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WFO MEDFORD Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Sunday, June 26, 2022 _____ HEAT ADVISORY URGENT - WEATHER MESSAGE National Weather Service Medford OR 203 PM PDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 11 PM PDT SUNDAY... * WHAT...Hot temperatures of 95 to 105 in the valleys during the afternoons and 85 to 95 at usually cooler hilly locations. Overnight lows will also be unusually warm, generally in the 60s. * WHERE...In California, the valleys and hills of western Siskiyou County, including the Klamath and Scott River valleys. In Oregon, the eastern Douglas County foothills including Toketee Falls and Steamboat. * WHEN...Until 11 PM PDT Sunday. * IMPACTS...Hot temperatures may cause heat illnesses to occur. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS...The hottest day of this heat wave is expected to be Sunday. This heat wave is likely to feel unusually hot to most due to fairly cool temperatures, thus far, this warm season. * View the hazard area in detail at https://www.wrh.noaa.gov/map/?wfo=mfr PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors. Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. Take extra precautions if you work or spend time outside. When possible reschedule strenuous activities to early morning or evening. Know the signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Wear lightweight and loose fitting clothing when possible. To reduce risk during outdoor work, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends scheduling frequent rest breaks in shaded or air conditioned environments. Anyone overcome by heat should be moved to a cool and shaded location. Heat stroke is an emergency! Call 9 1 1. ...HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 11 PM PDT MONDAY... afternoons and 85 to 95 at usually cooler, hilly locations. * WHERE...In California, the Klamath and Shasta valleys. In Oregon, Central Douglas County including Roseburg, Tri-City, Tiller, Azalea, Glendale, Camas Valley, Sutherlin, Elkton, Drain, and Scottsburg. Also in Oregon, all of Jackson County, Eastern Curry County and Josephine County including the Illinois Valley, Grants Pass, and Agness. * WHEN...Until 11 PM PDT Monday. expected to be Sunday. On Monday the Heat Advisory area is likely to be smaller as temperatures cool slightly. This heat wave is likely to feel unusually hot to most due to fairly cool temperatures, thus far, this warm season. afternoons and 85 to 95 at usually cooler mid-elevation locations. Overnight lows will also be much warmer than normal, generally in the mid 50s to lower 60s. * WHERE...In California, Dunsmuir, Mount Shasta City, Tennant, Macdoel, Dorris, and Tulelake. In Oregon, portions of the South Central Oregon Cascades, Siskiyou Mountains, and Southern Oregon Cascades including Crescent Lake, Union Creek, and Howard Prairie. Also, much of the Upper Klamath Basin including Keno, Klamath Falls, Bonanza, and Chiloquin. ...HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM SUNDAY TO 11 PM PDT MONDAY... * WHAT...Hot temperatures from the upper 80s to 100 in the valleys during the afternoons. Overnight lows will also be much warmer than normal, generally in the 50s. * WHERE...In California, all except the higher mountains of Modoc County. In Oregon, Northern and Eastern Klamath County and Western Lake County and Central and Eastern Lake County including Lakeview, Adel, Bly, Beatty, Sprague River, Silver Lake, Summer Lake, Chemult, and Crescent. * WHEN...From 11 AM Sunday to 11 PM PDT Monday. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS...This heat wave is likely to feel _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/CA-WFO-MEDFORD-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17265745.php
2022-06-25T22:22:49
en
0.904965
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/kentucky-wildcats-football/articles/39899167
2022-06-25T22:22:53
en
0.738227
WFO SACRAMENTO Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 25, 2022 _____ SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT Special Weather Statement National Weather Service Sacramento CA 224 PM PDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...A strong thunderstorm will impact portions of northwestern Alpine, east central El Dorado and northeastern Amador Counties through 315 PM PDT... At 223 PM PDT, Doppler radar was tracking a strong thunderstorm over Kirkwood. This storm was nearly stationary. HAZARD...Pea size hail. SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Minor damage to outdoor objects is possible. Locations impacted include... Carson Pass, Kirkwood, Kirkwood Ski Area and Kirkwood Meadows. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... If outdoors, consider seeking shelter inside a building. Torrential rainfall is also occurring with this storm and may lead to localized flooding. Do not drive your vehicle through flooded roadways. If on or near water, get out of the water and move indoors or inside a vehicle. Remember, lightning can strike out to 10 miles from the parent thunderstorm. If you can hear thunder, you are close enough to be struck by lightning. Move to safe shelter now! Do not be caught on the water in a thunderstorm. LAT...LON 3866 12008 3879 12009 3881 12003 3880 12002 3868 11998 TIME...MOT...LOC 2123Z 171DEG 4KT 3873 12005 MAX HAIL SIZE...0.25 IN MAX WIND GUST...<30 MPH ...HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 10 AM SUNDAY TO 8 PM PDT MONDAY... * WHAT...High temperatures ranging from 95 to 105 degrees. * WHERE...Santa Clarita Valley, Los Angeles County San Fernando Valley, Los Angeles County Mountains and Los Angeles County San Gabriel Valley. * WHEN...From 10 AM Sunday to 8 PM PDT Monday. * IMPACTS...Hot temperatures may cause heat illnesses to occur. Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors. Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. Take extra precautions if you work or spend time outside. When possible reschedule strenuous activities to early morning or evening. Know the signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Wear lightweight and loose fitting clothing when possible. To reduce risk during outdoor work, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends scheduling frequent rest breaks in shaded or air conditioned environments. Anyone overcome by heat should be moved to a cool and shaded location. Heat stroke is an emergency! Call 9 1 1. * WHAT...High temperatures ranging from 90 to 100 degrees. Low temperatures ranging from 70 to 80 degrees. * WHERE...Santa Barbara County Interior Mountains and Ventura County Mountains. * WHAT...High temperatures ranging from 95 to 107 expected. * WHERE...Cuyama Valley, San Luis Obispo County Mountains, San Luis Obispo County Interior Valleys and Southern Salinas Valley. ...HEAT ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 10 AM TO 8 PM PDT MONDAY... * WHERE...Central Ventura County Valleys and Southeastern Ventura County Valleys. * WHEN...From 10 AM to 8 PM PDT Monday. * WHAT...High temperatures ranging from 91 to 101 degrees. * WHERE...Santa Monica Mountains. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/CA-WFO-SACRAMENTO-Warnings-Watches-and-17265770.php
2022-06-25T22:22:55
en
0.853357
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/kentucky-wildcats-football/articles/39899169
2022-06-25T22:22:59
en
0.738227
WFO SACRAMENTO Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 25, 2022 _____ SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT Special Weather Statement National Weather Service Sacramento CA 249 PM PDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...A strong thunderstorm will impact portions of southeastern Plumas and northeastern Sierra Counties through 315 PM PDT... At 248 PM PDT, Doppler radar was tracking a strong thunderstorm near Sattley, or near Sierraville, moving north at 5 mph. HAZARD...Half inch hail. SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Minor damage to outdoor objects is possible. Locations impacted include... Bassetts. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... If outdoors, consider seeking shelter inside a building. Torrential rainfall is also occurring with this storm and may lead to localized flooding. Do not drive your vehicle through flooded roadways. Frequent cloud to ground lightning is occurring with this storm. Lightning can strike 10 miles away from a thunderstorm. Seek a safe shelter inside a building or vehicle. LAT...LON 3945 12042 3952 12056 3970 12066 3971 12065 3971 12063 3961 12047 3953 12043 3949 12043 3949 12044 3947 12041 TIME...MOT...LOC 2148Z 185DEG 4KT 3957 12049 MAX HAIL SIZE...0.50 IN MAX WIND GUST...<30 MPH _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/CA-WFO-SACRAMENTO-Warnings-Watches-and-17265802.php
2022-06-25T22:23:02
en
0.846914
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/kentucky-wildcats-football/articles/39899599
2022-06-25T22:23:05
en
0.738227
WFO NEW YORK CITY Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 25, 2022 _____ AIR QUALITY ALERT Air Quality Alert Message Relayed by National Weather Service New York NY 435 PM EDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...AIR QUALITY ALERT IN EFFECT UNTIL 11 PM EDT THIS EVENING... The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation has issued an Air Quality Health Advisory for the following counties: until 11 PM EDT this evening. Air quality levels in outdoor air are predicted to be greater than an Air Quality Index value of 100 for the pollutant of Ground Level Ozone. The Air Quality Index, or AQI, was created as an easy way to correlate levels of different pollutants to one scale. The higher the AQI value, the greater the health concern. When pollution levels are elevated, the New York State Department of Health recommends that individuals consider limiting strenuous outdoor physical activity to reduce the risk of adverse health effects. People who may be especially sensitive to the effects of elevated levels of pollutants include the very young, and those with preexisting respiratory problems such as asthma or heart disease. Those with symptoms should consider consulting their personal physician. A toll free air quality hotline has been established so New York residents can stay informed on the air quality situation. The toll free number is 1 800 5 3 5, 1 3 4 5. _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/NY-WFO-NEW-YORK-CITY-Warnings-Watches-and-17265709.php
2022-06-25T22:23:08
en
0.919021
WFO AMARILLO Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 25, 2022 _____ SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT Special Weather Statement National Weather Service Amarillo TX 409 PM CDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...A strong thunderstorm will impact portions of western Deaf Smith County through 445 PM CDT... At 409 PM CDT, Doppler radar was tracking a strong thunderstorm 6 miles east of Bellview, or 21 miles northwest of Friona, moving northwest at 10 mph. HAZARD...Wind gusts up to 50 mph and penny size hail. SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Gusty winds could knock down tree limbs and blow around unsecured objects. Minor damage to outdoor objects is possible. Locations impacted include... Glenrio. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... If outdoors, consider seeking shelter inside a building. Torrential rainfall is also occurring with this storm and may lead to localized flooding. Do not drive your vehicle through flooded roadways. LAT...LON 3518 10304 3518 10297 3475 10282 3475 10304 TIME...MOT...LOC 2109Z 154DEG 9KT 3485 10299 MAX HAIL SIZE...0.75 IN MAX WIND GUST...50 MPH _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/TX-WFO-AMARILLO-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17265756.php
2022-06-25T22:23:14
en
0.857163
WFO AMARILLO Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 25, 2022 _____ SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT Special Weather Statement National Weather Service Amarillo TX 414 PM CDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...A strong thunderstorm will impact portions of northern Armstrong County through 445 PM CDT... At 414 PM CDT, Doppler radar was tracking a strong thunderstorm 7 miles west of Goodnight, or 8 miles south of Claude. This storm was nearly stationary. HAZARD...Wind gusts up to 50 mph and penny size hail. SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Gusty winds could knock down tree limbs and blow around unsecured objects. Minor damage to outdoor objects is possible. Locations impacted include... Claude, Washburn and Goodnight. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... If outdoors, consider seeking shelter inside a building. Torrential rainfall is also occurring with this storm and may lead to localized flooding. Do not drive your vehicle through flooded roadways. LAT...LON 3518 10162 3518 10119 3499 10118 3491 10138 3488 10163 TIME...MOT...LOC 2114Z 165DEG 3KT 3500 10132 MAX HAIL SIZE...0.75 IN MAX WIND GUST...50 MPH _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/TX-WFO-AMARILLO-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17265758.php
2022-06-25T22:23:20
en
0.864084
