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Police: Man with axe, sword asked to enter NY Times newsroom Published: Nov. 17, 2022 at 3:53 PM CST|Updated: 34 minutes ago NEW YORK (AP) — A man with an axe and a sword went into the lobby of the New York Times building and asked to speak to the political section, then handed over his weapons when he was denied. The New York Police Department says officers responded to the Times’ building in midtown Manhattan shortly after noon Thursday. Building security told them the man had two weapons, and made the request to speak with the specific part of the newspaper staff. He was taken to a hospital for evaluation. An email seeking comment was sent to the Times. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
https://www.valleynewslive.com/2022/11/17/police-man-with-axe-sword-asked-enter-ny-times-newsroom/
2022-11-17 22:27:47
0
https://www.valleynewslive.com/2022/11/17/police-man-with-axe-sword-asked-enter-ny-times-newsroom/
Which enema kit is best? There are a variety of reasons why you may need an enema, from simple constipation to preparation for surgery. Because of the equally varied types of enema kits, it’s difficult to know which one is the proper fit for your need, not to mention complicating factors such as the length of the hose and what tips are included. The best enema kit is the Aussie Health Co. Enema Kit. It’s excellent for those needing regular enemas, thanks to its ease of use, plus it comes with a drawstring storage bag. What to know before you buy an enema kit Enema kit types There are five types of enema kits: - Bag kits use a large, typically silicone bag that’s filled with solution and hung. They’re easy to fold up and store, but they can be hard to clean. - Bucket kits are essentially bag kits but with a bucket instead. The bucket is often able to hold more solution than the average bag and is easier to clean, but they don’t travel well and can be harder to hang. - Bulb kits use a small handheld bulb to shoot your solution in. They’re easy to clean and the most portable, but the small size means the effects are similarly minor. - Shower kits attach directly to your showerhead and use the water and the pressure from it to work. They aren’t recommended, however, as it’s easy to use too much pressure and harm yourself. It’s also difficult to monitor your water usage. - Disposable kits are one-use squeeze bottles that function similarly to a bulb and that are pre-filled with solution. They’re great for traveling or for keeping on hand when necessity strikes. Capacity The higher the capacity of your enema kit, the deeper your cleaning will be: - Bag and bucket kits measure capacity in quarts and are typically found in 1- to 4-quart sizes. - Bulb and disposable kits measure capacity in ounces and are typically found in 4.5- to 12-ounce sizes. Hose length If you’re using a bag, bucket or shower enema kit, then you need a long hose to ensure you can hang it high enough to be effective. Most tubes are around 6 feet long, which is suitable for the average person. Double-check the hose length before purchase and know that a little too long is better than a little too short. What to look for in a quality enema kit Tips The best bag, bucket and shower enema kits come with a variety of tips to increase the chances that one will be comfortable for you. The best usually have at least three types of tips while others may only have one. You can also buy tips later, but if you buy tips from a different manufacturer you may find the tips won’t fit in the tube. Flow control The best bag and bucket enema kits have a two-stage flow control system. The first is a clamp with adjustable tightness so you can control how much solution gets through and how fast it travels. The second is a check valve that prevents solution from traveling back up. How much you can expect to spend on an enema kit They can cost as little as $2.50 to as much as $40-plus. Disposable kits rarely cost more than $10 per enema. Reusable kits typically cost $10-$30 with only the most fully featured costing more. Enema kit FAQ Is giving myself an enema safe? A. As with all things medical, it’s perfectly safe if you do it correctly. This means carefully following all the included instructions and asking your doctor questions if you’re still unsure. You should also only use them when strictly necessary as overuse can cause dehydration and foster dependency. Do enemas hurt? A. No, and if it does then you should stop immediately and contact your doctor. That said, they can be uncomfortable, especially for those new to them. How do I clean my reusable enema kit? A. It’s a multistep process that must be repeated after each use to ensure the next use will be sanitary and safe: - First, deconstruct your kit completely and thoroughly wash each piece with hot soapy water. - Second, reconstruct your kit and fill it with hydrogen peroxide, letting some fill the tube if it has one. Let it sit for three hours before dumping and rinsing. - Third, remove the tip and let it sit overnight or for eight hours in a mixture of hot (but not boiling) water and hydrogen peroxide. During the same period, hang the rest of your kit to dry. What’s the best enema kit to buy? Top enema kit What you need to know: This kit is packed with tip options to ensure you have a comfortable experience. What you’ll love: It includes three types of tips: A hard traditional tip, a long flared colonic irrigation nozzle and three soft disposable tips, replacements of which are available from the manufacturer. The tube has a check flow valve and an adjustable clamp. What you should consider: You can’t tell how much solution is left inside the stainless steel bucket. Some consumers had issues with air bubbles clogging the flow. Where to buy: Sold by Amazon Top enema kit for the money Fleet Laxative Saline Enema for Adult Constipation What you need to know: This is among the easiest and cheapest disposable kits. What you’ll love: The tip is lubricated for more comfortable insertion and it takes just a few minutes to work. It comes in 4.5-ounce sizes in packs of two, four, 12, 24 and 48 or 7.8-ounce sizes in packs of six or 24. What you should consider: A few customers received it with the shipping label on the box; a lack of privacy that some may find uncomfortable. Where to buy: Sold by Amazon Worth checking out What you need to know: This is another excellent reusable kit and it comes in several sizes. What you’ll love: It has six tips: three soft tips, two hard tips and a long flared tip. There’s a large stainless steel hook so you can hang it anywhere and a drawstring storage bag. It comes in 2-, 3-, and 4-quart sizes. What you should consider: A few purchasers found the clamp hard to use. Others disliked that the bag doesn’t seal. Some kits didn’t include instructions. Where to buy: Sold by Amazon Want to shop the best products at the best prices? Check out Daily Deals from BestReviews. Sign up here to receive the BestReviews weekly newsletter for useful advice on new products and noteworthy deals. Jordan C. Woika writes for BestReviews. BestReviews has helped millions of consumers simplify their purchasing decisions, saving them time and money. Copyright 2023 BestReviews, a Nexstar company. All rights reserved.
https://www.kark.com/reviews/br/health-wellness-br/digestive-care-br/best-enema-kit/
2023-01-26 13:19:07
0
https://www.kark.com/reviews/br/health-wellness-br/digestive-care-br/best-enema-kit/
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United Arab Emirates United Kingdom of Great Britain & N. 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https://www.idahopress.com/eyeonboise/bogus-basin-sets-nov-24-opening-target-completes-5m-in-improvements/article_f5f2b5d6-53ed-11ed-b40c-c32f67588502.html
2022-10-24 23:59:54
0
https://www.idahopress.com/eyeonboise/bogus-basin-sets-nov-24-opening-target-completes-5m-in-improvements/article_f5f2b5d6-53ed-11ed-b40c-c32f67588502.html
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Veteran closer Kenley Jansen has agreed to a $32 million, two-year deal with the Boston Red Sox, a person familiar with the deal told The Associated Press. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity Wednesday because the agreement was pending a physical. The 35-year-old Jansen went 5-2 with a 3.38 ERA in 64 innings for the Atlanta Braves this year. The three-time All-Star led the National League with 41 saves. The right-hander spent the previous 12 seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers, winning a World Series title in 2020. Jansen has a 2.46 career ERA. He was an All-Star in 2016-2018. His 391 career saves are the second-most among active players (behind Craig Kimbrel’s 394) and eighth all time. ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.yourcentralvalley.com/sports/ap-ap-source-red-sox-jansen-reach-32m-2-year-deal/
2022-12-07 20:21:16
0
https://www.yourcentralvalley.com/sports/ap-ap-source-red-sox-jansen-reach-32m-2-year-deal/
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Israeli lawmaker Itamar Ben-Gvir calls his Arab colleagues “terrorists.” He wants to deport his political opponents, and in his youth, his views were so extreme that the army banned him from compulsory military service. Yet today, the populist lawmaker who was once relegated to the margins of Israeli politics is surging ahead in the polls ahead of November elections. He has received the blessing of former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and is poised to emerge as a major force that could propel the onetime premier back to power. Ben-Gvir’s stunning rise is the culmination of years of efforts by the media-savvy lawmaker to gain legitimacy. But it also reflects a rightward shift in the Israeli electorate that has brought his religious, ultranationalist ideology into the mainstream and all but extinguished hopes for Palestinian independence. “Over the last year I’ve been on a mission to save Israel,” Ben-Gvir recently told reporters. “Millions of citizens are waiting for a real right-wing government. The time has come to give them one.” Ben-Gvir, 46, has been a fixture of Israel’s extreme right for more than two decades, gaining notoriety in his youth as a disciple of the late radical rabbi, Meir Kahane. He first became a national figure when he famously broke a hood ornament off then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin’s car in 1995. “We got to his car, and we’ll get to him too,” he said, just weeks before Rabin was assassinated by a Jewish extremist opposed to his peace efforts with the Palestinians. Kahane’s violent anti-Arab ideology — which included calls to ban Jewish-Arab intermarriage and for the mass expulsion of Palestinians — was considered so repugnant that Israel banned him from parliament and the U.S. listed his party as a terrorist group. Kahane himself was assassinated by an Arab assailant in New York in 1990. But in recent years, his followers and some of his ideas have made their way to the Israeli mainstream — in large part thanks to Ben-Gvir. He transitioned into politics last year after a career as a lawyer defending radical Jewish West Bank settlers. His intimate knowledge of the law has helped him test the boundaries of the country’s incitement laws and avoid sanctions that have prevented some of his closest associates from running in elections. Ben-Gvir, for instance, calls Kahane “righteous and holy” but also says he doesn’t agree with everything his former mentor said. He’s careful to limit his own calls for expulsion to those who engage in violence and lawmakers — Jewish or Arab — who he says undermine the state. Before entering politics, he removed a photo of Baruch Goldstein — a Jewish militant who gunned down 29 Palestinians in a mosque in 1994 — from his living room. He no longer allows his supporters to chant “Death to Arabs” at political rallies. Instead, they are told to say, “Death to terrorists!” Supporters say Ben-Gvir has changed, been misunderstood, or wrongly painted an extremist. “People mature. People develop,” said Nevo Cohen, Ben-Gvir’s campaign manager. “They stuck a label on Ben-Gvir that is totally wrong.” Ben-Gvir’s office turned down an interview request. But he makes frequent appearances on Israeli TV and radio, displaying a cheerful demeanor, quit wit and knack for deflecting criticism as he banters with his hosts. He also has tapped into a wave of anti-Arab and nationalist sentiment driven by years of violence, failed peace efforts and demographic changes. Ben-Gvir’s supporters are largely religious and ultra-Orthodox Jews, who tend to have large families, and also come from the influential West Bank settler movement. Ben-Gvir himself lives in a hard-line settlement next to the West Bank city of Hebron, home to more than 200,000 Palestinians. “He is a populist demagogue. He plays on the sentiments of hate and fear of Arabs,” said Shuki Friedman, an expert on Israel’s far right at the Jewish People Policy Institute. “He interviews well, he is good on camera and he has had plenty of screen time that has given him legitimacy.” In the opposition over the past year, Ben-Gvir has positioned himself as a rabble rouser against the government — the first ever to have an Arab party as a member. He publicly quarreled with Arab lawmakers in scenes captured on camera and widely broadcast. In the tense run-up to last year’s Gaza war, he staged provocative visits to Arab neighborhoods, rallying ultranationalist supporters to confront Palestinians and assert “Jewish Power” — the name of his party. He set up an outdoor parliamentary “office” in an Arab neighborhood of east Jerusalem where Jewish settlers are trying to expel Palestinians from their homes, setting off a melee. He later called for police to use live fire against Palestinian protesters at a flashpoint holy site. His surge in the polls has made him a central figure in Netanyahu’s comeback strategy. Netanyahu is on trial for corruption, and the public is again torn over his fitness to rule. After four consecutive inconclusive elections, Netanyahu and his Likud party hope to break the logjam with Ben-Gvir’s support. “Yes, Ben-Gvir is someone very militant and yes, sometimes a little provocative, but he is someone who cares about Israel,” said Likud lawmaker and Netanyahu confidant Miki Zohar, who insisted Ben-Gvir would fall in line under a Netanyahu-led government. Last week, Netanyahu personally brokered a deal between Ben-Gvir and a rival far-right leader, Bezalel Smotrich, to ensure they run together. If they hadn’t, Smotrich might not have made it into parliament, depriving Netanyahu of a critical source of support. “Joining forces is the order of the day,” Netanyahu said. One recent poll forecast Ben-Gvir’s alliance with 12 seats, which would make it parliament’s fourth-largest. That means Netanyahu almost certainly would make Ben-Gvir a Cabinet minister if he can form a government. Ben-Gvir has said his first order of business would be to pass a law allowing deportations of those who allegedly subvert the country and its security forces. He has proposed imposing the death penalty for “terrorists” and granting immunity to soldiers accused of committing violent crimes against Palestinians. Thabet Abu Rass, the Arab co-director of the Abraham Initiatives, which promotes Jewish-Arab coexistence, said the mainstreaming of figures like Ben-Gvir is not only a threat to Israel’s Arab citizens, but to the country as a whole. By branding Arab members of parliament as traitors who should be expelled, Ben Gvir delegitimizes the political participation of Arab citizens — who make up around 20% of Israel’s population — and the possibility of Jewish-Arab partnerships, Abu Rass said. “It’s very dangerous for the whole Israeli society,” he said. “It’s going to bring about the collapse of democracy.”
https://www.qcnews.com/news/world-news/ap-extremist-lawmaker-surges-ahead-of-elections-in-israel/
2022-09-23 01:58:34
1
https://www.qcnews.com/news/world-news/ap-extremist-lawmaker-surges-ahead-of-elections-in-israel/
Israel's new government wants to weaken the judiciary — prompting unprecedented levels of protest. Critics say the effort echoes steps taken by the far-right governments in Hungary and Poland. Copyright 2023 NPR Israel's new government wants to weaken the judiciary — prompting unprecedented levels of protest. Critics say the effort echoes steps taken by the far-right governments in Hungary and Poland. Copyright 2023 NPR
https://www.kanw.com/2023-01-26/protesters-in-israel-criticize-the-judicial-overhaul-planned-by-the-new-government
2023-01-26 11:14:16
0
https://www.kanw.com/2023-01-26/protesters-in-israel-criticize-the-judicial-overhaul-planned-by-the-new-government
As the first and only biologic targeting both cytokines interleukin (IL)-12 and IL-23, STELARA provides a new therapeutic option for children six years of age and older living with active psoriatic arthritis Active psoriatic arthritis in pediatric patients is a rare disease affecting five to eight percent of children and adolescents with chronic inflammatory arthritis*1-6 HORSHAM, Pa., Aug. 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved STELARA® (ustekinumab) for the treatment of pediatric patients six years of age and older with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA). This rare disease that resembles adult PsA affects five to eight percent of children and adolescents with chronic inflammatory arthritis.*1-7 Two of the four indications for STELARA now include pediatric patients, further expanding its treatment profile since the first approval in 2009 for adults living with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis (PsO). STELARA is a fully human monoclonal antibody that selectively inhibits both interleukin (IL)-12 and IL-23, two cytokines thought to play an important role in tempering the overactive inflammatory response in several autoimmune diseases. STELARA is administered as a subcutaneous injection dosed four times per year after two starter doses for the treatment of pediatric patients six years of age and older with active PsA. "We know active pediatric psoriatic arthritis is a challenging inflammatory disease given its rarity and that symptoms, such as swollen joints and skin lesions, can vary significantly in presentation and severity," said Terence Rooney, M.D., Ph.D., Vice President, Rheumatology and Maternal Fetal Disease Area, Janssen Research & Development, LLC. "With this pediatric approval of STELARA, we're pleased to help address the unmet needs of these young patients and provide physicians with a much-needed treatment option that has an established track record of safety and efficacy." The FDA's approval was based on pharmacokinetic (PK) data and extrapolation of the established efficacy and existing safety profile of STELARA in multiple Phase 3 studies in adult and pediatric patients with moderate to severe plaque PsO (PSTELLAR, CADMUS, and CADMUS Jr) and adult patients with active PsA (PSUMMIT I and II). With the limited availability of pediatric PsA patients for inclusion in clinical trials, researchers utilized an extrapolation approach based on previous PK, efficacy and safety observations from a closely adjacent population of pediatric patients with moderate to severe plaque PsO who also had active PsA, as well as adult patients with moderate to severe plaque PsO or active PsA. An analysis of the data demonstrated that PK exposure of STELARA in these pediatric PsO patients with active PsA was consistent with that of Phase 3 clinical trials of STELARA in pediatric PsO patients without active PsA, as well as with adult patients with moderate to severe plaque PsO or adult patients with active PsA, while data on common efficacy endpoints were similar in these pediatric PsO patients with active PsA. "The approval of STELARA for use in children six years of age and older with active psoriatic arthritis, which follows the 2020 approval for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis in this population, is complemented by more than 12 years of clinical trial and real-world evidence across all approved indications demonstrating the safety and efficacy of this biologic therapy," said Jennifer Davidson, DO, Vice President of Immunology Medical Affairs, Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC. "As a global leader in immunology, Janssen is dedicated to reducing the burden of chronic autoimmune diseases, and this additional approval for STELARA builds on our legacy of bringing important treatment options to younger patients." Janssen is actively working toward greater patient accessibility through improved commercial first-line formulary coverage, as well as patient-specific support services specifically for patients to start and stay on STELARA® treatment after a prescribing decision has been made. STELARA withMe offers a comprehensive support program that helps patients get started on STELARA and stay on track. STELARA withMe provides information on insurance coverage, potential out-of-pocket costs, and treatment support, and identifies options that may help make treatment more affordable, including the STELARA withMe Savings Program for commercially insured patients who are eligible. Active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in pediatric patients, a rare disease that resembles adult PsA, affects five to eight percent of children and adolescents with chronic inflammatory arthritis.*1-7 Symptoms of active pediatric PsA can vary significantly in presentation and severity from patient to patient, but often include joint inflammation and skin lesions.8 PsA can be a challenging disease to treat – especially in younger populations – reinforcing the need for additional treatment options. PSTELLAR, a Phase 3b, randomized, double-blind, active-controlled, multicenter study assessed the effect of extending maintenance dosing intervals beyond 12 weeks on the clinical efficacy and safety of STELARA in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. Adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis received STELARA at weeks 0, 4 and 16 during open-label treatment. Patients achieving a week-28 Physician's Global Assessment (PGA) score of cleared/minimal (PGA = 0/1) were randomized 1:4 to group 1 [approved every 12 weeks (q12 wk) maintenance] or group 2 (q12-24 wk; response-based dosing determined by time to loss of PGA = 0/1). Key endpoints included the number of visits with PGA = 0/1 (primary end point) and ≥ 75 percent improvement in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 75) between weeks 88 and 112, and PGA/PASI responses between weeks 28 and 112. CADMUS, a Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel, multicenter trial, evaluated the efficacy and safety of STELARA in adolescent patients 12 to 17 years of age with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. Patients (N=110) had been diagnosed with psoriasis more than six months prior to first study agent administration and had a Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI) score greater than or equal to 12, a Physician's Global Assessment (PGA) score greater than or equal to 3 and body surface area (BSA) involvement of at least 10 percent. In addition, patients were inadequately controlled with topical therapy or were candidates for systemic/phototherapy. A Phase 3 study, CADMUS Jr, evaluated the efficacy and safety of STELARA in the treatment of pediatric patients 6 to 11 years of age living with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. Two Phase 3 multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials of STELARA in adult patients with active psoriatic arthritis, PSUMMIT I and PSUMMIT II, evaluated the efficacy and safety of subcutaneously administered STELARA 45 mg or 90 mg at weeks 0, 4 and then every 12 weeks. The trials included adult patients diagnosed with active psoriatic arthritis who had at least five tender and five swollen joints and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels of at least 0.3 mg/dL despite previous treatment with conventional therapy. PSUMMIT II also included adult patients with previous exposure to tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors. The primary endpoints for both studies were the proportion of patients demonstrating at least a 20 percent improvement in arthritis signs and symptoms [American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 20] at week 24. Secondary endpoints at week 24 included in the submissions were: improvements in Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ-DI) scores, a 50 or 70 percent improvement in arthritis signs and symptoms (ACR 50 or ACR 70), and at least a 75 percent improvement in psoriatic skin lesions as measured by the Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI 75) in patients with at least three percent body surface area involvement at baseline. STELARA® (ustekinumab), a human interleukin (IL)-12 and IL-23 antagonist, is approved in the United States for the treatment of: 1) adults and children six years and older with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis who are candidates for phototherapy or systemic therapy; 2) adults and children six years and older with active psoriatic arthritis; 3) adult patients (18 years and older) with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease; 4) adult patients (18 years and older) with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis. The Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson maintain exclusive worldwide marketing rights to STELARA. * When other known causes of arthritis have been excluded.3,5,10 STELARA® is a prescription medicine that affects your immune system. STELARA® can increase your chance of having serious side effects including: STELARA® may lower your ability to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections. While taking STELARA®, some people have serious infections, which may require hospitalization, including tuberculosis (TB), and infections caused by bacteria, fungi, or viruses. - Your doctor should check you for TB before starting STELARA® and watch you closely for signs and symptoms of TB during treatment with STELARA®. - If your doctor feels that you are at risk for TB, you may be treated for TB before and during treatment with STELARA®. You should not start taking STELARA® if you have any kind of infection unless your doctor says it is okay. - think you have an infection or have symptoms of an infection such as: - are being treated for an infection or have any open cuts. - get a lot of infections or have infections that keep coming back. - have TB, or have been in close contact with someone with TB. After starting STELARA®, call your doctor right away if you have any symptoms of an infection (see above). These may be signs of infections such as chest infections, or skin infections or shingles that could have serious complications. STELARA® can make you more likely to get infections or make an infection that you have worse. People who have a genetic problem where the body does not make any of the proteins interleukin 12 (IL‐12) and interleukin 23 (IL‐23) are at a higher risk for certain serious infections that can spread throughout the body and cause death. People who take STELARA® may also be more likely to get these infections. STELARA® may decrease the activity of your immune system and increase your risk for certain types of cancer. Tell your doctor if you have ever had any type of cancer. Some people who had risk factors for skin cancer developed certain types of skin cancers while receiving STELARA®. Tell your doctor if you have any new skin growths. PRES is a rare condition that affects the brain and can cause death. The cause of PRES is not known. If PRES is found early and treated, most people recover. Tell your doctor right away if you have any new or worsening medical problems including: headache, seizures, confusion, and vision problems. Serious allergic reactions can occur. Stop using STELARA® and get medical help right away if you have any symptoms of a serious allergic reaction such as: feeling faint, swelling of your face, eyelids, tongue, or throat, chest tightness, or skin rash. Cases of lung inflammation have happened in some people who receive STELARA® and may be serious. These lung problems may need to be treated in a hospital. Tell your doctor right away if you develop shortness of breath or a cough that doesn't go away during treatment with STELARA®. - have any of the conditions or symptoms listed above for serious infections, cancers, or PRES. - ever had an allergic reaction to STELARA® or any of its ingredients. Ask your doctor if you are not sure. - are allergic to latex. The needle cover on the prefilled syringe contains latex. - have recently received or are scheduled to receive an immunization (vaccine). People who take STELARA® should not receive live vaccines. Tell your doctor if anyone in your house needs a live vaccine. The viruses used in some types of live vaccines can spread to people with a weakened immune system, and can cause serious problems. You should not receive the BCG vaccine during the one year before receiving STELARA® or one year after you stop receiving STELARA®. - have any new or changing lesions within psoriasis areas or on normal skin. - are receiving or have received allergy shots, especially for serious allergic reactions. - receive or have received phototherapy for your psoriasis. - are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. It is not known if STELARA® can harm your unborn baby. You and your doctor should decide if you will receive STELARA®. - are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. It is thought that STELARA® passes into your breast milk. - talk to your doctor about the best way to feed your baby if you receive STELARA®. Tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over‐the‐counter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. Know the medicines you take. Keep a list of them to show your doctor and pharmacist when you get a new medicine. - Use STELARA® exactly as your doctor tells you to. - STELARA® is intended for use under the guidance and supervision of your doctor. In children 6 years and older, it is recommended that STELARA® be administered by a healthcare provider. If your doctor decides that you or a caregiver may give your injections of STELARA® at home, you should receive training on the right way to prepare and inject STELARA®. Your doctor will determine the right dose of STELARA® for you, the amount for each injection, and how often you should receive it. Do not try to inject STELARA® yourself until you or your caregiver have been shown how to inject STELARA® by your doctor or nurse. Common side effects of STELARA® include: nasal congestion, sore throat, and runny nose, upper respiratory infections, fever, headache, tiredness, itching, nausea and vomiting, redness at the injection site, vaginal yeast infections, urinary tract infections, sinus infection, bronchitis, diarrhea, stomach pain, and joint pain. These are not all of the possible side effects with STELARA®. Tell your doctor about any side effect that you experience. Ask your doctor or pharmacist for more information. Please click to read the full Prescribing Information and Medication Guide for STELARA® and discuss any questions you have with your doctor. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1‐800‐FDA‐1088. cp-124932v5 At Janssen, we're creating a future where disease is a thing of the past. We're the Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, working tirelessly to make that future a reality for patients everywhere by fighting sickness with science, improving access with ingenuity, and healing hopelessness with heart. We focus on areas of medicine where we can make the biggest difference: Cardiovascular, Metabolism, & Retina; Immunology; Infectious Diseases & Vaccines; Neuroscience; Oncology; and Pulmonary Hypertension. Learn more at www.janssen.com. Follow us at www.twitter.com/JanssenGlobal and www.twitter.com/JanssenUS. Janssen Research & Development, LLC, Janssen Biotech, Inc. and Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC are part of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson. This press release contains "forward-looking statements" as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 regarding development of STELARA® (ustekinumab). The reader is cautioned not to rely on these forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations of future events. If underlying assumptions prove inaccurate or known or unknown risks or uncertainties materialize, actual results could vary materially from the expectations and projections of Janssen Research & Development, LLC, any of the other Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies and/or Johnson & Johnson. Risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to: challenges and uncertainties inherent in product research and development, including the uncertainty of clinical success and of obtaining regulatory approvals; uncertainty of commercial success; manufacturing difficulties and delays; competition, including technological advances, new products and patents attained by competitors; challenges to patents; product efficacy or safety concerns resulting in product recalls or regulatory action; changes in behavior and spending patterns of purchasers of health care products and services; changes to applicable laws and regulations, including global health care reforms; and trends toward health care cost containment. A further list and descriptions of these risks, uncertainties and other factors can be found in Johnson & Johnson's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended January 2, 2022, including in the sections captioned "Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements" and "Item 1A. Risk Factors," and in Johnson & Johnson's subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Copies of these filings are available online at www.sec.gov, www.jnj.com or on request from Johnson & Johnson. None of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies nor Johnson & Johnson undertakes to update any forward-looking statement as a result of new information or future events or developments. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson
https://www.wagmtv.com/prnewswire/2022/08/01/stelara-ustekinumab-approved-by-us-food-drug-administration-treat-pediatric-patients-with-active-psoriatic-arthritis/
2022-08-01 13:33:27
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https://www.wagmtv.com/prnewswire/2022/08/01/stelara-ustekinumab-approved-by-us-food-drug-administration-treat-pediatric-patients-with-active-psoriatic-arthritis/
Ex-FCC chief, public TV advocate Newton Minow dead at 97 CHICAGO (AP) — Newton N. Minow, who as Federal Communications Commission chief in the early 1960s famously proclaimed that network television was a “vast wasteland,” died Saturday. He was 97. Minow, who received a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016, died Saturday at home, surrounded by loved ones, said his daughter, Nell Minow. “He wanted to be at home,” she told The Associated Press. “He had a good life.” Though Minow remained in the FCC post just two years, he left a permanent stamp on the broadcasting industry through government steps to foster satellite communications, the passage of a law mandating UHF reception on TV sets and his outspoken advocacy for quality in television. “My faith is in the belief that this country needs and can support many voices of television — and that the more voices we hear, the better, the richer, the freer we shall be,” Minow once said. “After all, the airways belong to the people.” Minow was appointed as FCC chief by President John F. Kennedy in early 1961. He had initially come to know the Kennedys in the 1950s as an aide to Illinois Gov. Adlai Stevenson, the Democrats’ presidential nominee in 1952 and 1956. Minow laid down his famous challenge to TV executives on May 9, 1961, in a speech to the National Association of Broadcasters, urging them to sit down and watch their station for a full day, “without a book, magazine, newspaper, profit-and-loss sheet or rating book to distract you.” “I can assure you that you will observe a vast wasteland,” he told them. “You will see a procession of game shows, formula comedies about totally unbelievable families, blood and thunder, mayhem, violence, sadism, murder, Western bad men, Western good men, private eyes, gangsters, more violence and cartoons. And, endlessly, commercials — many screaming, cajoling and offending.” As he spoke, the three networks were just about all most viewers had to choose from. Pay television was barely in the planning stage, PBS and “Sesame Street” were several years away, and HBO and niche channels such as Animal Planet were far in the future. The speech caused a sensation. “Vast wasteland” became a catch phrase. Jimmy Durante opened an NBC special by saying, “Da next hour will be dedicated to upliftin’ da quality of television. ... At least, Newt, we’re tryin’.” Minow became the first government official to get a George Foster Peabody award for excellence in broadcasting. The New York Times critic Jack Gould (himself a Peabody winner) wrote, “At long last there is a man in Washington who proposes to champion the interests of the public in TV matters and is not timid about ruffling the industry’s most august feathers. Tonight some broadcasters were trying to find dark explanations for Mr. Minow’s attitude. In this matter the viewer possibly can be a little helpful; Mr. Minow has been watching television.” CBS President Frank Stanton strongly disagreed, calling Minow’s comments a “sensationalized and oversimplified approach” that could lead to ill-advised reforms “on the ground that any change is a change for the better.” For the criticism over his speech, Minow said he didn’t support censorship, preferring exhortation and measures to broaden public choices. But he also said a broadcasting license was “an enormous gift” from the government that brought with it a responsibility to the public. His daughter, Nell Minow, told The Associated Press in 2011 that her father loved television and wished he would have been remembered for championing the public interest in television programming, rather than just a few words in his much broader speech. “His No. 1 goal was to give people choice,” she said. Among the new laws during his tenure were the All-Channel Receiver Act of 1962, that required that TV sets pick up UHF as well as VHF broadcasts, which opened up TV channels numbered above 13 for widespread viewing. Congress also passed a bill that provided funds for educational television, and measures to foster communications satellites. In a September 2006 interview on National Public Radio, Minow recalled telling Kennedy that such satellites were “more important than sending a man into space. ... Communications satellites will send ideas into space, and ideas live longer than people.” On July 10, 1962, Minow was one of the officials making statements on the first live trans-Atlantic television program, a demonstration of AT&T’s Telstar satellite. Children’s programming was a particular interest of Minow, a father of three, who told broadcasters the few good children’s shows were “drowned out in the massive doses of cartoons, violence and more violence. ... Search your consciences and see if you cannot offer more to your young beneficiaries whose future you guide so many hours each and every day.” Minow resigned in May 1963 to become executive vice president and general counsel for Encyclopedia Britannica Inc. in Chicago. Nell Minow said her father also was instrumental in getting presidential debates televised, starting with Kennedy and Richard N. Nixon, after watching Stevenson struggle to use the new medium during his 1956 presidential run. “Minow was appalled by ... the whole charade of having to image-make on television,” said Craig Allen, a mass communications professor at Arizona State University who wrote a 2001 book about Minow. In 1965, Minow returned to his law practice in Chicago, and later served as board member at PBS, CBS Inc. and the advertising company Foote Cone & Belding Communications Inc. He was director of the Annenberg Washington Program in Communications Policy Studies of Northwestern University. He also gave Barack Obama a summer job at the law firm, where the future president met his wife, Michelle Robinson. Minow also was one of Obama’s earliest supporters when the then-Illinois senator considered running for president, Nell Minow said. Television is one of our century’s most important advances “and yet, as a nation, we pay no attention to it,” Minow said in a 1991 Associated Press interview. He continued to push for reforms such as free airtime for political ads and more quality programming while also praising advances in diversity in U.S. television. “In 1961, I worried that my children would not benefit much from television. But in 1991 I worry that my grandchildren will actually be harmed by it,” he said. ___ Former Associated Press writer Polly Anderson in New York contributed to this story. Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
https://www.1011now.com/2023/05/06/ex-fcc-chief-public-tv-advocate-newton-minow-dead-97/
2023-05-06 20:01:51
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https://www.1011now.com/2023/05/06/ex-fcc-chief-public-tv-advocate-newton-minow-dead-97/
NEW YORK (WPIX/NEXSTAR) — Despite a recent slowdown in growth, rent costs across the U.S. are well above pre-pandemic levels – so where can you get the most space for your money? An annual analysis from Rentcafe, a nationwide listing service that helps find apartments or houses for renters and buyers, looked at how much square footage you can get, on average, for $1,500 in the 100 largest U.S. cities. The most square footage for $1,500 Wichita, Kansas ranks number one when it comes to generous layouts, with 1,463 square feet for $1,500. The average apartment costs $817 a month and has 797 square feet. Rounding out the top 10 are Toledo, Ohio (1,379 square feet); Tulsa, Oklahoma (1,368 square feet), Oklahoma City (1,330 square feet); Memphis, Tennessee (1,293 square feet); Fort Wayne, Indiana (1,263); El Paso, Texas (1,222 square feet); Lubbock, Texas (1,218 square feet); and Omaha, Nebraska (1,209). The least square footage for $1,500 Moving to New York City? You may want to pack light. In Manhattan, $1,500 will get you a paltry 243 square feet. This may not surprise many New Yorkers, but you can’t get a whole lot of space for $1,500 a month in rent. A quick look on Zillow lists less than 200 apartments for that amount, and most are under 500 square feet. A garage in a residential home that houses two cars is about 400 square feet. Boston is right behind the Big Apple at 320 square feet, followed by San Francisco (336 square feet); Brooklyn, New York (342 square feet); Jersey City, New Jersey (362 square feet); Queens, New York (393 square feet); Oakland, California (418 square feet); Los Angeles (423 square feet); Irvine, California (445); and San Diego (449 square feet). Good news for renters? Rent prices are still sharply higher than they were before the pandemic, but there may be reason for some optimism. Year-over-year average rent prices across the U.S. actually went down for the first time since COVID-19 upended life around the globe. Unfortunately for apartment shoppers, rental prices are still quite expensive. The national media cost of rent is now $1,937, according to Rent, which tracks listings and rental data. The last time it was below that level was February 2022, when it was $1,904. In January, 2020, the month when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the first COVID-19 case in the U.S., the median rental price was $1,585.
