot Frederick Hauck; and commander Robert Crippen. Behind Crippen is John Manke, director of NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at the time. (Ima
Ride described some funny moments leading up to her spaceflight as a primarily male engineer team figured out what a woman would need in space.
"The engineers at NASA, in their infinite wisdom, decided that women astronauts would want makeup—so they designed a makeup kit," she said. "A makeup kit brought to you by NASA engineers."
However, Ride said makeup was the last thing on her mind as she was busy training for her flight.
Another time, a group of engineers asked her if 100 tampons would be enough to send up for her one-week mission.
"We want to be safe," she recalled they told her.
Ride said she responded, "that would not be the right number," and they could cut that in half with no problem.
On June 18, 1983, Ride launched with four crew mates on Space Shuttle Challenger. She told JSC interviewers the shuttle simulator helped prepare her for the launch but that nothing can prepare you for the feeling of blasting off the Earth.
"It's an emotionally and psychologically overwhelming experience," she recalled. "Very exhilarating. Exhilarating, terrifying, and overwhelming all at the same time."
The crew spent six busy days in space. Ride operated the shuttle's robotic arm to deploy a satellite and catch it two days later, bringing it back to Earth, another first for a spaceflight mission.
Mission Specialist NASA Astronaut Sally K. Ride during her 1983 spaceflight on STS-7. (Image: NASA/MSFC)
STS-7 ended with the space shuttle landing at Edwards Air Force Base in California. Ride said before the flight, her training kept her busy, and she wasn't fully aware of the attention that would come with being the first American woman in space.
After returning to Earth, Ride said the onslaught of attention finally hit her.
"While I was in training, I had been protected from it all. I had the world’s best excuse: ‘I’ve got to train, because I have this job to do,’" she said, but after the flight, "Everybody wanted a piece of me."
Nearly 40 years after Ride's first spaceflight, women now make up half of all NASA astronaut classes. It's been that way since 2013.
After Ride, there have been many other firsts by other women in space.
THESE WOMEN ACHIEVED FIRSTS OF SPACEFLIGHT LEADING THE WAY FOR NEXT GENERATION
In 1995, NASA Astronaut Eileen Collins became the first woman to pilot a space shuttle and then in 1999, and she became the first woman to command a space shuttle mission.
Now retired, NASA Astronaut Peggy Whitson holds the record for most spacewalks by a woman with 10 extra-vehicular activities or EVAs. Whitson will command the second all-private mission to the ISS next year with Axiom Space.
And more recently, in 2019, NASA astronauts Christina Koch and Jessica Meir conducted the first all-female spacewalk outside the International Space Station.
NASA astronauts Jessica Meir (left) and Christina Koch (right) conducted the first all-female spacewalk in October 2019. (Image: NASA)
Koch also holds the record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman, with 289 days in orbit.
However, there is still a lot more to achieve.
NASA plans to achieve another historic first when a woman and the first person of color walk on the moon as soon as 2025. The space agency has not named the crew for that mission known as Artemis-3, but NASA has revealed about 20 current astronauts who will make up the Artemis program crew, half are women.
LEARN ABOUT NASA'S NEW MOON LAUNCH SYSTEM
Today, these milestone firsts in spaceflight for women still receive much attention. Part of that is because 77 women have been to space compared to 556 men, according to Superclusters Astronaut Database, which includes sub-orbital flights.
Ride said she recalled thinking during her historic spaceflight that she wished being a female astronaut wasn't a big deal.
"It’s too bad this is so important. It’s too bad that we’re not further along that it’s a normal occurrence for a woman to go up on a Space Shuttle flight. It’ll be a wonderful day when this isn’t news."
Be sure to download the FOX Weather app to track any storms in your area and receive potentially life-saving weather alerts issued by the National Weather Service. The free FOX Weather livestream is also available 24/7 on the website and app and on your favorite streaming platform. The FOX Weather Update podcast also provides weather information for the entire country.
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Something in the Water 2022: Fans in good spirits as day 1 of the festival kicks off Friday
WASHINGTON - The Something in the Water music festival wrapped up its first day Friday with no major incidents to report.
Download the FOX 5 DC News App for Local Breaking News and Weather
Day one of the festival featured a jam-packed lineup of performances, including sets from Usher, Anderson .Paak & The Free Nationals, Lil Baby, and Ozuna.
Thousands of people were seen throughout the day packing the festival venue, which is located along Independence Avenue between 3rd and 9th Streets in Southwest. According to an event permit, organizers expect as many as 50,000 people to attend the weekend festival.
While day one of the festival went off mostly without a hitch, the record-breaking heat Friday did have some impacts. DC Fire and EMS officials said six people were to area hospitals for heat related issues. Officials said several others were also treated for dehydration issues at the festival, but did not require transport to a hospital.
RELATED: Something in the Water 2022: Everything you need to know about this weekend's festival
Despite the heat, attendees FOX 5 spoke with were in good spirits and said they were loving the atmosphere.
"It’s been great. We’ve had great food so far, honestly great vibes. It’s just been a great time," said Ashe’ Clarke.
Another attendee told FOX 5 that she came from Chicago to see the show.
"Once they dropped it, I called my friends. I said we’re going right, and then we immediately bought the tickets. I got my flight, so excited to be here," said Chyna Sanders.
This is the first year Pharrell's annual festival is being held in D.C., after spending previous years in Pharrell's hometown of Virginia Beach.
SUBSCRIBE TO FOX 5 DC ON YOUTUBE
The festival resumes Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. and Saturday night will feature Pharrell himself performing. For a full guide on what to expect at the festival this weekend click here.
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https://www.fox5dc.com/news/something-in-the-water-2022-fans-in-good-spirits-as-day-1-of-the-festival-kicks-off-friday
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/stanford-cardinal-football/articles/39833068
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Buttigieg: US may act against airlines on consumers’ behalf
(AP) - The day after Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg met with airline leaders to quiz them about widespread flight disruptions, his own flight was canceled and he wound up driving from Washington to New York.
“That is happening to a lot of people, and that is exactly why we are paying close attention here to what can be done and how to make sure that the airlines are delivering,” Buttigieg told The Associated Press in an interview Saturday.
Buttigieg said he is pushing the airlines to stress-test their summer schedules to ensure they can operate all their planned flights with the employees they have, and to add customer-service workers. That could put pressure on airlines to make additional cuts in their summer schedules.
Buttigieg said his department could take enforcement actions against airlines that fail to live up to consumer-protection standards. But first, he said, he wants to see whether there are major flight disruptions over the July Fourth holiday weekend and the rest of the summer.
Enforcement actions can results in fines, although they tend to be small. Air Canada agreed to pay a $2 million fine last year over slow refunds.
During Thursday’s virtual meeting, airline executives described steps they are taking to avoid a repeat of the Memorial Day weekend, when about 2,800 flights were canceled. “Now we’re going to see how those steps measure up,” Buttigieg said.
Travel is back. On Friday, more than 2.4 million people passed through security checkpoints at U.S. airports, coming within about 12,500 of breaking the pandemic-era high recorded on the Sunday after Thanksgiving last year.
The record surely would have been broken had airlines not canceled 1,400 flights, many of them because thunderstorms hit parts of the East Coast. A day earlier, airlines scrubbed more than 1,700 flights, according to tracking service FlightAware.
Weather is always a wild card when it comes to flying in summer, but airlines have also acknowledged staffing shortages as travel roared back faster than expected from pandemic lows. Airlines are scrambling to hire pilots and other workers to replace employees whom they encouraged to quit after the pandemic hit.
It takes months to hire and train a pilot to meet federal safety standards, but the Transportation Department sees no reason the airlines cannot immediately add customer-service representatives to help passengers rebook if their flight is canceled.
The government has its own staffing challenges.
Shortages at the Federal Aviation Administration, part of Buttigieg’s department, have contributed to flight delays in Florida. The FAA promises to increase staffing there. The Transportation Security Administration, an agency within the Department of Homeland Security, has created a roving force of 1,000 screeners who can be dispatched to airports where checkpoint lines get too long.
Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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https://www.ktre.com/2022/06/18/buttigieg-us-may-act-against-airlines-consumers-behalf/
| 2022-06-18T19:21:54
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CDC advisers recommend COVID-19 shots for children under 5
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. health advisers on Saturday recommended COVID-19 vaccines for infants, toddlers and preschoolers — the last group without the shots.
The advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention unanimously decided that coronavirus vaccines should be made available to children as young as 6 months, offering protection from hospitalizations, deaths and possible long-term complications that are still not clearly understood.
“We’ve taken a major step forward today,” said Dr. Oliver Brooks, one of the members of the advisory panel.
The final signoff was expected later in the day from CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky. While the Food and Drug Administration OKs vaccines, it’s the CDC that decides who should get them.
The government has been gearing up for the start of the shots early next week, with millions of doses ordered for distribution to doctors, hospitals and community health clinics around the country. Roughly 18 million kids will be eligible.
Many families have been anxious for officials to approve vaccines for small children, saying they have long avoided bringing their kids to birthday parties and other gatherings because they weren’t vaccinated.
“Parents will breathe a sigh of relief knowing these vaccines will very soon be available,” Dr. Jack Resneck, president of the American Medical Association, said in a statement.
Still, it remains to be seen how many will ultimately get the vaccines. Less than a third of children ages 5 to 11 have done so since vaccination opened up to them last November.
Here are some things to know:
WHAT KINDS ARE AVAILABLE?
Two brands — Pfizer and Moderna — got the green light Friday from the FDA and Saturday from the advisory panel. The vaccines use the same technology but are being offered at different dose sizes and number of shots for the youngest kids.
Pfizer’s vaccine is for 6 months through 4 years. The dose is one-tenth of the adult dose, and three shots are needed. The first two are given three weeks apart, and the last at least two months later.
Moderna’s is two shots, each a quarter of its adult dose, given about four weeks apart for kids 6 months through 5. The FDA also approved a third dose, at least a month after the second shot, for kids with immune conditions that make them more vulnerable to serious illness.
HOW WELL DO THEY WORK?
In studies, vaccinated youngsters developed levels of virus-fighting antibodies as strong as young adults, suggesting that the kid-size doses protect against coronavirus infections.
However, exactly how well they work is hard to pin down, especially when it comes to the Pfizer vaccine.
Two doses of Moderna appeared to be only about 40% effective at preventing milder infections at a time when the omicron variant was causing most COVID-19 illnesses. Pfizer presented study information suggesting the company saw 80% with its three shots. But the Pfizer data was so limited — and based on such a small number of cases — that experts and federal officials say they don’t feel there is a reliable estimate yet.
SHOULD MY LITTLE ONE BE VACCINATED?
Yes, according to the CDC’s advisers. While COVID-19 has been the most dangerous for older adults, younger people, including children, can also get very sick.
Hospitalizations surged during the omicron wave. Since the start of the pandemic, about 480 children under age 5 are counted among the nation’s more than 1 million COVID-19 deaths, federal data show.
“It is worth vaccinating, even though the number of deaths are relatively rare, because these deaths are preventable through vaccination,” said Dr. Matthew Daley, a Kaiser Permanente Colorado researcher who sits on the advisory committee.
WHICH VACCINE SHOULD MY CHILD GET?
Either one, says Dr. Peter Marks, the FDA’s vaccine chief.
“Whatever vaccine your health care provider, pediatrician has, that’s what I would give my child,’’ Marks said Friday.
The doses haven’t been tested against each other, so experts say there’s no way to tell if one is better.
One consideration: It takes roughly three months to complete the Pfizer three-shot series, but just one month for Moderna’s two shots. So families eager to get children protected quickly might want Moderna.
WHO’S GIVING THE SHOTS?
Pediatricians, other primary care physicians and children’s hospitals are planning to provide the vaccines. Limited drugstores will offer them for at least some of the under-5 group.
U.S. officials expect most shots to take place at pediatricians’ offices. Many parents may be more comfortable getting the vaccine for their kids at their regular doctor, White House COVID-19 coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha said. He predicted the pace of vaccination to be far slower than it was for older populations.
“We’re going see vaccinations ramp up over weeks and even potentially over a couple of months,” Jha said.
CAN CHILDREN GET OTHER VACCINES AT THE SAME TIME?
It’s common for little kids to get more than one vaccine during a doctor’s visit.
In studies of the Moderna and Pfizer shots in infants and toddlers, other vaccinations were not given at the same time so there is no data on potential side effects when that happens.
But problems have not been identified in older children or adults when COVID-19 shots and other vaccinations were given together, and the CDC is advising that it’s safe for younger children as well.
WHAT IF MY CHILD RECENTLY HAD COVID-19?
About three-quarters of children of all ages are estimated to have been infected at some point. For older ages, the CDC has recommended vaccination anyway to lower the chances of reinfection.
Experts have noted re-infections among previously infected people and say the highest levels of protection occur in those who were both vaccinated and previously infected.
The CDC has said people may consider waiting about three months after an infection to be vaccinated.
___
AP reporter Zeke Miller in Washington contributed.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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| 2022-06-18T19:22:00
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Lufkin police arrest man accused of shooting mother of his children
Published: Jun. 18, 2022 at 1:10 PM CDT|Updated: 28 minutes ago
LUFKIN, Texas (KTRE) - Lufkin police officers arrested a 35-year-old man Friday afternoon in connection with allegations that he shot the mother of his children.
Alexander Damone Blow, of Lufkin, is being held in the Angelina County Jail on an aggravated assault with a deadly weapon charge. No bond amount has been set for his charge yet.
According to the Lufkin Police Department media report, the shooting incident occurred in the 400 block of College Drive at about 3:37 p.m. Friday. LPD officers responded to a 911 call about an assault in progress.
The LPD media report did not specify the severity of the woman’s injury or injuries.
Copyright 2022 KTRE. All rights reserved.
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https://www.ktre.com/2022/06/18/lufkin-police-arrest-man-accused-shooting-mother-his-children/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:06
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Painted with gratitude: Disney fan’s painting spreads joy to entire Disney World cast
SUAMICO, Wis. (WBAY/Gray News) - The wonderful world of Disney has meant the world to Drew Gustin and his family, and he recently inspired the entire cast at Disney World.
WBAY reports when Drew learned Disney had shut down during the pandemic, he felt really sad. So, he decided to paint Cinderella’s Castle for the staff at Disney World to thank them for all the kindness they’ve shown him over the years.
“The Disney cast members make Disney special for everyone. A lot of times, when you have a special needs person, people tend to look away to be polite, but at Disney, they actually give attention and pull people out who have special needs. They’re not afraid to celebrate the differences,” Drew’s mom Diane Gustin said.
And the family says their son received quite the “thank you” in return for his painting.
Drew’s sister, who had worked at Disney, sent the portrait along with a note from her brother to a current cast member. In the days and weeks that followed, something magical happened.
“It just went crazy. They [cast members] all wanted to see the picture. A woman had it framed and named it Project Drew,” Diane Gustin said. “All of the Disney cast members were asking to get their picture taken with the portrait.”
To thank Drew for his love and inspiration, Disney sent him an album, created especially for him, filled with photos of hundreds of cast members posing with his painting.
“The proudest part is that he’s bringing so much joy. I mean not the recognition that he painted it, but that he painted it with the spirit of gratitude,” Diane Gustin said.
Copyright 2022 WBAY via Gray Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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https://www.ktre.com/2022/06/18/painted-with-gratitude-disney-fans-painting-spreads-joy-entire-disney-world-cast/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:12
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Warren Buffett’s final charity lunch draws record $19M bid
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An anonymous bidder has shelled out a record $19 million for a private lunch with billionaire Warren Buffet at a steakhouse in New York City.
The meal with the Berkshire Hathaway CEO was offered on an eBay auction to benefit the San-Francisco-based charity GLIDE, which helps homeless people and those in poverty. The winner can bring up to seven guests.