WFO AMARILLO Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Saturday, June 25, 2022 _____ SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT Special Weather Statement National Weather Service Amarillo TX 437 PM CDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...Strong thunderstorms will impact portions of northern Armstrong and northwestern Donley Counties through 515 PM CDT... At 436 PM CDT, Doppler radar was tracking strong thunderstorms along a line extending from 8 miles southeast of Washburn to 5 miles southeast of Claude to 8 miles northeast of Goodnight. Movement was north at 5 mph. HAZARD...Wind gusts up to 50 mph and nickel size hail. SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Gusty winds could knock down tree limbs and blow around unsecured objects. Minor damage to outdoor objects is possible. Locations impacted include... Claude, Washburn and Goodnight. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... If outdoors, consider seeking shelter inside a building. Torrential rainfall is also occurring with these storms and may lead to localized flooding. Do not drive your vehicle through flooded roadways. LAT...LON 3498 10154 3518 10160 3518 10092 3498 10094 3496 10131 TIME...MOT...LOC 2136Z 171DEG 6KT 3508 10148 3504 10132 3508 10105 MAX HAIL SIZE...0.88 IN MAX WIND GUST...50 MPH _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/TX-WFO-AMARILLO-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17265791.php
2022-06-25T22:23:27
en
0.875113
WFO PENDLETON Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Monday, June 27, 2022 _____ HEAT ADVISORY URGENT - WEATHER MESSAGE National Weather Service Pendleton OR 232 PM PDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...HEAT ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM SUNDAY TO 11 PM PDT MONDAY... * WHAT...High temperatures around 99 to 102 expected. * WHERE...In Washington, Eastern Columbia River Gorge of Washington. In Oregon, Eastern Columbia River Gorge of Oregon. * WHEN...From 11 AM Sunday to 11 PM PDT Monday. * IMPACTS...Hot temperatures may cause heat illnesses to occur. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors. Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. Take extra precautions if you work or spend time outside. When possible reschedule strenuous activities to early morning or evening. Know the signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Wear lightweight and loose fitting clothing when possible. To reduce risk during outdoor work, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends scheduling frequent rest breaks in shaded or air conditioned environments. Anyone overcome by heat should be moved to a cool and shaded location. Heat stroke is an emergency! Call 9 1 1. ...HEAT ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM TO 11 PM PDT MONDAY... * WHAT...High temperatures around 100 to 105 expected. * WHERE...In Washington, Yakima Valley, Lower Columbia Basin of Washington and Foothills of the Blue Mountains of Washington. In Oregon, Lower Columbia Basin of Oregon. * WHEN...From 11 AM to 11 PM PDT Monday. _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/WA-WFO-PENDLETON-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17265787.php
2022-06-25T22:23:33
en
0.852731
WFO PORTLAND Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Sunday, June 26, 2022 _____ HEAT ADVISORY URGENT - WEATHER MESSAGE National Weather Service Portland OR 147 PM PDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 PM PDT SUNDAY... * WHAT...Temperatures in the 90s expected. * WHERE...In Oregon, Coast Range of Northwest Oregon, Central Coast Range of Western Oregon, Central Willamette Valley, South Willamette Valley, Northern Oregon Cascade Foothills and Cascade Foothills in Lane County. In Washington, Willapa Hills, I- 5 Corridor in Cowlitz County and South Washington Cascade Foothills. * WHEN...Through 10 PM PDT Sunday. * IMPACTS...Hot temperatures may cause heat illnesses to occur. Rivers are running cold and fast, and will continue to do so this weekend. Nearly every year, people die in rivers in southwest Washington and northwest Oregon due to cold water shock during the season's first heat wave. Hot temperatures can make the cool water seem tempting, but river temperatures in the 50s can easily result in cold water shock that can kill in minutes. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS...Sunday will be the hottest day, with highs generally in the mid to upper 90s. Nighttime temperatures are expected to be in the mid 50s to mid 60s. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors. Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. Take extra precautions if you work or spend time outside. When possible reschedule strenuous activities to early morning or evening. Know the signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Wear lightweight and loose fitting clothing when possible. To reduce risk during outdoor work, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends scheduling frequent rest breaks in shaded or air conditioned environments. Anyone overcome by heat should be moved to a cool and shaded location. Heat stroke is an emergency! Call 9 1 1. * WHAT...Temperatures 80 to 90 expected. * WHERE...In Oregon, North Oregon Coast and Central Oregon Coast. In Washington, South Washington Coast. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS...Main location of concern is for inland areas away from the immediate coast. Sunday will be the hottest day, with inland highs generally 85 to 95. Coastal communities north of Newport are likely to reach the mid to upper 80s Sunday. Overnight temperatures are likely to fall into mid 50s to mid 60s. * WHERE...In Oregon, Northern Oregon Cascades and Cascades in Lane County. In Washington, South Washington Cascades. generally in the lower 80s. However, the lowest valleys are likely to be in the mid 80s to lower 90s. Overnight temperatures will be in the mid 50s to mid 60s, but locally to 70 on mid and upper slopes. ...HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 PM PDT MONDAY... * WHAT...Temperatures 90 to 100 expected. * WHERE...In Oregon, Lower Columbia, Greater Portland Metro Area, Upper Hood River Valley, Western Columbia River Gorge and Central Columbia River Gorge. In Washington, Greater Vancouver Area, Western Columbia River Gorge and Central Columbia River Gorge. * WHEN...Through 10 PM PDT Monday. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS...Sunday will be the hottest day with highs in the mid to upper 90s, locally to 102. Maximum temperatures Monday are expected to be 90 to 95. Nighttime temperatures are expected to be in the upper 50s to upper 60s. _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/WA-WFO-PORTLAND-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17265729.php
2022-06-25T22:23:39
en
0.901212
WFO SPOKANE Warnings, Watches and Advisories for Monday, June 27, 2022 _____ HEAT ADVISORY URGENT - WEATHER MESSAGE National Weather Service Spokane WA 245 PM PDT Sat Jun 25 2022 ...HEAT ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM TO 11 PM PDT MONDAY... * WHAT...High temperatures from 98 to 102 expected. * WHERE...Ephrata, Moses Lake, Othello, and Quincy. * WHEN...From 11 AM to 11 PM PDT Monday. * IMPACTS...Hot temperatures may lead to heat illnesses. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun during the peak heating of the day, and check up on relatives and neighbors. Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather
https://www.theheraldreview.com/weather/article/WA-WFO-SPOKANE-Warnings-Watches-and-Advisories-17265795.php
2022-06-25T22:23:45
en
0.863031
Confidence in Supreme Court hit historic low ahead of abortion ruling, Gallup poll shows A recent Gallup poll shows Americans have hit their lowest confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court as the justices receive praise and backlash for overturning Roe v. Wade, giving states power regarding abortion rights. "Twenty-five percent of U.S. adults say they have "a great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court, down from 36% a year ago and five percentage points lower than the previous low recorded in 2014," Gallup said on its website. The results were based on a poll from June 1 to June 20, days before the abortion ruling was handed down in Washington. However, the poll happened after a draft of the opinion was leaked back in May. RELATED: Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade; abortion bans anticipated in several states "Many institutions have suffered a decline in confidence this year, but the 11-point drop in confidence in the Supreme Court is roughly double what it is for most institutions that experienced a decline," researchers said. The Supreme Court on Friday stripped away women’s constitutional protections for abortion, a fundamental and deeply personal change for Americans’ lives after nearly a half-century under Roe v. Wade. The court’s overturning of the landmark court ruling is likely to lead to abortion bans in roughly half the states. The ruling, unthinkable just a few years ago, was the culmination of decades of efforts by abortion opponents made possible by an emboldened right side of the court fortified by three appointees of former President Donald Trump. Pregnant women considering abortions already had been dealing with a near-complete ban in Oklahoma and a prohibition after roughly six weeks in Texas. Clinics in at least eight other states — Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri, South Dakota, Wisconsin and West Virginia — stopped performing abortions after Friday’s decision. RELATED: State by state: Where abortion will be illegal after Supreme Court Dobbs v. Jackson ruling Abortion foes cheered the ruling, but abortion-rights supporters, including President Joe Biden, expressed dismay and pledged to fight to restore the rights. Biden said Friday he would fight to preserve access to abortion after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, and he called on Americans to elect more Democrats who would safeguard rights upended by the court’s decision. "This is not over," he declared. "Let’s be very clear, the health and life of women across this nation are now at risk," he said from the White House on what he called "a sad day for the court and the country." Biden added that "the court has done what it’s never done before — expressly taking away a constitutional right that is so fundamental to so many Americans." RELATED: Supreme Court abortion ruling exposes deep chasm in the U.S. Biden warned that other legal precedents ensuring same-sex marriage and access to birth control could also be at risk. "This is an extreme and dangerous path this court is taking us on," he said. The White House and the Justice Department said they would look for ways to blunt the impact of the ruling, and Biden said his administration would try to ensure that abortion medication is available as widely as possible. However, no executive actions were announced Friday, and Biden conceded that his options were limited. White House officials tried to rally allies in a virtual meeting after the president spoke. Biden and other Democrats hope to use outrage over the court decision to rally voters in November’s midterm elections. Although nationwide legislation ensuring access to abortion appears out of reach, more Democratic victories at the state level could limit Republican efforts to ban the practice. The Associated Press contributed to this report. This story was reported from Los Angeles.
https://www.fox35orlando.com/news/confidence-in-supreme-court-hit-historic-low-ahead-of-abortion-ruling-gallup-poll-shows
2022-06-25T22:24:01
en
0.973319
Flight instructor, student killed in Utah plane crash CACHE COUNTY, Utah - A flight instructor and student, part of the aviation program at Utah State University, were killed in a plane crash Friday. The university identified the pilot as Blake Shumway and the student as Michael Carpenter. "We are devastated by this morning’s tragic crash and the loss of members in our USU community," USU President Noelle E. Cockett said on the school’s website. "Every student and employee is part of our Aggie family, and we know many individuals will feel this loss deeply." According to a press release from the Cache County Sheriff’s Office, deputies received a call about a plane crash Friday around 9 a.m. near 2685 South Highway 23. There were two occupants in the plane and no survivors, according to authorities. "The Sheriff’s Office offers heartfelt condolences to the families and the loved ones of the occupants," authorities posted on their Facebook page. There’s no word yet on what caused the crash, but the Sheriff’s Office said several agencies are investigating including the National Transportation Safety Board. According to the university, Shumway was a certified flight instructor and had worked for USU Aviation since September 2021. Carpenter was majoring in aviation technology/professional pilot and was scheduled to graduate in the fall of 2022. Other flight lessons were canceled on Friday. "USU will be working with employees and students in the USU Aviation program to offer counseling and other services to help them process this loss," the university said. This story was reported from Los Angeles.