https://cbs4indy.com/news/national-world/heres-how-much-apartment-space-1500-buys-in-the-top-us-cities-report/
2023-05-14 15:47:34
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https://cbs4indy.com/news/national-world/heres-how-much-apartment-space-1500-buys-in-the-top-us-cities-report/
ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia (AP) — Protesters angered by allegations of corruption linked to Mongolia’s coal trade with China tried to force their way into the State Palace in the capital, demanding dismissals of officials involved in the scandal. The U.S. Embassy in Ulaanbaatar issued an alert Monday saying that several hundred protesters had gathered in the freezing cold in the city’s Sukhbaatar Square during the weekend and marched to the presidential residence. The demonstrators chanted and sang, stamping their feet to stay warm. They were demanding that the government hold officials accountable for the alleged theft of 385,000 tons of coal from stockpiles on Mongolia’s border with China. Most of the demonstrators were college students and others in their 20s and 30s, a few bundled up in traditional thick robes, and some holding up placards. “If you don’t love your country, why be a citizen?” said one. A black board held up by another said, “We want to live with dignity in our country.” “If the citizens rise up, the feast is over!” said another. The allegations center on coal from the Tavan Tolgoi region in the south Gobi desert that is being mined by state-owned Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi and two other companies. Local media reports said ETT, which is listed on Mongolia’s stock exchange, has been placed under state supervision as the government’s Independent Authority Against Corruption investigates. Foreign sales of Mongolia’s vast mineral wealth, coal and other resources are a perennial source of conflict for the country, where nearly one in three people live in poverty. Adding to the frustrations, the pandemic has left many Mongolians struggling to make ends meet, with inflation topping 15%. Mongolia transitioned to democracy in the early 1990s after six decades of communism. Peaceful protests are not uncommon in Ulanbaatar, where about half of Mongolia’s 3.2 million people live. In April, thousands of young protesters demonstrated in Sukhbaatar Square. China is the destination of most of landlocked Mongolia’s exports of coal, cashmere, livestock and other resources. In Beijing, a Foreign Ministry spokesperson who was asked about allegations that coal was stolen for sale inside China said she was unaware of that “specific situation.” “China is a friendly neighbor of Mongolia, and we believe the Mongolian government will properly handle and investigate the matter. The competent Chinese authority will provide necessary assistance as requested by the Mongolian side in accordance with laws and regulations,” Mao said. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
https://wtmj.com/national/2022/12/06/mongolians-protest-alleged-theft-of-coal-sold-to-china/
2022-12-06 14:19:48
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https://wtmj.com/national/2022/12/06/mongolians-protest-alleged-theft-of-coal-sold-to-china/
SHARM EL-SHEIKH (AP) — A handshake in lush Bali is being felt at climate talks thousands of miles away in the Egyptian desert, where lack of progress had a top United Nations official worried. After more than a week of so far fruitless climate talks, negotiators were grasping for something themselves: Hope. It came in the form of a cordial greeting between U.S. President Joe Biden and China’s President Xi Jinping, who met on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Indonesia. Tensions between the world’s two biggest polluters — whose cooperation is essential for any climate deal to work — have cast a shadow over the annual U.N. climate gathering, known as COP27. The Biden-Xi meeting could unfreeze negotiations between the U.S. and China on climate, which Beijing paused in August to protest House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan. At Monday’s meeting, Biden and Xi agreed to “empower key senior officials” on areas of potential cooperation, including tackling climate change — though it was not immediately clear whether that meant formal talks would resume. The two nations’ top climate envoys, John Kerry and Xie Zhenhua, have a long and friendly working relationship that was put on hold by the summer tensions. Li Shuo, a China expert at Greenpeace, said the news from Bali showed Beijing and Washington had found an “offramp” to avoid geopolitics from polluting climate engagement. “This will help calm down tension at COP27,” he said. “Both sides can talk to each other, now they also need to lead.” Despite the handshake, United Nations Environment Programme Director Inger Andersen used the word “worried” six times when talking about the state of climate talks in a half-hour interview with The Associated Press late Monday. “We need to see much, much greater effort now,” Andersen said. “So, yes, I’m worried, concerned, but also absolutely determined that we have to push to get there.” Sameh Shoukry, the Egyptian official chairing the talks, acknowledged that negotiators will need help from ministers now flying to Sharm el-Sheikh in order to get a deal over the line. “There is still a lot of work ahead of us if we are to achieve meaningful and tangible outcomes of which we can be proud,” said Shoukry, who is also Egypt’s foreign minister. “We must now shift gears and complement the technical discussions with more political, high-level engagement.” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, arriving in Bali, said, there was no way to address climate change “without the cooperation of all G-20 members and in particular without the cooperation of the two biggest economies, the United States and China.” But there was worry that fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the ensuing energy and food crises and global inflation, could see the G-20 backtrack on last year’s commitment to addressing climate change, including upholding the 1.5 degree Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) warming limit agreed seven years ago in Paris. “It would clearly be a great disappointment to the majority of countries, the vast majority of countries, to the small island developing states” that insisted on putting the 1.5 goal in the 2015 Paris agreement, Andersen said. “We cannot undo Paris.” Deep divides remain at COP27, where tens of thousands of attendees from nearly 200 countries returned to the sprawling conference zone in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh after a one-day break. Aside from haggling once again over the 1.5-degree target, delegates remained divided on calls for wealthy nations whose industrialization contributed most to global warming to provide more help for poor countries who’ve contributed little to global emissions. This was reflected in the first draft of a crucial agreement released Monday on the issue of ‘loss and damage.’ Poor nations are seeking the creation of a new fund “no later” than November 2024 to provide further financial aid to countries hit by extreme weather, sea-level rise and other devastating effects of global warming. Rich nations including the United States have conceded that they need to provide more aid but made clear they don’t want a new fund, instead citing an existing “mosaic of funding arrangements for responding to loss and damage.” UNEP head Andersen said the talks in Sharm el-Sheikh might clear the path for future pledges, but there still needed to be meaningful and clear progress on a pathway. Some delegates were already talking about the possibility of a walkout by developing nations unless demands for more aid to poor countries are met. “Now rich countries need to play their part,” said Rachel Cleetus, policy director and lead economist at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “So this is going to be the litmus test of success at this COP, at COP27, that we get this loss and damage finance facility agreed here and that it’s up and running in two years,” Cleetus said at a press briefing. Guterres, the U.N. chief, said he was encouraged by some countries’ declarations that they would contribute funds, “but it’s still early to know whether these (loss and damage) objectives will be – or not – reached.” The Group of Seven leading economies launched a new insurance system Monday to provide swift financial aid when nations are hit by devastating effects of climate change. The so-called Global Shield is backed by the V20 group of 58 climate-vulnerable nations and will initially receive more than 200 million euros (dollars) in funding, mostly from Germany. Initial recipients include Bangladesh, Costa Rica, Fiji, Ghana, Pakistan, the Philippines and Senegal. But civil society groups were skeptical, warning that the program should not be used as a way to distract from the much broader effort to get big polluters to pay for the loss and damage they’ve already caused with their greenhouse gases. India made an unexpected proposal over the weekend for this year’s climate talks to end with a call for a phase down of all fossil fuels. The idea is likely to get strong pushback from oil and gas-exporting nations, including the United States, which promotes natural gas as a clean ‘bridge fuel’ to renewables. India was blamed at last year’s climate talks for resisting a call to “phase out” coal. Countries compromised by calling for a vaguer “phase down” instead, which was nevertheless seen as significant because it was the first time a fossil fuel industry was put on notice. The talks are due to wrap up Friday but could extend into the weekend if negotiators need more time to reach an agreement. The U.N.’s top climate official appealed for constructive diplomacy to match the high-flying rhetoric heard during the opening days of the talks. “Let me remind negotiators that people and planet are relying on this process to deliver,” U.N. Climate Secretary Simon Stiell said. “Let’s use our remaining time in Egypt to build the bridges needed to make progress.” ___ Follow AP’s climate and environment coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment ___ Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
https://www.texomashomepage.com/news/ap-climate-confab-heads-into-final-week-warming-goal-uncertain/
2022-11-14 21:06:48
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https://www.texomashomepage.com/news/ap-climate-confab-heads-into-final-week-warming-goal-uncertain/
Johnson, Pili lead No. 13 Utah women past Riverside 92-45 SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Jenna Johnson scored 18 points, Alissa Pili had 15 and No. 13 Utah blitzed UC Riverside 92-45 on Saturday. Dasia Young added 12 for the Utes (10-0), who shot 52%, making 6 of 19 from 3-point range and 14 of 17 from the foul line. Mele Finau had 15 points for the Highlanders (2-7), who shot 29% (17 of 59), made only five free throws and were outrebounded 48-21. Ten Utes scored in the first half that ended with them on top 43-15. They shot 52% and held Riverside to 25%. After the Highlanders hit the opening basket, Utah raced to a 19-6 lead at the end of the first quarter, scoring the last 10 points. The Utes added an 11-0 run in the second quarter. There was another 10-0 run in the third quarter, with Johnson scoring six. All 12 Utes grabbed a rebound, 11 scored and 11 had an assist. Pili had a career-high five assists, matching Ines Viera. Johnson was 8-of-11 shooting, Pili 7 of 10. ___ AP women’s college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25
https://localnews8.com/news/ap-utah/2022/12/17/johnson-pili-lead-no-13-utah-women-past-riverside-92-45/
2022-12-18 02:28:37
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https://localnews8.com/news/ap-utah/2022/12/17/johnson-pili-lead-no-13-utah-women-past-riverside-92-45/
MINEOLA, N.Y. (WPIX) – Richard Cottingham, the imprisoned serial killer and rapist who once claimed he’d killed about 100 women, admitted Monday to five Long Island murders, including one in 1968 and four others from the 1970s. Appearing virtually from South Woods prison in New Jersey, Cottingham, 76, admitted killing five women in Nassau County, New York, four by strangulation. Cottingham, who was dubbed the “Torso Killer” because he dismembered his victims, admitted Monday to killing Diane Cusick outside a Long Island shopping mall in 1968. He was indicted for murder in June after DNA tied him to the rape and strangulation of Cusick, a 23-year-old mother and dance teacher. The woman’s parents found her body in the back seat of her white Plymouth Valiant at the suburban Green Acres Mall after she failed to come home from shopping. Cusick was the mother of a 3-year-old daughter, Darlene, who was present in court Monday. Cottingham also confessed to the 1972 strangulations of Mary Beth Heinz and Laverne Moye three months apart. He said he threw the bodies of both women off a bridge in Rockville Centre, New York. Cottingham also admitted to fatally stabbing Sheila Heiman in 1973 at home in North Woodmere, New York. He admitted to strangling Maritza Rosada Nieves in July 1973. Cottingham has been convicted of a number of murders in New Jersey and in New York. He has claimed he’s responsible for up to 100 homicides, but he’s only been officially linked to a dozen so far. Judge Karen Fink sentenced Cottingham to 25 years to life in prison in connection with Cusick’s death. Cottingham had an agreement with the office of Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly not to be prosecuted for the other four murders.
https://www.kark.com/news/national-news/new-york-serial-killer-richard-cottingham-admits-to-5-more-murders/
2022-12-05 20:35:26
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https://www.kark.com/news/national-news/new-york-serial-killer-richard-cottingham-admits-to-5-more-murders/
In a small town in Chad, climate change, regional conflicts and rising commodity prices have driven shortages, which have been exacerbated by Russia's invasion of Ukraine many thousands of miles away. Copyright 2022 NPR In a small town in Chad, climate change, regional conflicts and rising commodity prices have driven shortages, which have been exacerbated by Russia's invasion of Ukraine many thousands of miles away. Copyright 2022 NPR
https://www.kcbx.org/2022-12-02/remote-areas-of-africa-are-feeling-the-costly-impacts-of-the-war-in-ukraine
2022-12-02 14:37:29
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https://www.kcbx.org/2022-12-02/remote-areas-of-africa-are-feeling-the-costly-impacts-of-the-war-in-ukraine
NEW YORK, March 16, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- WHY: Rosen Law Firm, a global investor rights law firm, reminds purchasers of securities of Match Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: MTCH) between November 3, 2021 and January 31, 2023, both dates inclusive (the "Class Period"), of the important May 5, 2023 lead plaintiff deadline. SO WHAT: If you purchased Match securities during the Class Period you may be entitled to compensation without payment of any out of pocket fees or costs through a contingency fee arrangement. WHAT TO DO NEXT: To join the Match class action, go to https://rosenlegal.com/submit-form/?case_id=12766 or call Phillip Kim, Esq. toll-free at 866-767-3653 or email pkim@rosenlegal.com or cases@rosenlegal.com for information on the class action. A class action lawsuit has already been filed. If you wish to serve as lead plaintiff, you must move the Court no later than May 5, 2023. A lead plaintiff is a representative party acting on behalf of other class members in directing the litigation. WHY ROSEN LAW: We encourage investors to select qualified counsel with a track record of success in leadership roles. Often, firms issuing notices do not have comparable experience, resources or any meaningful peer recognition. Many of these firms do not actually litigate securities class actions, but are merely middlemen that refer clients or partner with law firms that actually litigate the cases. Be wise in selecting counsel. The Rosen Law Firm represents investors throughout the globe, concentrating its practice in securities class actions and shareholder derivative litigation. Rosen Law Firm has achieved the largest ever securities class action settlement against a Chinese Company. Rosen Law Firm was Ranked No. 1 by ISS Securities Class Action Services for number of securities class action settlements in 2017. The firm has been ranked in the top 4 each year since 2013 and has recovered hundreds of millions of dollars for investors. In 2019 alone the firm secured over $438 million for investors. In 2020, founding partner Laurence Rosen was named by law360 as a Titan of Plaintiffs' Bar. Many of the firm's attorneys have been recognized by Lawdragon and Super Lawyers. DETAILS OF THE CASE: According to the lawsuit, defendants throughout the Class Period made false and/or misleading statements and/or failed to disclose that: (1) the Company was not effectively executing on Tinder's new product initiatives; (2) as a result, the Company was not on track to deliver Tinder's planned product initiatives in 2022; and (3) therefore, defendants' statements about the Company's business, operations, and prospects lacked a reasonable basis. When the true details entered the market, the lawsuit claims that investors suffered damages. To join the Match class action, go to https://rosenlegal.com/submit-form/?case_id=12766 or call Phillip Kim, Esq. toll-free at 866-767-3653 or email pkim@rosenlegal.com or cases@rosenlegal.com for information on the class action. No Class Has Been Certified. Until a class is certified, you are not represented by counsel unless you retain one. You may select counsel of your choice. You may also remain an absent class member and do nothing at this point. An investor's ability to share in any potential future recovery is not dependent upon serving as lead plaintiff. Follow us for updates on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-rosen-law-firm, on Twitter: https://twitter.com/rosen_firm or on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rosenlawfirm/. Attorney Advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Contact Information: Laurence Rosen, Esq. Phillip Kim, Esq. The Rosen Law Firm, P.A. 275 Madison Avenue, 40th Floor New York, NY 10016 Tel: (212) 686-1060 Toll Free: (866) 767-3653 Fax: (212) 202-3827 lrosen@rosenlegal.com pkim@rosenlegal.com cases@rosenlegal.com www.rosenlegal.com View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Rosen Law Firm, P.A.
https://www.wbrc.com/prnewswire/2023/03/17/rosen-leading-law-firm-encourages-match-group-inc-investors-with-losses-over-100k-secure-counsel-before-important-deadline-securities-class-action-mtch/
2023-03-17 02:48:14
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https://www.wbrc.com/prnewswire/2023/03/17/rosen-leading-law-firm-encourages-match-group-inc-investors-with-losses-over-100k-secure-counsel-before-important-deadline-securities-class-action-mtch/
Alabama expands ban on trans athletes to include college teams MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey on Tuesday signed legislation that will ban transgender women from playing on female sports teams in college, becoming the latest state to place restrictions on transgender athletes. The legislation expands the state’s existing 2021 ban on transgender athletes on K-12 sports teams to include college teams. Students assigned one sex at birth would be prohibited from playing under a different gender identity, even after undergoing hormone treatment. “Look, if you are a biological male, you are not going to be competing in women’s and girls’ sports in Alabama. It’s about fairness, plain and simple,” Ivey said in a statement. The bill is part of a wave of restrictions on transgender people being pushed in conservative states. At least 20 states have now imposed restrictions on transgender athletes at the K-12 or collegiate level, or both. While supporters say transgender women have an unfair advantage in competition, opponents say the bills are about shaming transgender people and are rooted in discrimination and politics. Carmarion D. Anderson-Harvey, Alabama state director of the Human Rights Campaign, an advocacy group for LGBTQ+ people, said the legislation is part of a “systematic attack against LGBTQ+ people” in Alabama and elsewhere. “In just two years, she and extremist lawmakers in Alabama have passed four anti-LGBTQ+ bills. From dictating what bathrooms we can use to blatantly ignoring the actual problems in women’s sports, these politicians are making Alabama an increasingly hostile place for transgender people and the LGBTQ+ community as a whole,” Anderson-Harvey said. Alabama lawmakers approved bills restricting bathroom and locker room usage and a ban on the use of gender-affirming hormones and puberty blockers to treat transgender minors. A judge has temporarily blocked the medication ban from taking effect while a court challenge goes forward. The latest sports bill was approved with lopsided support in both chambers, passing 26-4 in the Alabama Senate and 83-5 in the House of Representatives. More than a dozen House members abstained from the vote. Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
https://www.wistv.com/2023/05/30/alabama-expands-ban-trans-athletes-include-college-teams/
2023-05-30 22:35:12
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https://www.wistv.com/2023/05/30/alabama-expands-ban-trans-athletes-include-college-teams/
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — The head of Iran’s nuclear program insisted Wednesday that his government would cooperate with international inspectors on any “new activities.” His statement followed an exclusive Associated Press report about Tehran’s new underground tunnel system near a nuclear enrichment facility. The AP outlined this week how deep inside a mountain, the new tunnels near the Natanz facility are likely beyond the range of a last-ditch U.S. weapon designed to destroy such sites. The report sparked wider conversation across the Middle East about the construction, with Israel’s national security adviser saying Tuesday the site would not be immune from attack even if its depth put it out of range of American airstrikes. Speaking to journalists Wednesday after a Cabinet meeting, Mohammad Eslami of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran sought to describe the interest in the site as a case of Israel feeling pressured. “The Islamic Republic of Iran is working under the IAEA safeguards, and whenever wants to start new activities, it will coordinate with the IAEA, and acts accordingly,” Eslami said, using an acronym for the International Atomic Energy Agency. The IAEA did not respond to questions from the AP about the construction at Natanz, about 225 kilometers (140 miles) south of Tehran. Natanz has been a point of international concern since its existence became known two decades ago. Satellite photographs of the piles of dirt from the digging and experts who spoke to the AP suggest the new tunnels will be between between 80 meters (260 feet) and 100 meters (328 feet) deep. Such underground facilities led the U.S. to create the GBU-57 bomb, which can plow through at least 60 meters (200 feet) of earth before detonating, according to the American military. U.S. officials reportedly have discussed using two such bombs in succession to ensure a site is destroyed. It is not clear that such a one-two punch would damage a facility as deep as the one at Natanz. With such bombs potentially off the table, the U.S. and its allies are left with fewer options to target the site. If diplomacy remains stalled as it has for months over Iran’s tattered nuclear deal, sabotage attacks may resume. Iran says the new construction will replace an above-ground centrifuge manufacturing center at Natanz struck by an explosion and fire in July 2020. Tehran blamed the incident on Israel, long suspected of running sabotage campaigns against its program. ___ Associated Press writer Amir Vahdat in Tehran, Iran, contributed to this report. ___ Follow Jon Gambrell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP.