Buffett has raised $53 million for GLIDE since the auction began in 2000. The charity earned the philanthropist billionaire’s support when his first wife, Susie, introduced him to it after she started volunteering there. She died in 2004.
This year’s event will be the first private lunch offered with the 91-year-old billionaire since the previous record-setting bid of $4.5 million by cryptocurrency entrepreneur Justin Sun in 2019. The past two auctions were called off due to COVID-19 concerns and Buffett has said this will be the last.
“It’s been nothing but good,” Buffett said of the charity lunch in a news release. “I’ve met a lot of interesting people from all over the world. The one universal characteristic is that they feel the money is going to be put to very good uses.”
Like the winner this year, some other past winners have chosen to remain anonymous. One past winner, Ted Weschler, received a job offer from Buffett’s company after he spent nearly $5.3 million on two auctions in 2010 and 2011. Weschler now works as an investment manager for the Omaha, Nebraska, conglomerate, Berkshire.
Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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Annual Golf Tournament that Supports Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy Will Celebrate Legacy of Beloved Mother Angela Knight.
WESTMINSTER, Colo., June 18, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- For 19 years, the Knight family of Westminster, Colorado has supported the mission of Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD), a nonprofit organization leading the fight to end Duchenne muscular dystrophy (Duchenne), by hosting their annual Jumping Jack events each June. Angela and Darrell Knight, along with friends, family, and what seems like the entire community of Westminster, Colorado have fought to end Duchenne since their son Jack was a young boy. This year Jumping Jack will bring the community together again for "The Final Round" on Monday, June 20 to raise awareness for Duchenne, and to celebrate the life of Angela Knight.
In 2020, Angela Knight lost her battle with melanoma. She had a gift of crafting community and was a source of laughter, light, and love to everyone. PPMD was Angela Knight's passion. She put her heart and soul into everything she did in support of her son Jack and countless other individuals living with Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy.
"Angela was an amazingly kind individual and deeply missed by all who knew her, but leaves behind a legacy of strength, love, and a commitment to living each day to the fullest," says Darrell Knight.
The Knight family, along with a team of local volunteers, have created a mainstay event that connects people all over the state of Colorado to raise awareness for PPMD. Jumping Jack started in 2004 as an annual golf tournament and quickly blossomed into a full day of fundraising activities, including a wine tasting, dinner, and silent auction, raising over $750,000 for PPMD since its inception.
Founded in 1994 by a group of parents and grandparents, and led by Founding President and CEO Pat Furlong, PPMD is the largest, most comprehensive nonprofit organization in the United States focused on ending Duchenne, a genetic disorder characterized by the progressive loss of muscle. Duchenne is a multi-systemic condition, affecting many parts of the body, which results in deterioration of the skeletal, heart, and lung muscles.
"For almost 20 years, the Knight Family has created something truly special, defining what it means to bring people together. Angela was an inspiration to the community, with her passion and drive to raise awareness for the fight to end Duchenne. Angela always found a way to make it happen. Her energy and uplifting spirit are at the heartbeat of this community. Although we miss her dearly, she leaves an unforgettable impact," said Pat Furlong, Founding President & CEO of PPMD.
The Jumping Jack Golf Tournament is a unique opportunity to enjoy a top-notch golf experience on an absolutely beautiful course. There will be something fun for everyone, golfers and non-golfers to take part in and enjoy. Carrabba's Italian Grill will provide a delicious lunch and dinner. Novice wine drinkers to connoisseurs will enjoy the wide array of great wines that Ron's Liquors at Costco will present.
It's not too late to join the fun, raise funds for Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy, and celebrate Angela's legacy. Register to join us for dinner and be a part of Jumping Jack Golf Tournament - The Final Round on June 20, 2022 at Legacy Ridge Golf Course. For more about Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy, visit www.ParentProjectMD.org.
ABOUT PARENT PROJECT MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY:
Duchenne is a fatal genetic disorder that slowly robs people of their muscle strength. Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD) fights every single battle necessary to end Duchenne.
We demand optimal care standards and ensure every family has access to expert healthcare providers, cutting edge treatments, and a community of support. We invest deeply in treatments for this generation of Duchenne patients and in research that will benefit future generations. Our advocacy efforts have secured hundreds of millions of dollars in funding and won five FDA approvals.
Everything we do—and everything we have done since our founding in 1994—helps those with Duchenne live longer, stronger lives. We will not rest until we end Duchenne for every single person affected by the disease. Join our fight against Duchenne at EndDuchenne.org. Follow PPMD on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube.
View original content to download multimedia:
SOURCE Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD)
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https://www.ktre.com/prnewswire/2022/06/18/annual-charity-golf-outing-jumping-jack-end-duchenne-hosts-final-round/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:25
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An ambitious judge “is more dangerous” than a bribe-taking judge, said Supreme Court judge Justice Jamshed Pardiwala in Ahmedabad Saturday recounting a former colleague’s remark. He added the lesson is something he has embedded within himself.
The former Gujarat High Court judge added that in his new assignment as an SC judge, it will be his “endeavour” to try his best to fulfil his constitutional oath.
Justice Pardiwala, who was elevated to the apex court in May and is expected to have tenure until 2030, was speaking at the felicitation-cum-farewell of recently elevated SC judges from the Gujarat High Court–Justices Vikram Nath, Bela Trivedi and Jamshed Pardiwala–organised by the Gujarat High Court Advocates’ Association (GHAA).
Emphasising the importance of the institution of justice and it being larger than any individual, Justice Pardiwala elaborated on the two major roles of a judge “in a vibrant democracy such as India”. The first role is to “uphold the Constitution and the rule of law,” and the second is “to bridge the gap between the law and the society.”
“Your ideologies may differ, but when it comes to protecting the honour and dignity of this institution, always stand united and tall. Never allow any person to point a finger at this institution, never allow anyone to speak foul about this institution. Why I’m saying so is, in the words of a very eminent jurist, “the power of judiciary lies not in deciding cases, not in imposing sentences, not in punishing for contempt, but in the trust, confidence and faith of the common man.” This trust and confidence must not be shaken,” Justice Pardiwala said.
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Reminiscing his time on the bench with former Gujarat Chief Justice (now retd) Bhaskar Bhattacharya, Justice Pardiwala recounted a time when the latter when asked about his age (45 years then), commented spontaneously on Justice Pardiwala’s remaining 17 years of tenure saying “an ambitious judge is more dangerous than a bribe-taking judge.”
Justice Pardiwala was taken aback at the remarks and later mustered the courage to ask Justice Bhattacharya what he wanted to convey. He said, “Brother, when I became a judge in 1997, I had a tenure of more than 16 years. On the morning of my oath, my father who was also a judge of the Calcutta HC but of service cadre came to wish me and said, “Bhaskar da, don’t start thinking from day one when you will become the chief justice of any high court or when will you go to the SC because an ambitious judge is a more dangerous judge than a bribe-taking judge. Ambition can lead a judge to do anything. Therefore, what my father has conveyed to me, I’m conveying it to you.” These words got embedded in my mind, they are still embedded, they will die with me,” said Justice Pardiwala.
Justice Bela Trivedi, the first woman judge of Gujarat HC to be elevated to SC, remembered senior advocate Vasuben Shah under whom she trained as a lawyer. Shah, who passed away last month, was the first woman designated senior advocate at Gujarat HC.
Felicitating the three judges on their elevation to SC, Asim Pandya, president of GHAA, added, “As Supreme Court judges, it is expected that the values of democracy are protected and that they take special care to ensure that citizens’ rights, as enshrined in the Constitution, are not encroached upon by the executive or Parliament.”
Meanwhile, in his welcome speech for Justice Vikram Nath, Pandya reminisced of his role during the Covid pandemic, when he presided over the petitions related to the pandemic. He also noted that Justice Nath had, as the Chief Justice of the HC, delivered some “interesting judgements” one of which was the litigations challenging the alcohol prohibition law in Gujarat.