https://www.fox35orlando.com/news/flight-instructor-student-killed-in-utah-plane-crash
2022-06-25T22:24:07
en
0.98166
Pope Francis hails families, blasts ‘culture of waste’ after Roe v. Wade ruling ROME (AP) - Pope Francis celebrated families Saturday and urged them to shun "selfish" decisions that are indifferent to life as he closed out a big Vatican rally a day after the U.S. Supreme Court ended constitutional protections for abortion. Francis didn’t refer to the ruling or explicitly mention abortion in his homily. But he used the buzzwords he has throughout his papacy about the need to defend families and to condemn a "culture of waste" that he believes is behind the societal acceptance of abortion. "Let us not allow the family to be poisoned by the toxins of selfishness, individualism, today’s culture of indifference and waste, and as a result lose its very DNA, which is the spirit of welcoming and service," he said. RELATED: Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade; abortion bans anticipated in several states The pope, noting that some couples allow their fears and anxieties to "thwart the desire to bring new lives in the world," called for them not to cling to selfish desires. "You have been asked to not have other priorities, not to ‘look back’ to miss your former life, your former freedom, with its deceptive illusions," he said. Francis has strongly upheld church teaching opposing abortion, equating it to "hiring a hitman to solve a problem." At the same time, he has expressed sympathy for women who had abortions and made it easier for them to be absolved of the sin of undergoing the procedure. RELATED: State by state: Where abortion will be illegal after Supreme Court Dobbs v. Jackson ruling The Catholic Church holds that life begins at conception and must be protected and defended until natural death. Francis delivered his homily in a packed St. Peter’s Square at the end of the World Meeting of Families, a four-day conference held every few years aimed at helping church workers provide better pastoral care for families, especially those in difficulty. The head of the Vatican’s laity office, Cardinal Kevin Farrell, celebrated the closing Mass before tens of thousands of people given Francis has a bad knee that makes it difficult for him to stand for long periods of time. The pope instead sat to the side of the altar and delivered the homily seated, though he was able to stand up easily for the reading of the Gospel and other moments with the help of a cane. The Vatican welcomed Friday’s ruling overturning Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that provided constitutional protections for abortion in the U.S. The move opens the doors for individual states to ban or restrict abortion access, with bans now expected in about half the U.S. states. RELATED: Supreme Court Roe v. Wade decision: Leaked abortion draft versus the opinion The Holy See’s main bioethics body, the Pontifical Academy for Life, said it "challenges the whole world" to reopen debate about the need to protect life. Abortion is legal in Italy and most of Europe. In an editorial Saturday entitled "For Life, Always," the Vatican’s editorial director, Andrea Tornielli, called for that debate to move away from polarized ideology to a dialogue that takes into account concerns about maternal mortality rates and helping women, especially poor ones, with paid parental leave and other assistance when they bring children into the world . "Being for life, always, also means defending it against the threat of firearms, which unfortunately have become a leading cause of death of children and adolescents in the U.S.," Tornielli wrote. Farrell, in his closing remarks at the end of the Mass, thanked Francis for his many initiatives in favor of families, citing in particular his teaching on the value of grandparents and his "many pronouncements in defense of life."
https://www.fox35orlando.com/news/pope-francis-hails-families-blasts-culture-of-waste-after-roe-v-wade-ruling
2022-06-25T22:24:13
en
0.972264
Biden's mission in Europe: Shore up alliance against Russia President Joe Biden is out to sustain the global alliance punishing Russia for its invasion of Ukraine as he embarks on a five-day trip to Europe as the four-month-old war shows no sign of abating and its aftershocks to global food and energy supplies are deepening. Biden first joins a meeting of the Group of Seven leading economic powers in the Bavarian Alps of Germany and later travels to Madrid for a summit with leaders of the 30 NATO countries. The visit comes as the global coalition to bolster Ukraine and punish Russia for its aggression has shown signs of fraying amid skyrocketing inflation in food and energy prices caused by the conflict. The Ukraine war has entered a more attritional phase since Biden's last trip to Europe in March, just weeks after Russia launched its assault. At that time, he met with allies in Brussels as Ukraine was under regular bombardment and he tried to reassure Eastern Europe partners in Poland that they would not be the next to face an incursion by Moscow. Russia's subsequent retreat from western Ukraine and regrouping in the east has shifted the conflict to one of artillery battles and bloody house-to-house fighting in the country's industrial heartland, the Donbas region. While U.S. officials see broad consensus for maintaining the pressure on Russia and sustaining support for Ukraine in the near term, they view Biden's trip as an opportunity to align strategy for both the conflict and its global ramifications heading into the winter and beyond. Allies differ over whether their goals are merely to restore peace or to force Russia to pay a deeper price for the conflict to prevent its repetition. "Every country speaks for themselves, every country has concerns for what they're willing to do or not do," said John Kirby, spokesman for the White House National Security Council. "But as far as the alliance goes, it truly has never been stronger and more viable than it is today." Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is set to address both summits by video. The U.S. and allies have shipped his country billions of dollars in military assistance and imposed ever stricter sanctions on Russia over the invasion. Kirby said the allies would be making new "commitments" during the summits to further sever Russia from the global economy. The aim is to make it more difficult for Moscow to acquire technology to rebuild the arsenal it has depleted in Ukraine and to crack down on sanctions evasion by Russia and its oligarchs. G-7 summits have traditionally put global finance issues front and center, but amid soaring inflation in the U.S. and Europe, few concrete actions are expected. "There are different drivers of inflation in these various economies, different things that can be used to address it," said Josh Lipsky, director of the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center. He foresees "a lack of an ability to do something coordinated on inflation, other than really talk about the problem." Biden has blamed much of the rise in prices on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, especially in the energy markets, as U.S. and allied sanctions have limited Moscow's ability to sell its oil and gas supplies. Sustaining the Western resolve will only get more challenging as the war drags on and cost-of-living issues pose political headaches for leaders at home, U.S. and European officials said. Finding ways to transition from Russian energy to other sources — without setting back longstanding goals to combat climate change — is set to be a key discussion point. Russia was once a member of what was then the G-8. It was expelled from the group in 2014 after it invaded Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula, a move that foreshadowed the current crisis. A top priority of Western officials heading into the summit is finding a way to get Ukraine's vast grain harvest out onto the world market, as the United Nations and others warn of tens of millions of people being cast into hunger because of tight supplies. The most impactful changes would require an agreement from Russia to stop targeting food and food infrastructure as well as agreeing to the establishment of a sea corridor to allow exports of grain from Ukraine. In Madrid, Biden will help promote NATO's effort to welcome Finland and Sweden into the alliance after the Russian invasion of Ukraine led the two historically neutral democracies to seek the protection of the mutual-defense association. It remains to be seen whether Biden will meet with Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who has indicated he plans to block the two countries' accession into NATO unless he receives concessions. Adding new members requires unanimous support from existing NATO members. U.S. officials have maintained optimism that the two countries will be welcomed into the alliance, but have played down expectations for a breakthrough in Madrid. Biden speaks often of the world being in a generational struggle between democracies and autocracies that will set the global agenda for the coming decades. He aims to use the trip to show that Russia's invasion of Ukraine has "firmed up" democracies on the threats from autocracies in both Moscow and Beijing. Biden is also securing a significant step by NATO to recognize China as an emerging challenge to the alliance. The formal reference of China in NATO's new "Strategic Concept," the first update to its guiding principles since 2010, fulfills efforts under multiple presidents to expand the alliance's focus to China, even in the face an increasingly bellicose Russia. In a symbolic step, NATO has invited Pacific leaders from Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and Australia to the summit. "Instead of distracting us from the Indo-Pacific and China, the president's leadership with respect to supporting Ukraine has actually galvanized leaders in that region and effectively linked our efforts in Europe and in Asia," Kirby told reporters. "And those Asian countries that will be participating in the NATO Summit, I think, speak volumes about that fact." Biden is also set to relaunch his idea for a global infrastructure investment program meant to counter China's influence in the developing world, which he previously had called "Build Back Better World" and had introduced at the 2021 G-7 summit. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin accused NATO of trying to "start a new Cold War" and warned against the alliance "drawing ideological lines which may induce confrontation." —- Superville reported from Telfs, Austria.
https://www.4029tv.com/article/biden-in-europe-june-2022/40415862
2022-06-25T22:25:06
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Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Yeah. Mhm. Yeah. *** Yeah, Okay *** Yeah *** Yeah, Yeah. ***. Advertisement Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Heavy rains hit the Ruidoso, New Mexico, on Wednesday causing some flash flooding issues. A viewer sent sister station KOAT a video of a stream in the Ruidoso area rise and begin to flood in with the heavy rainfall. The water was close to some homes in the area. Watch the video player above to see the flooding. RUIDOSO, N.M. — Heavy rains hit the Ruidoso, New Mexico, on Wednesday causing some flash flooding issues. A viewer sent sister station KOAT a video of a stream in the Ruidoso area rise and begin to flood in with the heavy rainfall. The water was close to some homes in the area. Advertisement Watch the video player above to see the flooding.
https://www.4029tv.com/article/ruidoso-flooding-new-mexico-monsoon/40419199
2022-06-25T22:25:17
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2022-06-25T22:26:38
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2022-06-25T22:26:39
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2022-06-25T22:26:39
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2022-06-25T22:26:41
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39899792
2022-06-25T22:26:58
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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Saturday signed the most sweeping gun violence bill in decades, a bipartisan compromise that seemed unimaginable until a recent series of mass shootings, including the massacre of 19 students and two teachers at a Texas elementary school. "Time is of the essence. Lives will be saved,” he said in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. Citing the families of shooting victims he has met, the president said, "Their message to us was, ‘Do something.’ How many times did we hear that? ‘Just do something. For God’s sake, just do something.’ Today we did.” The House gave final approval Friday, following Senate passage Thursday, and Biden acted just before leaving Washington for two summits in Europe. “Today we say, ‘More than enough,’” Biden said. “It’s time, when it seems impossible to get anything done in Washington, we are doing something consequential." This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate The legislation will toughen background checks for the youngest gun buyers, keep firearms from more domestic violence offenders and help states put in place red flag laws that make it easier for authorities to take weapons from people adjudged to be dangerous. The president called it “a historic achievement.” Most of its $13 billion cost will help bolster mental health programs and aid schools, which have been targeted in Newtown, Connecticut, and Parkland, Florida, and elsewhere in mass shootings. Biden said the compromise hammered out by a bipartisan group of senators from both parties “doesn't do everything I want” but “it does include actions I've long called for that are going to save lives.” “I know there’s much more work to do, and I’m never going to give up, but this is a monumental day,” said the president, who was joined by his wife, Jill, a teacher, for the signing. After sitting to sign the bill, Biden sat reflectively for a moment, then murmured, “God willing, this is gonna save a lot of lives.” He also said they will host an event on July 11 for lawmakers and families affected by gun violence. The president spoke of families "who lost their souls to an epidemic of gun violence. They lost their child, their husband, their wife. Nothing is going to fill that void in their hearts. But they led the way so other families will not have the experience and the pain and trauma that they had to live through.” Biden signed the measure two days after the Supreme Court's ruling Thursday striking down a New York law that restricted peoples’ ability to carry concealed weapons. And Saturday’s ceremony came less than 24 hours after the high court overturned the Roe v. Wade decision, which had legalized abortion nationwide for nearly five decades. “Yesterday, I spoke about the Supreme Court’s shocking decision striking down Roe v. Wade,” Biden said. “Jill and I know how painful and devastating the decision is for so many Americans. I mean so many Americans.” He noted that the abortion ruling leaves enforcement up to the states, some of which have already moved to ban abortion or will soon do so. Biden said his administration will “focus on how they administer it and whether or not they violate other laws, like deciding to not allow people to cross state lines to get health services.” Asked by reporters about whether the Supreme Court was broken, Biden said, “I think the Supreme Court has made some terrible decisions.” He walked away without answering more questions, noting, ” “I have a helicopter waiting for me to take off.” While the new gun law does not include tougher restrictions long championed by Democrats, such as a ban on assault-style weapons and background checks for all firearm transactions, it is the most impactful gun violence measure produced by Congress since enactment a long-expired assault weapons ban in 1993. Enough congressional Republicans joined Democrats in supporting the steps after recent rampages in Buffalo, New York and Uvalde, Texas. It took weeks of closed-door talks but senators emerged with a compromise. Biden signed the bill just before departing Washington for a summit of the Group of Seven leading economic powers — the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan — in Germany. He will travel later to Spain for a NATO meeting. - Supreme Court strikes New York gun law in major ruling - Houston dredging company ordered to pay $1M after oil spill - Uvalde school police chief placed on administrative leave - 3 major roadway closures could snarl Houston traffic this weekend For the latest and best from Chron, sign up for our daily newsletter here.