https://www.cenlanow.com/international/ap-international/ap-after-ap-report-irans-nuclear-chief-says-tehran-to-cooperate-with-inspectors-on-new-activities/
2023-05-25 05:48:18
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https://www.cenlanow.com/international/ap-international/ap-after-ap-report-irans-nuclear-chief-says-tehran-to-cooperate-with-inspectors-on-new-activities/
Esteemed oncologist to advise on imaging efforts SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., Sept. 7, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Imaging Endpoints (IE) announced today that Dr. Antonio Fojo was chosen to join their Scientific Advisory Board, a global group of leading medical professionals appointed to provide strategic insight and imaging-related expertise for optimizing the opportunity to demonstrate efficacy in clinical trials. Dr. Fojo is currently a professor of medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and the co-director of the Carling Adrenal Surgery Center, the world's largest endocrine surgery center. Known for his research toward reversing cancer chemotherapy resistance, Dr. Fojo's work in tumor growth kinetics (TGK) has been instrumental in advancing the field. His work has shown how a drug's anticancer properties are better demonstrated by tumor growth rate and fraction of tumor killed (as compared to indirect measures such as response rate or progression-free survival). Dr. Fojo's expertise in adrenocortical cancer, thyroid cancer, and neuroendocrine malignancies — coupled with his involvement in the design, management, and interpretation of clinical trials — makes him particularly passionate about developing additional therapies and expanding treatment options for patients with these cancers. Dr. Fojo is also particularly interested in the molecular basis of drug resistance and has been integral to several important discoveries in the matter, including the identification of molecular events shown to be influential in the treatment of ovarian cancer. Additionally, as a Principal Investigator for the Medicine Branch of the National Cancer Institute, he established a successful translational clinical program to develop therapeutic treatments for endocrine and neuroendocrine cancers. Dr. Fojo's new board colleagues are an acclaimed group of clinical experts, including Daniel Von Hoff, M.D., F.A.C.P.; David Sidransky, M.D.; Elliot Fishman, M.D.; Bruce Cheson, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.A.S.; Manuel Hidalgo, M.D., PhD.; and Axel Hanauske, M.D., Ph.D., MBA. The Scientific Advisory Board leverages their expertise to advise Imaging Endpoints on the imaging design for global clinical trials wherein IE is providing its Imaging CRO services. For more information on the Imaging Endpoints Scientific Advisory Board, visit https://imagingendpoints.com/meet-our-team/scientific-advisory-board/ IE team will be in Paris for ESMO 2022! Schedule a time to meet us at ESMO from Sept. 9th-12th. Imaging Endpoints (IE) is one of the largest iCROs globally, and the largest focused in oncology. IE is passionately dedicated to its vision to Connect Imaging to the Cure. Every day, IE teams are advancing imaging science, technology, and services to bring curative technologies to humankind. Having supported many of the most impactful new drug approvals in oncology, IE's experience spans the customization of imaging to facilitate regulatory approval in hundreds of trials across all phases of development. IE also provides additional data to support trial efficacy by integrating advanced imaging technologies such as CD8 imaging, tumor growth kinetics, radiomics, and artificial intelligence — areas in which over fifty peer-reviewed publications have established the company as the industry leader. Imaging Endpoints is headquartered in Scottsdale, AZ, with offices in Cambridge, MA; London, UK; Leiden, Netherlands; Basel, Switzerland; Hyderabad, India and Shanghai, China. IE is an affiliate of HonorHealth, one of the largest healthcare systems nationally, and an affiliate of Southwest Medical Imaging, Ltd. (SMIL/RadPartners), part of the largest private radiology group in the U.S. Sam Lofland - slofland@imagingendpoints.com. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Imaging Endpoints
https://www.kxii.com/prnewswire/2022/09/07/dr-antonio-fojo-joins-imaging-endpoints-scientific-advisory-board/
2022-09-07 13:22:04
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https://www.kxii.com/prnewswire/2022/09/07/dr-antonio-fojo-joins-imaging-endpoints-scientific-advisory-board/
FORT WORTH, Texas — Police with the Eagle Mountain-Saginaw Independent School District are investigating incidents involving racist graffiti found at two schools on Monday. According to a letter sent to parents from school officials, racist messages were found in the courtyard area of Chisholm Trail High School and in the walkway in front of Ed Willkie Middle School. Both schools are located in northwest Fort Worth, but they are part of the Eagle Mountain-Saginaw school district. "This act of vandalism alone is disturbing; however, the content of the graffiti is even more disappointing with references demeaning several different ethnic groups of people," the letter from school officials stated. The letter to Chisholm Trail parents also stated one of the messages contained a threat but that district police determined it wasn't credible. In images posted on social media, racists messages could be seen written on the ground near the schools and even on a brick wall. Crews quickly cleaned up the graffiti on Monday morning, according to the district. Eagle Mountain-Saginaw school district police are now investigating the source of the vandalism and officers are reviewing surveillance cameras covering areas of the campuses. "Those found to be responsible will be arrested and face legal consequences," the letter stated. "Part of what makes our community great is our diversity. We will not tolerate anything that makes our campus uncomfortable for any child." Anyone who may have information on the vandalism is urged to contact the district through the Let's Talk button on the website or report details to Crime Stopper or Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD police at 817-847-2999. More coverage from WFAA:
https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/local/racist-graffiti-texas-chisholm-trail-high-school-ed-willkie-middle-eagle-mountain-saginaw-isd/287-9848e6ad-fc9c-4039-9989-26ad46dc5685
2023-02-28 13:31:13
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https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/local/racist-graffiti-texas-chisholm-trail-high-school-ed-willkie-middle-eagle-mountain-saginaw-isd/287-9848e6ad-fc9c-4039-9989-26ad46dc5685
Family looking for man who pulled son from burning car BATESVILLE, Ark. (KAIT/Gray News) - A family from Arkansas is searching for a man who saved their son’s life. Randy Seale’s son was involved in a significant three-car accident on Highway 167 north of Batesville, Arkansas, last Monday. The car his son was in started smoking and eventually caught fire, and had it not been for “Steve from Texas,” the situation could’ve ended much worse. Seale said that morning began like any other. “I got up on Monday morning and was scrolling through newsfeeds like I normally do. Just a regular Monday morning,” he said. “All of a sudden, I get a notification from Life360 that my son had a sudden stop. You pray that it’s, ‘OK, he dropped his phone.’ You don’t really want to think the worst, but sometimes that happens.” Then, just a few moments after the Life360 notification, Seale’s wife, Summer, received a call from their son. “My wife gets a phone call from my son’s phone, and it’s a gentleman,” Seale said. “We can hear my son Dyllan in the background. She puts him on speaker, and she can hear him in the background. She’s not necessarily talking to him, she’s talking to a gentleman named Steve, and he’s asking us questions about who we are and what happened.” Seale explained he wanted to thank the man and possibly even give him a hug for his heroic actions. “If it wasn’t for this man named Steve, I don’t necessarily think my son would be with me today,” he said. The family is asking anyone who knows who the man may be to email Randy.Seale@ARUMC.org. Copyright 2022 KAIT via Gray Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
https://www.wibw.com/2022/10/26/family-looking-man-who-pulled-son-burning-car/
2022-10-26 01:27:00
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https://www.wibw.com/2022/10/26/family-looking-man-who-pulled-son-burning-car/
Updated June 2, 2023 at 11:36 PM ET NEW DELHI — Two passenger trains derailed Friday in India, killing more than 200 people and trapping hundreds of others inside more than a dozen damaged rail cars, officials said. The accident that happened about 220 kilometers (137 miles) southwest of Kolkata created a chaotic scene of twisted wreckage and desperate rescuers as teams tried to free passengers and recover bodies. The cause was under investigation. About 900 people were injured in the accident, P.K. Jena, the top bureaucrat in the eastern state of Odisha, said in a tweet. Ten to 12 coaches of one train derailed, and debris from some of the mangled coaches fell onto a nearby track, said Amitabh Sharma, a railroad ministry spokesperson. The debris was hit by another passenger train coming from the opposite direction, and up to three coaches of the second train also derailed, Sharma said. The Press Trust reported that a third train carrying freight was also involved, but there was no immediate confirmation from railroad authorities. The Press Trust report said some of the derailed passenger coaches hit cars from the freight train. The death toll rose steadily throughout the night. As dawn approached on Saturday, Jena said that at least 233 people were dead. Passengers describe the scene In the aftermath, television images showed rescuers climbing atop the wreckage to break open doors and windows and using cutting torches to free survivors. Officials said 1,200 rescuers worked with 115 ambulances, 50 buses and 45 mobile health units through the night at the accident site. Villagers said they rushed to the site to evacuate people after hearing a loud sound created by the train coaches going off the tracks. "The local people really went out on a limb to help us. They not only helped in pulling out people, but retrieved our luggage and got us water," PTI cited Rupam Banerjee, a survivor, as saying. Passenger Vandana Kaleda said that she "found people falling on each other" as her coach shook violently and veered off the tracks. "As I stepped out of the washroom, suddenly the train tilted. I lost my balance. ... Everything went topsy turvy. People started falling on each other and I was shocked and could not understand what happened. My mind stopped working," she said, adding she was lucky to survive. Another survivor who did not give his name said he was sleeping when the impact woke him up. He said he saw other passengers with broken limbs and disfigured faces. The Press Trust said the derailed Coromandel Express was traveling from Howrah in West Bengal state to Chennai, the capital of southern Tamil Nadu state. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said his thoughts were with the bereaved families. "May the injured recover soon," tweeted Modi, who said he had spoken to the railway minister and that "all possible assistance" was being offered. Officials announced a day of mourning on Saturday in the state. Hundreds of railway accidents happen in India every year Despite government efforts to improve rail safety, several hundred accidents occur every year on India's railways, the largest train network under one management in the world. In August 1995, two trains collided near New Delhi, killing 358 people in one of the worst train accidents in India's history. In 2016, a passenger train slid off the tracks between the cities of Indore and Patna, killing 146 people. Most train accidents are blamed on human error or outdated signaling equipment. More than 12 million people ride 14,000 trains across India every day, traveling on 64,000 kilometers (40,000 miles) of track. Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
https://www.wbaa.org/2023-06-02/more-than-200-people-are-dead-and-900-hurt-after-2-trains-derail-in-india
2023-06-03 04:22:49
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https://www.wbaa.org/2023-06-02/more-than-200-people-are-dead-and-900-hurt-after-2-trains-derail-in-india
LAS VEGAS (AP) — There are just some tickets that are hard to get in Las Vegas. Like Adele, for example. Or Garth Brooks. Or U2, which starts a residency there this fall. And now, add Wemby to that list. Victor Wembanyama’s debut at NBA Summer League is Friday night — and it’s sold out. All 17,500 tickets that were available for Day 1 of the 11-day series of games on the campus of UNLV were gone by sometime Wednesday, largely because of the debut of the 7-foot-3 rookie who will be playing his first game in a San Antonio Spurs uniform. “I can’t wait. Can’t wait,” Wembanyama said Thursday, after practice in Las Vegas with Spurs coach Gregg Popovich among those in the gym. “The practices lately have been really intense. I made a little pause in basketball with the draft and stuff, couldn’t really practice. I’m getting back in shape and I can’t wait. I’m having so much fun.” The plan, as of now: He’ll play “at least one or two games” in Vegas, Wembanyama said. That means he’ll play Friday against Charlotte (and No. 2 pick Brandon Miller) and likely again Sunday against Portland (and No. 3 pick Scoot Henderson). He’s got appearances to make as well — Wembanyama is one of the headline attractions at the inaugural NBA Con event that starts Friday; he’ll be part of the Saturday unveiling of the new in-season tournament alongside Commissioner Adam Silver, and he’ll have an on-stage conversation with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in a session called “Exploring the Evolution of Basketball.” Welcome to the NBA, Wemby. People have been waiting. “I just realize more and more how lucky I am to be in this situation,” Wembanyama said. “I’m just happy to be here. Enjoying the moment.” Tickets aren’t just gone — this is only the fifth sellout of Summer League in Las Vegas, the NBA said — but they’re also soaring on the secondary resale markets. Vivid Seats, a resale ticket marketplace, said its data shows the average cost of a ticket for Friday was $106; that would top its Summer League record of $86 set on opening night in 2019, when Zion Williamson made his debut for the New Orleans Pelicans. Spurs summer coach Matt Nielsen hadn’t heard that Friday was sold out; he was told after San Antonio finished its two-game stay at the California Classic summer league in Sacramento — Wembanyama wasn’t part of those games — before flying to Las Vegas on Wednesday night. “It’s probably not the biggest surprise,” Nielsen said. The growth of Summer League in Las Vegas is well-chronicled. The inaugural event in 2004 drew six teams playing a total of 13 games, and it seems as though the spectacle has grown almost annually since. It’s now an unofficial leaguewide meeting for anyone with ties to the NBA; most coaches show up, hundreds of players show up — many will be courtside for Wembanyama’s debut on Friday — and the final days of Summer League this year just happens to coincide with the WNBA All-Star weekend in Las Vegas. “It’s grown tremendously and it’s a bit of basketball magic in a bottle,” said Kelly Flatow, the NBA’s executive vice president of global events. “We liken it to three key ingredients — incredible passion of the rookies, free agents that are all working to get a permanent spot on a team, and incredible energy of the fans. It seems so many fans that come back every year that make this a bit of a pilgrimage. And they visit from not just the U.S. but from all over the world.” That seems especially true this year; NBA data shows that 98% of fans who purchased tickets through NBA Experiences for Summer League live outside of Nevada, and 13% live outside the U.S. Wembanyama was asked what advice Popovich is giving him. “Being myself,” Wembanyama said. “No one can worry about me not being myself. Coming into a new environment it’s important not to lose that sense of just being myself, having fun and experiencing it. This is the time to experience stuff on the court — because when the season starts, it’s about winning.” This is the second time Wembanyama has arrived to play to great fanfare in Las Vegas. His French team had a pair of exhibitions last fall against the G League Ignite — a team that featured Henderson. The success of those games led to the Ignite booking another series for this fall against the Perth Wildcats. All 30 NBA teams are represented, and each will play four games before a four-team playoff bracket is set. The 26 teams that don’t make the playoffs will play a fifth game on July 15 or 16 before leaving Las Vegas; the four playoff teams will play a single-elimination tournament with semifinals on July 16 and culminating with a championship game on July 17. As has been the case many times in the past, Summer League provides the NBA with a chance to experiment with new rules before they get fully adopted. This year, coaches will get a second challenge if their first one is successful, and an in-game flopping penalty — one free throw and possession for the other team if a flop is called — will also be tried out. ___ AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.cbs42.com/sports/ap-wembymania-set-to-hit-las-vegas-as-spurs-rookie-cant-wait-for-his-nba-debut-at-summer-league/
2023-07-07 06:12:31
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https://www.cbs42.com/sports/ap-wembymania-set-to-hit-las-vegas-as-spurs-rookie-cant-wait-for-his-nba-debut-at-summer-league/
The Biden administration is again making some free COVID-19 tests available to all U.S. households as it unveils its contingency plans for potential coronavirus surges this winter. After a three-month hiatus, the administration is making four rapid virus tests available per household through covidtests.gov starting Thursday. COVID-19 cases have shown a marked increase after the Thanksgiving holiday, and further increases are projected from indoor gathering and travel around Christmas and New Year’s. The administration is putting personnel and equipment on standby should they be needed to help overwhelmed hospitals and nursing homes, as was necessary in earlier waves of the virus. So far, there have been no requests for assistance, but surge teams, ventilators and personal protective equipment are ready, the White House said. The Biden administration is also urging states and local governments to do more to encourage people to get the updated bivalent COVID-19 vaccines, which scientists say are more effective at protecting against serious illness and death from the currently circulating variants. The administration is reiterating best practices to nursing homes and long-term care facilities for virus prevention and treatment and is urging administrators as well as governments to encourage vulnerable populations to get the new shots. The planning comes as the administration has struggled to persuade most Americans to get the updated boosters as cases and deaths have declined from pandemic highs and most people have embraced a return to most of their pre-pandemic activities. A White House official said the new tests would come from the national stockpile, which still has reserves after the administration shut off the at-home testing program in September. New tests would be procured to replace tests distributed over the coming weeks under existing funding authorities. The Biden administration is still asking Congress for billions of dollars in additional funding for the virus response.
https://www.miamitimesonline.com/news/world_national/white-house-reveals-winter-covid-19-plans/article_c01810ec-80ab-11ed-bc91-df7605a79052.html
2022-12-21 09:06:49
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https://www.miamitimesonline.com/news/world_national/white-house-reveals-winter-covid-19-plans/article_c01810ec-80ab-11ed-bc91-df7605a79052.html
LOS ANGELES — A California man has been found guilty of illegally importing an ancient mosaic from Syria, federal prosecutors said. Mohamad Yassin Alcharihi, 56, of Palmdale, was convicted by a jury Wednesday on one count of “entry of falsely classified goods,” the U.S. attorney's office said in a news release. The mosaic, which depicts a tale from mythology in which Hercules rescues Prometheus, dates to the Roman Empire, prosecutors said. Authorities believe it was looted from war-torn Syria. According to prosecutors, Alcharihi purchased the mosaic for $12,000 and falsely classified its value and quality when it was imported through the Port of Long Beach, California. It arrived as part of a container shipment from Turkey that was declared as ceramic tiles worth less than $600. The approximately 2,000-pound (907-kilogram) mosaic was trucked to Alcharihi's home, where federal agents seized it from his garage in 2016. Alcharihi had paid $40,000 to restore the mosaic and a government appraisal expert valued it at $450,000, the U.S. attorney’s office said. Alcharihi faces up to two years in prison. A sentencing hearing was scheduled for Aug. 31.
https://www.abc10.com/article/news/local/california/california-man-convicted-illegally-importing-an-ancient-mosaic-syria/103-78bf6b6c-8137-4dc6-99b9-91aef9ff1254
2023-06-22 23:28:58
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https://www.abc10.com/article/news/local/california/california-man-convicted-illegally-importing-an-ancient-mosaic-syria/103-78bf6b6c-8137-4dc6-99b9-91aef9ff1254
New biotech trait targeted at soybean nematode resistance to combine with leading herbicide tolerance to help soybean farmers optimize yield potential INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. and RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. and WEST POINT, Iowa, June 29, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Corteva Agriscience, BASF and MS Technologies™ today announced they have entered into a mutually beneficial trait licensing agreement to develop next-generation Enlist E3® soybeans with the nematode resistant soybean (NRS) trait for farmers in the United States and Canada. As part of this agreement, Corteva and MS Technologies have licensed the Enlist E3 soybean trait to BASF for development with the NRS trait in BASF germplasm. BASF has licensed its NRS trait to Corteva and MS Technologies for use in Enlist E3 soybeans. The three companies anticipate commercialization of Enlist E3 soybean varieties containing the NRS trait in the late 2020s, pending applicable regulatory reviews and completion of field testing. The new NRS trait is expected to provide unprecedented protection against nematode pests in soybeans, including soybean cyst nematode (SCN). A common parasite in North America, SCN accounts for more than $1 billion1 in economic losses for U.S. farmers each year. The NRS trait provides yield protection above and beyond the current industry standard native SCN resistance traits, including PI88788 and Peking, as well as protection against some of the most economically important nematode species for soybean farmers beyond North America, including Pratylenchus brachyurus2. "Our nematode resistant soybean trait will be the first commercially available biotechnology trait developed to control nematodes," said Linda Trolinder, Senior Vice President of BASF Seeds and Traits R&D. "BASF is in its 5th year of advanced field testing the NRS trait in the U.S. and in our trials, it has demonstrated an average 8% yield benefit above today's SCN-resistant varieties." The Enlist® weed control system is an industry-leading system for soybeans, corn and cotton. Enlist E3 soybeans are tolerant to 2,4-D choline, glyphosate and glufosinate herbicides, giving farmers additional options to manage resistant and hard-to-control weeds. "Farmers have embraced the Enlist E3 soybean trait, which offers maximum flexibility among the industry's various weed-control systems," said Tim Glenn, Executive Vice President, Seed Business Unit, Corteva Agriscience. "The addition of the NRS trait to Enlist E3 soybeans is a logical next step for Corteva. Offering both trait technologies together will provide soybean farmers with additional functionality for pest management." The Enlist E3 soybean trait is jointly developed and owned by Corteva and MS Technologies and was commercialized in 2019. "We are pleased to see the technology fit various growing environments. The agreement between MS Technologies, BASF and Corteva enables access of Enlist E3 soybeans to more farmers in the United States and Canada," noted Joseph Merschman, President of MS Technologies. "We are excited to be working toward a new, sustainable option for farmers who want to manage weeds and nematodes in high-performing soybean varieties." Terms of the agreement were not disclosed. Corteva, Inc. (NYSE: CTVA) is a publicly traded, global pure-play agriculture company that combines industry-leading innovation, high-touch customer engagement and operational execution to profitably deliver solutions for the world's most pressing agriculture challenges. Corteva generates advantaged market preference through its unique distribution strategy, together with its balanced and globally diverse mix of seed, crop protection, and digital products and services. With some of the most recognized brands in agriculture and a technology pipeline well positioned to drive growth, the company is committed to maximizing productivity for farmers, while working with stakeholders throughout the food system as it fulfills its promise to enrich the lives of those who produce and those who consume, ensuring progress for generations to come. More information can be found at www.corteva.com. Follow Corteva on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Twitter, and YouTube. Farming is fundamental to provide enough healthy and affordable food for a rapidly growing population while reducing environmental impacts. Working with partners and agricultural experts and by integrating sustainability criteria into all business decisions, we help farmers to create a positive impact on sustainable agriculture. That's why we invest in a strong R&D pipeline, connecting innovative thinking with practical action in the field. Our portfolio comprises seeds and specifically selected plant traits, chemical and biological crop protection, solutions for soil management, plant health, pest control and digital farming. With expert teams in the lab, field, office and in production, we strive to find the right balance for success – for farmers, agriculture and future generations. In 2021, our division generated sales of €8.2 billion. For more information, please visit www.agriculture.basf.com or any of our social media channels. MS Technologies™ LLC is a leading trait, technology and soybean genetics provider. MS Technologies features a portfolio of in-house traits, as well as wide access to other traits and technologies through collaborative agreements with other parties. For more information on MS Technologies, visit our website at www.mstechseed.com. This communication contains certain estimates and forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, which are intended to be covered by the safe harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, and may be identified by their use of words like "plans," "expects," "will," "anticipates," "believes," "intends," "projects," "estimates" or other words of similar meaning. All statements that address expectations or projections about the future, including statements about Corteva's regulatory approvals, product development and performance are forward-looking statements. Corteva disclaims and does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement or other estimate, except as required by applicable law. A detailed discussion of some of the significant risks and uncertainties which may cause results and events to differ materially from such forward-looking statements or other estimates is included in the "Risk Factors" section of Corteva's Annual Report on Form 10-K, as modified by subsequent reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K. This communication contains forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current estimates and projections of BASF and currently available information. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of the future developments and results outlined therein. These are dependent on a number of factors; they involve various risks and uncertainties; and they are based on assumptions that may not prove to be accurate. Such risk factors include those discussed in Opportunities and Risks in BASF's annual report 2021. We do not assume any obligation to update the forward-looking statements contained in this report above and beyond the legal requirements. The transgenic soybean event in Enlist E3® soybeans is jointly developed and owned by Corteva Agriscience and M.S. Technologies, L.L.C. ™ ® ℠ Trademarks and service marks of Corteva Agriscience and its affiliated companies. 1 Bandara AY, Weerasooriya DK, Bradley CA, Allen TW, Esker PD. 2020. Dissecting the economic impact of soybean diseases in the United States over two decades. PLoS ONE 15(4): e0231141. https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0231141. Accessed June 15, 2022. 2 Based on BASF field trial data. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Corteva, Inc.
https://www.wistv.com/prnewswire/2022/06/29/corteva-agriscience-basf-ms-technologies-sign-agreement-bring-industry-first-soybean-trait-stack-market-united-states-canada/
2022-06-29 12:24:16
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https://www.wistv.com/prnewswire/2022/06/29/corteva-agriscience-basf-ms-technologies-sign-agreement-bring-industry-first-soybean-trait-stack-market-united-states-canada/
WATERBURY, Conn. (AP) — Infowars’ revenues and website viewership spiked around the time of one of Alex Jones’ shows in 2014 when he talked about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting being a hoax, according to documents shown to a jury Thursday. Jones and his Free Speech Systems company are on trial in Connecticut in a lawsuit brought by Sandy Hook families over his spreading the hoax lies. Jones has already been found liable for damages to the families, and the six-member jury will be deciding how much he and his company should pay the families. The shooting in December 2012 in Newtown, Connecticut, killed 20 first- graders and six educators. Christopher Mattei, a lawyer for the families, showed an internal Infowars documents detailing the revenue and website-visit spikes around the time of an article on Sept. 24, 2014, on the Infowars website that said no one died at Sandy Hook. The next day, Jones talked about the article on his show. Revenues to the Infowars online store, which sells nutritional supplements, clothing and other items, increased from $48,000 on Sept. 24 to more than $230,000 on Sept. 25, according to the documents. Total user sessions on the Infowars website, meanwhile, increased from about 543,000 on Sept. 23 to about 1 million on Sept. 24, the documents showed. The data was part of the families’ case claiming Jones spread lies about the shooting and profited from them, while causing emotional distress to the families. An FBI agent who responded to the school shooting and relatives of eight children and adults killed in the massacre are part of the lawsuit against Jones. Last month, a jury in Texas awarded the parents of another slain Sandy Hook child nearly $50 million in a similar lawsuit against Jones and his company. Mattei on Thursday questioned Brittany Paz, a Connecticut lawyer hired by Jones to testify about his companies, about the financial and website analytics documents. He also asked her about company emails and videos from Infowars that show Jones and a guest claiming the massacre was staged. Mattei, quoting Jones, said: “’Folks, they staged Aurora, they staged Sandy Hook, the evidence is overwhelming.’ Do you remember that?” “I do remember that, yes,” Paz replied. On Wednesday, Paz acknowledged that Jones’ show, website and social media platforms spread falsehoods about the school shooting. Paz also said Jones did not check the qualifications of a guest on his show in 2014 —- a conspiracy theorist who claimed to be a school security expert who had investigating the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado — as Jones boasted of his credentials. Website traffic data reports run by Infowars employees and presented at the trial also show Jones’ audience ballooned in the years after the shooting. By 2016, his show aired on 150 affiliate radio stations, and the Infowars website got 40 million page views a month. Paz testified that she believes Jones and his companies have made at least $100 million in the decade since the massacre and Jones is now worth millions of dollars. But she could not answer several questions about Jones’ businesses by Mattei, saying she had not received some documents from the companies and could not recall other information. Mattei showed Paz internal Infowars emails between employees sharing Google Analytics data. Paz testified Wednesday that she was told by Infowars employees that they didn’t use Google Analytics regularly to track website viewing data. After showing her the emails, Mattei asked if it was still her testimony that Infowars didn’t regularly use Google Analytics. “I don’t know at this point,” she said. The families’ lawsuit claims that Jones trafficked in lies to increase his audience and sales of the nutritional supplements, clothing and other merchandise he sells on the Infowars website and hawks on his web show. He and guests on his show said the shooting was staged with crisis actors as part of gun control efforts. Jones, however, now says he believes the shooting happened, but he insists his comments were protected by free speech rights, which he cannot argue at trial because he has already been found liable for damages. Judges in the Connecticut and Texas cases found Jones liable without trials, as penalties for what they called his repeated failures to turn over documents to the families’ lawyers. On his Infowars show Thursday, Jones called the proceedings in Connecticut “a show trial” and said he expects to be sanctioned by Judge Barbara Bellis when he shows up in the courtroom next week. “She now has to carry out this fraud,” he said. “But across the legal community, people are just saying, ’My God, this is something worthy of Venezuela. This is unbelievable.’” The families say the emotional and psychological harm was profound and persistent. Relatives say they were subjected to social media harassment, death threats, strangers videotaping them and their children, and the surreal pain of being told that they were faking their loss. Jones’ lawyer, Norman Pattis, said in his opening statement Tuesday that any damages should be minimal and claimed the families were exaggerating the harm they say they have suffered. “At what point do we regard him as a crank on the village green, a person we can walk away from if we choose?” Pattis asked. ___ Find AP’s full coverage of the Alex Jones trial at: https://apnews.com/hub/alex-jones
https://www.kxnet.com/news/national-news/ap-infowars-rep-to-return-to-stand-in-sandy-hook-hoax-trial/
2022-09-15 20:23:27
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https://www.kxnet.com/news/national-news/ap-infowars-rep-to-return-to-stand-in-sandy-hook-hoax-trial/
This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 8 DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Powerball jackpot stood at an estimated $825 million grand prize during Saturday night's draw, but it was not immediately known if there was a winner. The winning numbers announced at 11 p.m. Saturday were: 19, 31, 40, 46, 57, 23. The $825 million estimated jackpot is the second largest in Powerball history. Strong ticket sales pushed the estimate up from $800 million on Friday, according to Powerball. If there is no winner, the next drawing could offer an even bigger prize. It has been nearly three months since anyone hit all six numbers and won the lottery game’s top prize, thanks to Powerball’s long odds of one in 292.2 million. The biggest prize in U.S. history was a $1.586 billion Powerball jackpot won by three ticketholders in 2016. Powerball is played in 45 states, as well as Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
https://www.mrt.com/news/article/Powerball-draws-825M-jackpot-numbers-players-17544490.php
2022-10-30 05:22:14
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https://www.mrt.com/news/article/Powerball-draws-825M-jackpot-numbers-players-17544490.php
BEECH MOUNTAIN, N.C. (WJZY) – Somewhere, over the rainbow, way up high … on a North Carolina mountain. The Autumn at Oz Festival is kicking off in North Carolina’s Avery County this September. The “Wizard of Oz”-themed amusement park drops visitors in the center of the Land of Oz – yellow brick road included. There are craft and food vendors, an “immersive theatrical experience,” plus lots of photo opportunities. The park originally opened in June 1970 and was fully operational for about a decade before a fire destroyed two of the Emerald City buildings in 1975. New management was able to get the park up and running again by 1976 – but not for long. The amusement park shut down again in 1980. In the late ’80s, parts of the park had to be demolished because of “excessive vandalism and decay,” Land of Oz North Carolina explains. “However, much of the park was saved including the Gale farmhouse, barn, and most of the yellow brick road.” In 1988, a group of former employees banded together to bring back the Oz experience every year with the Autumn at Oz Festival. For a limited time, the Land of Oz Theme Park will be open to the public on the following days this year: - Sept. 8-10 - Sept. 15-17 - Sept. 22-24 This year’s “Autumn at Oz Festival” marks the park’s 30th anniversary. Tickets go on sale in late June. The exact date has not yet been announced. Officials advise that the land is private property, and those arriving onsite after hours without advanced approval will be considered trespassers.
https://www.wowktv.com/news/u-s-world/wizard-of-oz-park-to-reopen-in-north-carolina/
2023-04-12 14:10:03
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https://www.wowktv.com/news/u-s-world/wizard-of-oz-park-to-reopen-in-north-carolina/
ABILENE, Texas (KTAB/KRBC) – Texas 17-year-old Aiyona Lee said she’s lucky to be alive after what started out as a normal hike quickly changed when she encountered a rattlesnake at Fort Phantom Hill in Abilene Tuesday evening. “I was walking, and I felt something thick that I stepped on, and I heard a little rattle… It wasn’t loud, but it got me,” said Lee. After the snake bit her left ankle, Lee told KTAB she just took off running. But due to the bite, she experienced numbness and fell as her leg stiffened. “It feels like fire, like a knife. It hurts really bad,” Lee described. Lee’s friends immediately knew something was wrong when they heard her scream. Kyle Lackey said he hoped it was a cut from a cactus, but when he got a closer look, he knew she needed to be rushed to the hospital. “She takes one step and runs towards us. We didn’t know what it was. She was screaming, something bit her. I looked at the back and saw two red dots in the back of her ankle, and she started bleeding,” detailed Kyle. Another friend, Kayley Washington, told KTAB that together they were able to carry her out of the field and rush her to the hospital. “We carried her out, we helped her get to the car and everything, and I’m glad he went as fast as he did ’cause we wouldn’t have made it,” Washington praised. Aiyona’s dad, Jerade Lee, said he was thankful for his daughter’s friends’ quick thinking that saved her life. “It was panic at first,” said Jerade Lee. “All I have to say is ‘thanks’ to her friends for carrying her out of the location they were located at, getting her to the car and getting her to the hospital.” The Abilene High School senior is expected to have a full recovery. But due to the extent of the swelling, she’s unsure if she will be able to walk across the stage at graduation. “I’m hoping that I’m able to kinda walk on Saturday,” Lee added. “I highly doubt that I will be able to walk without the crutches.” Regardless of the outcome, her friends said they will cheer her on. Lee now encourages everyone to be aware of their surroundings when outside.