“If you ask every house, there will be at least two alcohol bottles–either with a permit or not. So when the petition was before him, he gave a patient hearing and when Kamal Trivedi (as advocate general of Gujarat) had taken a preliminary objection saying the law had already been decided on, the interim objection was rejected (by Justice Nath),” said Pandya, attracting guffaws of laughter from all judges and audience members.
The Gujarat Prohibition Act, 1949, remains under challenge before the HC more than seven decades after it came into effect as the Bombay Prohibition Act. The court in August 2021 had held the petitions to be maintainable.
Meanwhile, Justice Vikram Nath, who was the Chief Justice of Gujarat HC from 2019 until his elevation as SC judge in August 2021, remarked on the “complicated cooperative laws” in the state that he had to encounter as an HC judge, adjudging equally “complicated litigations” on the law.
- The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
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https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/ahmedabad/ambitious-judge-more-dangerous-than-bribe-taking-judge-justice-jamshed-pardiwala-7977831/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:33
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Water supply is likely to be affected in parts of Delhi on Sunday due to reduction of the pond level at Wazirabad, according to a communication from the Delhi Jal Board (DJB).
The level of the pond at Wazirabad was 667.30 ft against a normal level of 674.50 ft, and the receipt of water from the Delhi Sub-Branch (DSB) and the Carrier Lined Channel (CLC) was also low, the DJB said. This has affected water production at the Chandrawal and Wazirabad water treatment plants which draw raw water from the Wazirabad pond. The DSB and CLC carry water from Haryana to Delhi.
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Water supply is likely to be available at low pressure in the morning and evening on Sunday. Areas that are likely to be affected are parts of South Delhi, Delhi Cantt, areas under the New Delhi Municipal Council, Kamla Nagar, Shakti Nagar, Civil Lines, Rajinder Nagar, Patel Nagar, Inderpuri, Kalkaji, Tughlaqabad, Punjabi Bagh, Jahangirpuri, Moolchand, Greater Kailash and Burari.
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The city has been facing a prolonged shortage of water this summer with the Yamuna drying up in some parts. The DJB had issued a similar notice on June 9 stating that water will be available at low pressure from June 10 onwards, till sufficient raw water is available.
The Chandrawal water treatment plant produces around 90 MGD, while the Wazirabad WTP produces 120 MGD.
- The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
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https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/delhi/water-supply-to-be-hit-in-some-parts-of-delhi-today-7977804/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:39
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| 0.945774
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Sugar mills in Maharashtra have crushed more than 100 lakh tonne of cane, which was not “registered” with any mill at the start of the season. This was mainly due to reluctance of farmers to register with any single mill and instead sell their cane to the mill that gives the highest price, Sugar Commissioner Shekhar Gaikwad told The Indian Express on Wednesday.
The 2021-22 sugarcane crushing season for Maharashtra came to an end on Tuesday with Rajgad Cooperative Sugar Mill in Bhor taluka of Pune district being the last mill to end its operation. The season, which lasted for 173 days, saw 200 mills crushing 1,320.31 lakh tonne of cane and producing 137.27 lakh tonne of sugar. This would be the first time in the past 10 seasons when the crushing season had extended well into June.
While this was the most cane crushed in the past 10 seasons, mills were stumped from March onward as their previous estimates of cane to be crushed started going wrong, especially mills in Marathwada, Solapur and Ahmednagar. Some mills had claimed an abnormal rise in per hectare yield was to blamed for this while others admitted that a large portion of cane had gone unregistered, which was to be blamed for the long season. Gaikwad said this season, they have seen per
hectare yields rise from 80 tonne to 110 tonne. “Good soil moisture had helped crop growth,” he said.
But the sugar commissioner’s office said more than 100 lakh tonne of cane had gone unregistered. “Farmers in many areas prefer not to register their cane with any particular mill. They instead decided to sell their cane to the mill that was providing the best payment. In this way, the cane escaped the net of estimates,” he said.
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Farmers generally register their cane with mills that draw up their harvesting calendar to ensure proper recovery of sugar. Unregistered cane is purchased as ‘gate cane’ for which farmers see more deduction in terms of harvesting and transportation charges.
Given the abnormally high amount of unregistered cane, Maharashtra had to revise its estimates several times. The first estimate that was issued by the sugar commissioner’s office in September 2021 was a modest 110 lakh tonne – a far cry from the final figure of 137.27 lakh tonnes.
Gaikwad said they will take extra care to ensure this is not repeated from the next season. An app is being developed by his office which will allow farmers to register their cane. In case no mill wants to register a farmer’s cane within their harvesting programme, the cane commissioner’s office will provide an option for registration. The sugar commissioner’s office will encourage mills to invest in mechanical harvesters.
- The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
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https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/pune/100-lakh-tonne-of-unregistered-cane-was-crushed-in-maharashtra-7977826/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:45
|
en
| 0.979412
|
June 19, 2022 12:35:47 am
SUGAR MILLS in Maharashtra have crushed more than 100 lakh tonne of cane, which was not “registered” with any mill at the start of the season. This was mainly due to reluctance of farmers to register with any single mill and instead sell their cane to the mill that gives the highest price, Sugar Commissioner Shekhar Gaikwad told The Indian Express on Wednesday.
The 2021-22 sugarcane crushing season for Maharashtra came to an end on Tuesday with Rajgad Cooperative Sugar Mill in Bhor taluka of Pune district being the last mill to end its operation. The season, which lasted for 173 days, saw 200 mills crushing 1,320.31 lakh tonne of cane and producing 137.27 lakh tonne of sugar. This would be the first time in the past 10 seasons when the crushing season had extended well into June.
While this was the most cane crushed in the past 10 seasons, mills were stumped from March onward as their previous estimates of cane to be crushed started going wrong, especially mills in Marathwada, Solapur and Ahmednagar. Some mills had claimed an abnormal rise in per hectare yield was to blamed for this while others admitted that a large portion of cane had gone unregistered, which was to be blamed for the long season. Gaikwad said this season, they have seen per hectare yields rise from 80 tonne to 110 tonne. “Good soil moisture had helped crop growth,” he said.
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But the sugar commissioner’s office said more than 100 lakh tonne of cane had gone unregistered. “Farmers in many areas prefer not to register their cane with any particular mill. They instead decided to sell their cane to the mill that was providing the best payment. In this way, the cane escaped the net of estimates,” he said.
Farmers generally register their cane with mills that draw up their harvesting calendar to ensure proper recovery of sugar. Unregistered cane is purchased as ‘gate cane’ for which farmers see more deduction in terms of harvesting and transportation charges. Given the abnormally high amount of unregistered cane, Maharashtra had to revise its estimates several times. The first estimate that was issued by the sugar commissioner’s office in September 2021 was a modest 110 lakh tonne – a far cry from the final figure of 137.27 lakh tonnes.
- The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
|
https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/pune/sugar-mills-crush-over-100-lakh-tonne-of-unregistered-cane-in-state-7977830/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:51
|
en
| 0.978808
|
A PIL has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking a direction to set up a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe the damage to public properties including that of railways and violent protests against the Centre’s Agnipath scheme.
The PIL has been filed by advocate Vishal Tiwari, who also sought directions to the Centre and Uttar Pradesh, Telangana, Bihar, Haryana and Rajasthan governments to submit a status report on the violent protests.
Tiwari in his plea also sought a direction to set up an expert committee under the chairmanship of a retired apex court judge to examine the scheme and its impact on national security and Army.
He further sought directions to the Centre and the states arrayed as parties to appoint claim commissioners under the guidelines laid down by the apex court in its verdict of 2009 passed in a suo motu case initiated after incidents of damages to public properties.
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“The petitioner through this present Public Interest Litigation (Civil) under Article 32 of the Constitution of India would like to bring to the court’s attention the devastated condition of the country resulting from the Agnipath scheme launched by the Respondent No.1 (Union of India) through its Ministry of Defence,” the plea said.
It said that the consequence has been far reaching for the citizens of this country resulting in intensified vandalism and protest leading to severe destruction of public property and goods.