https://www.chron.com/news/nation-world/article/Biden-signs-landmark-gun-measure-says-lives-17265422.php
2022-06-25T22:27:01
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2022-06-25T22:27:04
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This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate BERLIN (AP) — The head of the United Nations warned Friday that the world faces “catastrophe” because of the growing shortage of food around the globe. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the war in Ukraine has added to the disruptions caused by climate change, the coronavirus pandemic and inequality to produce an “unprecedented global hunger crisis” already affecting hundreds of millions of people. “There is a real risk that multiple famines will be declared in 2022,” he said in a video message to officials from dozens of rich and developing countries gathered in Berlin. “And 2023 could be even worse.” Guterres noted that harvests across Asia, Africa and the Americas will take a hit as farmers around the world struggle to cope with rising fertilizer and energy prices. “This year’s food access issues could become next year’s global food shortage,” he said. “No country will be immune to the social and economic repercussions of such a catastrophe.” Guterres said U.N. negotiators were working on a deal that would enable Ukraine to export food, including via the Black Sea, and let Russia bring food and fertilizer to world markets without restrictions. He also called for debt relief for poor countries to help keep their economies afloat and for the private sector to help stabilize global food markets. The Berlin meeting's host, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, said Moscow's claim that Western sanctions imposed over Russia's invasion of Ukraine were to blame for food shortages was “completely untenable." Russia exported as much wheat in May and June this year as in the same months of 2021, Baerbock said. She echoed Guterres' comments that several factors underlie the growing hunger crisis around the world. “But it was Russia's war of attack against Ukraine that turned a wave into a tsunami,” Baerbock said. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken insisted that Russia has no excuse for holding back vital goods from world markets. “The sanctions that we’ve imposed on Russia collectively and with many other countries exempt food, exempt food products, exempt fertilizers, exempt insurers, exempt shippers,” he said. ____ Follow AP's coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine - Supreme Court strikes New York gun law in major ruling - Houston dredging company ordered to pay $1M after oil spill - Uvalde school police chief placed on administrative leave - 3 major roadway closures could snarl Houston traffic this weekend For the latest and best from Chron, sign up for our daily newsletter here.
https://www.chron.com/news/nation-world/article/UN-chief-warns-of-catastrophe-from-global-food-17265790.php
2022-06-25T22:27:07
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39899807
2022-06-25T22:27:10
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39899824
2022-06-25T22:27:16
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39899857
2022-06-25T22:27:22
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39899878
2022-06-25T22:27:28
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39899970
2022-06-25T22:27:34
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39899975
2022-06-25T22:27:40
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39900108
2022-06-25T22:27:46
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/articles/39900246
2022-06-25T22:27:52
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39899444
2022-06-25T22:27:58
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39899633
2022-06-25T22:28:04
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39899881
2022-06-25T22:28:10
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39899893
2022-06-25T22:28:17
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39900202
2022-06-25T22:28:23
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/washington-nationals/articles/39900213
2022-06-25T22:28:29
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Confidence in Supreme Court hit historic low ahead of abortion ruling, Gallup poll shows A recent Gallup poll shows Americans have hit their lowest confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court as the justices receive praise and backlash for overturning Roe v. Wade, giving states power regarding abortion rights. "Twenty-five percent of U.S. adults say they have "a great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court, down from 36% a year ago and five percentage points lower than the previous low recorded in 2014," Gallup said on its website. The results were based on a poll from June 1 to June 20, days before the abortion ruling was handed down in Washington. However, the poll happened after a draft of the opinion was leaked back in May. RELATED: Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade; abortion bans anticipated in several states "Many institutions have suffered a decline in confidence this year, but the 11-point drop in confidence in the Supreme Court is roughly double what it is for most institutions that experienced a decline," researchers said. The Supreme Court on Friday stripped away women’s constitutional protections for abortion, a fundamental and deeply personal change for Americans’ lives after nearly a half-century under Roe v. Wade. The court’s overturning of the landmark court ruling is likely to lead to abortion bans in roughly half the states. The ruling, unthinkable just a few years ago, was the culmination of decades of efforts by abortion opponents made possible by an emboldened right side of the court fortified by three appointees of former President Donald Trump. Pregnant women considering abortions already had been dealing with a near-complete ban in Oklahoma and a prohibition after roughly six weeks in Texas. Clinics in at least eight other states — Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri, South Dakota, Wisconsin and West Virginia — stopped performing abortions after Friday’s decision. RELATED: State by state: Where abortion will be illegal after Supreme Court Dobbs v. Jackson ruling Abortion foes cheered the ruling, but abortion-rights supporters, including President Joe Biden, expressed dismay and pledged to fight to restore the rights. Biden said Friday he would fight to preserve access to abortion after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, and he called on Americans to elect more Democrats who would safeguard rights upended by the court’s decision. "This is not over," he declared. "Let’s be very clear, the health and life of women across this nation are now at risk," he said from the White House on what he called "a sad day for the court and the country." Biden added that "the court has done what it’s never done before — expressly taking away a constitutional right that is so fundamental to so many Americans." RELATED: Supreme Court abortion ruling exposes deep chasm in the U.S. Biden warned that other legal precedents ensuring same-sex marriage and access to birth control could also be at risk. "This is an extreme and dangerous path this court is taking us on," he said. The White House and the Justice Department said they would look for ways to blunt the impact of the ruling, and Biden said his administration would try to ensure that abortion medication is available as widely as possible. However, no executive actions were announced Friday, and Biden conceded that his options were limited. White House officials tried to rally allies in a virtual meeting after the president spoke. Biden and other Democrats hope to use outrage over the court decision to rally voters in November’s midterm elections. Although nationwide legislation ensuring access to abortion appears out of reach, more Democratic victories at the state level could limit Republican efforts to ban the practice. The Associated Press contributed to this report. This story was reported from Los Angeles.
https://www.fox5dc.com/news/confidence-in-supreme-court-hit-historic-low-ahead-of-abortion-ruling-gallup-poll-shows
2022-06-25T22:29:02
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Juul e-cigarettes can stay on the market for now, judge rules Juul can continue to sell its electronic cigarettes, at least for now, after a federal appeals court on Friday temporarily blocked a government ban. Juul filed an emergency motion earlier Friday, seeking the temporary hold while it appeals the sales ban. The e-cigarette maker had asked the court to pause what it called an "extraordinary and unlawful action" by the Food and Drug Administration that would have required it to immediately halt its business. The FDA said Thursday that Juul must stop selling its vaping device and its tobacco and menthol flavored cartridges. The action was part of a sweeping effort by the agency to bring scientific scrutiny to the multibillion-dollar vaping industry after years of regulatory delays. To stay on the market, companies must show that their e-cigarettes benefit public health. In practice, that means proving that adult smokers who use them are likely to quit or reduce their smoking, while teens are unlikely to get hooked on them. The FDA said Juul’s application left regulators with significant questions and didn’t include enough information to evaluate any potential health risks. Juul said it submitted enough information and data to address all issues raised. RELATED: FDA bans Juul e-cigarettes, orders them off the U.S. market A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit granted Juul's request for a hold while the court reviews the case. While Juul remains a top seller, its share of the U.S. e-cigarette market has dipped to about half. The company was widely blamed for a surge in underage vaping a few years ago, but a recent federal survey showed a drop in the teen vaping rate and a shift away from Juul's products. The devices heat a nicotine solution into a vapor that’s inhaled, bypassing many of the toxic chemicals produced by burning tobacco. The company said in its Friday court filing that it submitted a 125,000-page application to the FDA nearly two years ago. It said the application included several studies to evaluate the health risks among Juul users. Juul said that the FDA cannot argue that there was a "critical and urgent public interest" in immediately removing its products from the market when the agency allowed them to be sold during its review. The company noted that the FDA denied its application while authorizing those submitted by competitors with similar products. The FDA has OK'd e-cigarettes from R.J. Reynolds, Logic and other companies, while rejecting many others. In 2019, Juul was pressured into halting all advertising and eliminating its fruit and dessert flavors after they became popular among middle and high school students. The next year, the FDA limited flavors in small vaping devices to just tobacco and menthol.
https://www.fox5dc.com/news/juul-e-cigarettes-fda-ban
2022-06-25T22:29:08
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Mother admits to killing, slashing throat of infant to hide pregnancy nearly 30 years ago CHOCTAW COUNTY, Okla. - A mother turned admitted to the 1993 murder of her baby son after surrendering to authorities. The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation said authorities arrested 53-year-old Meaonia Michelle Allen last Wednesday after she turned herself in for an outstanding warrant for one count of first-degree murder. Bond was denied. Authorities said "Baby Doe" was found on December 8, 1993, by a homeowner in her yard in rural Choctaw County. A medical examiner determined the baby boy was born alive but was killed after his throat was slashed. The case then went cold. Authorities said in October 2020, a special agent submitted DNA belonging to "Baby Doe" to a laboratory. That led to Allen being identified as the baby’s mother. Allen admitted to the murder during an interview, according to investigators. RELATED: Couple killed in dispute over dog, baby left orphaned "During a follow-up interview a few days later, Allen admitted to cutting the baby’s throat shortly after his birth," authorities said in a Facebook post. "Allen, who was working for a daycare center at the time, did not tell anyone of her pregnancy or delivery in the almost 30 years of the child’s murder," the post continued. "The synergy between our agents and criminalists to solve cold cases, especially those with an unidentified victim, is to be applauded," Ricky Adams, OSBI Director, said. "Identifying the use of genetic genealogy as a tool and the work of Parabon and our internal genealogy specialist provided significant leads in this disturbing case. Baby Doe can now be properly laid to rest and his killer will be held accountable." Oklahoma currently has a safe-haven law. Babies under seven days old are allowed to be relinquished to certain entities by parents and without a court’s approval. This story was reported from Los Angeles.