https://www.ksn.com/news/it-feels-like-fire-high-school-senior-survives-rattlesnake-bite-thanks-to-friends/
2023-05-25 20:10:05
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https://www.ksn.com/news/it-feels-like-fire-high-school-senior-survives-rattlesnake-bite-thanks-to-friends/
Olympic committee in talks with 10 potential hosts for 2036 Summer Games Countries interested in hosting the 2036 Olympics include Qatar, Egypt, England, India, Indonesia and more The IOC is in talks with 10 potential candidates to host a future Summer Games, the global group of national Olympic leaders was told Thursday. Interest in hosting the 2036 Olympics has been expressed by officials in countries including Egypt, England, India, Indonesia and Qatar. "We are currently working with 10 interested NOCs and regions across four continents," International Olympic Committee director general Christophe de Kepper said at the Association of National Olympic Committees meeting in Seoul, South Korea. BEIJING OLYMPICS: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT THE 2022 WINTER GAMES That Olympics is the next Summer Games available to be awarded in a mostly secretive process led by IOC officials to avoid both expensive public campaigning and a vote contested by multiple candidates. The system that picked Brisbane as the 2032 host 11 years in advance was introduced after French-led investigations of alleged vote-buying in the 2016 and 2020 Olympics bidding. Those campaigns were won by Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo, respectively. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP De Kepper said the 10 bid projects who he did not identify "are at very different stages and are developing their ambitions according to their own regional or national timelines."
https://www.foxnews.com/sports/olympic-committee-talks-10-potential-hosts-2036-summer-games
2022-10-20 20:55:52
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https://www.foxnews.com/sports/olympic-committee-talks-10-potential-hosts-2036-summer-games
Coming Up on 9News at 6: Sept. 13, 2022 BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) - Here’s what the team is working on for the 6 p.m. newscast on Tuesday, September 13, 2022: Lawmakers gathered today to begin discussions about Louisiana’s tax system. The House Ways and Means Committee held its first meeting to go over broad reforms to the tax system, including the elimination of personal income tax. Chris Rosato was inside the room and explains what happened. CLICK HERE for more. The Baton Rouge Police Department has identified the victims of a fiery, deadly hit-and-run crash on I-110 this morning. Investigators are searching for the other vehicle and driver involved in the crash. Kellie Sanchez has the latest on that investigation. CLICK HERE for more. Gov. John Bel Edwards and a couple of Louisiana health leaders rolled up their sleeves to receive the latest updated COVID-19 booster and a flu shot. Breanne Bizette informs you on why you are encouraged to also get the shots. CLICK HERE for more. More than half of teens and young adults admit to spending too much time on social media, according to the Family Online Safety Institute (FOSI). As a result, experts said it is crucial to regularly check-in to ensure their safety and wellbeing. Rachel DePompa has the story. CLICK HERE for more. Jay Grymes and the 9Storm team encourage you to enjoy the comfortable weather while it lasts. Our chief meteorologist will tell you when to expect the heat and humidity to return. CLICK HERE for more. Click here to report a typo. Copyright 2022 WAFB. All rights reserved.
https://www.wafb.com/2022/09/13/coming-up-9news-6-sept-13-2022/
2022-09-13 22:43:41
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https://www.wafb.com/2022/09/13/coming-up-9news-6-sept-13-2022/
China announced that it had carried out military drills around Taiwan againImage: Gong Yulong/Xinhua/AP Photo/picture alliance PoliticsChina Taiwan: China conducts drills ahead of German MPs arrival 24 minutes ago The team of German lawmakers arrived in Taiwan as defense officials reported the detection of Chinese warplanes. Beijing said it had conducted patrols and combat exercises around Taiwan. https://p.dw.com/p/4Lt5U Advertisement A high-ranking parliamentary delegation from Germany landed in Taiwan for a four day visit on Monday. The team arrived as Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense reported that Chinese warplanes had been detected in it's airspace. On Sunday, the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) announced that it had carried out military drills around Taiwan. Chinese forces had organized "joint combat readiness patrols and actual combat drills" in the sea and airspace around Taiwan, read a statement from the PLA. PLA drills aims to counter "separatist forces" in Taiwan The Chinese military said its exercises were focused on land strikes and sea assaults. Some 57 PLA aircraft and 4 PLA Naval vessels were detected around Taiwan, said a statement by Taiwan's Defense Ministry. "28 of the detected aircraft had crossed the media line of the Taiwan Strait," it said. The aim of China's exercise was to test joint combat abilities and "resolutely counter the provocative actions of external forces and Taiwan independence separatist forces," said the People's Liberation Army's Eastern Theatre Command. This is the second such exercise in less than a month when 43 Chinese aircraft crossed the Taiwan Strait's median line, which is an unofficial buffer between the two regions. German visit a 'sign of solidarity' Chair of Germany's parliamentary defense committee, Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, is leading the German delegation and said that the visit marked a "sign of solidarity" with Taiwan. Strack-Zimmermann added that the delegation will discuss the current "threat situation." German Education Minister Bettina Stark-Watzinger is also scheduled to visit Taipei in spring, which will be the first visit by a member of the German Cabinet in 26 years. On Sunday, the neoliberal Free Democratic Party's (FDP) Johannes Vogel tweeted a photo of himself and his FDP colleague Strack-Zimmermann on the flight to Taiwan. Deputies from the FDP are set to meet with senior political, military and civil society figures in Taiwan. Vogel warned that like Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jingping could also unleash a war. "After Putin comes Xi," he said. "We must take autocrats seriously and literally." German vice chancellor: 'We've made up our mind about China' China became Germany's biggest trading partner in 2016. Highlighting how Germany's dependence on Russia for natural resources before the Ukraine invasion, Strack-Zimmermann warned that "it can only be to our disadvantage to make ourselves dependent economically on autocratic states." Germany's visit set to anger China China, which views the democratically-governed Taiwan as its own territory, has been carrying out regular military incursions into Taiwan's air and maritime space for the past three years. President Xi has reacted with growing anger to the flurry of visits by Western politicians to the island and opposed any official exchange with Taiwan. Earlier this year, in response to rising tensions with China in the Indo-Pacific region, Germany sent 13 military aircraft to joint exercises in Australia. In August last year, a German frigate, Bayern, set sail for the Indo-Pacific for the first time in 20 years.
https://www.dw.com/en/taiwan-china-conducts-drills-ahead-of-german-delegations-visit/a-64321992
2023-01-09 06:52:38
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https://www.dw.com/en/taiwan-china-conducts-drills-ahead-of-german-delegations-visit/a-64321992
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Jan. 16, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Century Casinos, Inc. (the "Company") (Nasdaq Capital Market®: CNTY) announced today that it will attend the Jefferies 12th Annual Winter Restaurant, Foodservice, Gaming, Lodging & Leisure Summit in Bachelor Gulch in Avon, Colorado, USA, on January 23, 2023. Peter Hoetzinger, President & Co CEO, will present the Company and hold one-on-one meetings with selected institutional investors. The current presentation will be available at the Company's website under https://www.cnty.com/investor/presentations/ on January 23, 2023. Century Casinos, Inc. is a casino entertainment company. The Company owns and operates Century Casino & Hotels in Cripple Creek and Central City, Colorado, and in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; the Century Casino in Cape Girardeau and Caruthersville, Missouri, and in St. Albert, Alberta, Canada; Mountaineer Casino, Racetrack & Resort in New Cumberland, West Virginia; and the Century Mile Racetrack and Casino in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Through its Austrian subsidiary, Century Resorts Management GmbH, the Company holds a 66.6% ownership interest in Casinos Poland Ltd., the owner and operator of eight casinos throughout Poland; and a 75% ownership interest in Century Downs Racetrack and Casino in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Through its United States subsidiary, Century Nevada Acquisition, Inc., the Company owns a 50% membership interest in Smooth Bourbon, LLC, which owns the land and building of the Nugget Casino Resort (the "Nugget") in Sparks, Nevada. The Company has an agreement to purchase 100% of the membership interests related to the operations of the Nugget and an agreement to purchase 100% of the equity interest in the Rocky Gap Casino Resort operations. The Company also has an agreement to operate one ship-based casino. The Company continues to pursue other projects in various stages of development. Century Casinos' common stock trades on The Nasdaq Capital Market® under the symbol CNTY. For more information about Century Casinos, visit our website at www.cnty.com. This release may contain certain "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on the beliefs and assumptions of the management of Century Casinos based on information currently available to management. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking statements include, among others, risks described in the section entitled "Risk Factors" under Item 1A in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, and in subsequent periodic and current SEC filings the Company may make. Century Casinos disclaims any obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statement that may be made from time to time by it or on its behalf. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Century Casinos, Inc.
https://www.wbrc.com/prnewswire/2023/01/16/century-casinos-present-jefferies-summit/
2023-01-16 15:26:07
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https://www.wbrc.com/prnewswire/2023/01/16/century-casinos-present-jefferies-summit/
SACRAMENTO (AP) _ The winning numbers in Wednesday evening's drawing of the California Lottery's "Daily Derby" game were: 1st:7 Eureka-2nd:10 Solid Gold-3rd:8 Gorgeous George, Race Time: 1:47.96 (1st: 7 Eureka, 2nd: 10 Solid Gold, 3rd: 8 Gorgeous George; Race Time: one: 47.96) ¶ To win the grand prize, ticket-holders must match in exact order the winning race time and the first, second and third place horses. Lesser prizes are given to ticket-holders who correctly match other horses or race times.
https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Daily-Derby-game-17275642.php
2022-06-30 03:28:35
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https://www.expressnews.com/lottery/article/Winning-numbers-drawn-in-Daily-Derby-game-17275642.php
BISMARCK, N.D. (KXNET) — Does your school have a select group of cyber super sleuths? They might be a perfect fit for Cyber Madness. On October 24, North Dakota’s Chief Information Officer Shawn Riley announced the second upcoming annual Cyber Madness High School Tournament, established by the state government’s EduTech division. This three-round tournament is designed to put high schoolers up against a series of challenges with the hopes of helping them develop useful cybersecurity skills. Teams in the event will participate in the Capture the Flag (CTF) competition, which is described as a ‘fun, interactive cybersecurity challenge’ based on many cybersecurity-focused topics, including the following: - Addressing (Physical and Virtual) - Packet Encapsulation - Network and Endpoint Security Technology - Security Principles Edutech requests that all students signing up for the event display an active interest in technology — and while previous experience with cybersecurity is recommended, none is necessary, as knowledge, instruction, and learning materials will be provided. Cyber Madness states that it welcomes any student into the event, regardless of skill level, to learn these new concepts. “North Dakota is the first state to adopt computer science and cybersecurity content standards,” said State Superintendent and administrator of the North Dakota Department of Public Instruction Kirsten Baesler in the event’s announcement. “It is our vision for all PK-12 North Dakota students to have the opportunity to obtain a foundational understanding in this area because it is critically important in today’s world. The Cyber Madness tournament gives students an opportunity to put what they have learned to the test in a fun, competitive manner as they navigate real-world scenarios.” All high schools and North Dakota students (including public, private, tribal, and home school students of the age) are encouraged to form teams of up to five students and a coach to take part in the Cyber Madness challenge. In order to prepare for the event, schools can register on this page. The 2023 Cyber Madness competition will be held from February 16-18 at the National Energy Center of Excellence in Bismarck. Sponsorships, commitment forms, and even more information can be gained by visiting the NoDak EduTech page or contacting the ND Cyber Madness Planning Committee at ndcybermadness@k12nd.us.
https://www.kxnet.com/north-dakota-news/cyber-madness-are-north-dakota-high-schools-up-to-the-challenge/
2022-10-26 18:01:31
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https://www.kxnet.com/north-dakota-news/cyber-madness-are-north-dakota-high-schools-up-to-the-challenge/
Florida homeowner shoots, kills man who allegedly tried to steal his birds, deputies say ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. - A man who was shot and killed last week at an Orange County home was allegedly trying to steal the homeowner's birds, according to an incident report from the Orange County Sheriff's Office. On Thursday, Oct. 27, deputies responded to a home on Ponderosa Drive, northeast of the Orlando airport, and found a man in the front yard near a chicken coop with gunshot wounds, the report stated. Orange County Fire Rescue also responded to the area and pronounced the man who had been shot, dead. The sheriff's office said there was an altercation between the homeowner and the man, and a gun was fired. "No arrests have been made in this case. Once our investigation is complete, we will send the case to the State Attorney’s Office, and they will determine whether charges will be filed," a spokesperson for the sheriff's office said in a statement.
https://www.fox35orlando.com/news/florida-homeowner-shoots-kills-man-who-allegedly-tried-to-steal-his-birds-deputies-say
2022-11-02 18:04:23
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https://www.fox35orlando.com/news/florida-homeowner-shoots-kills-man-who-allegedly-tried-to-steal-his-birds-deputies-say
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Kurt Kitayama only had to look around at the players next to him in the practice area and right below him on the leaderboard at Bay Hill to know what he was up against Sunday in the Arnold Palmer Invitational. “You can’t ignore it. You got to know where you’re at and you know who is there and just embrace the whole situation, I guess,” Kitayama said after a final two hours of pure theater for his first PGA Tour win. He got the result he desperately wanted in a fashion he never imagined. First came the wild tee shot that sailed out-of-bounds on the ninth hole that led to triple bogey and let an All-Star cast — Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth, Scottie Scheffler, Tyrrell Hatton and Harris English — back into the tournament. And then the 30-year-old Californian, who has played on 11 tours around the world to hone is game, delivered the winner. Part of a five-way tie for the lead with three holes to play, he drilled a 6-iron to just inside 15 feet on the par-3 17th and holed it for birdie to take the lead. From the gnarly rough left of the 18th fairway, he gouged an 8-iron onto the green to 50 feet. Needing two putts to win, the first one stopped an inch from the cup. The tap-in for an even-par 72 was the easiest shot he faced all day, giving him a one-shot win over McIlroy and English. The soft-spoken Kitayama was due. Over the last year he finished one shot behind to Jon Rahm in Mexico, to Xander Schauffele in Scotland, to McIlroy in South Carolina. This time, he beat them all. “I think just a little bit of luck finally went my way,” Kitayama said. “When it’s that close at the top, that’s what you need. Anyone probably could have won it. Luckily, it just happened to be me.” He finished at 9-under 279 and earned $3.6 million, moving to No. 19 in the world. McIlroy roared into the mix with four birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn, took on a shot he didn’t need because he didn’t realize he was tied for the lead on the 14th, and ultimately missed a 10-foot birdie putt on the final hole and shot 70. English remarkably went bogey-free on brittle Bay Hill for the entire weekend. He missed an 18-foot birdie putt on the last hole for a 70. “I know Kurt more from European tour stuff,” McIlroy said. “But he’s done really well. He’s persevered and played wherever he could get starts and all of a sudden he’s won one of the biggest events on the PGA Tour. So good for him.” Scheffler was a foot away from having a close look at birdie on the 18th and a chance to take the lead. Instead, his ball spun back into the rough, his chip came out weakly and he finished with a bogey for a 73. “I wish I played a little bit better, but at the end of the day I put up a good fight,” Scheffler said. “But Kurt played fantastic golf today. I think to birdie 17 and par 18 to finish and win by one is pretty special.” Spieth was among six players who had at least a share of the lead over the final two hours. He missed four straight putts inside 8 feet from the 14th through the 17th holes — three of them for par. After taking the lead with a 15-foot birdie putt on the 13th hole, he played his last five holes in 3 over. “I wouldn’t have hit any of the putts differently. I hit my line on every single one of them. I misread all four by just barely,” Spieth said. Spieth (70), Scheffler Patrick Cantlay (68) and Hatton (72) all finished two shots behind. They all had a chance, mostly because of one swing. Kitayama had a two-shot lead when he hit a wild hook out-of-bounds on the ninth hole, leading to triple bogey. “It went south on 9,” Kitayama said. “All of a sudden, I’m not leading any more. I just fought back hard, and I’m proud of myself for that.” The finish kept everyone guessing, especially when there was a five-way tie for the lead deep in the round, all of them one swing or one putt away from potentially winning. “I certainly felt it on the golf course, so I’m sure it was pretty good to watch,” McIlroy said. “It’s hard because the lead was changing hands with guys making bogeys, not really making birdies. So don’t know how people find that entertainment value. “But it was a great back nine. It was great to be involved with,” he said. “I’m really happy for Kurt. He’s been playing well for a while now and I’m happy to see him get his first win.” Of the top seven players, all of them have either won majors or played in the Ryder Cup. The exception is Kitayama, who groomed himself for a moment like this with so many close calls against players with polished pedigrees. Kitayama, who played at UNLV, didn’t find much success on the Korn Ferry Tour and took his trade overseas to the Asian Tour and European tour, along with stops in Canada, South Africa, China, Korea, Japan, the PGA Tour of Australasia and the Asian Development Tour. Now he has a red cardigan for winning at Arnie’s place and a big feather in his cap for the players he had to beat. ___ AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/kurt-kitayama-breaks-through-in-wild-finish-at-bay-hill/
2023-03-06 17:34:07
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https://www.ksn.com/sports/ap-sports/kurt-kitayama-breaks-through-in-wild-finish-at-bay-hill/
GREENWICH, Conn., July 28, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- L Catterton, a leading global consumer-focused investment firm, today announced the successful closing of a continuation fund transaction for its portfolio company PatientPoint Health Technologies™ ("PatientPoint"), a leading tech-enabled point-of-care patient engagement company. The transaction reaffirms L Catterton's long-term commitment and maintains its ownership in the business, allows L Catterton to return capital to investors, and provides PatientPoint with additional capital to support growth initiatives. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. PatientPoint has become a trusted patient engagement company, and following its successful transformational combination with Outcome Health in 2021, is now an industry-leading platform serving approximately 140,000 healthcare practitioners ("HCPs") and impacting over 750 million patient visits annually, nationwide. The Company improves doctor-patient engagement by educating patients through the nation's largest interconnected network of digital devices in healthcare practices. With innovative solutions and unparalleled reach, PatientPoint has consistently delivered strong financial and operational excellence and is well-positioned for long-term growth. "Over the course of our investment, PatientPoint has transformed into a leading digital patient engagement platform improving health outcomes for patients, and we believe the business continues to have opportunities to accelerate its growth," said Andrew Taub, a Managing Partner in L Catterton's Flagship Fund. "We are excited to continue our partnership through a transaction that not only provides new capital to PatientPoint to support product expansion, but also presents an attractive liquidity option to L Catterton's existing investors. We look forward to continuing to work with PatientPoint's talented team to strengthen the company's value proposition during its next phase of growth." "We are thrilled to extend our successful partnership with L Catterton in a transaction that validates the significant momentum we've generated," said Mike Collette, Founder and CEO of PatientPoint. "This additional investment will allow us to capitalize on meaningful near-term growth initiatives, while upholding our commitment to providing trusted, reliable solutions that improve doctor-patient engagement across the entire care journey. We thank L Catterton for their continued support and are confident that together, we will continue to drive long-term, sustainable growth." L Catterton will maintain its position in PatientPoint through the new dedicated continuation vehicle, which includes investments from funds advised by Neuberger Berman, lead investor, and funds advised by affiliates of Fortress Investment Group LLC, co-lead investor. Littlejohn & Co., who became a partner to L Catterton following PatientPoint's merger with Outcome Health in 2021, will retain its ownership. Peter Bock, Managing Director at Neuberger Berman said, "We have been impressed both by L Catterton's consumer expertise and PatientPoint's opportunity to leverage their expansive HCP network to offer a full set of digital solutions across the patient care journey. This transaction provides the Company with the time they need to execute their value creation strategy and offers a compelling liquidity opportunity to existing investors." Greg Getschow, Managing Director at Fortress added, "On behalf of our investors, we are pleased to establish this partnership with L Catterton, which provides PatientPoint with the additional capital that they need capitalize on significant growth initiatives that are ahead for the business." Evercore served as financial advisor to L Catterton on the transaction. Kirkland & Ellis served as legal counsel. About L Catterton L Catterton is a market-leading consumer-focused investment firm, managing approximately $33 billion of equity capital across three multi-product platforms: private equity, credit, and real estate. Leveraging deep category insight, operational excellence, and a broad network of strategic relationships, L Catterton's team of more than 200 investment and operating professionals across 17 offices partners with management teams to drive differentiated value creation across its portfolio. Founded in 1989, the firm has made over 250 investments in some of the world's most iconic consumer brands. For more information about L Catterton, please visit lcatterton.com. About PatientPoint PatientPoint® is a tech-enabled point-of-care patient engagement platform. Our innovative, tech-enabled solutions create more effective doctor-patient interactions and deliver high value for patients, providers and healthcare sponsors. Through our nearly 140k unique healthcare provider relationships, PatientPoint's solutions impact roughly 750 million patient visits each year, further advancing our mission of making every doctor-patient engagement better®. Learn more at patientpoint.com. Media Contacts: L Catterton Julie Hamilton Managing Director, Firm Communications media@lcatterton.com 203.742.5185 PatientPoint PatientPoint Corporate Communications news@patientpoint.com View original content: SOURCE L Catterton
https://www.wkyt.com/prnewswire/2023/07/28/l-catterton-announces-completion-continuation-fund-extend-its-partnership-with-patientpoint-health-technologies/
2023-07-28 14:36:54
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https://www.wkyt.com/prnewswire/2023/07/28/l-catterton-announces-completion-continuation-fund-extend-its-partnership-with-patientpoint-health-technologies/
HIROSHIMA – The cost of war is ever-present in this nuclear-scarred city, which is playing host this week to a high-stakes summit of the Group of 7 nations amid Europe’s bloodiest conflict since WWII. The Atomic Bomb Dome, its skeleton roof and partially remaining walls from when it was irrevocably transformed at 8:15 am on August 6, 1945, is a haunting testament to the horror wrought by man’s determination to pursue maximum destruction. And it serves as the backdrop for a weekend summit at a time when the use of nuclear war is once again openly threatened on the world stage – from loose Russian talk, North Korean provocations, Iran’s nuclear buildup and China’s expanding arsenal. Nearly 78 years from the detonation of the first atomic weapon, the world appears in the midst of a new nuclear arms race. I arrived in Hiroshima early on May 18 — just hours before parts of the city were shutting down for the high-profile summit. Having covered war on the ground in Israel, the Gaza Strip, Iraq and Ukraine, I wanted to bear witness to one of the darkest periods in relations between the U.S. and Japan, and look back on American leaders’ decision to introduce nuclear weapons in war and against civilians. President Biden, attending the summit, will not be issuing an apology on behalf of the United States for using the atomic bomb, the White House said ahead of the president’s arrival in Japan. That can be understood as the White House likely trying to avoid giving Republicans an attack line that Biden is weak on the world stage, or allow Russian and Chinese leaders a propaganda opportunity to distract from the death and oppression they are carrying out in the present day. Biden will reaffirm U.S. commitment to nuclear nonproliferation and participate in a wreath laying ceremony at the Peace Memorial Park, which was ground zero for the explosion of the atomic bomb, so-called Little Boy, which detonated at a height of about 1,960 feet and, in a flash of light, laid waste to a city and its people. To be sure, Biden and other leaders in the G7 are focused on reinforcing support for Ukraine in the face of Russia’s brutal invasion, with evidence of war crimes piling up and Moscow stepping up its ballistic missile attacks on Kyiv and other cities. But hosting the summit in Hiroshima requires a moment of reflection. Just across from the Peace Memorial Park is the museum housing the testimonies of survivors and the victims of the atomic bombing – gruesome stories of people scorched by the heat of the blast, their skin hanging off their bodies just as their clothes hung like rags. An estimated 140,000 people died as a result of the bombing. Among the museum’s displays include a photo from 2010 of then-President Obama shaking hands with former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev following the signing of the New START treaty, a watershed moment signaling the two leading nuclear powers committing to reducing their nuclear stockpiles. Today, the New START treaty is on ice with Russia’s refusal to participate. And Medvedev — in the position of deputy chair of Russia’s security council — is viewed as the mouthpiece for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s threats of nuclear weapons use against Ukraine. “The idea to punish a country that has the largest nuclear arsenal is absurd in and of itself and potentially creates a threat to the existence of mankind,” Medvedev said last year, in response to the International Criminal Court opened a war crimes probe into Russia’s war. The museum has yet to update that photo to show the current state of nuclear tensions. But the museum’s entrance includes a display of a letter sent to Biden in April 2022 by Hiroshima’s Mayor, Matsui Kazumi, vehemently protesting the U.S. carrying out “subcritical nuclear testing” in June and September — testing that the U.S. says is important to assess the reliability of nuclear stockpiles without full nuclear testing. “The ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine continues to fuel the idea that military forces are the only way to suppress violence committed by military forces,” the letter read. “From the United States, I strongly demand the following: deeply reflect upon the horrific realities of what a single atomic bomb did to Hiroshim and the tragic experiences of the hibakusha [survivors].” Outside the museum and park, the entire city memorializes the horror. The Inarimachi bridge, less than a mile from the Memorial peace park, bears a placard with a photo showing the steel rails warped by the blast and describes how survivors, fleeing the epicenter of the destruction, rushed to the river to relieve their burns and quench a torturous thirst, as dead bodies floated downstream. Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is from Hiroshima. He was born 12 years after the bombing, but is said to have family members who were victims. Nuclear nonproliferation is one of his priority global objectives — even as he is ushering in a new era of Japanese militarization in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Kishida, during his visit to Washington D.C. in January, said he would put forward Japan’s pledge to “revive the momentum for nuclear disarmament,” but without “sacrificing deterrence in the midst of the severe security environment.” But this comes as Kishida is overseeing a massive military mobilization in Japan in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Kishida visited Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv in March, an extraordinary show of solidarity from an Asian nation. While the G7 is primarily a grouping of the world’s top economies, it has evolved into a strategic alliance confronting Russian President Vladimir Putin’s revanchism (the group kicked Russia out in 2014 after it invaded and annexed Ukraine’s Crimea Peninsula). The city has set up a wrap-around display in the Peace park showcasing its rebuilding efforts in the aftermath of the atomic bomb — reconnecting its water supply, setting up its electricity network, inventing its signature dish of Okonomiyaki — a dish of Soba noodles, egg, meat, cabbage and BBQ sauce. At the end of the display a placard invites visitors to “deliver your hopes for peace to Ukraine.” World leaders are gathering in Hiroshima at a time in which experts warn the risk of nuclear confrontation is at its highest since the Cold War. In previews of the G7 summit agenda, U.S. administration officials address commitments to nuclear nonproliferation as part of a wider list of catastrophic threats facing the world. Top among them are last-minute efforts for nations to reign in fossil fuel use as the world careens toward irreversible global damage from man-made climate change. The group of nations will also navigate competing interests on confronting the threat posed by China, without losing access to its market of more than a billion people. But reinforcing solidarity among G7 nations to support Ukraine pushing back against Russian aggression is sure to be the primary focus, with Putin’s nuclear saber rattling and Hiroshima’s haunted legacy front of mind. Kishida, in a tweet on his way to Hiroshima ahead of the summit, reaffirmed his determination “to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons.”
https://www.kxnet.com/hill-politics/hiroshimas-nuclear-history-sounds-an-urgent-warning-for-g7-summit/
2023-05-19 11:07:46
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https://www.kxnet.com/hill-politics/hiroshimas-nuclear-history-sounds-an-urgent-warning-for-g7-summit/
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The competition between Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis is intensifying as the former president is scheduling a return trip to Iowa on the same day that the Florida governor was already going to be in the state that will kick off the Republican contest for the White House. A Trump campaign official said Saturday that the former president plans to be in Iowa on May 13 to headline an organizing rally at a sprawling park in downtown Des Moines. That’s when DeSantis was already slated to headline Iowa Rep. Randy Feenstra’s annual summer fundraiser in northwest Iowa and speak at a party fundraiser later that evening in Cedar Rapids. The Trump campaign official, who requested anonymity to discuss the trip before it was announced, said the Des Moines organizing rally has been in the planning stage for weeks and is aimed at identifying caucus supporters and volunteers. The move is a sign of the escalating competition between the two men who, at least for now, are leading contenders for the Republican presidential nomination. Trump and his allies have become increasingly emboldened in their efforts to attack and marginalize DeSantis, who is expected to announce his White House bid sometime after the Florida Legislature wraps up its work in the coming week. But Trump’s trip is also notable for its emphasis on the type of ground-level organizing that is vital in Iowa politics and was often missing during his 2016 campaign, when Texas Sen. Ted Cruz overtook him and won the state’s GOP caucuses. Trump has been almost singularly focused on swinging at DeSantis, whom he has attacked for policy positions on entitlement reform, his loyalty to conservative causes, even his character. While DeSantis has largely ignored Trump’s jabs, a pro-DeSantis super political action committee, Never Back Down, began to respond in paid ads this month. Meanwhile, the super PAC promoting DeSantis is hiring Iowa staff to begin organizing support for the governor before he enters the race. The stakes for both men are particularly high in Iowa, where the caucuses in February offer opportunities for them to cement their status atop the GOP. A poor performance, however, would give an opening for other Republicans to mount an upstart campaign. Trump’s 2016 Iowa campaign was a seat-of-the-pants operation disparately managed by campaign newcomers who, including the candidate, had little idea what the caucuses are. The roughly 1,700 precinct-level Republican political meetings, vestiges of prairie civic life, include a presidential preference question but require in-person participation on a typically frigid winter evening. Eight years ago, Trump’s Iowa team had left contact information for roughly 10,000 Iowans interested in supporting him unprocessed before the caucuses, where Trump had led in lead-up polls, but fell short against Cruz’s more organized campaign. Armed with not just refined 2016 caucus data but information collected during two national campaigns, Trump’s advisers says they are building a data and digital engagement strategy they say would put him in position to win the caucuses. It’s an expectation Iowa GOP strategists say is an absolute must for the former president, who carried Iowa comfortably in the 2016 and 2020 general elections. Meantime Never Back Down, run by DeSantis’ 2022 Florida re-election campaign senior strategist, Phil Cox, has named Iowa Republican operatives to its roster as it seeks to tap into interested GOP activists as the Iowa 2024 campaign gets underway. Among them are Ryan Koopmans, the former chief of staff to Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds. The group has been airing TV advertisements in Iowa and other early-voting states, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, for weeks, and plans to launch a new one Monday.