“The country is yet again witnessing another such societal upset and fatal condition due to the recent launch of the Agnipath scheme dated June 14, 2022 by the Respondent No. 1 through its Ministry of Defence. The Agnipath scheme was designed for the recruitment of young personnel in the all three armed forces divisions. It is a scheme which entails a recruitment process for individuals with ranks below that of the officer with the goal of deploying fitter and younger troops on the front lines which will be based on a four year contract,” it said.
The plea said that since the launch of the scheme, the country is facing severe and uncontrolled mass violence and protests against the scheme.
“The concern which rises through this scheme is primarily the length of service that is 4 years is not reasonable and there remains no pension benefits. The defence aspirants during their protests have alleged that this Agnipath scheme leads to a road of uncertainty for soldiers who will have to leave the services after 4 years. After the completion of the 4 years contract, 25 percent of the total force will be retained and the rest of the personnel will have to leave which puts a serious uncertainty on their future,” it said.
It added that along with no job security and protection, there will be no pension benefits including the disability pension, the soldiers will get a lump sum of a little more than Rs 11 lakh when they end their fourth tenure.
“As opined by various experienced military veterans, this scheme of contractual fixed recruitment could compromise on training, morale and commitment in comparison to the permanent recruits. Such experimental radical change in the structure and pattern of the military can lead to severe strategic uncertainties which could compromise the national security of the country,” it said.
- The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
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https://indianexpress.com/article/india/plea-in-sc-for-sit-probe-into-violent-protests-against-agnipath-scheme-damage-to-properties-7977434/
| 2022-06-18T19:22:57
|
en
| 0.968617
|
The direction was issued during Friday’s meeting by the INSACOG which reviewed the Covid-19 data to check the possibility of any new emerging variant or sub-variant and ascertain the reasons behind the breakthrough infections.
“The idea behind asking states and Union territories to send large number of samples is to keep a closer watch over the current circulating sublineages of Omicron and its correlation to the current epidemiological picture,” an official said.
“Also, we want to see if we are missing out any important clues regarding newer sub-variants during routine sequencing through the sentinel surveillance,” the official added.
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As on date, 10 states and Union territories — Maharashtra, Kerala, Delhi, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Telangana, West Bengal and Gujarat have over 1,000 cases.
“The last review meeting that there is no variant of concern in the country as of now. India now has BA.4 and BA.5 in addition to BA.2 which have slightly higher transmissibility as compared to other Omicron sub lineages,” the official said.
The INSACOG is a joint initiative of the department of biotechnology under the ministries of science and technology, and health to carry out genome sequencing of the virus to understand how it spreads and evolves.
Thirty-two districts in India including 11 from Kerala and five from Maharashtra are reporting a weekly Covid positivity rate of more than 10 per cent while in 35 districts including 9 from Delhi, the weekly positivity is between 5 and 10 per cent, sources said.
India logged a single day rise of 13,216 new coronavirus infections taking the total tally of Covid-19 cases to 4,32,83,793, while the active cases have increased to 68,108, according to health ministry data updated on Saturday morning.
The death toll has climbed to 5,24,840 with 23 new fatalities.
According to health experts although there is a rise in cases, there is no associated increase in hospitalisation or deaths. Also, the increase is limited to limited to a few districts.
The complacency among people towards following Covid-appropriate behaviour in addition to people not being enthusiastic about taking precaution doses possibly has increased the pool of susceptible population.
In addition, there is an increased mobility due to summer holidays, easing of travel restrictions – both nationally and internationally – and full-fledged opening up of economic activities, because of which there is spread of infection among vulnerable individuals.
- The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
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https://indianexpress.com/article/india/surge-in-covid-19-cases-states-uts-asked-to-submit-larger-number-of-samples-for-whole-genome-sequencing-7977412/
| 2022-06-18T19:23:03
|
en
| 0.955035
|
As Assam continued to reel under floods, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma Saturday visited several relief camps sheltering the displaced. Earlier in the morning, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took stock of the situation, and assured “all possible support” to the state from the Centre. “At 6am today, Hon PM Shri @narendramodi ji called me to enquire about #flood situation in #Assam. While expressing his concerns over the hardships being faced by people due to this natural calamity, Hon PM assured all help from Central Govt” tweeted Sarma.
The Centre will also be sending a team to Meghalaya, which has also been convulsed by floods. On Friday, the state had reported 13 deaths, following which Chief Minister Conrad Sangma spoke to Union Home Minister Amit Shah. “Have updated @AmitShah ji of the flood situation in the state and the extensive damage that has been caused. He has assured of all help and will be sending a team to assess the situation. I thank him for his prompt response” Sangma tweeted.
Saturday marked the fifth consecutive day of rains in both the states. In Assam, the Brahmaputra and its tributaries are flowing above the danger level at several places in the state.
A release from the Assam State Disaster Management Authority (ASDMA) said that in the past 24 hours, floods and landslides claimed eight more lives, taking up the total death toll this year to 62. Out of the eight, two people in Karimganj district and one person in Hailakandi district were buried alive in a landslide, and six died in the flood waters. Over 30 lakh have been affected in 4,291 villages across 32 districts of the state.
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In Assam, Sarma visited Rangia in Kamrup district. Speaking to reporters, he said: “Officials concerned have been directed to ensure evacuation of people from vulnerable areas to relief camps. The Army is ready to provide assistance.. NDRF and SDRF personnel were evacuating affected people to safer places.”
In Hojai district, a country boat carrying 113 flood-affected people capsized, leading to the death of a woman and a 4-year-old child. Fresh landslides were reported in several areas of Guwahati and parts of Cachar, Karimganj, Hailakandi, Goalpara, South Salmara, Dima Hasao, Goalpara and Kamrup districts.
Meanwhile, over 10,000 people have been rendered homeless in Tripura due to inundation caused by incessant rainfall since Friday, a PTI report said. Chief Minister Manik Saha held a meeting of senior officials on Saturday to take stock of the flood situation.
The India Meteorological Department has issued an orange alert for both Meghalaya and Assam for June 19 and 20.
- The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
|
https://indianexpress.com/article/north-east-india/assam/assam-flood-toll-62-over-30-lakh-affected-pm-modi-dials-sarma-to-know-situation-7977825/
| 2022-06-18T19:23:09
|
en
| 0.970551
|
NEW YORK (AP) — US opens COVID-19 vaccines to little kids; shots begin next week.
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https://www.lakecountystar.com/business/article/Alert-US-opens-COVID-19-vaccines-to-little-kids-17251043.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:03
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en
| 0.893601
|
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) — A home for Cheech Marin's collection of Chicano art has debuted in Southern California.
The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture opened Saturday in Riverside, east of Los Angeles.
Marin rolled up in a blue 1962 Chevy Impala lowrider, hopped out and unlocked the doors for opening day of “The Cheech,” The Press-Enterprise reported.
“We hope that this building and this collection and this participation of the community will be a beacon for everybody else around the country to finally redefine inclusion,” Marin said during a ceremony.
The museum is located in the city's former main library, adjacent to the historic Mission Inn Hotel & Spa.
The center houses hundreds of paintings, photographs, sculptures and other works from Marin's collection, which the actor and comedian began building in the 1980s.
The center is a public-private partnership between the Marin, the city and the Riverside Art Museum, which will operate it.