https://www.fox5dc.com/news/mother-admits-to-killing-slashing-throat-of-infant-to-hide-pregnancy-30-years-ago
2022-06-25T22:29:14
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Pope Francis hails families, blasts ‘culture of waste’ after Roe v. Wade ruling ROME (AP) - Pope Francis celebrated families Saturday and urged them to shun "selfish" decisions that are indifferent to life as he closed out a big Vatican rally a day after the U.S. Supreme Court ended constitutional protections for abortion. Francis didn’t refer to the ruling or explicitly mention abortion in his homily. But he used the buzzwords he has throughout his papacy about the need to defend families and to condemn a "culture of waste" that he believes is behind the societal acceptance of abortion. "Let us not allow the family to be poisoned by the toxins of selfishness, individualism, today’s culture of indifference and waste, and as a result lose its very DNA, which is the spirit of welcoming and service," he said. RELATED: Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade; abortion bans anticipated in several states The pope, noting that some couples allow their fears and anxieties to "thwart the desire to bring new lives in the world," called for them not to cling to selfish desires. "You have been asked to not have other priorities, not to ‘look back’ to miss your former life, your former freedom, with its deceptive illusions," he said. Francis has strongly upheld church teaching opposing abortion, equating it to "hiring a hitman to solve a problem." At the same time, he has expressed sympathy for women who had abortions and made it easier for them to be absolved of the sin of undergoing the procedure. RELATED: State by state: Where abortion will be illegal after Supreme Court Dobbs v. Jackson ruling The Catholic Church holds that life begins at conception and must be protected and defended until natural death. Francis delivered his homily in a packed St. Peter’s Square at the end of the World Meeting of Families, a four-day conference held every few years aimed at helping church workers provide better pastoral care for families, especially those in difficulty. The head of the Vatican’s laity office, Cardinal Kevin Farrell, celebrated the closing Mass before tens of thousands of people given Francis has a bad knee that makes it difficult for him to stand for long periods of time. The pope instead sat to the side of the altar and delivered the homily seated, though he was able to stand up easily for the reading of the Gospel and other moments with the help of a cane. The Vatican welcomed Friday’s ruling overturning Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that provided constitutional protections for abortion in the U.S. The move opens the doors for individual states to ban or restrict abortion access, with bans now expected in about half the U.S. states. RELATED: Supreme Court Roe v. Wade decision: Leaked abortion draft versus the opinion The Holy See’s main bioethics body, the Pontifical Academy for Life, said it "challenges the whole world" to reopen debate about the need to protect life. Abortion is legal in Italy and most of Europe. In an editorial Saturday entitled "For Life, Always," the Vatican’s editorial director, Andrea Tornielli, called for that debate to move away from polarized ideology to a dialogue that takes into account concerns about maternal mortality rates and helping women, especially poor ones, with paid parental leave and other assistance when they bring children into the world . "Being for life, always, also means defending it against the threat of firearms, which unfortunately have become a leading cause of death of children and adolescents in the U.S.," Tornielli wrote. Farrell, in his closing remarks at the end of the Mass, thanked Francis for his many initiatives in favor of families, citing in particular his teaching on the value of grandparents and his "many pronouncements in defense of life."
https://www.fox5dc.com/news/pope-francis-hails-families-blasts-culture-of-waste-after-roe-v-wade-ruling
2022-06-25T22:29:20
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SJPD: Double homicide suspect pistol whipped grandmother while kids in car SAN JOSE, Calif. - New details were released Friday on a police shooting in San Jose that involved a suspect connected to two homicides. At a news conference, San Jose Police Chief Anthony Mata said two of his tactical officers had no choice but to fire when the suspect came rushing out of a shed and pointed a weapon at them. The chief also filled in some details about the crime spree that spanned from San Jose to Modesto. Video provided by the police department shows the suspect, identified as San Jose resident Raymond Calderon, running out of a shed he was hiding in carrying what turned out to be a stolen gun. It was shortly after the video was taken that Calderon pointed his weapon at tactical officers, who had been involved in standoff with him overnight, authorities said. "At approximately 7:22 am (Wednesday) the suspect ran out of the shed and raced toward the perimeter officers," Mata said. The chief said that is when officers first saw the handgun. "Calderon ran at the officers surrounding the house and raised and pointed the gun at special operations officers. Two officers fired their weapons at the suspect striking him twice," Mata said. The entire situation began Tuesday when police received their first 911 call from the mother of two of Calderon’s children. Calderon had the kids, ages six and seven, with him in his truck along with his own grandmother. Police said Calderon had the three stay in his truck when he allegedly killed a man who police said he knew on Mount Shasta Drive in East San Jose. Then Calderon traveled to Modesto where he killed 29-year-old Michelle Gonzales, who was the mother of his infant son. The infant from Modesto was not among the passengers in Calderon's truck. Calderon was then chased by California Highway Patrol officers as he returned to San Jose, later forcing his two other children and his own grandmother out of his vehicle in Gilroy. He then turned around and headed north on Highway 101 back toward San Jose. Chief Mata said "Calderon’s grandmother had two black eyes and stated she was pistol whipped by Calderon." Mata said Calderon then tried to break into several houses near Roundtable and Bendorf Drive in South San Jose before finally holing up in an unlocked shed. "Suspect Calderon senselessly killed two people. And when finally confronted by the San Jose Police Department in a highly populated neighborhood he opened fire on them in a last ditch effort to escape," Mata said. San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo says it's a very sad episode for all involved. "I applaud the patient and courageous efforts of San Jose police officers that prevented Raymond Calderon from inflicting an even more horrific toll from the two lives he had already taken," the mayor said. There are still many unanswered questions, including what was the relationship between Calderon and the first person he killed in San Jose. Police say the two knew each other, but there is no additional information on the nature of their relationship. The two officers involved in the shooting were placed on administrative leave. The police body-worn footage will be released at a later time.
https://www.fox5dc.com/news/sjpd-double-homicide-suspect-pistol-whipped-grandmother-while-kids-in-car
2022-06-25T22:29:26
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0.991038
Video: Boy’s father attacks murder suspect in Ohio courtroom Video from an Ohio courtroom shows a man running up and attacking the defendant, punching him multiple times in the side of the head. The surveillance video was released by a spokesperson from the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office, who said the attacker, Tonio Hughes, was the biological father of a young boy who was allegedly murdered by the defendant, 22-year-old Desean Brown. Video shows Brown sitting at the courtroom table during a hearing. Hughes, sitting in the back row of the courtroom, suddenly gets up, runs down the aisle toward Brown and begins punching him in the head. Two security guards quickly run over and pull the two apart. Though handcuffed, Brown can be seen holding his head for a few moments after the altercation. "Everything inside him, just the pain and everything took over," family friend Faith Burton told FOX 19 in Cincinnati. "He did what I think any of us would do." Following the incident, Judge Megan Shanahan found Hughes in contempt of court and sentenced him to seven days at the Hamilton County Justice Center, FOX 19 reported. Hughes is the father of Nylo Lattimore, a 3-year-old boy who went missing in December 2020. Brown is accused of fatally stabbing Nylo’s mother, Nyteisha Lattimore, who was his girlfriend at the time, before throwing the boy off a pedestrian bridge in the Ohio River. Authorities believe Nylo was still alive at the time. The boy’s body hasn’t been recovered despite more than a year of searching in multiple states. The veteran prosecutor told The Associated Press the case has given him nightmares. "I can’t even imagine what that little boy was going through," he said. Brown is charged in both their deaths and faces the death penalty. This story was reported from Detroit. The Associated Press contributed.
https://www.fox5dc.com/news/video-boys-father-attacks-murder-suspect-in-ohio-courtroom
2022-06-25T22:29:32
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0.977777
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/duke-blue-devils-football/articles/39888639
2022-06-25T22:30:59
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/duke-blue-devils-football/articles/39892201
2022-06-25T22:31:05
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39899511
2022-06-25T22:31:23
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39899891
2022-06-25T22:31:29
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39899968
2022-06-25T22:31:35
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39900003
2022-06-25T22:31:41
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39900059
2022-06-25T22:31:47
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39900065
2022-06-25T22:31:53
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39900215
2022-06-25T22:32:00
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/articles/39900291
2022-06-25T22:32:06
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899121
2022-06-25T22:32:12
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899122
2022-06-25T22:32:18
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899123
2022-06-25T22:32:24
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899145
2022-06-25T22:32:30
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899155
2022-06-25T22:32:36
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899341
2022-06-25T22:32:42
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899409
2022-06-25T22:32:48
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899570
2022-06-25T22:32:54
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899628
2022-06-25T22:33:00
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/penn-state-nittany-lions-football/articles/39899657
2022-06-25T22:33:06
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/ohio-state-buckeyes-football/articles/39898667
2022-06-25T22:33:12
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/ohio-state-buckeyes-football/articles/39898713
2022-06-25T22:33:18
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/ohio-state-buckeyes-football/articles/39898990
2022-06-25T22:33:25
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/ohio-state-buckeyes-football/articles/39899014
2022-06-25T22:33:31
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/ohio-state-buckeyes-football/articles/39899018
2022-06-25T22:33:37
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/ohio-state-buckeyes-football/articles/39899260
2022-06-25T22:33:43
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Biden's mission in Europe: Shore up alliance against Russia President Joe Biden is out to sustain the global alliance punishing Russia for its invasion of Ukraine as he embarks on a five-day trip to Europe as the four-month-old war shows no sign of abating and its aftershocks to global food and energy supplies are deepening. Biden first joins a meeting of the Group of Seven leading economic powers in the Bavarian Alps of Germany and later travels to Madrid for a summit with leaders of the 30 NATO countries. The visit comes as the global coalition to bolster Ukraine and punish Russia for its aggression has shown signs of fraying amid skyrocketing inflation in food and energy prices caused by the conflict. The Ukraine war has entered a more attritional phase since Biden's last trip to Europe in March, just weeks after Russia launched its assault. At that time, he met with allies in Brussels as Ukraine was under regular bombardment and he tried to reassure Eastern Europe partners in Poland that they would not be the next to face an incursion by Moscow. Russia's subsequent retreat from western Ukraine and regrouping in the east has shifted the conflict to one of artillery battles and bloody house-to-house fighting in the country's industrial heartland, the Donbas region. While U.S. officials see broad consensus for maintaining the pressure on Russia and sustaining support for Ukraine in the near term, they view Biden's trip as an opportunity to align strategy for both the conflict and its global ramifications heading into the winter and beyond. Allies differ over whether their goals are merely to restore peace or to force Russia to pay a deeper price for the conflict to prevent its repetition. "Every country speaks for themselves, every country has concerns for what they're willing to do or not do," said John Kirby, spokesman for the White House National Security Council. "But as far as the alliance goes, it truly has never been stronger and more viable than it is today." Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is set to address both summits by video. The U.S. and allies have shipped his country billions of dollars in military assistance and imposed ever stricter sanctions on Russia over the invasion. Kirby said the allies would be making new "commitments" during the summits to further sever Russia from the global economy. The aim is to make it more difficult for Moscow to acquire technology to rebuild the arsenal it has depleted in Ukraine and to crack down on sanctions evasion by Russia and its oligarchs. G-7 summits have traditionally put global finance issues front and center, but amid soaring inflation in the U.S. and Europe, few concrete actions are expected. "There are different drivers of inflation in these various economies, different things that can be used to address it," said Josh Lipsky, director of the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center. He foresees "a lack of an ability to do something coordinated on inflation, other than really talk about the problem." Biden has blamed much of the rise in prices on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, especially in the energy markets, as U.S. and allied sanctions have limited Moscow's ability to sell its oil and gas supplies. Sustaining the Western resolve will only get more challenging as the war drags on and cost-of-living issues pose political headaches for leaders at home, U.S. and European officials said. Finding ways to transition from Russian energy to other sources — without setting back longstanding goals to combat climate change — is set to be a key discussion point. Russia was once a member of what was then the G-8. It was expelled from the group in 2014 after it invaded Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula, a move that foreshadowed the current crisis. A top priority of Western officials heading into the summit is finding a way to get Ukraine's vast grain harvest out onto the world market, as the United Nations and others warn of tens of millions of people being cast into hunger because of tight supplies. The most impactful changes would require an agreement from Russia to stop targeting food and food infrastructure as well as agreeing to the establishment of a sea corridor to allow exports of grain from Ukraine. In Madrid, Biden will help promote NATO's effort to welcome Finland and Sweden into the alliance after the Russian invasion of Ukraine led the two historically neutral democracies to seek the protection of the mutual-defense association. It remains to be seen whether Biden will meet with Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who has indicated he plans to block the two countries' accession into NATO unless he receives concessions. Adding new members requires unanimous support from existing NATO members. U.S. officials have maintained optimism that the two countries will be welcomed into the alliance, but have played down expectations for a breakthrough in Madrid. Biden speaks often of the world being in a generational struggle between democracies and autocracies that will set the global agenda for the coming decades. He aims to use the trip to show that Russia's invasion of Ukraine has "firmed up" democracies on the threats from autocracies in both Moscow and Beijing. Biden is also securing a significant step by NATO to recognize China as an emerging challenge to the alliance. The formal reference of China in NATO's new "Strategic Concept," the first update to its guiding principles since 2010, fulfills efforts under multiple presidents to expand the alliance's focus to China, even in the face an increasingly bellicose Russia. In a symbolic step, NATO has invited Pacific leaders from Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and Australia to the summit. "Instead of distracting us from the Indo-Pacific and China, the president's leadership with respect to supporting Ukraine has actually galvanized leaders in that region and effectively linked our efforts in Europe and in Asia," Kirby told reporters. "And those Asian countries that will be participating in the NATO Summit, I think, speak volumes about that fact." Biden is also set to relaunch his idea for a global infrastructure investment program meant to counter China's influence in the developing world, which he previously had called "Build Back Better World" and had introduced at the 2021 G-7 summit. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin accused NATO of trying to "start a new Cold War" and warned against the alliance "drawing ideological lines which may induce confrontation." —- Superville reported from Telfs, Austria.