https://www.wric.com/news/politics/trump-ups-competition-with-desantis-in-planning-trip-to-iowa/
2023-04-30 16:29:04
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https://www.wric.com/news/politics/trump-ups-competition-with-desantis-in-planning-trip-to-iowa/
AI may have an ‘eye’ on growing babies: Could predict premature birth as early as 31 weeks Deep learning model analyzes electrical activity in the uterus: ‘Could influence pregnancy management’ About 10% of all infants born in the U.S. in 2021 were preterm — which means they were delivered earlier than 37 weeks of pregnancy, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Preterm births also make up about 16% of infant deaths. Now, researchers from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, are looking to improve those odds through the use of artificial intelligence. They developed a deep learning model that can predict preterm births by analyzing electrical activity in the woman’s uterus during pregnancy — then they tested the model in a study that was published in the medical journal PLOS One. "The key takeaway is that it is possible to take data as early as the 31st week and predict preterm birth up to the 37th week" — which surprised the researchers, Arye Nehorai, PhD, professor of electrical engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, told Fox News Digital. "The AI/deep learning automatically learned the most informative features from the data that are relevant to the prediction of preterm birth," he added. Additionally, the findings indicate that preterm birth is an abnormal physiological condition, not just a pregnancy that happened to end early, Nehorai said. During the study, the researchers performed electrohysterograms (EHGs), which use electrodes on the abdomen to record electrical activity in the uterus. They took recordings of these electrical currents from 159 pregnant women who were at least 26 weeks along and "trained" the AI model on that data. They combined this data with medical information such as the woman’s age and weight, the fetal weight and any bleeding experienced in the first or second trimester. Nearly 19% of the women in the study delivered preterm. In theory, the data from those women could be used as a benchmark for predicting premature birth. "The advantage of our approach is that is inexpensive to build," said Nehorai of the new research. "Our model was effective in prediction with shorter EHG recordings, which could make the model easier to use, more cost-effective in a clinical setting and possibly usable in a home setting." Looking ahead, the researchers believe that this method should be adopted by hospitals and obstetricians as part of women’s regular pregnancy check-ups. It would then allow pregnant women to seek care and make lifestyle changes to protect the health of their baby as needed. "Our work contributes to the goal of using EHG measuring devices for accurately predicting preterm birth." "A device dedicated to implementing our method should be built for this purpose," said Nehorai. It is hard to say how long it might be before this kind of test becomes widely available, the researchers said. "There are some EHG measuring devices already in the market — however, it has been challenging to predict preterm births from the EHG data," said Uri Goldsztejn, a PhD candidate in the department of biomedical engineering working under the supervision of Professor Nehorai at Washington University. NEW AI ‘CANCER CHATBOT’ PROVIDES PATIENTS AND FAMILIES WITH 24/7 SUPPORT: 'EMPATHETIC APPROACH' "Our work contributes to the goal of using EHG measuring devices for accurately predicting preterm birth," he told Fox News Digital. EHG measurements usually take between 30 and 60 minutes, with additional time required for setting the device on the mother's abdomen, noted Goldsztejn. "We showed that predictions could be made based on shorter EHG measurements, of under five minutes, without reducing the prediction accuracy too much," he told Fox News Digital. "This finding is significant, since the prolonged duration of EHG measurements is an important limitation for its adoption in clinical settings." ‘Promise’ of deep learning — but caveats Dr. Suzy Lipinski, a board-certified OB/GYN at Pediatrix Medical Group in Denver, Colorado, was not involved in the study but shared her input on whether the deep learning technology could help solve the problem of preterm birth in the U.S. "Being able to predict who is at risk before they present in labor would be highly beneficial," Lipinski told Fox News Digital. "The use of a deep learning model seems to hold promise; however, this study has a relatively small number of patients, so it cannot be determined how applicable this is to a larger population." "Prior studies using AI have not shown great reliability, so this will need more studies and larger patient populations before we start using this method," she added. Another potential limitation is that very few places use EHG measurements, the doctor pointed out. "The standard in most hospitals and offices is to use a tocodynamometer, which measures pressure, not electrical," she explained. OZEMPIC, WEGOVY AND PREGNANCY RISK: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE ISSUE If EHG becomes the way to evaluate for preterm birth, then hospitals, birth centers and offices would all have to purchase new equipment, which could delay adoption in low-resource areas such as rural and inner cities, Lipinski said. "A higher rate of preterm birth in this study than the national average also raises questions about the applicability," she told Fox News Digital. "No demographics were given about the patient population, so there is no way to see how it reflects the population of the entire country." "Being able to predict who is at risk before they present in labor would be highly beneficial." There is also the chance of false positives, Lipinski pointed out. "While this method does predict better than our current methods, there are still many patients that will be identified as at-risk that may not have a preterm birth," she said. "This false positive result will cause a large burden of stress on the patient, as well as increased utilization of health care resources." If and when this becomes the new standard of care, Lipinski said, there would need to be improved treatments for preterm labor. "Our issues with preterm birth are two-fold: We have poor prediction, but also poor prevention options after 26 weeks," she added. Researchers share study's main limitations The study has two main limitations, according to Goldsztejn. "First, we developed our work using around 160 samples from two public datasets," he said. "Although this amount of data was sufficient for our initial investigation, a far larger dataset would be required for developing and validating a medical product." The second limitation comes from the nature of deep learning, which can produce accurate results but is usually hard to interpret, Goldsztejn said. "In other words, it is challenging to understand how the algorithm makes predictions," he explained. CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER In a discussion of the findings in the medical journal, the authors noted that "although machine learning algorithms can contribute to improving health care and much research is yielding advances in this field, important challenges remain." "A far larger dataset would be required for developing and validating a medical product." Among those challenges: It can be difficult to identify the causes behind the algorithm’s predictions, the researchers wrote. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP "In our case, although our predictions could influence pregnancy management, our predictions would need to be supplemented with additional medical examinations to determine which therapies are more likely to reduce the risk of preterm birth and improve its outcomes," the researchers also said.
https://www.foxnews.com/health/ai-eye-growing-babies-could-predict-premature-birth-31-weeks
2023-06-06 06:35:56
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https://www.foxnews.com/health/ai-eye-growing-babies-could-predict-premature-birth-31-weeks
The bitter battle to confirm Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) as House Speaker is finally over and the groundwork has been laid for the 118th Congress. But the multiday, historically long process laid bare the divisions and potential issues McCarthy and House Republicans face as they seek to pass legislation, launch investigations and get reelected in two years. So what lies ahead for McCarthy, the GOP and Democrats? Here are six things to watch as Speaker McCarthy takes his seat: How much did the Speaker battle weaken McCarthy? The House Freedom Caucus has power for the first time since Democrats won the House in 2018, and the far-right group wasted no time in asserting itself, providing a glimpse at the issues McCarthy will confront as he takes over as the weakest Speaker in recent memory. The caucus of hard-line conservatives has put McCarthy between a rock and a hard place as he attempts to manage the unruly group and deal with bipartisan legislation that is likely to come over from the Senate — which will have to be cobbled together with 60 votes and will be, by its nature, more moderate. What happens if the Senate sends over a spending deal later this summer that isn’t palatable to the deal McCarthy struck with House conservatives? Will he be willing to shut down the government, which Freedom Caucus members will likely be clamoring for him to do? How much will he be willing to fight, with a one-vote threshold for a motion to oust him hanging over his head? McCarthy’s goal for years was to win the gavel. No one questions that, including his allies. Now, the essential question to watch is: How far will McCarthy go to keep hold of the Speakership? Whether he cost himself a long and extended tenure in the position remains to be seen. Debt limit, debt limit, debt limit The looming effort to increase the debt ceiling will likely be the ultimate test of the coming year for the California Republican and will prove consequential in answering how long his tenure will last. This week’s drawn-out adventure to name a Speaker is already causing some in the GOP agita over what’s to come when it’s time later this year to raise the nation’s borrowing limit — an issue that caused the party intense consternation in 2011, when the U.S.’s credit rating was dinged for the first time in history. “You’re looking at a preview of coming attractions,” Rep. Dave Joyce (R-Ohio) told The Hill amid the series of failed votes before a deal was reached. The Treasury Department has not yet said when exactly the U.S. will reach the debt limit, but it is expected to be sometime after July, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. Conservatives on Friday declined to reveal specifics about the deal struck with leaders in recent days, but a number of them indicated that cuts to mandatory spending programs — like Social Security and Medicare — will have to be part of any package, or else. “There will be no clean debt ceiling increase, that’s for sure,” Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.), chairman of the Freedom Caucus, told reporters on Friday. Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), a fellow holdout until Friday, indicated that they would hold McCarthy’s feet to the fire over the cuts. “It’s safe to say that we believe there ought to be specific, concrete limits on spending attached to a debt ceiling increase,” Roy said, adding that the framework “serves as the template by which we’re going to be holding him accountable.” Relationship with McConnell While McCarthy deals with hard-liners day-to-day, he will also have another key relationship to manage in the coming months: one with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). The two men and their leadership styles are like oil and water. McConnell, the record-breaking GOP leader, has led his conference with a much firmer hand in recent years, a stark contrast to McCarthy, whose path to success has centered on backslaps and fundraising prowess in lieu of a bedrock political philosophy. In addition, the two have clashed on a number of items in recent months, ranging from the handling of the 2022 year-end effort to fund the government to how to deal with former President Trump to Ukraine funding. The newly minted Speaker also opposed a number of items McConnell helped marshal through the upper chamber in the 117th Congress. Headlining those were the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill — which McConnell helped herald on Wednesday alongside President Biden in Kentucky — gun violence legislation in response to the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, and the $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act to boost domestic semiconductor production. Nevertheless, aides for both members have said the two have a good, cordial relationship. One GOP leadership aide told The Hill in October that the two try to meet at least once every congressional work period. The Senate GOP leader also threw his support behind McCarthy to win the top job before 2022 ended. Ukraine funding Funding to help Ukraine in its ongoing battle with Russia is also poised to be an area of contention within the fractured House GOP conference — and among Republicans in both chambers. The government spending bill passed by both chambers in December included $45 billion in funding to support Kyiv, buying Congress some time before it has to weigh whether to appropriate more funds for the embattled ally. But when the hour does come for that debate, the negotiations could get messy. While the majority of the House GOP conference has expressed support for Ukraine throughout its nearly one-year conflict, a handful of conservative Republicans have expressed opposition to assisting Kyiv as the war drags on. In October, McCarthy warned that House Republicans would not write a “blank check” to Ukraine should they take control of the chamber, and months before that, in May, 57 Republicans voted against a multibillion-dollar aid package for Ukraine in May. The divisions were also on full display last month when Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky delivered an address to a joint meeting of Congress, which was well-received by some Republicans and disregarded by others. Those differences could stymie sending aid to Ukraine in the future. Some Republicans have said the U.S.-Mexico border should be prioritized more than supporting Kyiv. The small — but outspoken — opposition to Ukraine aid in the House may also set the scene for a chamber vs. chamber battle, pitting McCarthy against McConnell, a vocal supporter of Ukraine who has thrown his weight behind the aid sent to Kyiv. Will Democrats rescue McCarthy on must-pass bills? McCarthy’s concession to make it easier to oust a sitting Speaker has led to concerns on both sides of the aisle that conservatives will hold that threat like a cudgel over McCarthy, deterring him from bringing must-pass legislation — things like a debt ceiling hike and government funding bills — to the floor even if it has the bipartisan support to pass. Some moderate Republicans have countered that they can still move such bills by teaming up with Democrats on a procedural gambit, known as a discharge petition, that allows a simple majority to force legislation to the floor even over the objections of the Speaker — an idea that Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), a co-chair of the moderate Problem Solvers Caucus, has promoted this week. That scenario poses a dilemma for Democratic leaders, who would be forced to decide whether to bail out McCarthy to prevent episodes like government shutdowns or to allow them and benefit from the opportunity to highlight the dysfunction and divisions in the Republican ranks. A similar question could accompany efforts to vacate the chair, which might provide Democrats the chance to topple McCarthy by teaming up with a small group of conservative firebrands. The fallout would again provide Democrats an occasion to focus attention on the discord within the GOP. But it would disrupt a functioning House, while lawmakers fought to fill the void, and raise the prospect that someone much more conservative — and more adverse to bipartisan compromise — could replace him. This week’s Speakership battle may be instructive. While Republicans struggled, Democrats just steered clear. “All we are asking is House Republicans to get along with each other,” Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (N.Y.), the Democratic leader, said amid the GOP fight. Where does McCarthy take his relationship with Trump? McCarthy’s relationship with Trump is both deep and delicate — a knotty political kinship that was only complicated by the attack on the Capitol two years ago. In the immediate aftermath of that rampage, McCarthy went to the House floor and declared Trump responsible for the riot. Yet just weeks later — after it was clear that Trump remained enormously popular within both the Republican base and the House GOP conference — he made the trek to Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s Florida resort, to make amends. Now, exactly two years after the Capitol riot and McCarthy’s initial denunciation of the president, he is once again entangled with Trump. The former president endorsed McCarthy’s Speakership leading into the midterms, despite reservations from the far right. And when McCarthy struggled this week to win over his conservative detractors, Trump intervened once more, imploring the holdouts to drop their opposition. That lobbying reportedly extended right up to the 14th ballot Friday night, which finally got McCarthy over the finish line. The relationship could get trickier still in the months to come. Trump has already announced his 2024 presidential bid, and one member of McCarthy’s leadership team, Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), has already endorsed him. But Trump’s popularity is also waning, even among Republicans, and a series of legal and financial entanglements could drop those numbers further still. That complex network of political factors could put the newly seated Speaker in a difficult spot as he navigates through an election cycle when Trump, a figure famous for demanding loyalty, is on the ballot.
https://www.wivb.com/hill-politics/speaker-mccarthy-has-arrived-now-what/
2023-01-07 06:41:16
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https://www.wivb.com/hill-politics/speaker-mccarthy-has-arrived-now-what/
The Bethlehem Historic Conservation Commission on Monday narrowly denied Bethlehem nonprofit ArtsQuest’s application to demolish the Banana Factory to build a new cultural arts center. Commission members and Bethlehem residents who spoke at Monday’s meeting were split on the proposal, which would demolish all six Banana Factory buildings to make way for a new cultural arts center. The Banana Factory is ArtsQuest’s visual arts programming hub. Those in favor of the new project said the new center would help ArtsQuest expand vital arts programming to meet community needs, but those who opposed it said the new building does not fit with the South Side historic district. The vote was 3-2 with commission members Roger Hudak and Michael Simonson voting in favor of the project; chair Gary Lader and members Craig Evans and Kenneth Loush voting against. ArtsQuest first secured approval to revamp the Banana Factory in 2018, and their original plan was to preserve two of the six buildings and demolish the others. But with rising construction costs, keeping two of the buildings is no longer economically feasible for ArtsQuest, CEO Kassie Hilgert said. ArtsQuest has so far raised $14 million from public and private donations to fund the new center. The proposed new, five-story cultural center would feature an outdoor Arts Plaza, expanded classroom space, rooms for summer camps and a 100-seat comedy center. The building facade facing Third Street would feature a window pattern that spells out “Art For All” in binary code. The facade at the corner of 3rd and Northampton streets would be entirely glass, bringing in natural light that the current building lacks, and giving passersby a peek inside. Hilgert called the new center an “issue of equity” because it will allow ArtsQuest to expand its highly in-demand arts programming. The organization faces a waitlist for its artist studios and a need for more classroom and educational space. “Building a new structure at the current location is the most efficient way to serve Bethlehem’s growing and changing community,” Hilgert said. First Call Bethlehem historic officer Jeffrey Long said ArtsQuest’s proposal is not appropriate for the historic conservation district because of several design elements including its windows, height and building materials. Some commission members agreed. “By demolishing all of these buildings, it is not only taking away part of communities history, it is actually shrinking the [historic] district,” chair Gary Lader said. “I’m kind of troubled by it.” But several members of the public said that the Banana Factory buildings are unattractive and not historically significant, and demolishing them could make way for something better. “There is no historic value to those buildings,” said former ArtsQuest board chair Greg Feinberg. “Those buildings are just old and I think something for you to consider is the distinction between what is historic and what is just old.” Lader encouraged ArtsQuest’s representatives to return with an updated plans that addressed some members’ concerns. “I feel there’s a way forward here,” Lader said. “We’re certainly available to discuss this.” Morning Call reporter Lindsay Weber can be reached at 610-820-6681 and liweber@mcall.com.
https://www.mcall.com/news/local/bethlehem/mc-nws-banana-factory-artsquest-bethlehem-demolition-denial-historic-commission-20220719-mosddji555gczmpynru5z6lb5e-story.html
2022-07-19 01:36:38
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https://www.mcall.com/news/local/bethlehem/mc-nws-banana-factory-artsquest-bethlehem-demolition-denial-historic-commission-20220719-mosddji555gczmpynru5z6lb5e-story.html
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia is poised to formally annex areas of Ukraine where it has military control after referendums there reportedly endorsed Moscow’s rule. But the ballots were widely discredited and earned the Kremlin no relief Wednesday from international pressure over its assault on its neighbor. Pro-Moscow administrations of all four occupied regions of southern and eastern Ukraine said Tuesday night that their residents voted to join Russia in five days of Kremlin-orchestrated balloting. According to Russia-installed election officials, 93% of the ballots cast in the Zaporizhzhia region supported annexation, as did 87% in the Kherson region, 98% in the Luhansk region and 99% in Donetsk. Russian-installed officials in those occupied regions said Wednesday they would ask President Vladimir Putin to incorporate them into Russia. It wasn’t immediately clear how the administrative process would unfold. Western countries, however, dismissed the ballots as a meaningless pretense staged by Moscow in an attempt to legitimize its invasion of Ukraine launched on Feb. 24. The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said late Tuesday that Washington would propose a U.N. Security Council resolution to condemn Russia’s “sham” vote. The resolution would also urge member states not to recognize any altered status of Ukraine and demand that Russia withdraws its troops from its neighbor, she tweeted. The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, also weighed in on the ballots, on Wednesday calling them “illegal” and describing the results as “falsified.” “This is another violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty (and) territorial integrity, (amid) systematic abuses of human rights,” Borrell tweeted. In Kyiv, Ukraine’s foreign ministry blasted the ballots as “a propaganda show” and “null and worthless.” “Forcing people in these territories to fill out some papers at the barrel of a gun is yet another Russian crime in the course of its aggression against Ukraine,” a foreign ministry statement said. It asked the EU, NATO and the Group of Seven major industrial nations to “immediately and significantly” step up pressure on Russia through new sanctions, and significantly increase their military aid to Ukraine. The EU also expressed outrage over the suspected sabotage Tuesday of two underwater natural gas pipelines from Russia to Germany and warned of retaliation for any attack on Europe’s energy networks. Borrell said Wednesday that “all available information indicates those leaks are the result of a deliberate act,” even though the perpetrators haven’t so far been identified. “Any deliberate disruption of European energy infrastructure is utterly unacceptable and will be met with a robust and united response,” Borrell said in a statement on behalf of the EU’s 27 member countries. The war in Ukraine has brought an energy standoff between the EU, many of whose members have for years relied heavily on Russian natural gas supplies, and Moscow. The damage makes it unlikely the pipelines will be able to supply any gas to Europe this winter, according to analysts. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s military and a Washington-based think tank said Wednesday that Russia is sending troops without any training to the front line. Moscow has struggled to hold the line against Ukraine’s recent counteroffensive and has ordered a partial mobilization to replenish its ranks. The effort is causing unrest, however, amid a reluctant public. In a daily briefing, the Ukraine military’s general staff said 1st Tank Regiment of the 2nd Motorized Rifle Division of Russia’s 1st Tank Army has received untrained new troops. The Ukrainian military also said prison convicts are arriving in Ukraine to reinforce the Russian lines. It offered no evidence to support the claim, though the Ukrainian security services have released audio of allegedly monitored Russian phone conversations on the issue. The Institute for the Study of War think tank cited one online video by a man who identified himself as a member of the 1st Tank Regiment, visibly upset, saying that he and his colleagues wouldn’t receive training before shipping out to the Russian-occupied region of Kherson in Ukraine. “Mobilized men with a day or two of training are unlikely to meaningfully reinforce Russian positions affected by Ukrainian counteroffensives in the south and east,” the institute said. The U.K. ministry of defense said Ukraine’s counteroffensive, which has inflicted some humiliating defeats on Moscow’s forces, is advancing slowly. It said Russia is currently putting up a stouter defense. In the eastern Ukrainian region of Donetsk, which is partially occupied by Moscow, Russian fire killed five people and wounded 10 others over the last 24 hours, said Pavlo Kyrylenko, the head of the local military authority. Authorities in the southern Ukrainian city of Nikopol said Russian rockets and artillery pounded the city overnight. The city, across the Dnipro River from Russian-occupied territory, saw 10 high-rises and private buildings hit, as well as a school, power lines and other areas, said Valentyn Reznichenko, the head of the local military administration, said. ___ Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
https://phl17.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-occupied-ukrainian-regions-to-ask-putin-to-annex-them/
2022-09-28 09:53:50
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https://phl17.com/news/ap-top-headlines/ap-occupied-ukrainian-regions-to-ask-putin-to-annex-them/
Hiking alone in the woods can seem a bit scary. After all, you may have to deal with wild animals, heights, finding your way around — there are all sorts of unknowns involved. But just outside of Atlanta, Georgia’s city limits in Dekalb County, there’s a hiking trail that’s been made legitimately creepy by the addition of some unwanted items that’ll make your hair stand on end: doll heads. Nestled inside Constitution Lakes Park, a 125-acre nature preserve of wetlands and wildlife, lies Doll’s Head Trail, a 1.5-mile loop trail that’s known for its found art installations. Hikers can complete this easy-to-moderate trail, which is popular for running, hiking and birding, in less than 30 minutes. Here’s an image of the boardwalk at Doll’s Head Trail from its Facebook page. Looks nice, right? Looks can be deceiving! The area known as Constitution Lakes was once the spot where South River Brick Company dug up Georgia clay to create its bricks. The clay pits were so deep, they were transformed into man-made ponds when filled with rainwater. What originally began as the work of a local carpenter named Joel Slaton soon became a much broader project involving numerous artists. Slaton, who experienced a work lull after the Great Recession in 2008, started by creating art installations from discarded doll parts and other found trash on the site with his newfound time. Here’s an image of an item added to the trail last year, from the Doll’s Head Trail account on Facebook: “During my hikes at Constitution Lakes, I began finding doll, bicycle, automobile and appliance parts. These became the original displays,” Slaton told CNN. “The trail started as sort of a joke for the few regulars who ventured that far back to stumble upon them.” His first art installations kept disappearing, so he made them more elaborate and started giving them titles. He also began leaving Sharpies so people could leave their own messages. His goal: to give the trail to have an air of mystery, and to make visitors think about the disposable lifestyle we lead. Here’s one of the messages you can see on the trail: Then he invited visitors to repurpose the trash into their own found art, which has become an ongoing project. As the artwork grew, so did Doll’s Head Trail’s popularity. While the installations found along the path are predominately constructed with doll’s heads, others include old bricks, dinosaur toys, truck parts, bottles and collages. This one posted to Facebook, for example, looks like it’s mostly made of old tires. Slaton said that he wasn’t sure DeKalb County would approve at first, but Dave Butler, greenspace environment manager for the DeKalb County Department of Recreation, Parks and Cultural Affairs, loved the idea. He even formally “knighted” it in 2012. Here’s another image of one of the installations along the Doll’s Head Trail. Just as nature is always changing, the works have too evolved. Slaton says the trail is public art, built by the public, and that the displays have changed over time — although some of that is due to vandalism. This fairly smooth, partially-paved path is relatively shaded by large surrounding trees and leads to a lake with a boardwalk. If you want to stay awhile, you can grab a book from the little free library. Slaton believes the park is a combination of history, nature and art. Those visiting are asked to keep the area family-friendly and kid-safe and to respect what has already been assembled. The common thread among the art pieces is that every element of them has been found within the park itself. There’s even a trailhead sign that reads, “Litter makes the angels cry.” Here’s another one of the many art installations that have been documented on the Doll’s Head Trail Facebook, where you can go to see many more curiosities. If you’re a fan of nature and offbeat art and would like to experience Doll’s Head Trail for yourself, the best times to visit are between April and September. Bring a water bottle and bug spray during the summer. This story originally appeared on Simplemost. Check out Simplemost for additional stories.
https://www.wrtv.com/dolls-heads-trail-features-eerie-folk-art
2023-02-14 14:32:03
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https://www.wrtv.com/dolls-heads-trail-features-eerie-folk-art
NATCHITOCHES, La. (KTAL/KMSS) – The Natchitoches Parish Sheriff’s Office helped police locate a drowning victim early Sunday morning. The Natchitoches Police Department contacted the sheriff’s department around 2:00 a.m. and requested assistance in searching for the man in the Cane River near the 300 block of Jefferson St. NPSO Dive team members launched a rescue boat with special sonar equipment for search and rescue. Natchitoches Parish Fire District #9, La. Department of Wildlife & Fisheries Agents, and Natchitoches Regional Medical Center EMS also assisted in rescue efforts. Around 5:07 a.m. the dive team recovered the body of a man who had been reportedly swimming in the area. They released his body to the Natchitoches Parish Coroner’s Office pending an autopsy. This is a developing story. More information will be provided as it becomes available.