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https://www.lakecountystar.com/entertainment/article/Cheech-Marin-s-museum-of-Chicano-art-opens-in-17251039.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:09
|
en
| 0.9502
|
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Indiana Lottery's "Daily Four-Midday" game were:
3-7-1-7, SB: 5
(three, seven, one, seven; SB: five)
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Indiana Lottery's "Daily Four-Midday" game were:
3-7-1-7, SB: 5
(three, seven, one, seven; SB: five)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Daily-Four-Midday-game-17250954.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:15
|
en
| 0.907554
|
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Illinois Lottery's "LuckyDay Lotto Midday" game were:
16-20-26-38-42
(sixteen, twenty, twenty-six, thirty-eight, forty-two)
Estimated jackpot: $150,000
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Illinois Lottery's "LuckyDay Lotto Midday" game were:
16-20-26-38-42
(sixteen, twenty, twenty-six, thirty-eight, forty-two)
Estimated jackpot: $150,000
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-LuckyDay-Lotto-Midday-17250978.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:21
|
en
| 0.848544
|
BRAINTREE, Mass. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Massachusetts Lottery's "Numbers Midday" game were:
6-5-7-8
(six, five, seven, eight)
BRAINTREE, Mass. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Massachusetts Lottery's "Numbers Midday" game were:
6-5-7-8
(six, five, seven, eight)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Numbers-Midday-game-17251002.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:27
|
en
| 0.915748
|
LONDON (AP) — Thousands of people marched through central London on Saturday in a protest over the soaring cost of living in Britain.
Huge crowds flooded into the British capital for the rally to demand that the government do more to help people faced with bills and other expenses that are rising more quickly than their wages.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been criticized for being slow to respond to the cost-of-living crisis. Inflation in Britain and across Europe has been surging, as Russia’s war in Ukraine crimped supplies of energy and food staples like wheat. Prices were already rising before the war, as the global economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in strong consumer demand.
Demonstrators carried banners with messages such as “Cut war not welfare.” They booed when they passed by 10 Downing Street, the prime minister’s residence, according to videos posted on social media.
Ben Robinson, who works for a housing charity in south London’s Brixton neighborhood, said the government doesn’t realize how bad things are going to be for the poor.
“We’ve got residents who are coming into our offices who are choosing between feeding their own kids, not themselves, their own kids, and paying rent and heating,” he said. “That is just not a choice that anyone should have to face, you know, in the fourth biggest economy in the world.”
The TUC, an umbrella organization for labor unions that organized the protest, said its research suggests workers have effectively lost a total of almost 20,000 pounds ($24,450) since 2008 because pay hasn’t kept pace with inflation.
Johnson’s government is facing heavy pressure to do more to help Britons struggling with soaring fuel and food prices and domestic energy bills. In one example of the crunch for household finances, a data firm said the average cost of filling up a typical family car exceeding 100 pounds ($125).
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https://www.news10.com/business/ap-business/big-crowds-take-to-london-streets-to-protest-soaring-costs/
| 2022-06-18T19:25:31
|
en
| 0.968655
|
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Numbers Midday" game were:
4-1-0
(four, one, zero)
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the New York Lottery's "Numbers Midday" game were:
4-1-0
(four, one, zero)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Numbers-Midday-game-17251024.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:33
|
en
| 0.923353
|
NEW YORK (AP) — The price of bitcoin fell below $20,000 on Saturday for the first time since late 2020, in a fresh sign that the selloff in cryptocurrencies is deepening.
Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency, fell below the psychologically important threshold, dropping by as much as 9% to less than $19,000 and hovering around that mark, according to the cryptocurrency news site CoinDesk.
The last time bitcoin was at that level was in November 2020, when it was on its way up to its all-time high of nearly $69,000, according to CoinDesk. Many in the industry had believed it would not fall under $20,000.
Bitcoin has now lost more than 70% of its value since reaching that peak.
Ethereum, another widely followed cryptocurrency that’s been sliding in recent weeks, took a similar tumble on Saturday.
It’s the latest sign of turmoil in the cryptocurrency industry amid wider turbulence in financial markets. Investors are selling off riskier assets because central banks are raising interest rates to combat quickening inflation.
The overall market value of cryptocurrency assets has fallen from $3 trillion to below $1 trillion, according to coinmarketcap.com, a company that tracks crypto prices. On Saturday, the company’s data showed crypto’s global market value stood at about $834 billion.
A spate of crypto meltdowns has erased tens of billions of dollars of value from the currencies and sparked urgent calls to regulate the freewheeling industry. Last week, bipartisan legislation was introduced in the U.S. Senate to regulate the digital assets. The crypto industry has also upped its lobbying efforts — flooding $20 million into congressional races this year for the first time, according to records and interviews.
Cesare Fracassi, a finance professor at the University of Texas at Austin who leads the school’s Blockchain Initiative, believes Bitcoin’s fall under the psychological threshold isn’t a big deal. Instead, he said the focus should be on recent news from lending platforms.
Cryptocurrency lending platform Celsius Network said this month that it was pausing all withdrawals and transfers, with no sign of when it would give its 1.7 million customers access to their funds. Another crypto lending platform, Babel Finance, said in a notice posted on its website Friday that it will suspend redemptions and withdrawals on products due to “unusual liquidity pressures.”
“There is a lot of turbulence in the market,” Fracassi said. “And the reason why prices are going down is because there is a lot of concern the sector is overleveraged.”
The cryptocurrency exchange platform Coinbase announced Tuesday that it laid off about 18% of its workforce, with the company’s CEO and cofounder Brian Armstrong placing some of the blame on a coming “crypto winter.”
Stablecoin Terra imploded last month, losing tens of billions of dollars in value in a matter of hours.
Crypto had permeated much of popular culture before its recent tumble, with many Super Bowl ads touting the digital assets and celebrities and YouTube personalities routinely promoting it on social media.
David Gerard, a crypto critic and author of “Attack of the 50 Foot Blockchain,” said the recent meltdowns show a failure by regulators, who he believes should have put more scrutiny on the industry years ago. Many nascent investors — especially young people — invested in crypto based on a false hope that was sold to them, he said.
“There are real human victims here that are ordinary people.”
___
Chan reported from London.
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https://www.news10.com/business/ap-business/bitcoin-drops-below-20000-as-crypto-selloff-quickens/
| 2022-06-18T19:25:38
|
en
| 0.961868
|
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
9-0-3
(nine, zero, three)
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
9-0-3
(nine, zero, three)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-3-Midday-game-17250964.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:40
|
en
| 0.912243
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/cf/texas-longhorns-football/articles/39833017
| 2022-06-18T19:25:40
|
en
| 0.738227
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/cf/texas-longhorns-football/articles/39833068
| 2022-06-18T19:25:41
|
en
| 0.738227
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/cf/texas-longhorns-football/articles/39833198
| 2022-06-18T19:25:43
|
en
| 0.738227
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/cf/texas-longhorns-football/articles/39833199
| 2022-06-18T19:25:43
|
en
| 0.738227
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/cf/texas-longhorns-football/articles/39833685
| 2022-06-18T19:25:44
|
en
| 0.738227
|
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
0-8-6
(zero, eight, six)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 3 Midday" game were:
0-8-6
(zero, eight, six)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-3-Midday-game-17250980.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:46
|
en
| 0.867512
|
The day after Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg met with airline leaders to quiz them about widespread flight disruptions, his own flight was canceled and he wound up driving from Washington to New York.
“That is happening to a lot of people, and that is exactly why we are paying close attention here to what can be done and how to make sure that the airlines are delivering,” Buttigieg told The Associated Press in an interview Saturday.
Buttigieg said he is pushing the airlines to stress-test their summer schedules to ensure they can operate all their planned flights with the employees they have, and to add customer-service workers. That could put pressure on airlines to make additional cuts in their summer schedules.
Buttigieg said his department could take enforcement actions against airlines that fail to live up to consumer-protection standards. But first, he said, he wants to see whether there are major flight disruptions over the July Fourth holiday weekend and the rest of the summer.
Enforcement actions can results in fines, although they tend to be small. Air Canada agreed to pay a $2 million fine last year over slow refunds.
During Thursday’s virtual meeting, airline executives described steps they are taking to avoid a repeat of the Memorial Day weekend, when about 2,800 flights were canceled. “Now we’re going to see how those steps measure up,” Buttigieg said.
Travel is back. On Friday, more than 2.4 million people passed through security checkpoints at U.S. airports, coming within about 12,500 of breaking the pandemic-era high recorded on the Sunday after Thanksgiving last year.