https://www.wxii12.com/article/biden-in-europe-june-2022/40415862
2022-06-25T22:34:04
en
0.964922
Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Yeah. Mhm. Yeah. *** Yeah, Okay *** Yeah *** Yeah, Yeah. ***. Advertisement Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Heavy rains hit the Ruidoso, New Mexico, on Wednesday causing some flash flooding issues. A viewer sent sister station KOAT a video of a stream in the Ruidoso area rise and begin to flood in with the heavy rainfall. The water was close to some homes in the area. Watch the video player above to see the flooding. RUIDOSO, N.M. — Heavy rains hit the Ruidoso, New Mexico, on Wednesday causing some flash flooding issues. A viewer sent sister station KOAT a video of a stream in the Ruidoso area rise and begin to flood in with the heavy rainfall. The water was close to some homes in the area. Advertisement Watch the video player above to see the flooding.
https://www.wxii12.com/article/ruidoso-flooding-new-mexico-monsoon/40419199
2022-06-25T22:34:14
en
0.907032
Pixel 4 accidentally receives Android 13 update weeks too early 1 Android 13 is currently being beta tested and the final stable version of the operating system could be ready for release in July or August. However, a Pixel 4 owner recently received the Android 13 update by accident on June 23, weeks ahead of time. The version number was TP1A.220603.002.A1. We know what you're thinking. The guy probably had his Pixel 4 signed up for the Android 13 Beta for Pixel program and installed it, but that is not the case. The phone was never signed up for the Android 13 Beta program. When the user received a notification of an update to Android 13, he did not realize what the notification was for until after he had downloaded and installed it. What the Pixel 4 owner did realize was that Google Pay did not work after he installed the update. Even trying to reinstall the app by using the Google Pay APK installation package was useless, and so was restoring factory settings. One theory that seems plausible is that the version of Android 13 that this Pixel 4 owner received was a special beta variant that Google disseminates to employees that accidentally became available to at least one user. The About phone screen on a Pixel 4 shows that the device was accidentally updated with Android 13 It's been pointed out that something similar seems to take place every year. Word about the accidental update was reported by MyDrivers (via Gizchina). With Android 13, users will not only be able to match the colors and appearance of Google's app icons to the wallpaper being used on the phone, but they will also be able to match third-party app icons with the wallpaper as well. A new music playback widget will feature a "wavy" playback progress bar. In Android 13, users will be able to set a language for a particular app that is different than the phone's main language setting. The new photo picker will allow a user to share certain photos with an app without giving that app open access to his complete photo library. And Android 13 will support Bluetooth LE audio; this allows high-quality music to be delivered without taking a huge bite out of the handset's battery life. The Pixel models that are receiving the Android 13 update this year include the Pixel 4, Pixel 4 XL, Pixel 4a, Pixel 4a (5G), Pixel 5, Pixel 5a, Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro. Loading Comments...
https://www.phonearena.com/news/pixel-4-accidentally-gets-android-13-update_id140976
2022-06-25T22:34:23
en
0.97501
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/phoenix-suns/articles/39900080
2022-06-25T22:35:20
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/phoenix-suns/articles/39900324
2022-06-25T22:35:20
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/los-angeles-clippers/articles/39900223
2022-06-25T22:35:21
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0.738227
Biden's mission in Europe: Shore up alliance against Russia President Joe Biden is out to sustain the global alliance punishing Russia for its invasion of Ukraine as he embarks on a five-day trip to Europe as the four-month-old war shows no sign of abating and its aftershocks to global food and energy supplies are deepening. Biden first joins a meeting of the Group of Seven leading economic powers in the Bavarian Alps of Germany and later travels to Madrid for a summit with leaders of the 30 NATO countries. The visit comes as the global coalition to bolster Ukraine and punish Russia for its aggression has shown signs of fraying amid skyrocketing inflation in food and energy prices caused by the conflict. The Ukraine war has entered a more attritional phase since Biden's last trip to Europe in March, just weeks after Russia launched its assault. At that time, he met with allies in Brussels as Ukraine was under regular bombardment and he tried to reassure Eastern Europe partners in Poland that they would not be the next to face an incursion by Moscow. Russia's subsequent retreat from western Ukraine and regrouping in the east has shifted the conflict to one of artillery battles and bloody house-to-house fighting in the country's industrial heartland, the Donbas region. While U.S. officials see broad consensus for maintaining the pressure on Russia and sustaining support for Ukraine in the near term, they view Biden's trip as an opportunity to align strategy for both the conflict and its global ramifications heading into the winter and beyond. Allies differ over whether their goals are merely to restore peace or to force Russia to pay a deeper price for the conflict to prevent its repetition. "Every country speaks for themselves, every country has concerns for what they're willing to do or not do," said John Kirby, spokesman for the White House National Security Council. "But as far as the alliance goes, it truly has never been stronger and more viable than it is today." Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is set to address both summits by video. The U.S. and allies have shipped his country billions of dollars in military assistance and imposed ever stricter sanctions on Russia over the invasion. Kirby said the allies would be making new "commitments" during the summits to further sever Russia from the global economy. The aim is to make it more difficult for Moscow to acquire technology to rebuild the arsenal it has depleted in Ukraine and to crack down on sanctions evasion by Russia and its oligarchs. G-7 summits have traditionally put global finance issues front and center, but amid soaring inflation in the U.S. and Europe, few concrete actions are expected. "There are different drivers of inflation in these various economies, different things that can be used to address it," said Josh Lipsky, director of the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center. He foresees "a lack of an ability to do something coordinated on inflation, other than really talk about the problem." Biden has blamed much of the rise in prices on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, especially in the energy markets, as U.S. and allied sanctions have limited Moscow's ability to sell its oil and gas supplies. Sustaining the Western resolve will only get more challenging as the war drags on and cost-of-living issues pose political headaches for leaders at home, U.S. and European officials said. Finding ways to transition from Russian energy to other sources — without setting back longstanding goals to combat climate change — is set to be a key discussion point. Russia was once a member of what was then the G-8. It was expelled from the group in 2014 after it invaded Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula, a move that foreshadowed the current crisis. A top priority of Western officials heading into the summit is finding a way to get Ukraine's vast grain harvest out onto the world market, as the United Nations and others warn of tens of millions of people being cast into hunger because of tight supplies. The most impactful changes would require an agreement from Russia to stop targeting food and food infrastructure as well as agreeing to the establishment of a sea corridor to allow exports of grain from Ukraine. In Madrid, Biden will help promote NATO's effort to welcome Finland and Sweden into the alliance after the Russian invasion of Ukraine led the two historically neutral democracies to seek the protection of the mutual-defense association. It remains to be seen whether Biden will meet with Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who has indicated he plans to block the two countries' accession into NATO unless he receives concessions. Adding new members requires unanimous support from existing NATO members. U.S. officials have maintained optimism that the two countries will be welcomed into the alliance, but have played down expectations for a breakthrough in Madrid. Biden speaks often of the world being in a generational struggle between democracies and autocracies that will set the global agenda for the coming decades. He aims to use the trip to show that Russia's invasion of Ukraine has "firmed up" democracies on the threats from autocracies in both Moscow and Beijing. Biden is also securing a significant step by NATO to recognize China as an emerging challenge to the alliance. The formal reference of China in NATO's new "Strategic Concept," the first update to its guiding principles since 2010, fulfills efforts under multiple presidents to expand the alliance's focus to China, even in the face an increasingly bellicose Russia. In a symbolic step, NATO has invited Pacific leaders from Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and Australia to the summit. "Instead of distracting us from the Indo-Pacific and China, the president's leadership with respect to supporting Ukraine has actually galvanized leaders in that region and effectively linked our efforts in Europe and in Asia," Kirby told reporters. "And those Asian countries that will be participating in the NATO Summit, I think, speak volumes about that fact." Biden is also set to relaunch his idea for a global infrastructure investment program meant to counter China's influence in the developing world, which he previously had called "Build Back Better World" and had introduced at the 2021 G-7 summit. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin accused NATO of trying to "start a new Cold War" and warned against the alliance "drawing ideological lines which may induce confrontation." —- Superville reported from Telfs, Austria.