https://www.myarklamiss.com/news/top-stories/mans-body-found-in-cane-river-by-natchitoches-parish-sheriffs-office-dive-team/
2023-05-24 17:08:47
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https://www.myarklamiss.com/news/top-stories/mans-body-found-in-cane-river-by-natchitoches-parish-sheriffs-office-dive-team/
This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate TOKYO (AP) — Asian shares rose Tuesday, encouraged by a rally in U.S. shares after some weak economic data raised hopes that the Federal Reserve might ease away from aggressive interest rate hikes. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 added 2.8% in afternoon trading to 26,959.25. South Korea's Kospi gained 2.5% to 2,209.98. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 jumped 3.8% to 6,699.30 after its central bank boosted its benchmark interest rate for a sixth consecutive month to a nine-year high of 2.6%. The Reserve Bank of Australia’s increase of a quarter percentage point to the cash rate was smaller than those at recent monthly meetings. When the bank lifted the rate by a quarter percentage point at its board meeting in May, it was the first rate hike in more than 11 years. It’s now at its highest point since August 2013, when the bank cut the rate from 2.75% to 2.5%. Markets in Hong Kong and Shanghai were closed for holidays. “Asian equities were positive on Tuesday after a corrective session as traders eye potentially oversold market conditions,” Anderson Alves at ActivTrades said in a report. On Monday, Wall Street soared to its best day in months in a widespread relief rally after some unexpectedly weak data on the economy raised the possibility that the Federal Reserve won't have to be so aggressive about hiking interest rates. The S&P 500's leap of 2.6% to 3,678.43 was its biggest since July, the latest swing for a scattershot market that’s been mostly falling this year on worries about a possible global recession. The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 2.7%, to 29,490.89, and the Nasdaq composite gained 2.3% to 10,815.43. Stocks took their cue from the bond market, where yields fell to ease some of the pressure that's been battering markets this year. The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which helps set rates for mortgages and many other kinds of loans, fell to 3.62% from 3.83% late Friday. It got as high as 4% last week after starting the year at just 1.51%. A report on U.S. manufacturing came in weaker than expected, along with data showing a drop off in construction spending from July to August. That may seem discouraging, but could mean the Federal Reserve can ease off on raising interest rates to beat down the high inflation damaging households’ finances. By raising rates, the Fed is making it more expensive to buy a house, a car or most anything else purchased on credit. The hope is to slow the economy just enough to starve inflation of the purchases needed to keep prices rising so quickly. The Fed has already pulled its key overnight interest rate to a range of 3% to 3.25%, up from virtually zero as recently as March. Most traders expect it to be more than a full percentage point higher by early next year. But stresses are building in financial markets and corporate profits have weakened as central banks around the world hike rates in concert. The yield on the two-year Treasury, which more closely tracks expectations for Fed action, fell to 4.11% from 4.27% following the weaker-than-expected reports on the economy. Besides stocks, lower rates also boost prices for everything from cryptocurrencies to gold, which can suddenly look a bit more attractive when bonds are paying less in income. Stocks of high-growth companies and particularly risky or expensive investments have been the most affected by changes in rates. Bitcoin rallied Monday with the reprieve in yields, while technology stocks did the heaviest lifting to carry the S&P 500. Apple and Microsoft both rose more than 3%. Monday’s rally came despite an 8.6% drop for Tesla, one of the most influential stocks on Wall Street because of its massive market value. The maker of electric vehicles delivered fewer vehicles from July through September than investors expected. The latest update on the U.S. jobs market comes on Friday. Along with reports on inflation, the jobs report is one of the most highly anticipated pieces of data on Wall Street each month. It will be the last jobs report before the Fed makes its next decision on interest rates, scheduled for Nov. 2. Continued strength would give the central bank more leeway to keep hiking. Traders say the likeliest move is a fourth straight increase of a whopping three-quarters of a percentage point, triple the usual move. In energy trading, benchmark U.S. crude added 23 cents to $83.86 a barrel. It jumped Monday amid speculation big oil-producing countries could soon announce cuts to production. Shares of energy-producing companies made big gains. Exxon Mobil leaped 5.3%, and Chevron climbed 5.6%. Brent crude, the international standard, added 42 cents to $89.28 a barrel. In currency trading, the U.S. dollar inched up to 144.84 Japanese yen from 144.81 yen. The euro cost 98.28 cents, inching down from 98.40 cents. ___ Yuri Kageyama is on Twitter https://twitter.com/yurikageyama
https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Asian-shares-rise-after-relief-rally-on-Wall-17485152.php
2022-10-04 06:29:24
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https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/Asian-shares-rise-after-relief-rally-on-Wall-17485152.php
SAN FRANCISCO, July 31, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Schubert Jonckheer & Kolbe LLP is investigating potential shareholder derivative claims on behalf of shareholders of Norfolk Southern Corporation (NYSE: NSC). On February 3, 2023, a Norfolk Southern train derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, releasing toxins and other combustible liquids, which ultimately led to a controlled burn of toxic chemicals. The derailment prompted the evacuation of residents from the surrounding area. Upon returning to their homes, residents reported hazardous air quality and other health and environmental concerns. On February 8, 2023, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine stated that Norfolk Southern "created the problem" and that it was "their liability" and "ought to pay for it." On February 21, 2023, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ordered Norfolk Southern to clean up the site, stating that it "will pay for cleaning up the mess they created and for the trauma they've inflicted on this community." The National Transportation Safety Board's preliminary report stated that the derailment was 100% preventable, and it later opened a special investigation into Norfolk Southern's safety practices because it had experienced five significant accidents since December 2021. On March 14, 2023, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost filed a complaint against Norfolk Southern alleging a wide range of violations in connection with a series of Norfolk Southern train derailments. On March 16, 2023, purchasers of Norfolk Southern stock filed securities fraud class action claims against the company. On March 31, 2023, the U.S. Department of Justice sued Norfolk Southern seeking penalties and injunctive relief for the unlawful discharge of pollutants, oil, and hazardous substances under the Clean Water Act, and declaratory judgment for past and future costs under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act. The Schubert Firm is investigating potential wrongdoing by Norfolk Southern's officers and directors in connection with these allegations. Norfolk Southern previously recognized $387 million in expenses related to these matters, and on July 27, 2023 announced another $416 million charge, for a total of $803 million. If you own Norfolk Southern stock and wish to obtain additional information about your legal rights, please contact us today or visit our website at https://www.classactionlawyers.com/norfolk. About Schubert Jonckheer & Kolbe LLP Schubert Jonckheer & Kolbe represents shareholders, employees, and consumers in class actions against corporate defendants, as well as shareholders in derivative actions against their officers and directors. The firm is based in San Francisco, and with the help of co-counsel, litigates cases nationwide. View original content: SOURCE Schubert Jonckheer & Kolbe LLP
https://www.ktre.com/prnewswire/2023/07/31/shareholder-alert-norfolk-southern-corporation-nsc-officers-directors-face-shareholder-investigation-potential-wrongdoing-related-february-2023-east-palestine-train-derailment-which-has-resulted-803-million-charges/
2023-07-31 13:46:58
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https://www.ktre.com/prnewswire/2023/07/31/shareholder-alert-norfolk-southern-corporation-nsc-officers-directors-face-shareholder-investigation-potential-wrongdoing-related-february-2023-east-palestine-train-derailment-which-has-resulted-803-million-charges/
DCISionRT with Novel Residual Risk Subtype Identifies Patients Who May Not Benefit from ET after Surgery and Radiation LAGUNA HILLS, Calif., June 7, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Prelude Corporation (PreludeDx™), a leader in molecular diagnostics and precision medicine for early-stage breast cancer, announced compelling results in 926 women diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). The new information was presented in an oral abstract session at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting at McCormick Place, Chicago, IL. The results of the study demonstrated that after breast conserving surgery (BCS) patients in the DCISionRT elevated risk group had a significant risk reduction from endocrine therapy (ET), while those patients in the DS low risk group did not have a significant risk reduction from ET. "For the first time, physicians have access to an enhanced method of identifying which patients may have a significant or minimal benefit from adjuvant endocrine therapy based on individual tumor biology," said Pat Whitworth, MD, FACS, ASCO Presenter and Breast Surgical Oncologist Director, Nashville Breast Center; Associate Professor, University of Tennessee; and Managing Partner TME. "The results are meaningful and support a more tailored treatment plan for our DCIS patients." DCISionRT stratified patients as low risk, neither adjuvant ET nor radiation therapy (RT) resulted in reduced 10-year ipsilateral breast recurrence (IBR) (5.6% BCS+ET vs BCS alone). Patients in the elevated risk group, benefited from adjuvant ET as well as RT. "We are excited to share this unique data demonstrating the expanded utility of DCISionRT to guide personalized treatment decisions for DCIS patients," says Dan Forche, President and CEO of PreludeDx. "As precision medicine becomes the new standard of care, we are committed to continuous innovation to improve healthcare outcomes for early-stage breast cancer patients, clinicians and the healthcare system." About DCISionRT for Breast DCIS DCISionRT is the only risk assessment test for patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) that predicts radiation therapy benefit. Patients with DCIS have cancerous cells lining the milk ducts of the breast, but they have not spread into surrounding breast tissue. In the US, over 60,000 women are newly diagnosed with DCIS each year. DCISionRT, developed by PreludeDx on technology licensed from the University of California San Francisco, and built on research that began with funding from the National Cancer Institute, enables physicians to better understand the biology of DCIS. DCISionRT combines the latest innovations in molecular biology with risk-based assessment scores to assess a woman's individual tumor biology along with other pathologic risk factors and provide a personalized recurrence risk. The test provides a Decision Score™ that identifies a woman's risk as low or elevated. Unlike other risk assessment tools, the DCISionRT test combines protein expression from seven biomarkers and four clinicopathologic factors, using a non-linear algorithm to account for multiple interactions between individual factors in order to better interpret complex biological information. DCISionRT's intelligent reporting provides a woman's recurrence risk after breast conserving surgery alone and with the addition of radiation therapy. In turn, this new information may help patients and their physicians to make more informed treatment decisions. About PreludeDx PreludeDx is a leading personalized breast cancer diagnostics company dedicated to serving breast cancer patients and physicians worldwide. Founded in 2009 with technology licensed from University of California San Francisco, PreludeDx has focused on developing precision breast cancer tools that will impact a patient's treatment decision. Our mission is to provide patients and physicians with innovative technologies that improve patient outcomes and reduce the overall cost burden to the healthcare system. Before making a treatment decision, Know Your Risk™. PreludeDx is a Fjord Ventures portfolio company. For more information on how PreludeDx is making a difference for patients, please visit the Company's website: https://preludedx.com and follow us on Twitter @PreludeDx, Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. PreludeDx, the PreludeDx logo, DCISionRT, the DCISionRT logo, Decision Score, The DCIS Test, Know Your Risk and Your Biology, Your Decision are trademarks of Prelude Corporation or its wholly owned subsidiaries in the United States and foreign countries. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE PreludeDx
https://www.kfyrtv.com/prnewswire/2022/06/07/preludedx-presents-new-dcisionrt-data-effectiveness-endocrine-therapy-dcis-patients-asco-2022-annual-meeting/
2022-06-07 15:50:41
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https://www.kfyrtv.com/prnewswire/2022/06/07/preludedx-presents-new-dcisionrt-data-effectiveness-endocrine-therapy-dcis-patients-asco-2022-annual-meeting/
KC Current clinch spot in playoffs just one year after last-place finish in standings KANSAS CITY, Kan. (KCTV) -- The Kansas City Current’s second season since moving here has been filled with history. With Sunday’s victory over the Washington Spirit, more history is on the way. The Current clinched the club’s first ever postseason bid, defeating the Spirit 3-0 Sunday afternoon at Chldren’s Mercy Park. Lo’eau LaBonta scored the first goal of the game in the 18th minute: After 20 minutes of scoreless action, the Current scored twice in about three minutes. Cece Kizer extended the Current’s advantage to 2-0, while Claire Lavogez added the third goal of the game: The club will appear in the playoffs this season after finishing in last place in 2021. Kansas City’s turnaround came in no small part to what was a 13-game unbeaten streak that spanned nearly four full months on the calendar. It was the Current’s final home regular season match. They wrap up the regular season Oct. 1 against Racing Louisville. After Sunday’s win, the Current are back on top of the standings. Copyright 2022 KCTV. All rights reserved.
https://www.wibw.com/2022/09/25/kc-current-clinch-spot-playoffs-just-one-year-after-last-place-finish-standings/
2022-09-26 18:40:25
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https://www.wibw.com/2022/09/25/kc-current-clinch-spot-playoffs-just-one-year-after-last-place-finish-standings/
SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif., April 13, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- California's iconic and award-winning Sunstone Estate makes history as the first wine brand to offer a cannabis beverage, the Sunstone Spritz™. Sold exclusively direct-to-consumer, the Sunstone Spritz™ sparkling beverage is made from natural juice flavors and single-origin, full-spectrum, sun-grown cannabis rosin from Santa Barbara County. The Sunstone Spritz offers 5 milligrams of activated THC and is available in 4 flagship flavors: Grapefruit Orange, Peach-Passion Fruit, Pineapple Coconut, and Watermelon. "It's been our dream and vision to transition a globally-recognized wine brand into a new, inclusive era of both wine and cannabis," says Sunstone President, Teddy Cabugos. "We believe Santa Barbara County is the pinnacle agricultural region to produce world-class cannabis products, as it is for wines, and are committed to highlighting region-specific, agricultural quality in both markets." The Sunstone cannabis rosin ingredient is crafted with a hand-churned method using ice, delicate agitation, and precise pressure over time. The Sunstone craft produces the widest expression of therapeutically-rich rosin that powers a balanced, whole-plant cannabis beverage effect, guided by wellness and reflective of the superior natural quality Sunstone is already known for. Like single-origin olive oil, the single-origin nature of the cannabis ingredient allows Sunstone to assure consistent product quality and sustainable practices. The Sunstone Spritz is a tribute to the Estate's tradition of environmental stewardship and reflective of the Santa Ynez Valley coastal terroir on which the Estate resides. Sunstone is the oldest viticultural estate in Santa Barbara County to have been continuously farmed using organic and regenerative practices. Additionally, Sunstone announces the launch of a related beverage additive product, the Sunstone Splash™. The Sunstone Splash is a water-soluble, full spectrum rosin-based emulsion that can be added to any beverage for an enhanced experience. "Our 30-years established brand and audience provides a unique opportunity to bring mainstream the therapeutic health and wellness benefits of cannabis," says Sunstone CEO, Djamila Cabugos. "Our new Sunstone beverage line provides access to these benefits in a relatable way to consumers who value superior quality and single-origin craft, reflective of regionally-specific terroir. Most importantly, we are committed to doing so in a way that respects the health of our community and environment." Via technology partnership with SplashNano, the new Sunstone cannabis products employ a proprietary InfusedBySplash™ formula. The SplashNano technology is characterized by cutting-edge nanoemulsions which reduce particle size to submicron rating, allowing for both beverage infusion and fast-acting consumption effects. "As a product formulator and technology entrepreneur, it was a dream to craft the science and product lineup for Sunstone," says Kalon Baird, Chief Technology Officer and Co-Founder of SplashNano. "Sunstone's captive audience of wine connoisseurs is the perfect demographic to appreciate the nuances of the cannabis plant and culture. Offering the Sunstone Spritz to the wine community will contribute to the rapid adoption of cannabis-infused beverages as a historical precedent." Sunstone is an agricultural pioneer in California. The brand's origin, the historic Sunstone Winery, is an idyllic Old-World European-style estate founded in 1990 inclusive of vineyards, a winery, and tasting rooms, caves, and terraces nestled in the Santa Ynez Valley. It is also famous for its Sunstone Villa, an architectural masterpiece perched atop the estate which has been featured recently on Netflix and Bravo television, and in People and Vogue magazines. Like the Sunstone Spritz™ beverages, Sunstone® wines are available exclusively direct-to-consumer. Patrons can purchase the Sunstone Spritz™ online at www.sunstonecannabis.com for delivery within Santa Barbara County. Delivery to additional counties will come soon. Additionally, patrons soon will be able to purchase in-person from the Sunstone Cannabis Market, a brick-and-mortar dispensary which is targeted to open Q1 2024 in Santa Barbara. To learn more visit www.sunstonecannabis.com or follow @SunstoneSpritz on Instagram. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Sunstone
https://www.kmvt.com/prnewswire/2023/04/13/iconic-sunstone-winery-announces-launch-sunstone-spritz-sparkling-cannabis-beverage/
2023-04-13 14:33:22
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https://www.kmvt.com/prnewswire/2023/04/13/iconic-sunstone-winery-announces-launch-sunstone-spritz-sparkling-cannabis-beverage/
(LIV Golf) – Cameron Smith stood on the 18th green, put his hands behind his head and closed his eyes, trying to process the conflicting range of emotions following Sunday’s dramatic finish at LIV Golf London. He was elated to win the individual title, his second victory in 13 regular-season starts since joining LIV. It was a perfect way to build momentum entering his title defense in two weeks at the Open Championship. Yet he was disappointed to have missed a 6-foot putt for par that would’ve forced the first team playoff in LIV Golf history. Instead, his bogey on the final hole at Centurion Club dropped his all-Australian Ripper GC into second, one shot behind 4Aces GC, this season’s points leaders that won their second team title of the season while having to sweat out Smith’s putt. “Obviously thrilled about the individual win, but it would’ve been nice to get up there with the boys,” said Smith, who shot a final-round 68 for a winning score of 15 under. “It’s a bit of mixed emotions at the moment.” Smith and teammate Marc Leishman, playing in the final group Sunday, were the last hope for the Rippers to catch the 4Aces, who rallied from four strokes down to start the day to take the lead at 34 under. The Rippers were at 33 under going into the final hole, the par-5 18th. Individually, Smith had a two-shot lead over the 4Aces’ Patrick Reed. Smith was forced to lay up after his drive found the rough, but Leishman’s second shot was just off the back of the green. As Smith played his third shot, a gust of wind pushed his ball into the bunker. He blasted out to 6 feet. Leishman then completed his two-putt for birdie, leveling the team leaderboard while finishing in a tie for second individually with Reed. Then the unexpected happened. After a brilliant week of putting – especially on Sunday as he holed more than 105 feet of putts in his first 10 holes – Smith’s par attempt slid past the hole. His individual win was sealed, but the opportunity for the Rippers’ first team victory was lost. “I really wanted Cam to make the one on the last there,” Leishman said. “He played great and putted great all week. To win the tournament and still walk off the green disappointed, I guess that’s what this is all about, the team format.” The 4Aces certainly seem to have the formula for success in the team competition. Sunday’s win was their sixth regular-season team title going back to last season, and their second this season, having won in Adelaide. It also increases their lead in the team point standings to 39 points over Torque GC, the three-time tournament winners this year. Reed provided the Aces with their lowest score of the day, a 6-under 65 that moved him to 14 under. The other two contributing scores belonged to Pat Perez, who shot a bogey-free 66, and captain Dustin Johnson with a 67 (with Peter Uihlein’s 68 not counting). The 4Aces had started slowly on Friday, shooting just 3 under as a team, before shooting 31 under on the weekend. While they haven’t been as dominant as last season, they remain the team to beat through nine events. Sunday’s outcome was the latest evidence. “We were seeing a lot of those teams getting too close to us at the top of that board,” Reed said. “I felt like as a team, we just weren’t really getting the numbers we wanted to. This week meant a lot for us to go out and make a statement.” One of those statements involves the ability to finish off tournaments. Reed was a bogey-free 7 under on his first 11 holes. Perez was 4 under on his last 7 holes. Johnson supplied an eagle and a birdie in the back end of his round as the Aces kept cutting into the Rippers’ lead – and eventually overtaking them. “That was the biggest thing,” Reed said. “We kept pressure on them.” It came down to the last hole, with LIV Golf’s best putter in the spotlight. Six feet away from forcing LIV Golf’s first team playoff. “Cam hasn’t missed one of those in his life, so I’m pretty shocked,” Perez said. “Nonetheless, it would’ve been cool. That would’ve been a separator again in golf, to have a team playoff. I think it would’ve been awesome.” It didn’t work this time for Smith and his Rippers, but their second-place finish – the team’s best result – is something to build on. “We showed that we’re a contender of the team stuff,” Smith said. “That’s where we want to be every week.”
https://www.wane.com/liv-golf/smith-wins-individual-title-at-liv-london-falls-just-short-of-team-win/
2023-07-10 14:32:39
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https://www.wane.com/liv-golf/smith-wins-individual-title-at-liv-london-falls-just-short-of-team-win/
GOP Oklahoma lawmakers join call for death penalty pause By SEAN MURPHY Associated Press Writer OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Three Republican House members are among those joining the call for a moratorium on the death penalty in Oklahoma. The lawmakers joined members of clergy and a former corrections official in asking for a temporary halt to the state’s brisk pace of lethal injections. They cited declining public support of the death penalty and concerns that an innocent person could be put to death. Rep. Kevin McDugle says he is a supporter of the death penalty, but he has serious concerns that Oklahoma’s next death row inmate scheduled to die, Richard Glossip, is actually innocent. Oklahoma’s new attorney general has asked for an independent review of Glossip’s case.
https://localnews8.com/news/ap-national/2023/02/22/gop-oklahoma-lawmakers-join-call-for-death-penalty-pause/
2023-02-23 01:35:52
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https://localnews8.com/news/ap-national/2023/02/22/gop-oklahoma-lawmakers-join-call-for-death-penalty-pause/
DENVER, Dec. 14, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- M.D.C. Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: MDC), one of the nation's leading homebuilders, today announced that its Board of Directors, on the recommendation of the Corporate Governance/Nominating Committee, increased the number of directors on the Board from ten to eleven, appointed Rafay Farooqui as a Class II Director to fill the vacancy on the Board and nominated Mr. Farooqui for election as a Class II Director at the 2023 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. Mr. Farooqui is the Founder & CEO of +SUBSCRIBE, a fintech leader providing a unified private markets platform for alternative investment fund investors, fund managers, and service providers. The company's marquee solution is an order management and electronic subscription document system for alternative product transactions. The company's customers include many of the alternative investment industry's leading investors and fund managers. Prior to founding +SUBSCRIBE, along with two partners in 2009 he founded CAIS, another fintech technology company offering a platform of alternative investment funds to the wealth management industry. At CAIS, he served as Co-Founder & President focused on firm strategy and management. Prior to forming CAIS in 2009, Mr. Farooqui was the Head of the Middle East & North African Equities division for UBS Investment Bank and was based in Dubai, U.A.E. Between 2003 and 2008, Mr. Farooqui was Head of UBS Investment Bank's U.S. Institutional Equities Sales Group, based in New York City. Prior to UBS, from 1998 to 2003, Mr. Farooqui was Head of Global Institutional International Sales-Trading in the NYC offices of Goldman Sachs & Co., where he advised alternative investment management clients on research and trading in the global securities markets. Mr. Farooqui began his career in 1998 at Goldman Sachs & Co. within the Equity Division's International Department as a global equity securities sales-trader. Mr. Farooqui has served as trustee of the Board of Directors of the United Nations International School (UNIS) in New York and as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Queens Museum of Art (QMA) in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. He is a member of YPO International (Young Presidents' Organization), a global organization of business leaders across 110 countries. He is also a member of The Economic Club of New York and a former Term Member at The Council on Foreign Relations. He holds an undergraduate degree and an M.B.A. from Columbia University in New York City. Mr. Farooqui holds FINRA Series 24, 7, 9/10 and 63 licenses. About MDC M.D.C. Holdings, Inc. was founded in 1972. MDC's homebuilding subsidiaries, which operate under the name Richmond American Homes, have built and financed the American Dream for more than 230,000 homebuyers since 1977. MDC's commitment to customer satisfaction, quality and value is reflected in each home its subsidiaries build. MDC is one of the largest homebuilders in the United States. Its subsidiaries have homebuilding operations across the country, including the metropolitan areas of Denver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Tucson, Riverside-San Bernardino, Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange County, San Francisco Bay Area, Sacramento, Washington D.C., Baltimore, Orlando, Jacksonville, Seattle, Portland, Boise, Nashville, Austin, Albuquerque and Huntsville. MDC's subsidiaries also provide mortgage financing, insurance and title services, primarily for Richmond American homebuyers, through HomeAmerican Mortgage Corporation, American Home Insurance Agency, Inc. and American Home Title and Escrow Company, respectively. M.D.C. Holdings, Inc. is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "MDC." For more information, visit www.mdcholdings.com. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE M.D.C. Holdings, Inc.
https://www.kxii.com/prnewswire/2022/12/14/mdc-holdings-appoints-rafay-farooqui-its-board-directors/
2022-12-14 18:22:04
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https://www.kxii.com/prnewswire/2022/12/14/mdc-holdings-appoints-rafay-farooqui-its-board-directors/
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela’s opposition has selected an all-female team of mostly unknown exiled former lawmakers to replace the beleaguered Juan Guaidó as the face of its faltering efforts to remove socialist President Nicolas Maduro. Last week, politicians who were elected to the National Assembly in 2015 voted to oust Guaidó from his role as “interim president,” a title he claimed as head of what was widely considered the South American nation’s last democratically elected institution. On Thursday, those same former lawmakers chose Dinorah Figueroa as his replacement. She’ll be joined by two other backbenchers — Marianela Fernández and Auristela Vásquez — in a triumvirate leadership of a legislature that operates as a symbolic shadow to Maduro’s rubber-stamping National Assembly, which convened Thursday in its neoclassical chambers. The women represent three different parties that had been pushing for Guaidó’s removal as a way to reconnect with disillusioned voters ahead of next year’s presidential elections. But it remains to see how, living outside Venezuela, they will manage to mobilize their compatriots to counter Maduro’s increasingly firm grip on power. Figueroa, a medical surgeon who has been living in Spain, appealed for unity in her first address to fellow Maduro opponents. She also promised to work to shield the OPEC nation’s extensive oil assets abroad, which include Houston-based refinery Citgo, from seizure by a long list of creditors stiffed by Maduro’s profligate spending over the years. “I have the conviction that this parliament will raise the flag of faith, hope and justice,” Figuera said in the session, which was held virtually, in a Zoom meeting, because so many opposition politicians like her have fled Venezuela in recent years. In January 2019, the National Assembly, then controlled by the opposition, voted to stop recognizing Maduro as president after several top opponents were barred from running against him. It then appointed Guaidó, who was one of the few leaders in his Popular Will party to avoid arrest or exile, to be the nation’s “interim president,” in accordance with the order of succession outlined in Venezuela’s constitution. Guaidó was quickly recognized as Venezuela’s legitimate leader by the United States and dozens of governments in Europe and Latin America. But his interim government was unable to win over the military, the traditional arbiter of political disputes in Venezuela, and the opposition-controlled National Assembly’s five-year mandate officially ended at the close of 2020. With leftist leaders winning elections across Latin America in recent years, the U.S.-led international coalition to pressure Maduro has also frayed. Colombia, Brazil and Spain are among the countries that recently re-established diplomatic ties. Guaido, in Thursday’s meeting, thanked his many supporters, both domestic and foreign, in what was something akin to a farewell address. Standing at a lectern emblazoned with the Venezuelan presidential seal, the 39-year-old said he would remain in Venezuela — despite calls for his arrest from among Maduro’s more radical supporters — and urged his successors to rebuild the unity needed to unseat Maduro. “We can’t generate a power vacuum that only benefits the de-facto dictator,” he said. Guaido’s departure from the political scene may only be temporary however. Although no longer the harbinger of hope he was when he rose from obscurity amid a wave of street protests to challenge Maduro’s rule, he remains a popular figure in the otherwise rudderless opposition, admired for his bravery and commitment to the cause of Venezuela’s democracy if not for always delivering results. He’s expected to be among those who will compete in opposition primaries this year to see who runs against Maduro in 2024. Meanwhile, Maduro’s supporters seemed to be relishing the opposition’s squabbles. At Thursday’s session inaugurating the legislative year, loyalist lawmakers re-elected Jorge Rodriguez to lead the National Assembly. Rodriguez, a close Maduro ally, accused the opposition of causing imposing undue “pain, suffering and aggression against the Venezuelan people” by supporting U.S. sanctions on the country. Socialist party boss Diosdado Cabello also took a shot at the rival legislature, saying: “They love to live in a fantasy, they love to live dreaming.” The Biden administration has largely tried to avoid wading into the opposition’s feuding while continuing to pressure Maduro to make meaningful concessions to the opposition in negotiations taking place in Mexico that would pave the way for free and fair elections. U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said Tuesday that the U.S. stands ready to work with any individual, or collective body, chosen by the 2015 National Assembly to represent it. “Our approach to Nicolás Maduro has not changed,” Price said Tuesday. “He is illegitimate. We support the 2015 National Assembly as the only remaining vestige of democracy in Venezuela.” ___ Goodman reported from Miami.
https://fox59.com/news/national-world/ap-international/ap-exiled-venezuela-lawmakers-chosen-to-lead-anti-maduro-fight/
2023-01-06 00:05:18
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https://fox59.com/news/national-world/ap-international/ap-exiled-venezuela-lawmakers-chosen-to-lead-anti-maduro-fight/
I think it’s been three years since a venue has taken top honors in two categories, so big ups to Bacán for bringing the Michelin-selected game. Located inside the fashionably cool confines of the Lake Nona Wave Hotel, Bacán ticks all the boxes. From plancha-seared seafood delights to truly Pavlovian desserts (yes, this Australian favorite will make you drool) to a sinfully rich wagyu burger good enough to win its own Foodie accolades, the plates enchant. A knowledgeable and friendly staff — robot included — serves to enhance the experience. Come early and enjoy a cocktail in the sculpture garden. Or stay late and wander with a coffee. Good stuff here. [ See all the winners of the 2023 Orlando Sentinel Foodie Awards ] Critic’s Choice - Winner: Bacán (6100 Wave Hotel Drive in Orlando; 407-675-2000; bacanlakenona.com) - Runners-up: 4 Flamingos: A Richard Blais Florida Kitchen (Orlando) and Primo (Orlando) Readers’ Choice - Winner: Hamilton’s Kitchen (300 E. New England Ave. in Winter Park, 407-998-8089; thealfondinn.com/hamiltons-kitchen/the-restaurant) - Runners-up: Bull & Bear (Orlando) and Flamingos, A Richard Blais Florida Kitchen (Orlando) Want to reach out? Find me on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram @amydroo or on the OSFoodie Instagram account @orlando.foodie. Email: amthompson@orlandosentinel.com. For more foodie fun, join the Let’s Eat, Orlando Facebook group.
https://www.orlandosentinel.com/food-restaurants/foodie-awards/os-et-best-hotel-restaurant-bacan-orlando-2023-foodie-awards-20230224-n55vik4e6bgsnblqf2zqdd74ym-story.html
2023-02-24 11:25:02
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https://www.orlandosentinel.com/food-restaurants/foodie-awards/os-et-best-hotel-restaurant-bacan-orlando-2023-foodie-awards-20230224-n55vik4e6bgsnblqf2zqdd74ym-story.html
Former Van Zandt County Chief Deputy pleads guilty to striking handcuffed arrestee Posted/updated on: July 6, 2022 at 5:19 pmTYLER – A former Van Zandt County Chief Deputy pleaded guilty to deprivation of civil rights on Wednesday after being accused of unreasonably assaulting an arrestee according to our news partner KETK. Steven Craig Shelton was accused of depriving a person of their rights while acting under color of law in September 2021 after an incident in Wills Point. Wednesday in court, Shelton submitted a binding plea agreement. Federal Magistrate Judge John D. Love recommended that the plea agreement be accepted by the district judge. The binding plea agreement includes a 44-month imprisonment sentence, five-year supervised release, and requires Shelton to pay restitution to the victim and community in an amount yet to be decided. According to court documents, Shelton “used his forearm to twice strike [the person] in the face while [they] were handcuffed.” Bodily injury was reported to have resulted from the incident. Shelton admitted to the court on Wednesday that this information was true. Shelton posted an appearance bond of $50,000 after submitting the plea agreement and will be released until his sentencing. A pre-trial intervention contract entered in March, required Shelton to surrender his peace officers license. This permanently made Shelton ineligible to serve in law enforcement “in any capacity requiring licensure,” according to the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement. The district attorney in Shelton’s case at the time, resolved any potential criminal charges against Shelton at the time in regards to this incident in favor of his federal charges. The court also identified that this case was related to separate charges for obstruction of justice against former Van Zandt Sergeant Blake Snell. Shelton is the former Whitehouse Police Chief and had previous assault charges filed against him. Those charges were ultimately dropped after officials found the person who filed those charges lied under oath to a grand jury.