The record surely would have been broken had airlines not canceled 1,400 flights, many of them because thunderstorms hit parts of the East Coast. A day earlier, airlines scrubbed more than 1,700 flights, according to tracking service FlightAware.
Weather is always a wild card when it comes to flying in summer, but airlines have also acknowledged staffing shortages as travel roared back faster than expected from pandemic lows. Airlines are scrambling to hire pilots and other workers to replace employees whom they encouraged to quit after the pandemic hit.
It takes months to hire and train a pilot to meet federal safety standards, but the Transportation Department sees no reason the airlines cannot immediately add customer-service representatives to help passengers rebook if their flight is canceled.
The government has its own staffing challenges.
Shortages at the Federal Aviation Administration, part of Buttigieg’s department, have contributed to flight delays in Florida. The FAA promises to increase staffing there. The Transportation Security Administration, an agency within the Department of Homeland Security, has created a roving force of 1,000 screeners who can be dispatched to airports where checkpoint lines get too long.
|
https://www.news10.com/business/ap-business/buttigieg-us-may-act-against-airlines-on-consumers-behalf/
| 2022-06-18T19:25:45
|
en
| 0.965307
|
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
3-7-1-7
(three, seven, one, seven)
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Iowa Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
3-7-1-7
(three, seven, one, seven)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-4-Midday-game-17250965.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:52
|
en
| 0.923968
|
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. health officials on Saturday recommended COVID-19 vaccines for infants, toddlers and preschoolers — the last group without the shots.
The head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced the decision hours after an advisory panel voted unanimously that vaccines should be made available to children as young as 6 months.
“We know millions of parents and caregivers are eager to get their young children vaccinated, and with today’s decision, they can,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC’s director, said in a statement.
The shots offer young children protection from hospitalizations, deaths and possible long-term complications that are still not clearly understood, the CDC’s advisory panel said earlier.
“We’ve taken a major step forward today,” said Dr. Oliver Brooks, a member of the panel.
While the Food and Drug Administration approves vaccines, it’s the CDC that decides who should get them.
The government has been gearing up for the start of the shots early next week, with millions of doses ordered for distribution to doctors, hospitals and community health clinics around the country.
Roughly 18 million kids will be eligible, but it remains to be seen how many will ultimately get the vaccines. Less than a third of children ages 5 to 11 have done so since vaccination opened up to them last November.
Here are some things to know:
WHAT KINDS ARE AVAILABLE?
Two brands — Pfizer and Moderna — got the green light Friday from the FDA and Saturday from the CDC. The vaccines use the same technology but are being offered at different dose sizes and number of shots for the youngest kids.
Pfizer’s vaccine is for 6 months through 4 years. The dose is one-tenth of the adult dose, and three shots are needed. The first two are given three weeks apart, and the last at least two months later.
Moderna’s is two shots, each a quarter of its adult dose, given about four weeks apart for kids 6 months through 5. The FDA also approved a third dose, at least a month after the second shot, for kids with immune conditions that make them more vulnerable to serious illness.
HOW WELL DO THEY WORK?
In studies, vaccinated youngsters developed levels of virus-fighting antibodies as strong as young adults, suggesting that the kid-size doses protect against coronavirus infections.
However, exactly how well they work is hard to pin down, especially when it comes to the Pfizer vaccine.
Two doses of Moderna appeared to be only about 40% effective at preventing milder infections at a time when the omicron variant was causing most COVID-19 illnesses. Pfizer presented study information suggesting the company saw 80% with its three shots. But the Pfizer data was so limited — and based on such a small number of cases — that experts and federal officials say they don’t feel there is a reliable estimate yet.
SHOULD MY LITTLE ONE BE VACCINATED?
Yes, according to the CDC’s advisers. While COVID-19 has been the most dangerous for older adults, younger people, including children, can also get very sick.
Hospitalizations surged during the omicron wave. Since the start of the pandemic, about 480 children under age 5 are counted among the nation’s more than 1 million COVID-19 deaths, federal data show.
“It is worth vaccinating, even though the number of deaths are relatively rare, because these deaths are preventable through vaccination,” said Dr. Matthew Daley, a Kaiser Permanente Colorado researcher who sits on the advisory committee.
WHICH VACCINE SHOULD MY CHILD GET?
Either one, says Dr. Peter Marks, the FDA’s vaccine chief.
“Whatever vaccine your health care provider, pediatrician has, that’s what I would give my child,’’ Marks said Friday.
The doses haven’t been tested against each other, so experts say there’s no way to tell if one is better.
One consideration: It takes roughly three months to complete the Pfizer three-shot series, but just one month for Moderna’s two shots. So families eager to get children protected quickly might want Moderna.
WHO’S GIVING THE SHOTS?
Pediatricians, other primary care physicians and children’s hospitals are planning to provide the vaccines. Limited drugstores will offer them for at least some of the under-5 group.
U.S. officials expect most shots to take place at pediatricians’ offices. Many parents may be more comfortable getting the vaccine for their kids at their regular doctor, White House COVID-19 coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha said. He predicted the pace of vaccination to be far slower than it was for older populations.
“We’re going see vaccinations ramp up over weeks and even potentially over a couple of months,” Jha said.
CAN CHILDREN GET OTHER VACCINES AT THE SAME TIME?
It’s common for little kids to get more than one vaccine during a doctor’s visit.
In studies of the Moderna and Pfizer shots in infants and toddlers, other vaccinations were not given at the same time so there is no data on potential side effects when that happens.
But problems have not been identified in older children or adults when COVID-19 shots and other vaccinations were given together, and the CDC is advising that it’s safe for younger children as well.
WHAT IF MY CHILD RECENTLY HAD COVID-19?
About three-quarters of children of all ages are estimated to have been infected at some point. For older ages, the CDC has recommended vaccination anyway to lower the chances of reinfection.
Experts have noted re-infections among previously infected people and say the highest levels of protection occur in those who were both vaccinated and previously infected.
The CDC has said people may consider waiting about three months after an infection to be vaccinated.
___
Associated Press writer Zeke Miller in Washington contributed to this report.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
|
https://www.news10.com/business/ap-business/cdc-advisers-recommend-covid-19-shots-for-children-under-5/
| 2022-06-18T19:25:52
|
en
| 0.956846
|
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
2-2-0-2
(two, two, zero, two)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the Missouri Lottery's "Pick 4 Midday" game were:
2-2-0-2
(two, two, zero, two)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-4-Midday-game-17250981.php
| 2022-06-18T19:25:58
|
en
| 0.905537
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nhl/tampa-bay-lightning/articles/39832239
| 2022-06-18T19:26:00
|
en
| 0.738227
|
LONDON (AP) — Russian hostilities in Ukraine are preventing grain from leaving the “breadbasket of the world” and making food more expensive across the globe, threatening to worsen shortages, hunger and political instability in developing countries.
Together, Russia and Ukraine export nearly a third of the world’s wheat and barley, more than 70% of its sunflower oil and are big suppliers of corn. Russia is the top global fertilizer producer.
World food prices were already climbing, and the war made things worse, preventing some 20 million tons of Ukrainian grain from getting to the Middle East, North Africa and parts of Asia.
Weeks of negotiations on safe corridors to get grain out of Ukraine’s Black Sea ports have made little progress, with urgency rising as the summer harvest season arrives.
“This needs to happen in the next couple of months (or) it’s going to be horrific,’’ said Anna Nagurney, who studies crisis management at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and is on the board of the Kyiv School of Economics.
She says 400 million people worldwide rely on Ukrainian food supplies. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization projects up to 181 million people in 41 countries could face food crisis or worse levels of hunger this year.
Here’s a look at the global food crisis:
WHAT’S THE SITUATION?
Typically, 90% of wheat and other grain from Ukraine’s fields are shipped to world markets by sea but have been held up by Russian blockades of the Black Sea coast.
Some grain is being rerouted through Europe by rail, road and river, but the amount is a drop in the bucket compared with sea routes. The shipments also are backed up because Ukraine’s rail gauges don’t match those of its neighbors to the west.