https://www.wbaltv.com/article/biden-in-europe-june-2022/40415862
2022-06-25T22:35:34
en
0.964922
IS DRAWING HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE AND MANY ARE CARRYING SIGNS PROTESTING ANY FURTHER EROSION OF PERSONAL RIGHTS. POSSIBLE IS THE THEME FOR BALTIMORE PRIDE 2022 IS TOGETHER AGAIN, PEOPLE ARE CELEBRATING IN PERSON FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 2019, BUT ALSO ON THE MIND OF PPARTY GOERS IS AN OPINION RELEASE FRIDAY BY JUSTICE CLARENCE THOMAS SAYING WHY STOP WITH ROE V WADE? OCCURRING OPINION JUSTICE THOMAS WROTE THE SUPREME COURT MUST REVISIT AND OVERRULE PAST LANDMARK DECISIONS THAT LEGALIZE THE RIGHT TO OBTAIN. INTERCEPTION THE RIGHT TO SAME-SEX INTIMACY AND THE RIGHT TO SAME-SEX MARRIAGE WAS GOING ON RIGHT NOW IS GROSSLY INSENSITIVE TO HUMAN RIGHTS AND IF IT DOESN’T STOP HERE, THEN IT IS SO DANGEROUS WHERE THIS IS GOING TO GO AND WHAT WE NEEDED RIGHT NOW IS FOR PEOPLE TO BE IN THE STREETS. I’M VERY DISAPPOINTED. IT’S NOT SOMETHING THAT PERSONALLY AFFECTS HIM OR PROBABLY ANYBODY IN HIS IMMEDIATE FAMILY, SO IT’S NOT RIGHT FOR HIM TO HAVE A SAY ON SHOULDN’T BE ABLE TO MARRY YOU JUSTICE THOMAS WANT DO AWAY WITH THE DOCTRINE OF SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS THE PRINCIPLE ALLOWS COURTS TO PROTECT CERTAIN RIGHTS THAT ARE NOT SPELLED OUT IN THE CONSTITUTION THE SUPREME COURT DECISION TO OVERTURN ROE V-WAY SEIZED ON THE IDEA THAT SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS IS NOT IN THE CONSTITUTION MONUMENTAL SUPREME COURT DECISIONS IN THE PAST RELIED ON THE DOCTRINE IN 1965 GRISWOLD VERSUS CONNECTICUT ESTABLISHED THE RIGHT FOR MARRIED COUPLES TO BUY AND USE CONTRACEPTIVES AND 2003 LAWRENCE VERSUS TEXAS ESTABLISHED THE RIGHT FOR CONSENTING ADULTS TO ENG. AND SAVE SEX INTIMACY IN 2015 OBERGERFELL VS. HODGES ESTABLISHED THE RIGHT FOR SAME-SEX COUPLES TO BE MARRIED. I’M A TEACHER AND JUST THINKING ABOUT FOR MY STUDENTS THE THINGS THAT COULD HAVE TO GO THROUGH OR THAT THEY MIGHT NOT HAVE CHOICES TO DO CERTAIN THINGS THAT THEY WANT TO DO IN THEIR LIFE. IT’S REALLY TERRIFYING TO ME. THE LEGAL RIGHT OF INTERRACIAL MARRIAGE ALSO RELIES ON THE DOCTRINE SCHOLARS POINT OUT JUSTICE THOMAS, IT MENTIONED THAT IN HIS OPINION HIS WIFE HIS WIFE. REPORTING LIVE FRO Justice Thomas' concurring opinion on Roe v. Wade worries some about personal rights Updated: 6:27 PM EDT Jun 25, 2022 Baltimore Pride's block party held Saturday drew hundreds of people, many carrying signs protesting any further erosion of personal rights.The theme for Baltimore Pride 2022 is "Together Again" as people celebrating in-person for the first time since 2019.But some people are concerned about U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas' concurring opinion overturning Roe v. Wade that suggests the high court overturn landmark decisions that legalized contraception and same-sex marriage.| RELATED: Roe v. Wade overturned by Supreme Court; states can ban abortion"What's going on right now is grossly insensitive to human rights and if doesn't stop here. It is so dangerous where this is going to go. What we need is for people to be in the streets," said Jakob Fox, of Baltimore."I'm very disappointed. It's not something that personally affects him or his immediate family. So, it is not right for him to have a say on who should be able to marry who," said Misa Gould, of Baltimore.Thomas wants to do away with the doctrine of "substantive due process," a principle that allows courts to protect certain rights that are not spelled out in the constitution. Friday's Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade seized on the idea that substantive due process is not in the constitution.| RELATED: Some fear rollback of LGBTQ and other rights following Roe v. Wade decisionMonumental Supreme Court decisions in the past relied on the doctrine. In 1965, Griswold v. Connecticut established the right for married couples to buy and use contraceptives. In 2003, Lawrence v. Texas established the right for consenting adults to engage in same-sex intimacy. In 2015, Obergefell v. Hodges established the right for same-sex couples to marry."I'm a teacher and I'm thinking about my students and the things they have to go through. They may not have choices in what they want to do in their life. It's really terrifying," said Megan Werden, of Baltimore.The legal right of interracial marriage also relied on the substantive due process doctrine, but Thomas, whose wife is white, didn't mention that in his opinion. BALTIMORE — Baltimore Pride's block party held Saturday drew hundreds of people, many carrying signs protesting any further erosion of personal rights. The theme for Baltimore Pride 2022 is "Together Again" as people celebrating in-person for the first time since 2019. But some people are concerned about U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas' concurring opinion overturning Roe v. Wade that suggests the high court overturn landmark decisions that legalized contraception and same-sex marriage. | RELATED: Roe v. Wade overturned by Supreme Court; states can ban abortion "What's going on right now is grossly insensitive to human rights and if doesn't stop here. It is so dangerous where this is going to go. What we need is for people to be in the streets," said Jakob Fox, of Baltimore. "I'm very disappointed. It's not something that personally affects him or his immediate family. So, it is not right for him to have a say on who should be able to marry who," said Misa Gould, of Baltimore. Thomas wants to do away with the doctrine of "substantive due process," a principle that allows courts to protect certain rights that are not spelled out in the constitution. Friday's Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade seized on the idea that substantive due process is not in the constitution. | RELATED: Some fear rollback of LGBTQ and other rights following Roe v. Wade decision Monumental Supreme Court decisions in the past relied on the doctrine. In 1965, Griswold v. Connecticut established the right for married couples to buy and use contraceptives. In 2003, Lawrence v. Texas established the right for consenting adults to engage in same-sex intimacy. In 2015, Obergefell v. Hodges established the right for same-sex couples to marry. "I'm a teacher and I'm thinking about my students and the things they have to go through. They may not have choices in what they want to do in their life. It's really terrifying," said Megan Werden, of Baltimore. The legal right of interracial marriage also relied on the substantive due process doctrine, but Thomas, whose wife is white, didn't mention that in his opinion.
https://www.wbaltv.com/article/justice-clarence-thomas-roe-v-wade-gay-rights-contraceptives/40420128
2022-06-25T22:35:44
en
0.914258
HOUSTON (CW39) A Houston man was sentenced to life in prison this week for a 45-minute crime spree that involved shooting four men, three of whom died, and a 20-mile police chase, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced Saturday. It is heartbreaking that a madman with a gun and a stolen car can kill three people and absolutely devastate their families in a matter of minutes. Life in prison is absolutely the right result. Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg Joshua Kelsey, 37, was convicted Thursday. He shot Louis Hodges around 8:15 p.m. on May 6, 2020. Hodges and another man, who both knew Kelsey well, had picked him up to help them buy drugs. They drove Kelsey to a house in southwest Houston and gave him $40 to buy heroin. He went in and returned about 20 minutes later without the drugs or the money. A witness testified that he seemed “high.” Hodges and the other man, who were in a silver Kia sedan, drove Kelsey about half a block, stopping in a parking lot in the 14200 block of Bridgeport. When they stopped, Kelsey pulled out a pink pistol and threatened both men, who got out of the car and tried to run away. He fired at least eight times. He hit Hodges, who fell, and shot the other man three times as he ran away. Kelsey then stood above Hodges and shot him in the chest. The other man ran to a nearby house, where the homeowners called the Houston Police Department. A witness testified that Kelsey was angry at Hodges for an incident the day before in which Hodges was apparently careless with a small bag of heroin. Kelsey then took the car to a house in the 5200 block of Kelling Street, the home of his friend, Michael Miller, who had let Kelsey store his RV in 2016. However, Kelsey seemed to have abandoned the RV and could not be reached for six months, so Miller had it hauled away. Minutes after the first shooting, Kelsey knocked on the front door and fatally shot Miller when he answered, according to Miller’s longtime partner. She told investigators that Kelsey blamed Miller for getting rid of the RV, which, Kelsey believed, led to him becoming homeless. Kelsey fled and went to a house in the 13500 block of Hooper Road, where an old acquaintance named Juan Garcia lived. When Garcia answered the door, Kelsey said, “I’ve got something for you” and fatally shot him, according to two witnesses who were at the house. It was unclear why Kelsey held a grudge against Garcia. Kelsey left in the stolen Kia and was arrested about seven hours later, after a 20-mile police chase that ended in Sugar Land. “This is a guy who has never accepted any responsibility for his actions, and he made a plan to kill people who he held grudges against,” said Assistant District Attorney Sean Teare, who prosecuted the case with ADA David Brucker. “He had deep-seated anger and hatred for these people. He has to be locked away for as long as possible because who knows who else he may have grudges against.” A Harris County jury found Kelsey guilty of all three murders, and he was sentenced to life in prison.
https://cw39.com/crime/houston-man-sentenced-to-life-in-prison-after-killing-3-in-crime-scree/
2022-06-25T22:35:48
en
0.988299
Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Yeah. Mhm. Yeah. *** Yeah, Okay *** Yeah *** Yeah, Yeah. ***. Advertisement Watch: Flash flooding tears through New Mexico neighborhood Heavy rains hit the Ruidoso, New Mexico, on Wednesday causing some flash flooding issues. A viewer sent sister station KOAT a video of a stream in the Ruidoso area rise and begin to flood in with the heavy rainfall. The water was close to some homes in the area. Watch the video player above to see the flooding. RUIDOSO, N.M. — Heavy rains hit the Ruidoso, New Mexico, on Wednesday causing some flash flooding issues. A viewer sent sister station KOAT a video of a stream in the Ruidoso area rise and begin to flood in with the heavy rainfall. The water was close to some homes in the area. Advertisement Watch the video player above to see the flooding.
https://www.wbaltv.com/article/ruidoso-flooding-new-mexico-monsoon/40419199
2022-06-25T22:35:54
en
0.907032
SEVIERVILLE, Tenn. (WJHL) — The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency is warning the public to never leave food or “anything that smells like food” in their vehicles after a black bear got stuck inside a car and died on Wednesday. In a Facebook post shared the day after the incident, the TWRA said it believed the bear had used its “teeth or paws” to open the unlocked door of a car parked by a rental property in Sevierville. The bear then became trapped inside after the door closed behind it. It was 95 degrees F on Wednesday, but TWRA officials believe temperatures inside the car could have exceeded 140 degrees. Warning: The below segment contains images that some readers may find difficult to view. The car’s owner had left the property, and the vehicle, at about 10 a.m. that morning. The bear was discovered later that evening, at around 6:45 p.m. The TWRA said they found an empty soda can and a food package on the floorboard. “Bears have noses 7 times better than a bloodhound and can smell even the faintest odor of food inside a vehicle,” the TWRA wrote. “Lock your doors, roll up your windows, and never leave food or anything that smells like food inside! Empty food containers, candy wrappers, fast food bags, and even air fresheners can attract bears. “Please be #BearWise and help us keep bears wild and alive.”