https://ktbb.com/post/?p=1141890
2022-07-07 01:30:00
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https://ktbb.com/post/?p=1141890
Norfolk Southern creates fund for homeowners near Ohio derailment to compensate for decline in value (AP) - Norfolk Southern has recommitted to creating a fund for residents near the site of an Ohio train wreck that would cover any decline in home values since before the derailment earlier this year. In early February, 38 cars derailed in East Palestine, 11 carrying hazardous chemicals, with some spilling into nearby waterways. The U.S., the state of Ohio and residents near the crash have all filed lawsuits against Norfolk Southern over the derailment. Half of the 5,000 residents of East Palestine were evacuated as emergency personnel burned off some of the chemicals to avert an uncontrolled explosion. Norfolk Southern Corp. CEO Alan Shaw apologized for the impact the derailment has had on the community and the company has pledged to pay for the cleanup. Shaw said in a letter late Tuesday to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation that while the company has total accrued charges of almost $400 million for the derailment, that amount doesn’t include expected costs for funds tied to falling property values, long term health care or water treatment. It also doesn’t reflect payments the railroad will receive from its insurance. Shaw said the company was “undertaking these efforts and expenses without any judicial or investigatory finding of fault.” Shaw anticipates that homeowners eligible for compensation will initially include those with homes within an approximately five-mile radius of the derailment that happened near the Ohio-Pennsylvania border, and who sell their homes for less than what their property was appraised at before Feb. 3, when the derailment took place. Later Wednesday, the Senate committee will debate broad, new rail safety legislation in response to the wreck in Ohio and other derailments that followed. Among measures under consideration are requiring at least two crew members aboard each train, something the industry has been fighting against; an increase in the maximum penalty for violating rail safety rules, from $100,000 to $10 million; and requiring the use of defect detection technology that could prevent derailments like the one in East Palestine. Shares of Norfolk Southern Corp., based in Atlanta, rose slightly at the opening bell. Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
https://www.kttc.com/2023/05/10/norfolk-southern-creates-fund-homeowners-near-ohio-derailment-compensate-decline-value/
2023-05-10 16:02:35
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https://www.kttc.com/2023/05/10/norfolk-southern-creates-fund-homeowners-near-ohio-derailment-compensate-decline-value/
This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate HONOLULU (AP) — The eruption of the Mauna Loa volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island continues to ease, scientists said Sunday, reinforcing an earlier pronouncement that the mountain’s first flare-up in nearly 40 years might soon end. “We have good news to report,” Ken Hon, the scientist in charge of the U.S. Geological Survey at the Hawaii Volcano Observatory, said during a briefing. “The eruption is still at an extremely low level at this point.” Hon said the eruption is contained entirely within the volcano’s cinder cone. The USGS said a small amount of light remained visible at night through a vent in the cone, but the channels below that vent “appear drained of lava.” The inactive front of the lava flow may inch northward very slowly as it continues to settle, the agency said. Hon said Mauna Loa’s eruption appears to be ramping down and that nearby Kilauea has now reached a “full pause,” with its lava lake stagnant and crusted over. Mauna Loa began spewing molten rock Nov. 27 after being quiet for 38 years. The incandescent spectacle drew onlookers and set some nerves on edge among people who’ve lived through past eruptions. Sunday’s update came a day after scientists lowered the alert level for the volcano from a warning to a watch and said the eruption could be in its final days.
https://www.ourmidland.com/news/article/Scientists-say-eruption-of-Hawaii-volcano-17646795.php
2022-12-11 22:20:17
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https://www.ourmidland.com/news/article/Scientists-say-eruption-of-Hawaii-volcano-17646795.php
HOUSTON (AP) — Jose Altuve resumed some baseball activities this week, but there still isn’t a timetable for when Houston’s star second baseman will return to the team. Altuve fractured his right thumb in the World Baseball Classic and had surgery to repair the injury March 22. After his surgery, Astros general manager Dana Brown said he’d be out at least eight weeks. It’s been six weeks so far, and while Altuve was cleared to return to baseball activities this week — including throwing, running and fielding — he hasn’t been cleared to swing . “I think right now it’s hard to tell,” Altuve said when asked if he knows when he'll return. “Anything is possible. I’m working really hard. I want to come back and help these guys to win, but we’ll see. "I think the next two weeks are really important in my rehab.” This is the longest the eight-time All-Star and the 2017 American League MVP has ever been sidelined. “Obviously, it’s really hard,” he said. “It’s something I didn’t plan on, but things happen, and you can’t really do anything about it. I’m just continuing to work hard every day with (trainer) Jeremiah (Randall) and try to come back to the field as quick as I can, but in the meantime, just keep watching these guys play amazing baseball.” Manager Dusty Baker was glad to see Altuve getting some work in this week, but knows his star has a way to go before he can return to the lineup. “It’s been hard on him to not play and not contribute and not to help us win. We just have to temper it some not to rush him as badly as we want to, and it’s probably worse for him because he wants to get back again because he loves to play," Baker said. "We just have to be patient.” Mauricio Dubón has filled in nicely in Altuve’s absence, entering Wednesday’s game hitting .305 with seven doubles and six RBIs. He also had a career-long 20-game hitting streak. Altuve said it’s “awesome” to see Dubón playing so well. “I’m really happy and proud,” Altuve said. “He deserves it. He’s a great kid. He shows up every day and wanted to play … he’s a team player and just playing amazing. He’s going to keep doing that, and I know he’s going to have a great season and go from there.” ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.sfgate.com/sports/article/altuve-cleared-for-baseball-activities-return-18076547.php
2023-05-03 19:22:51
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https://www.sfgate.com/sports/article/altuve-cleared-for-baseball-activities-return-18076547.php
- Exclusive booth and private meeting rooms to be utilized for robust business initiatives SEOUL, South Korea, June 4, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- LOTTE BIOLOGICS, under the leadership of CEO Richard Lee, enthusiastically disclosed its participation in the upcoming 'BIO International Convention 2023' to be held from June 5th to June 8th, 2023, at the illustrious Boston Convention & Exhibition Center, USA. Hosted annually by the Biotechnology Innovation Organization, 'BIO International Convention 2023' is a premier conference in the global biotechnology industry, acting as an arena for distinguished biotech enterprises to highlight innovative technologies and form strategic partnerships, fostering a vibrant ecosystem of technological exchanges. This year's convention, under the theme 'Stand Up for Science', will address not merely the fundamentals of biotechnology but also offer a comprehensive exploration of the dynamic business landscape, policy trajectories, and the pressing human resource considerations prevalent in the industry. Continuing from last year, LOTTE BIOLOGICS is set to host an independent booth, underscored by a bold commitment to spotlight its differentiated competencies. These include the cutting-edge manufacturing technologies of its Syracuse site, robust process development services, stringent quality systems, and ambitious plans to inaugurate a state-of-the-art Mega Plant in South Korea. LOTTE BIOLOGICS has prepared designated meeting spaces within its booth, including a private meeting room, primed for an array of prearranged partnership dialogues. These discussions, with over 30 leading global pharmaceutical entities, along with emerging biotech firms, aim to facilitate the formation of strategic collaborations in the contract manufacturing of biopharmaceuticals. Kyung E. Kim, Head of LOTTE BIOLOGICS' Business Development Division, stated, "At this year's BIO International Convention, we look forward to meaningful discussions about LOTTE BIOLOGICS' intermediate and long-term business capacities with a diverse array of global pharmaceutical stakeholders. Through a network of synergistic alliances, we aim to fortify LOTTE BIOLOGICS' position at the forefront of competitive market leadership." About LOTTE BIOLOGICS LOTTE BIOLOGICS was established in 2022, and is headquartered in Seoul, South Korea. LOTTE BIOLOGICS entered the pharmaceutical industry as a CDMO company with the acquisition of Bristol Myers Squibb's Syracuse biologics manufacturing site. The Syracuse site offers drug substance manufacturing services with a total of 35,000L of production bioreactor capacity (7 x 5,000L bioreactors) utilizing stainless steel bioreactors, analytical QC testing laboratories, and warehouse facilities. The site is fully GMP operational with clinical and commercial capabilities. As of today, the site has received 60+ approvals worldwide from the FDA, EMA, PMDA, and MFDS. Moreover, the company is strategically poised to establish a comprehensive one-stop platform for CDMO services, incorporating Antibody Drug Conjugates (ADC) and Drug Products (DP) services into its business portfolio via facility expansion. By 2030, LOTTE BIOLOGICS plans to build 3 mega plants in South Korea. Each plant will have 8 stainless steel bioreactors with 15,000L capacities for large-scale commercial operations, alongside multiple 2,000L single-use bioreactors to accommodate the clinical needs. The groundbreaking is expected to take place in 2023. Altogether, the plants will have a total manufacturing volume of 360,000L or more in bioreactor capacity. More information about LOTTE BIOLOGICS, please visit: www.lottebiologics.com View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE LOTTE BIOLOGICS
https://www.wcjb.com/prnewswire/2023/06/05/lotte-biologics-kick-off-their-cdmo-business-campaign-bio-international-convention-2023/
2023-06-05 01:55:52
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https://www.wcjb.com/prnewswire/2023/06/05/lotte-biologics-kick-off-their-cdmo-business-campaign-bio-international-convention-2023/
U-Haul driver sentenced for hitting, killing Daytona Beach cyclist Advertisement U-Haul driver sentenced for hitting, killing Daytona Beach cyclist A man has been sentenced for driving the U-Haul truck that struck and killed a man in Daytona Beach. Daytona Beach Police say Tyler Williams struck and killed a 59-year-old man as he was riding a bicycle on Mason Avenue in June of 2021. Williams reportedly fled the scene after the crash. He has been sentenced to 15 years in prison and 15 years probation. DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — A man has been sentenced for driving the U-Haul truck that struck and killed a man in Daytona Beach. Daytona Beach Police say Tyler Williams struck and killed a 59-year-old man as he was riding a bicycle on Mason Avenue in June of 2021. Advertisement Williams reportedly fled the scene after the crash. He has been sentenced to 15 years in prison and 15 years probation.
https://www.wesh.com/article/u-haul-driver-sentenced-killing-cyclist/40476076
2022-07-02 17:00:41
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https://www.wesh.com/article/u-haul-driver-sentenced-killing-cyclist/40476076
Award-Winning Programs Serve More Than 1 Million Students SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., Aug. 23, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Imagine Learning, the largest provider of digital curriculum solutions in the U.S., serving 15 million students in more than half the school districts nationwide, today announced the launch of Imagine Learning Classroom, the new digital application powering its core English Language Arts and Mathematics solutions. Imagine Learning Classroom (formerly LearnZillion) enhances the high-quality curricula of Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics, Imagine Learning EL Education, Imagine Learning Odell Education, and Imagine Learning Guidebooks. These comprehensive programs offer the most accessible, teachable, and engaging core curricula for K-12 students available anywhere today. "Our goal is to deliver compelling, high-quality curricula in a teachable way to support educators and spark learning breakthroughs," said Terry Gilligan, Senior Vice President & General Manager, Core Curriculum for Imagine Learning. "With Imagine Learning Classroom, we've developed a cohesive, immersive classroom environment to empower teachers and ensure student success." As pioneers in digital instruction, Imagine Learning continually refines its core products and services to meet the needs of all students and educators. These solutions give educators continuous, clear insights into their students' learning, and supports them to maximize their potential. In addition, ongoing pedagogical research measures effectiveness in classrooms around the country to advance learning for all students. Imagine Learning Classroom puts the teacher and student at the center of learning for more positive outcomes. The dynamic software creates inspiring instructional experiences, providing students with opportunities to own their own learning, express choice in content, and showcase their voice in assignments, building essential skills to set students up for success. - Offers a turnkey solution that saves teachers time in planning and instruction - Incorporates features and functionality that support and honor each curricula's instructional design - Empowers teachers with tools to personalize and customize instruction to their unique needs - Engages students with rich media, including videos, digital interactivities, virtual manipulatives, and more - Enables the implementation of quality curricula in all learning environments - Refreshed student and teacher experiences, including a unique experience for primary students Imagine Learning Classroom offers the following premier ELA and Mathematics programs for grades K-12: - Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics is a complete K-12 IM-Certified mathematics curriculum that delivers a digital-first classroom experience, enabling teachers to create a student-centered, cohesive learning environment, based on research and driven by data that fully leverages the impact of high-quality curricula. - Imagine Learning EL Education is a content-based K-8 literacy curriculum utilizing compelling real-world texts that engage and excite learners in grades K-8. Informed by the Science of Reading, the program allows students to focus on mastery of knowledge and skills and demonstrate high-quality work while building habits of character. - Imagine Learning Odell Education is an innovative knowledge-based literacy program for grades 9-12 dedicated to fostering creativity and critical thinking. The program emphasizes learning through inquiry and empowers teachers to configure the course content by providing a variety of text collections and topics. - Imagine Learning Guidebooks is a comprehensive English Language Arts solution that immerses grade 3-12 students in reading and writing lessons across genres. Students create a web of meaning critical to the development of reading and writing skills, and build understanding through text sets, compelling questions, and integrated reading and writing activities. Imagine Learning is a PreK–12 digital learning solutions company that ignites learning breakthroughs by designing forward-thinking solutions at the intersection of people, curricula, and technology to drive student growth. Imagine Learning serves more than 15 million students and partners with more than half the school districts nationwide. Imagine Learning's flagship products include Imagine Edgenuity®, online courseware and virtual school services solutions; supplemental and intervention solutions for literacy, language, mathematics, robotics, and coding; and high-quality, digital-first core curriculum, including Illustrative Mathematics®, EL Education®, and Odell Education®—all on the Imagine Learning Classroom—and Twig Science®. Read more about Imagine Learning's digital solutions at imaginelearning.com. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Imagine Learning LLC
https://www.weau.com/prnewswire/2022/08/23/imagine-learning-classroom-launches-with-engaging-effective-core-math-english-language-arts-curricula/
2022-08-23 16:44:54
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https://www.weau.com/prnewswire/2022/08/23/imagine-learning-classroom-launches-with-engaging-effective-core-math-english-language-arts-curricula/
LAS VEGAS, Oct. 24, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Prime Trust, the leading provider of financial infrastructure for fintech and digital asset innovators, today opens its Crypto IRA to the public after a successful beta program launched earlier this year with businesses like SwanBitcoin, Coinbits, The Black Wall Street App & Digital Wallet and OnRamp. The Prime Trust Crypto IRA is the only API-enabled product that allows enterprises to offer their customers the opportunity to invest retirement funds in digital assets and take advantage of the tax benefits. This year, the macroeconomic landscape has seen constant change. As the markets have shown signs of downturn globally, investors are looking for alternative asset classes to diversify their portfolios. As interest in digital assets rose dramatically in 2021, more people have come to understand that cryptocurrency is here to stay. With this in mind, there has been an uptick in demand from financial services organizations (FSOs) for products that enable long-term investments in digital assets. "As a digital asset infrastructure provider, we pride ourselves in introducing new products that enable mass adoption of cryptocurrency," said Tom Brandl, Chief Operating Officer for Prime Trust. "As an alternative investment vehicle, cryptocurrencies garner interest from those who want to diversify their portfolio and invest for the long term, particularly under the current market conditions. We've definitely witnessed an increasing demand from IRA providers to add cryptocurrencies to their product mix. Our goal is to make the integration frictionless for IRA providers and the user experience familiar for investors." "As one of the best-performing assets of all time, owning Bitcoin in a tax-advantaged way is more important for Bitcoin than most other assets. That's typically either been difficult to do, or highly expensive," said Cory Klippsten, CEO of Swan. "In collaboration with Prime Trust, Swan made it very simple for millions of people to own actual Bitcoin in an IRA, Roth IRA, SEP IRA or Self 401(k). We've seen great demand for this solution and are thrilled to empower our clients to own Bitcoin however they want to hold it." Using Prime Trust's institutional-grade financial API technology, the company's IRA offering includes: - Traditional and ROTH IRAs - Rollover and transfer in support - Full IRA statements and tax reporting via API - In-account trading pairs from USD to BTC, ETH, SOL, LTC, ADA, AVAX, and more - Institutional grade security, including storage architecture supported by MPC technology Prime Trust's Crypto IRA is a tool that facilitates building wealth and expanding cryptocurrency's value as a means for financial inclusion. One example is Prime Trust's collaboration with The Black Wall Street App & Digital Wallet, which is a digital wallet and exchange that helps Black Americans onboard into the cryptocurrency ecosystem and is one of Prime Trust's beta integrators. Black Wall Street is now offering Prime Trust Crypto IRA to its users. "Giving people the wherewithal to invest responsibly, the tools to invest strategically and the support to understand their finances are key to building wealth in our community," said Hill Harper, founder of The Black Wall Street App & Digital Wallet, one of Prime Trust's beta integrators. "Many marginalized communities do not have access to the same investment tools that others have. Prime Trust's Crypto IRA will enable investors on the TBWS platform to easily add crypto offerings to diversify their portfolios in a secure, compliant and tax-advantageous way." The Black Wall Street App & Digital Wallet, SwanBitcoin, Coinbits and OnRamp are now offering Prime Trust Crypto IRA to their users. If you'd like to learn more about Prime Trust Crypto IRA, please visit https://www.primetrust.com/crypto-ira. Prime Trust powers innovation in the digital economy by providing fintech and digital asset innovators with financial infrastructure. Through a full suite of APIs, we help clients build seamlessly, launch quickly, and scale securely. Regulated by the State of Nevada, Prime Trust processes hundreds of millions of API calls per month. Prime Trust's team has extensive regulatory and financial services backgrounds from the OCC, SEC, Federal Reserve, U.S. Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security/Secret Service, JPMorgan Chase, American Express, PNC, Bank of America, and Visa. The company is recognized by Forbes as America's Best Startup Employer 2022 and is Great Place to Work-Certified™ 2022. Prime Trust has also been named to CB Insights Blockchain 50 and the Fintech 250 for 2022. Visit us at www.primetrust.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Prime Trust, LLC
https://www.kxii.com/prnewswire/2022/10/24/prime-trust-launches-only-all-in-one-ira-solution-after-successful-beta-program/
2022-10-24 16:37:26
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https://www.kxii.com/prnewswire/2022/10/24/prime-trust-launches-only-all-in-one-ira-solution-after-successful-beta-program/
WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen plan to use this year’s Freedman’s Bank Forum to highlight how federal coronavirus pandemic relief program funds have helped support Black- and minority-owned businesses. The Treasury Department said in a statement that “the importance of expanding the community finance system will be front and center” at the Oct. 6 forum. In 2015, then-Treasury Secretary Jack Lew launched the annual Freedman’s conference to develop strategies to address persistent racial economic disparities. Roughly 96% of Black-owned businesses are sole proprietorships and single-employee companies. These businesses have the hardest time finding funding and are often the first to suffer during economic downturns. They often turn to financial institutions for the underserved and other non-traditional lenders for micro-loans and grants. Earlier this month, Treasury announced that it had disbursed roughly $8.28 billion in relief funds to 162 community financial institutions across the country through its Emergency Capital Investment Program. The forum will include a panel on new support for community finance institutions, small businesses and low wealth communities, “all in an effort to unlock the economic potential of communities of color, rural areas, and others that have experienced limits on economic opportunity,” the department said. A February Government Accountability Office report outlined how various agencies could improve efforts to increase banking access for people who don’t have access to bank accounts. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the National Credit Union Administration and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency were all identified for improvements. ___ Follow the AP’s coverage of the Treasury Department at https://apnews.com/hub/us-department-of-the-treasury.
https://fox59.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-harris-yellen-focus-on-community-finance-at-freedman-forum/
2022-09-29 21:34:32
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https://fox59.com/news/politics/ap-politics/ap-harris-yellen-focus-on-community-finance-at-freedman-forum/
Political strategists Alice Stewart and Bill Press join Here & Now hosts Robin Young and Scott Tong to discuss the Biden administration’s economic messaging and the politics of gun control after the latest mass shootings. This article was originally published on WBUR.org. Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
https://www.nepm.org/2022-06-01/high-prices-gun-violence-churn-politics-with-5-months-to-go-before-midterm-elections
2022-06-01 19:44:53
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https://www.nepm.org/2022-06-01/high-prices-gun-violence-churn-politics-with-5-months-to-go-before-midterm-elections
‘It started hissing ... so I ran back inside’: Woman finds bear in backyard tree YUBA CITY, Calif. (KOVR) - A California woman is sounding the alarm in her neighborhood after one big burly neighbor unexpectedly showed up in her backyard. When she and her daughter went to check on a noise, Nancy Jimenez said she didn’t expect to find a bear in her backyard. She said she heard something substantial scurry up a tree, so she grabbed her flashlight and her daughter. “I got my shoes on and we came out here and she shined her light up and I was like, ‘What is that?’” Jimenez said. “And then it started hissing at us so I ran back inside like, ‘No, thank you.’” Despite the startling situation, Jimenez said she was more surprised than scared by the bear. “I was more, like, in awe that there’s an actual bear in my little Yuba City town,” she said. Jimenez and her daughter said they’re not sure how long the bear was in their backyard, but they did hear their dog barking most of the day. The only sign the bear left that he was in their yard is part of their fence that was broken down. “My son thought I was crazy,” Jimenez said. “I’m like no really, it’s a bear. You need to come over now.” Ann Bryant, executive director of BEAR League, said she wasn’t surprised at the bear’s appearance. “We’re seeing more of that and people aren’t prepared for it,” she said. Bryant said they are taking calls for bears in neighborhoods more often now. “You know what’s happening is, is with all the recent fires over the last few years, and so much bear habitat having burned, the bears have been moved around due to that,” Bryant said. Jimenez is now sharing video of the bear as a warning to others. “It just makes me a little bit in fear for my neighbors who will walk out and be like, ‘Oh my gosh, there’s a bear in my yard,’” she said. Copyright 2022 KMAX/KOVR via CNN Newsource. All rights reserved.