Ukraine’s deputy agriculture minister, Markian Dmytrasevych, asked European Union lawmakers for help exporting more grain, including expanding the use of a Romanian port on the Black Sea, building more cargo terminals on the Danube River and cutting red tape for freight crossing at the Polish border.
But that means food is even farther from those that need it.
“Now you have to go all the way around Europe to come back into the Mediterranean. It really has added an incredible amount of cost to Ukrainian grain,’’ said Joseph Glauber, senior research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington.
Ukraine has only been able to export 1.5 million to 2 million tons of grain a month since the war, down from more than 6 million tons, said Glauber, a former chief economist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Russian grain isn’t getting out, either. Moscow argues that Western sanctions on its banking and shipping industries make it impossible for Russia to export food and fertilizer and are scaring off foreign shipping companies from carrying it. Russian officials insist sanctions be lifted to get grain to global markets.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and other Western leaders say, however, that sanctions don’t touch food.
WHAT ARE THE SIDES SAYING?
Ukraine has accused Russia of shelling agricultural infrastructure, burning fields, stealing grain and trying to sell it to Syria after Lebanon and Egypt refused to buy it. Satellite images taken in late May by Maxar Technologies show Russian-flagged ships in a port in Crimea being loaded with grain and then days later docked in Syria with their hatches open.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says Russia has provoked a global food crisis. The West agrees, with officials like European Council President Charles Michel and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying Russia is weaponizing food.
Russia says exports can resume once Ukraine removes mines in the Black Sea and arriving ships can be checked for weapons.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov promised that Moscow would not “abuse” its naval advantage and would “take all necessary steps to ensure that the ships can leave there freely.”
Ukrainian and Western officials doubt the pledge. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said this week that it may be possible to create secure corridors without the need to clear sea mines because the location of the explosive devices are known.
But other questions would still remain, such as whether insurers would provide coverage for ships.
Dmytrasevych told the EU agriculture ministers this week that the only solution is defeating Russia and unblocking ports: “No other temporary measures, such as humanitarian corridors, will address the issue.”
HOW DID WE GET HERE?
Food prices were rising before the invasion, stemming from factors including bad weather and poor harvests cutting supplies, while global demand rebounded strongly from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Glauber cited poor wheat harvests last year in the United States and Canada and a drought that hurt soybean yields in Brazil. Also exacerbated by climate change, the Horn of Africa is facing one of its worst droughts in four decades, while a record-shattering heat wave in India in March reduced wheat yields.
That, along with soaring costs for fuel and fertilizer, has prevented other big grain-producing countries from filling in the gaps.
WHO’S HARDEST HIT?
Ukraine and Russia mainly export staples to developing countries that are most vulnerable to cost hikes and shortages.
Countries like Somalia, Libya, Lebanon, Egypt and Sudan are heavily reliant on wheat, corn and sunflower oil from the two warring nations.
“The burden is being shouldered by the very poor,” Glauber said. “That’s a humanitarian crisis, no question.’’
Beside the threat of hunger, spiraling food prices risk political instability in such countries. They were one of the causes of the Arab Spring, and there are worries of a repeat.
The governments of developing countries must either let food prices rise or subsidize costs, Glauber said. A moderately prosperous country like Egypt, the world’s top wheat importer, can afford to absorb higher food costs, he said.
“For poor countries like Yemen or countries in the Horn of Africa — they’re really going to need humanitarian aid,” he said.
Starvation and famine are stalking that part of Africa. Prices for staples like wheat and cooking oil in some cases are more than doubling, while millions of livestock that families use for milk and meat have died. In Sudan and Yemen, the Russia-Ukraine conflict came on top of years of domestic crises.
UNICEF warned about an “explosion of child deaths” if the world focuses only on the war in Ukraine and doesn’t act. U.N. agencies estimated that more than 200,000 people in Somalia face “catastrophic hunger and starvation,” roughly 18 million Sudanese could experience acute hunger by September and 19 million Yemenis face food insecurity this year.
Wheat prices have risen in some of those countries by as much as 750%.
“Generally, everything has become expensive. Be it water, be it food, it’s almost becoming quite impossible,” Justus Liku, a food security adviser with the aid group CARE, said after visiting Somalia recently.
Liku said a vendor selling cooked food had “no vegetables or animal products. No milk, no meat. The shopkeeper was telling us she’s just there for the sake of being there.”
In Lebanon, bakeries that used to have many types of flat bread now only sell basic white pita bread to conserve flour.
WHAT’S BEING DONE?
For weeks, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has been trying to secure an agreement to unblock Russian exports of grain and fertilizer and allow Ukraine to ship commodities from the key port of Odesa. But progress has been slow.
A vast amount of grain is stuck in Ukrainian silos or on farms in the meantime. And there’s more coming — Ukraine’s harvest of winter wheat is getting underway soon, putting more stress on storage facilities even as some fields are likely to go unharvested and because of the fighting.
Serhiy Hrebtsov can’t sell the mountain of grain at his farm in the Donbas region because transport links have been cut off. Scarce buyers mean prices are so low that farming is unsustainable.
“There are some options to sell, but it is like just throwing it away,” he said.
U.S. President Joe Biden says he’s working with European partners on a plan to build temporary silos on Ukraine’s borders, including with Poland, a solution that would also address the different rail gauges between Ukraine and Europe.
The idea is that grain can be transferred into the silos, and then “into cars in Europe and get it out to the ocean and get it across the world. But it’s taking time,” he said in a speech Tuesday.
Dmytrasevych said Ukraine’s grain storage capacity has been reduced by 15 million to 60 million tons after Russian troops destroyed silos or occupied sites in the south and east.
WHAT’S COSTING MORE?
World production of wheat, rice and other grains is expected to reach 2.78 billion tons in 2022, down 16 million tons from the previous year — the first decline in four years, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization said.
Wheat prices are up 45% in the first three months of the year compared with the previous year, according to the FAO’s wheat price index. Vegetable oil has jumped 41%, while sugar, meat, milk and fish prices also have risen by double digits.
The increases are fueling faster inflation worldwide, making groceries more expensive and raising costs for restaurant owners, who have been forced to increase prices.
Some countries are reacting by trying to protect domestic supplies. India has restricted sugar and wheat exports, while Malaysia halted exports of live chickens, alarming Singapore, which gets a third of its poultry from its neighbor.
The International Food Policy Research Institute says if food shortages grow more acute as the war drags on, that could lead to more export restrictions that further push up prices.
Another threat is scarce and costly fertilizer, meaning fields could be less productive as farmers skimp, said Steve Mathews of Gro Intelligence, an agriculture data and analytics company.
There are especially big shortfalls of two of the main chemicals in fertilizer, of which Russia is a big supplier.
“If we continue to have the shortage of potassium and phosphate that we have right now, we will see falling yields,” Mathews said. “No question about it in the coming years.”
___
AP reporters Noha El-Hennawy in Cairo; Cara Anna and Eloge Willy Kaneza in Nairobi, Kenya; Zeina Karam in Beirut, Lebanon; Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations; Lorne Cook in Brussels; Darlene Superville in Philadelphia; and Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, contributed.
|
https://www.news10.com/business/ap-business/explainer-how-did-russia-ukraine-war-trigger-a-food-crisis/
| 2022-06-18T19:25:59
|
en
| 0.956652
|
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the "Pick Four-Midday" game were:
1-0-1-7, Fireball: 7
(one, zero, one, seven; Fireball: seven)
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) _ The winning numbers in Saturday afternoon's drawing of the "Pick Four-Midday" game were:
1-0-1-7, Fireball: 7
(one, zero, one, seven; Fireball: seven)
|
https://www.lakecountystar.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Pick-Four-Midday-game-17250977.php
| 2022-06-18T19:26:05
|
en
| 0.814121
|
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
|
https://sportspyder.com/nhl/tampa-bay-lightning/articles/39832317
| 2022-06-18T19:26:06
|
en
| 0.738227
|
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