https://cw39.com/cw39/bear-gets-stuck-dies-inside-hot-car-in-tennessee/
2022-06-25T22:35:55
en
0.96981
HOUSTON (CW39) If you want good soul food in Houston, there are many options to choose from. Spots just south of downtown inlcude: Sure, there are several options for soul food in Houston on the south side and the north and west side. Cheapest options include Houston Soul Food This Is It Soul Food is the main soul food restaurant most native Houstonians are most familiar with to serve the best soul food in or most well known at least. They claim to be the original soul food restaurant in Houston “bringing every meal that Sunday feel since 1959. Their menu includes soul food items include: - oxtails - fried fish - fried chicken - smothered chicken - smothered pork chops - ham hocks - chitterlings - pepper steak gumbo - meatloaf - chicken and dumplings - Turkey wings - beef short ribs Sides - Black Eyed Peas - candied yams - cabbage - rice and gravy - Mac and cheese - Greens - green beans - Pinto beans - mashed potatoes - dressing - okra and tomatoes
https://cw39.com/cw39/best-soul-food-in-houston/
2022-06-25T22:36:01
en
0.902512
NORTH HIGHLANDS, Calif. (KTXL) — The Sacramento Sheriff’s Office has confirmed Friday that an apartment fire was started by a man who was holding a baby hostage, allegedly with a knife to its throat. Deputies responded to a domestic violence call at an apartment in the North Highlands section of the city early on Friday morning. Upon arrival, deputies say the man started a fire in the apartment. Metro Fire arrived on scene, but said the man was no longer holding the knife. Crew members rescued the baby, an older child, a woman and the suspect from the fire. All four were alive, and transported to a local hospital for treatment, according to deputies. The father has been placed in custody, officials said. Metro Fire did confirm, however, that two dogs died in the fire.
https://cw39.com/cw39/man-holding-baby-hostage-lights-apartment-on-fire-in-california/
2022-06-25T22:36:07
en
0.981421
YONKERS, NY (WPIX) — Diner workers jumped into action this week after a customer’s Grubhub order came in for an Irish breakfast roll, a burger and help. Around 5 a.m. Sunday, a worker at the Chipper Truck Café in Yonkers saw the order. It came from a woman being held hostage by an alleged rapist. “Please call police, his going to call me when u delivered come with the cones please don’t make it obvious,” read a note in the comments of the order. “You could see it was real because it was rushed,” Chipper Truck Café co-owner Alice Bermejo said. “The wording was not right, but you could still understand what they were meaning. So you knew when you read the note, you know it’s not a prank.” Café workers contacted police, who later arrived at the Bronx home of 32-year-old suspect Kemoy Royal. Expecting a delivery, Royal opened the door and was arrested by police. Royal was arraigned Sunday on a slew of charges, including rape and strangulation. He was also charged in connection with another incident from the week before, in which he is accused of attacking and threatening a different woman. “You see it in the movies; you don’t see it in real life,” Bermejo said of the situation. The couple that owns the Chipper Truck Café think of the diner, which operates all night, as a safe haven for the community. GrubHub also reached out to thank the couple, rewarding them with a check for $5,000.
https://cw39.com/cw39/note-on-grubhub-order-helps-rescue-alleged-rape-victim-in-new-york-please-call-the-police/
2022-06-25T22:36:13
en
0.983884
WICHITA FALLS (KFDX/KJTL) — Two people were killed Saturday morning in Wichita Falls. According to Sgt. Brian Sheehan with the Wichita Falls Police Department, officers responded to the 200 block of Cartwright Road around 9:30 a.m. for a report of gunshots. At the scene, officers found a dead male in the driveway of a residence. A dead female was found in the backyard of the property. Both had apparent traumatic wounds to their heads, Sgt. Sheehan said. The suspect was taken to United Regional with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. At time of publication, the suspect was in serious condition. Sgt. Sheehan said at the present time, there is no danger to the public.
https://cw39.com/news/texas/two-killed-after-shooting-in-wichita-falls/
2022-06-25T22:36:19
en
0.983571
NEW YORK (AP) — Cristian Javier, Héctor Neris and Ryan Pressly combined on the first no-hitter against the New York Yankees in 19 years, shutting down the best team in baseball and pitching the Houston Astros to a 3-0 victory on Saturday. Javier (5-3), a 25-year-old right-hander without a complete game in 84 professional starts, was clearly tired when manager Dusty Baker brought in a reliever to start the eighth. Javier set career highs for strikeouts (13) and pitches (115), and he matched his longest start with seven innings. Pressly, who gave up a tying three-run homer to Aaron Hicks in a 7-6 loss Thursday night, retired three straight batters in the ninth for his 15th save in 18 chances. After Giancarlo Stanton hit into a game-ending groundout, the Astros walked onto the field and gathered near the mound for a brief celebration. “To do it in New York, it’s the best feeling in the world,” Pressly said. Rookie J.J. Matijevic gave Javier a lead in the seventh when he hit his second big league homer, driving a fastball from Gerrit Cole (6-2) into the right-field second deck. Jose Altuve homered into the left-field second deck in the eighth against Michael King, and pinch-hitter Yuli Gurriel added an RBI single off Lucas Luetge in the ninth. In a matchup of the teams with the top two records in the American League, New York didn’t come close to a hit before a silenced crowd of 45,076. The major league-best Yankees lost consecutive games for the first time since May 28-29 against Tampa Bay, getting their only runners on three walks and an error. Javier, who lowered his ERA to 2.73, was starting because Jake Odorizzi is hurt. Javier began 12 of his first 18 batters with a strike but began his last five with a ball. His 50.9% first-strike percentage entering was 155th among 157 pitchers who faced 150 or more plate appearances this season. “I feel really happy, really proud right now for this moment that God has given me,” Javier said via interpreter. He walked Josh Donaldson on a full-count fastball with two outs in the first, then retired 17 in a row until Donaldson reached when third baseman Alex Bregman threw past first for an error on a one-out grounder in the seventh. Stanton took a called third strike and Gleyber Torres struck out swinging. Neris walked two in the eighth, then retired Joey Gallo on a flyout to the right-field warning track and got Aaron Judge to ground into an inning-ending forceout. “I said, ‘I have to get it for my team, I have to get it for Javy,’” said Neris, who had never pitched in a no-hitter before. The no-hitter was the third in the major leagues this year after five New York Mets combined against Philadelphia on April 29 and Reid Detmers of the Los Angeles Angels accomplished the feat against Tampa Bay on May 10. Houston’s no-hitter was its 14th, the first since Justin Verlander against Toronto on Sept. 1, 2019. Martín Maldonado caught his second combined no-hitter with Houston — he also guided four pitchers through a gem against Seattle on Aug. 3, 2019. “Trust maldy,” Pressly said. “A lot of people don’t get to see the preparation that Maldy and (back up Jason) Castro put in. It’s bar-none to anybody out there.” New York was no-hit for just the eighth time, Houston had been the previous team to do it, across the street at the old stadium on June 11, 2003. Roy Oswalt strained his right groin after his second pitch of the second inning, and Pete Munro (2 2/3 innings), Kirk Saarloos (1 1/3), Brad Lidge (two), Octavio Dotel (one) and Billy Wagner (one) followed in an 8-0 win. Matijevic, a 26-year-old taken by Houston in the second round of the 2017 amateur draft, debuted April 22. He is 2 for 14 and both hits are solo home runs; he went deep against Michael Kopech of the Chicago White Sox on June 19. Cole didn’t allow a hit until Jake Meyers grounded a slider into right field with two outs in the fifth. In his previous start, Cole held Tampa Bay hitless until Isaac Paredes’ single leading off the eighth on June 20. The 31-year-old right-hander took a perfect game into the seventh against Detroit on June 3 before Jonathan Schoop’s two-out single. DONALDSON’S BAT FLIP Yankees manager Aaron Boone said he addressed Donaldson flipping his bat into catcher Jason Castro and not running immediately on a ball that went for a ground-rule double Friday. “We kind of looked at each other,” Boone said. “JD plays his butt off. So yeah, anytime a guy hits a ball and does something, it doesn’t go out, yeah, ou kind of look at that and address it. But my biggest thing is, are my guys playing their butt off? And JD is a guy I have no issue with.” TRAINER’S ROOM Astros: RHP Lance McCullers Jr. threw about 25 pitches to Jeremy Peña and Chas McCormick in his first batting practice. McCullers has been sidelined since spring training with a strained right forearm. … Odorizzi (lower left leg discomfort) threw 59 pitches over three innings for Triple-A Sugar Land on Friday night, allowing two runs, two hits and two walks. … Peña (left thumb) could be activated Sunday. Yankees: After throwing an eight-pitch inning for Double-A Somerset on Friday in his first game action since May 22, LHP Aroldis Chapman (left Achilles tendinitis) expects to pitch again Sunday and then come off the IL. … RHP Jonathan Loaisiga, sidelined since May 22 by right shoulder inflammation, threw his first bullpen since getting hurt. He will need another bullpen and then batting practice before he goes on a rehab assignment, Boone said. … Domingo Germán (right shoulder impingement) is to make his second minor league rehab start on Tuesday. UP NEXT LHP Nestor Cortes (6-3, 2.31) starts Sunday’s series final for the Yankees and RHP José Urquidy (6-3, 4.68) for the Astros.
https://cw39.com/sports/astros/astros-javier-bullpen-combine-to-no-hit-yanks-in-3-0-win/
2022-06-25T22:36:25
en
0.969272
CLEVELAND — Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson's disciplinary hearing with the NFL and the NFL Player's Association is slated to start Tuesday, a league source confirmed with Scripps station WEWS. Source confirms #Browns QB Deshaun Watson's hearing with the NFL's disciplinary officer Sue L. Robinson is set to begin Tuesday. — Camryn Justice (@camijustice) June 25, 2022 Sue L. Robinson was selected by the two organizations to represent jointly and after investigating Watson about the allegations, will begin presenting the information on June 28. Robinson will then listen to both sides as the NFL is likely to suggest a "lengthy" suspension for Watson; meanwhile, the NFLPA is to defend the quarterback who recently settled 20 of 24 lawsuits against him. After settling those lawsuits, the NFL clarified that Watson settling the cases would have "no impact on the collectively bargained disciplinary process." However, according to an ESPN report, the NFL is likely to base the suspension time frame on a fraction of those women's lawsuits. There is no timeline for a decision to be made, but with the hearings beginning, the process is nearing finality. Robinson has no record of ruling on cases associated with the NFL and is a former member of Delaware's district court as the first woman to sit on the bench. She also served on the Judicial Conference of the United States. This article was written by Claire Geary for WEWS.
https://www.wsfltv.com/sports/browns-qb-deshaun-watson-scheduled-for-nfl-disciplinary-hearing-tuesday
2022-06-25T22:37:55
en
0.98044
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/dallas-mavericks/articles/39900223
2022-06-25T22:39:41
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/dallas-mavericks/articles/39900339
2022-06-25T22:39:47
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900021
2022-06-25T22:39:53
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900029
2022-06-25T22:39:59
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900035
2022-06-25T22:40:05
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900050
2022-06-25T22:40:11
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900075
2022-06-25T22:40:17
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900089
2022-06-25T22:40:23
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900100
2022-06-25T22:40:29
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900126
2022-06-25T22:40:35
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/cleveland-browns/articles/39900140
2022-06-25T22:40:41
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0.738227