https://www.valleynewslive.com/2022/12/08/it-started-hissing-so-i-ran-back-inside-woman-finds-bear-backyard-tree/
2022-12-09 00:08:15
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https://www.valleynewslive.com/2022/12/08/it-started-hissing-so-i-ran-back-inside-woman-finds-bear-backyard-tree/
DALLAS, June 22, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- ShiftKey, the largest platform for connecting independent licensed healthcare professionals with open shifts at healthcare facilities in the U.S. announced today that it has completed a strategic investment in Cleveland-based OnShift, the leading provider of workforce management technology for post-acute and long-term care facilities. "Since our founding, our goal has been to combine the ShiftKey marketplace with a scheduling tool for facility employees. When the opportunity to invest in OnShift came up, we could not have been more excited to join forces with the market leader for scheduling and employee management in post-acute care." Said Tom Ellis, Founder and CEO of ShiftKey. The vision behind this partnership is to provide facilities with a wholistic view of their schedule showing their own workforce and independent workers in one place to create visibility into their costs and continuing to offer flexibility for how to meet the needs of their business. "By offering the first complete solution to effectively manage the nursing schedule, our hope is to help alleviate the incredible pressure the industry is under to provide the best quality care while optimizing costs and creating transparency", said Ellis. While ShiftKey and OnShift will continue to operate independently, clients will benefit from additional new and innovative product offerings to help solve the operational challenges impacting healthcare administrators every day. "OnShift and ShiftKey share a common vision to transform the healthcare industry by solving the staffing crisis," said Mark Woodka, CEO of OnShift. "This partnership will address the unprecedented workforce challenges that today's healthcare organizations are facing with modern, cost-effective strategies. We are excited about the long-term opportunities that our two world-class companies will deliver to the industry." Founded in 2016, Dallas, TX based ShiftKey is a platform that is disrupting the way healthcare facilities typically find licensed and certified professionals to fill available shifts. Leveraging marketplace dynamics and deep industry knowledge, the company is playing a vital role in mitigating America's healthcare staffing shortages, enabling direct connections between facilities and healthcare professionals. By offering the opportunity to work as much or as little as they choose and putting the power back into the hands of healthcare workers, ShiftKey is bringing more licensed professionals back into the workforce, a solution that is solving a major crisis in healthcare. Since its inception, healthcare facilities have posted more than 35 million hours of shifts on ShiftKey, interacting with hundreds of thousands of professionals looking for flexible work. For more information, visit www.ShiftKey.com OnShift's next-generation platform fundamentally transforms the relationship between healthcare organizations and their workers. Our innovative approach to recruitment, hiring, workforce management, pay and engagement fosters a culture where people want to work. That's why thousands of healthcare organizations rely on OnShift's integrated suite of software and services to dramatically reduce turnover rates, decrease costs and improve the quality and continuity of care. For more information, visit www.OnShift.com View original content: SOURCE ShiftKey
https://www.kait8.com/prnewswire/2022/06/22/shiftkey-makes-strategic-investment-workforce-management-platform-onshift/
2022-06-22 19:53:24
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https://www.kait8.com/prnewswire/2022/06/22/shiftkey-makes-strategic-investment-workforce-management-platform-onshift/
Through Their Annual Toy Drive Allure Esthetic Provided Free Toys to Children in the Seattle Area SEATTLE, Dec. 29, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Allure Esthetic Plastic Surgery, in partnership with the Zera Foundation, hosted a toy drive in their practice during the holiday season to collect toys for underprivileged children who may otherwise not receive holiday gifts. The toy drive itself was a success and by Allure Esthetic donating five free Botox units in exchange for a donation of two toys. To distribute these gifts, the Zera Foundation helped organize an event where children or their families could come to pick out a toy at a Toy Shop setup at the office of Allure Esthetic. Working with local schools and shelters, over one hundred children or their guardians signed up for the event. On December 23, the event took place and Dr. Sajan and volunteers were there to help set up and distribute the toys. The linked video shows the impact the toy drive had on the local community. A representative from Allure Esthetic Plastic Surgery said, "We had such a tremendous response from the community that the donations weren't enough. Our practice funded the rest and we are more than happy to be able to give back this holiday season." Families also expressed their gratitude for the opportunity with many families stating they come from single-income households and were otherwise unable to give their kids the Christmas they wanted. Allure Esthetic and the Zera Foundation were able to help improve lives as well as provide extra cheer during the holiday season. About Dr. Javad Sajan: Dr. Javad Sajan is a plastic surgeon at Allure Esthetic Plastic Surgery. With years of surgical and non-surgical experience in the aesthetic field, patients travel from across the world for his expertise. Dr. Sajan frequently partners with the Zera Foundation to give back to the local Seattle community through events such as the annual toy drive and various other community service events throughout the year. Find Dr. Sajan and more information about the fundraiser on Instagram. Contact: realdrseattle Phone: 206-787-0784 Email: hello@realdrseattle.com View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Allure Esthetic
https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2022/12/29/dr-javad-sajan-amp-allure-esthetic-plastic-surgery-donate-toys-underprivileged-kids/
2022-12-30 00:29:45
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https://www.mysuncoast.com/prnewswire/2022/12/29/dr-javad-sajan-amp-allure-esthetic-plastic-surgery-donate-toys-underprivileged-kids/
Illinois man accused of killing estranged wife QUINCY, Ill. (WGEM/Gray News) - An Illinois man is being held without bond on accusations he killed his estranged wife. Police arrested 39-year-old Timothy Bliefnick on Monday, more than two weeks after his estranged wife, 41-year-old Rebecca “Becky” Bliefnick, was found shot to death Feb. 23 in her home in Quincy, Illinois. The arrest came as a relief to Bobbie Taute-Howe, one of Rebecca Bliefnick’s closest friends, who still can’t believe her friend is dead. “I still think that I’m going to wake up tomorrow to a text message,” she said, as she teared up. “I feel like this was an act of anger and jealousy.” Timothy Bliefnick is charged with first-degree murder and home invasion. At a Tuesday court appearance, a judge denied him bond, WGEM reports. His attorney, Casey Schnack, said a grand jury will review the case March 23. If it hands down an indictment, Timothy Bliefnick will return to court the next day for his arraignment, where he will plead not guilty. “Given the circumstances of Becky’s death, it’s not surprising he was the No. 1 suspect or a suspect,” Schnack said. “He knows that there are a lot of people out here that are fighting for him, that are thinking about him and have his best interests in mind, so he’s trusting the process right now.” Meanwhile, as Howe mourns, she remembers the time she spent with Rebecca Bliefnick. Together, they were nurses, workout buddies and moms. She describes her friend as “the mom you wanted to be.” “Becky was such a great person and so loving and kind. Only a person that was truly selfish would have done this to her,” Taute-Howe said. After Rebecca Bliefnick’s death, there are three boys who don’t have a mom. Taute-Howe is praying for justice for those boys and their mother. “Just knowing that the boys get answers and have a safe and loving home will give her justice,” she said. If convicted, Timothy Bliefnick could face life in prison. Copyright 2023 WGEM via Gray Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
https://www.wsaz.com/2023/03/16/illinois-man-accused-killing-estranged-wife/
2023-03-16 07:05:04
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https://www.wsaz.com/2023/03/16/illinois-man-accused-killing-estranged-wife/
The U.S. Justice Department is suing one of the nation's largest corporations, drug wholesaler AmerisourceBergen, for allegedly fueling the nation's deadly opioid crisis. In its complaint, DOJ officials said the company failed to report the diversion of "hundreds of thousands" of prescription opioid medications shipped to pharmacies. The addiction crisis has killed more than a million people in the U.S., with fatal overdoses claiming 107,000 lives last year alone. According to the DOJ, AmerisourceBergen and two of its subsidiaries could face penalties running into the billions of dollars. "Companies distributing opioids are required to report suspicious orders to federal law enforcement," said Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta, in a statement. "AmerisourceBergen which sold billions of units of prescription opioids over the past decade repeatedly failed to comply with that requirement," she added. According to the complaint, AmerisourceBergen executives knew prescription pills shipped to Florida and West Virginia were being diverted and "sold in parking lots for cash." The DOJ also alleges two people in Colorado who improperly received opioid pills shipped by the company "subsequently died of overdoses." In a statement, AmerisourceBergen denied any wrongdoing. The company accused the Justice Department of "cherry picking" alleged problems that existed at a handful of pharmacies out the tens of thousands of pharmacies served by the company. "AmerisourceBergen verified DEA registration and state board of pharmacy licenses before filling any orders, conducted extensive due diligence into these customers, reported every sale of every controlled substances to the DEA," the company said. In February 2022, AmerisourceBergen reached a national settlement with state and local governments, agreeing to pay $6.1 billion to resolve a tsunami of opioid-related lawsuits. Federal officials say this civil lawsuit against the company is unrelated to that deal. This action by the DOJ comes at a moment when drug manufacturers, distributors and pharmacy chains have faced a national reckoning over their role marketing and selling highly addictive pain pills. The DOJ is also currently suing Walmart for alleged opioid violations at its pharmacy chain. Walmart, too, has denied any wrongdoing. In all, corporations have agreed to pay more than $50 billion in settlements and penalties, money that's expected to fund drug addiction treatment programs across the U.S. Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
https://www.kvpr.org/npr-news/npr-news/2022-12-29/feds-sue-amerisourcebergen-over-hundreds-of-thousands-of-alleged-opioid-violations
2022-12-29 19:35:56
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https://www.kvpr.org/npr-news/npr-news/2022-12-29/feds-sue-amerisourcebergen-over-hundreds-of-thousands-of-alleged-opioid-violations
He was Roger Clemens’ lawyer. Why he says Trevor Bauer is ‘absolutely’ right to fight The star pitcher believed he was wrongly accused. He spoke up, and he spoke out. He faced the possibility of prison time. He sued his accuser, and his accuser sued him back. This is Trevor Bauer today, but this was also Roger Clemens 15 years ago. Clemens did everything he could to get his good name back. It did not work. “He’ll never be able to clear his name in terms of public perception,” Rusty Hardin told the Los Angeles Times. Hardin was the attorney for Clemens, and he was speaking about Clemens. He might as well have been speaking of Bauer. This is not a perfect parallel. Clemens was alleged to have used steroids. Bauer has been accused of sexual assault. Complete coverage from the Los Angeles Times of Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer’s 324-game suspension from Major League Baseball. When Clemens was identified as a steroid user in the Mitchell Report in 2007, he was 45. His career was over. He embarked on a legal crusade that took eight years to conclude. Bauer, the Dodgers pitcher, turns 32 in January. He made his major league debut 10 years ago. Even under the best of circumstances, he would have precious few years left in his career. He has not pitched in a major league game in 17 months. He will not be eligible to pitch in a major league game for another 17 months, unless an arbitrator reduces or overturns Bauer’s suspension for violating baseball’s policy on domestic violence and sexual assault. The arbitrator’s decision is expected no earlier than next month. Neither Bauer nor the league have said what specific conduct was deemed to have violated that policy. However, Commissioner Rob Manfred levied a two-year suspension, the longest such penalty under the policy. Bauer could have accepted a lesser suspension in exchange for agreeing not to appeal. The Los Angeles County district attorney already had decided not to file criminal charges against him. “It’s worth it for anybody who thinks they did not do what they are accused of. It’s always better to fight it.” — Attorney Rusty Hardin He could have moved forward from that point. He has continued his workouts, as his posts on social media show, and he would like to play again. However, he has filed defamation lawsuits against his accuser and five other parties, so any team that might be interested in employing him might well have to consider whether the possibility of years of legal proceedings would be a deterrent. Bauer’s representatives declined to comment for this column. Bauer has consistently denied any wrongdoing, portraying himself as a victim of a setup. To Bauer, any kind of settlement would be tantamount to an acknowledgment he did something wrong. His vigorous legal activity makes clear he would rather attack than step back. His attorneys said in a court filing last year that “no settlements or cash offers have or ever will be made” to the accuser. Puig will plead guilty to one count of making false statements after lying to federal agents investigating an illegal sports gambling operation run by Wayne Nix, a former minor league player. After Bauer sued the accuser for defamation, she sued back, with her attorneys arguing Bauer had “again victimized [her] by leveraging his considerable resources to file a meritless lawsuit.” Clemens is the only man to win seven Cy Young Awards. No one else has won more than five. On the field, he is a first-ballot Hall of Famer. The only significant reason for a voter to reject him: a belief that he used steroids, and that he should be held accountable for it, despite a jury finding that he did not commit perjury when he testified to Congress that he had not used steroids. “In spite of that, most people think he is guilty, because baseball fans are not well people,” Hardin said. “If you are accused of messing with their holy statistics, no matter whether you did it or not, it’s over for you.” The Baseball Writers Assn. of America rejected Clemens for the Hall of Fame 10 times, all 10 times after the jury verdict. He will get an 11th chance before a veterans’ committee next month. “Roger could afford to fight it and stay with it forever, until he got vindication through a verdict,” Hardin said. “It wasn’t enough to change people’s attitudes. You know why it didn’t change? It didn’t change sportswriters’ attitudes. That would have changed the public. Sooner or later, sportswriters have to recognize that it’s entertainment. “In their world, they don’t really care what the truth is, with all due respect, just whether somebody said it.” America has come to a place, Hardin said, “where the allegation has become self-proving.” Bauer, like Clemens, has the financial resources to fight. Yet, if the lesson of the Clemens case is that allegations alone are sufficient to tarnish one’s name forever, would Hardin advise Bauer to keep fighting? “Absolutely, yes,” Hardin said. “Roger always said, ‘Rusty, I’m going to fight it, not to get into the Hall of Fame, but so my four sons know I did everything I could to fight those false allegations. I care about them — not the public, and not the sports media.’ “So, yes, it’s worth it. It’s worth it for anybody who thinks they did not do what they are accused of. It’s always better to fight it.” Major League Baseball mandates locker rooms for women at baseball stadiums, but a legal squabble over who should pay for one at Camelback Ranch is brewing. In the end, after Clemens’ first three rejections for the Hall of Fame, and seven years after his accuser sued him for defamation, the accuser reached a financial settlement — not with Clemens himself, but with an insurance company with which Clemens had a policy. Clemens himself did not pay, and he did not attend the settlement negotiations, still defiant after almost a decade. “I was not present, nor would have I participated in paying one dime,” Clemens told the Houston Chronicle. “Everyone knows my stance on the subject.” If the Clemens timeline is any indication, we could hear Bauer say something very similar in 2029. Are you a true-blue fan? Get our Dodgers Dugout newsletter for insights, news and much more. You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
https://www.latimes.com/sports/dodgers/story/2022-11-17/trevor-bauer-dodgers-rusty-hardin-roger-clemens
2022-11-17 12:14:31
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https://www.latimes.com/sports/dodgers/story/2022-11-17/trevor-bauer-dodgers-rusty-hardin-roger-clemens
SBP shared how its Recovery Acceleration Fund (RAF) will accelerate financial support for the most vulnerable disaster survivors to rebuild their homes sooner NEW YORK, Sept. 21, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- On Tuesday, The Clinton Global Initiative announced the innovative work of SBP, a Louisiana-based social impact organization focused on disaster resilience and recovery. SBP's Recovery Acceleration Fund (RAF), a new program that taps private investment to shorten the time it takes for financial support to reach disaster survivors seeking home repair assistance, earned recognition as a featured Commitment to Action at CGI's 2022 meeting. While survivors must often wait more than two years after a natural disaster to receive HUD assistance, the RAF will quickly provide bridge loans to finance home rebuilds for under-resourced survivors. "We are honored that the Clinton Global Initiative has recognized SBP's transformative work to help communities recover from disasters," said Zack Rosenburg, CEO and co-founder of SBP. "SBP is already hard at work launching our Recovery Acceleration Fund, which we believe can scale to impact thousands more families." Rosenburg presented the RAF at CGI's 2022 meeting, sharing details on the new program with media and other social impact leaders in attendance. The RAF will act as a scalable model for a bridge loan, helping to rebuild families' homes 24 to 36 months sooner than previously possible. SBP is launching a pilot to rebuild 150 homes over the next 18 months and will scale the RAF to reach at least 1,000 homeowners over the next three years. This reimbursement model, which will pay a 4% return to investors, will become the go-to program that states and cities can build into their plans for distributing HUD relief, ensuring that low-income and vulnerable homeowners receive support months–not years–after disaster strikes. This is especially important for people of color in low-income communities. For these residents, homeownership is a key driver of wealth creation, and yet they are often disproportionately impacted by natural disasters. The RAF is a new Commitment to Action announced at the CGI meeting. CGI facilitates action by helping partners like SBP connect, collaborate, and develop Commitments to Action—new, specific, and measurable plans that address global challenges. CGI supports these programs by helping to forge new partnerships, provide technical support, and elevate compelling models with the potential to scale. SBP, a social impact organization focused on disaster resilience and recovery, solves the challenges facing at-risk communities by bringing the rigor of business and innovation to drive social impact, create resilient communities, and streamline recovery. To shrink the time between disaster and recovery, SBP takes a holistic approach—reducing risk, increasing resilience, and improving the recovery process—to effect transformational change in the disaster recovery system and restore opportunity and security for people and communities. Since its founding in 2006 in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana, following the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina, SBP has rebuilt homes for more than 3,000 families with the help of 150,000 volunteers in 14 communities across the U.S. and in the Bahamas. To learn more, visit www.SBPUSA.org. Facebook, Instagram & Twitter: @SBPUSA The Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) convenes global and emerging leaders to create and implement solutions to the world's most pressing challenges. CGI works with partners to drive action through its unique model. Rather than directly implementing projects, CGI facilitates action by helping members connect, collaborate, and develop Commitments to Action—new, specific, and measurable plans that address global challenges. Through CGI, the community has made more than 3,700 Commitments to Action that have made a difference in the lives of more than 435 million people in more than 180 countries. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE SBP
https://www.kalb.com/prnewswire/2022/09/21/clinton-global-initiative-highlights-sbps-innovative-disaster-recovery-solutions/
2022-09-22 00:19:43
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https://www.kalb.com/prnewswire/2022/09/21/clinton-global-initiative-highlights-sbps-innovative-disaster-recovery-solutions/
Bison’s relocation to Native lands revives a spiritual bond By BOBBY ROSS Jr. Associated Press BULL HOLLOW, Okla. (AP) — Ryan Mackey quietly sang a sacred Cherokee verse as he pulled a handful of tobacco out of a zip-close bag. Reaching over a barbed wire fence, he scattered the leaves onto the pasture where a growing herd of bison — popularly known as American buffalo — grazed in northeastern Oklahoma. The offering represented a reverent act of thanksgiving, the 45-year-old explained, and a desire to forge a divine connection with the animals, his ancestors and the Creator. “When tobacco is used in the right way, it’s almost like a contract is made between you and the spirit — the spirit of our Creator, the spirit of these bison,” Mackey said as a strong wind rumbled across the grassy field. “Everything, they say, has a spiritual aspect. Just like this wind, we can feel it in our hands, but we can’t see it.” Decades after the last bison vanished from their tribal lands, the Cherokee Nation is part of a nationwide resurgence of Indigenous people seeking to reconnect with the humpbacked, shaggy-haired animals that occupy a crucial place in centuries-old tradition and belief. Since 1992 the federally chartered InterTribal Buffalo Council has helped relocate surplus bison from locations such as Badlands National Park in South Dakota, Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming and Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona to 82 member tribes in 20 states. “Collectively those tribes manage over 20,000 buffalo on tribal lands,” said Troy Heinert, a Rosebud Sioux Tribe member who serves as executive director of the InterTribal Buffalo Council, based in Rapid City, South Dakota. “Our goal and mission is to restore buffalo back to Indian country for that cultural and spiritual connection that Indigenous people have with the buffalo.” Centuries ago, an estimated 30 million to 60 million bison roamed the vast Great Plains of North America, from Canada to Texas. But by 1900, European settlers had driven the species to near extinction, hunting them en masse for their prized skins and often leaving the carcasses to rot on the prairie. “It’s important to recognize the history that Native people had with buffalo and how buffalo were nearly decimated. … Now with the resurgence of the buffalo, often led by Native nations, we’re seeing that spiritual and cultural awakening as well that comes with it,” said Heinert, who is a South Dakota state senator. Historically, Indigenous people hunted and used every part of the bison: for food, clothing, shelter, tools and ceremonial purposes. They did not regard the bison as a mere commodity, however, but rather as beings closely linked to people. “Many tribes viewed them as a relative,” Heinert said. “You’ll find that in the ceremonies and language and songs.” Rosalyn LaPier, an Indigenous writer and scholar who grew up on the Blackfeet Nation’s reservation in Montana, said there are different mythological origin stories for bison among the various peoples of the Great Plains. “Depending on what Indigenous group you’re talking to, the bison originated in the supernatural realm and ended up on Earth for humans to use,” said LaPier, an environmental historian and ethnobotanist at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. “And there’s usually some sort of story of how humans were taught to hunt bison and kill bison and harvest them.” Her Blackfeet tribe, for example, believes there are three realms: the sky world, the below world — that is, Earth — and the underwater world. Tribal lore, LaPier says, holds that the Blackfeet were vegetarians until an orphaned bison slipped out of the underwater world in human form and was taken in by two caring humans. As a result, the underwater bison’s divine leader allowed more to come to Earth to be hunted and eaten. In Oklahoma, the Cherokee Nation, one of the largest Native American tribes with 437,000 registered members, had a few bison on its land in the 1970s. But they disappeared. It wasn’t until 40 years later that the tribe’s contemporary herd was begun, when a large cattle trailer — driven by Heinert — arrived in fall 2014 with 38 bison from Badlands National Park. It was greeted by emotional songs and prayers from tribe’s people. “I can still remember the dew that was on the grass and the songs of the birds that were in the trees. … I could feel the hope and the pride in the Cherokee people that day,” Heinert said. Since then, births and additional bison transplants from various locations have boosted the population to about 215. The herd roams a 500-acre (2-square kilometer) pasture in Bull Hollow, an unincorporated area of Delaware County about 70 miles (113 kilometers) northeast of Tulsa, near the small town of Kenwood. For now, the Cherokee are not harvesting the animals, whose bulls can weigh up to 2,000 pounds (900 kilograms) and stand 6 feet tall (nearly 2 meters), as leaders focus on growing the herd. But bison, a lean protein, could serve in the future as a food source for Cherokee schools and nutrition centers, said Bryan Warner, the tribe’s deputy principal chief. “Our hope is really not just for food sovereignty’s sake but to really reconnect our citizens back in a spiritual way,” said Warner, a member of a United Methodist church. That reconnection in turn leads to discussions about other fauna, he added, from rabbits and turtles to quail and doves. “All these different animals — it puts you more in tune with nature,” he said as bison sauntered through a nearby pond. “And then essentially it puts you more in tune with yourself, because we all come from the same dirt that these animals are formed from — from our Creator.” Originally from the southeastern United States, the Cherokee were forced to relocate to present-day Oklahoma in 1838 after gold was discovered in their ancestral lands. The 1,000-mile (1,600-kilometer) removal, known as the Trail of Tears, claimed nearly 4,000 lives through sickness and harsh travel conditions. While bison are more associated with Great Plains tribes than those with roots on the East Coast, the newly arrived Cherokee had connections with a slightly smaller subspecies, according to Mackey. The animals on the tribe’s lands today are not direct descendants, he explained, but close cousins with which the tribe is able to have a spiritual bond. “We don’t speak the same language as the bison,” Mackey said. “But when you sit with them and spend time with them, relationships can be built on … other means than just language alone: sharing experiences, sharing that same space and just having a feeling of respect. Your body language changes when you have respect for someone or something.” Mackey grew up with Pentecostal roots on his father’s side and Baptist on his mother’s. He still occasionally attends church, but finds more meaning in Cherokee ceremonial practices. “Even if (tribal members) are raised in church or in synagogue or wherever they choose to worship, their elders are Cherokee elders,” he said. “And this idea of relationship and respect and guardianship — with the land, with the Earth, with all those things that reside on it — it’s passed down. It still pervades our identity as Cherokee people.” That’s why he believes the bison’s return to Cherokee lands is so important. “The bison aren’t just meat,” he said. “They represent abundance and health and strength.” ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
https://localnews8.com/news/ap-national/2022/11/22/bisons-relocation-to-native-lands-revives-a-spiritual-bond/
2022-11-22 15:34:29
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https://localnews8.com/news/ap-national/2022/11/22/bisons-relocation-to-native-lands-revives-a-spiritual-bond/
North Carolina-based MegaRexx Trucks is back with another supersized Ford off-roader. The MegaRexx SVN is a modified Ford F-250 Super Duty built to haul lots of people instead of cargo. Taking advantage of the heavy-duty pickup truck’s considerable footprint, MegaRexx created a four-row configuration with seating for nine. The first, second, and third rows have bucket seats, while the fourth row has a three-seat bench. All of the seats are upholstered in leather. Unlike MegaRexx’s previous MegaRaptor7 SUV, the additional rows of seats are fully enclosed in aluminum bodywork that extends off the stock cab, and includes a one-piece rear window. MegaRexx also includes climate controls for the newly added rear rows. The exterior is otherwise mostly stock, but it also has a dark tint for the rear windows, Morimoto XB LED headlights and fog lights, and power side steps to aid ingress and egress. The truck also features 3D-printed C-pillar emblems, a laser-etched grille emblem, a laser-etched and CNC-routed tailgate panel, and Rhino-Rack cross bars mounted to the standard roof rack. The SVN uses the Super Duty’s stock 6.7-liter turbodiesel V-8. It’s rated at 475 hp and 1,050 lb-ft of torque, which is sent to all four wheels through the stock 10-speed automatic transmission. To wrangle so much vehicle and improve its off-road capability, MegaRexx swaps in a Carli 2.5-inch Commuter Suspension & Leveling System that as the name implies provides a 2.5-inch lift. It all rides on 285/75R18 Goodyear Wrangler DuraTrac tires. MegaRexx uses the F-250 Lariat with the Ultimate Package as the basis for the SVN, and claims it retains most of that truck’s many tech and convenience features. The list includes a 12.0-inch touchscreen and Sync 4 infotainment system, a 1,000-watt B&O audio system, wireless smartphone charging, power trailer-tow mirrors, and ambient lighting, as well as driver aids like blind-spot monitors and rear parking sensors. The price for all of this is $170,000, and that includes the cost of a donor vehicle. Note that MegaRexx previously charged $224,950 for its MegaBronc three-row Super Duty Bronco, which is also based on the F-250 Lariat diesel, but features Bronco-like styling. MegaRexx also turned the F-250 into a Raptor facsimile, dubbed MegaRaptor. Related Articles - SVE 800-hp Yenko/SC Silverado offered in lowered or off-road spec - Review: The 2023 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro sports an aftermarket vibe - 2024 Chevy Silverado 1500 adds diesel power to ZR2 off-roader - GMC and EarthCruiser ready Hummer EV overlander concept - Ford F-150 Lightning receives fourth price increase
https://cw33.com/automotive/internet-brands/megarexx-svn-turns-ford-f-250-into-a-9-passenger-off-roader/
2023-04-02 17:35:57
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https://cw33.com/automotive/internet-brands/megarexx-svn-turns-ford-f-250-into-a-9-passenger-off-roader/
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico's governor said Tuesday that given the ferocity and swift movements of a record-setting wildfire burning in the northeastern part of the state, the damage will be significant with estimates of burned homes and other structures likely to range between 1,000 and 1,500. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham stressed that was only a rough estimate but likely not an exaggeration, saying it's clear to state and federal officials that there are many victims who have lost their homes and have had their businesses affected. “And their families are suffering,” the governor said during a news conference with national FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell and top state officials. “And that's my takeaway, the number of families that we have to help.” The fire has charred more than 468 square miles (1212 square kilometers) over the last 42 days to earn the distinction of being the largest fire in the arid state's recorded history. It's also the largest fire currently burning in the U.S. Evacuation orders remain in place for many villages. Crews have been working on multiple fronts around the fire's massive perimeter to herd the flames around homes by building more dozer lines, clearing brush, raking pine needles and setting up sprinkler systems. A fraction of an inch of precipitation fell over parts of the fire Monday, but a meteorologist assigned to the blaze said those places along the perimeter that needed it most missed out on the moisture. More red flag warnings prompted by dry, windy conditions were expected to be issued later this week. The governor also warned that many residents, depending on whether they live, should be ready for potential evacuations all summer given the likelihood for higher fire danger due to strong winds, warmer temperatures brought on by climate change and forecasts for little to no precipitation. Officials with three of New Mexico’s five national forests announced that closure orders will take effect Thursday, prohibiting public access because of active wildfires and extreme fire danger. All of the Santa National Forest will be off limits along with the Cibola National Forest that borders Albuquerque and the Carson National Forest in far northern New Mexico. Another fire burning in the Gila National Forest in southern New Mexico had grown more than 57 square miles (148 square kilometers) in one day, causing concern among state officials. Forest roads and trails in the area were closed. Near the community of Los Alamos, crews made progress on keeping another fire within its containment lines. That blaze was behaving differently given that it was moving through the burn scar of a 2011 wildfire. Federal officials acknowledged during Tuesday's briefing that recovery for northern New Mexico will be a long process and that the initial aid provided through emergency programs was not meant to make people whole but rather provide reimbursements for lodging, medical expenses and emergency home repairs. More than 2,000 people already have registered with FEMA. Lujan Grisham recognized the emotions that many people are feeling after losing homes and property that have been in their families for generations — and in some cases for centuries. She said the goal of state and federal officials is to save all lives and as many properties as possible. “We have lives to put back together,” she said. Officials with the U.S. Forest Service announced Tuesday that a special team will begin assessing the cooler areas of the fire to determine what needs to be done to protect against post-fire events like erosion and flooding. The team will use ground and aerial surveys, satellite imagery and computer models to evaluate conditions and recommend emergency treatments. Similar work already is underway in southern New Mexico and in northern Arizona where early-season wildfires burned homes in forested communities. Nationwide, more than 2,140 square miles (5,542 square kilometers) have burned so far this year — the most at this point since 2018, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber Credit: Jim Weber
https://www.springfieldnewssun.com/nation-world/new-mexico-fires-prompt-forest-closures-governor-seeks-aid/N5R2IFEFOVFPJLK26I5M35R3NQ/
2022-05-18 00:27:32
0
https://www.springfieldnewssun.com/nation-world/new-mexico-fires-prompt-forest-closures-governor-seeks-aid/N5R2IFEFOVFPJLK26I5M35R3NQ/
Eastern Conference Central Division East Division Western Conference B.C. Division U.S. Division Note: Two points for a team winning in overtime or shootout; the team losing in overtime or shootout receives one which is registered in the OTL or SOL columns. Tuesday's games Prince Albert at Saskatoon, 7 p.m. Edmonton at Red Deer, 7 p.m. Medicine Hat at Lethbridge, 7 p.m. Victoria at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Everett at Tri-City, 7:05 p.m. Spokane at Seattle, 7:05 p.m. Kamloops at Kelowna, 7:05 p.m. Wednesday's games Brandon at Regina, 7 p.m. Winnipeg at Moose Jaw, 7 p.m. Swift Current at Medicine Hat, 7 p.m. Edmonton at Calgary, 7 p.m. Tri-City at Portland, 7 p.m. Kelowna at Kamloops, 7 p.m. Victoria at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Seattle at Spokane, 7:05 p.m.
https://www.sfchronicle.com/news/article/HKO-WHL-Standings-17675461.php
2022-12-24 07:01:01
1
https://www.sfchronicle.com/news/article/HKO-WHL-Standings-17675461.php
Jordan Staal Player Prop Bets: Hurricanes vs. Panthers - Stanley Cup Semifinals Game 3 Jordan Staal will be on the ice Monday when his Carolina Hurricanes play the Florida Panthers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Semifinals at BB&T Center. If you're considering a bet on Staal against the Panthers, we have lots of info to help. Catch over 1,000 out of market NHL games, plus original programming, with ESPN+ or the Disney Bundle. Click here to sign up! Jordan Staal vs. Panthers Game Info & Odds - When: Monday, May 22, 2023 at 8:00 PM ET - TV Channel: TNT - Points Prop: 0.5 points (Over odds: +145) - Assists Prop: 0.5 assists (Over odds: +245) Check out the latest odds and place your bets on player props with DraftKings Sportsbook. Hurricanes vs Panthers Game Info Staal Season Stats Insights - In 81 games this season, Staal has averaged 16:16 on the ice, while putting up a plus-minus rating of +7. - Staal has a goal in 17 of 81 contests this season, but no multi-goal games so far. - Staal has a point in 28 of 81 games this year, with multiple points in five of them. - Staal has an assist in 15 of 81 games this year, with multiple assists in one of them. - Staal has an implied probability of 40.8% to eclipse his point total based on the odds. - There is a 29% chance of Staal having more than 0.5 assists, based on the moneyline odds. Put together your best lineup of players and you could win cash prizes! Sign up for FanDuel Fantasy using our link for the best first-time player offer. Staal Stats vs. the Panthers - On the defensive side, the Panthers are giving up 272 total goals (3.3 per game) which ranks 21st in the NHL. - The team has the league's 16th-ranked goal differential (+16). Not all offers available in all states. Please gamble responsibly. If you or someone you know has developed a gambling problem or addiction, contact 1-800-GAMBLER. © 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
https://www.wistv.com/sports/betting/2023/05/22/jordan-staal-stanley-cup-semifinals-game-3-player-prop-bets/
2023-05-22 19:08:11
1
https://www.wistv.com/sports/betting/2023/05/22/jordan-staal-stanley-cup-semifinals-game-3-player-prop-bets/
Researchers at Harvard Medical School were able to reverse aging in mice. Now they’re trying to get the same result in humans. Scientists at The Sinclair Lab, which focuses on the study of aging and how to reverse it, were able to make mice young again by resetting aging cells into earlier versions of themselves – including versions with no illness or health issues. They used proteins to regulate gene expression. After DNA is repaired, the gene expression process is reset, researchers wrote. In the Harvard study, scientists tested the protein on mice with poor eyesight. The mice were able to see again, sometimes as well as their young offsprings. By this theory, scientists believe the same process could be applied to humans and reset our age. That would include aging into our 100s and being able to reverse disease, like cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer’s, scientists claim. However, studies looking into whether this can actually work in humans are still their early stages.
https://www.kbzk.com/news/national/scientists-reversed-aging-in-mice-now-they-want-to-see-if-it-works-in-humans
2022-06-03 20:12:44
1
https://www.kbzk.com/news/national/scientists-reversed-aging-in-mice-now-they-want-to-see-if-it-works-in-humans
New, untested abortion bans have made doctors unsure about treating some pregnancy complications, which has led to life-threatening delays and trapped families in a limbo of grief and helplessness. Elizabeth Weller never dreamed that her own hopes for a child would become ensnared in the web of Texas abortion law. She and her husband began trying in late 2021. They had bought a house in Kingwood, a lakeside development in Houston. Elizabeth was in graduate school for political science, and James taught middle-school math. The Wellers were pleasantly surprised when they got pregnant early in 2022. In retrospect, Elizabeth says their initial joy felt a little naive: "If it was so easy for us to get pregnant, then to us it was almost like a sign that this pregnancy was going to be easy for us." Things did go fairly smooth at first. Seventeen weeks into the pregnancy, they learned they were expecting a girl. They also had an anatomy scan, which revealed no problems. Even if it had, the Wellers were determined to proceed. "We skipped over the genetic testing offered in the first trimester," Elizabeth says. "I was born with a physical disability. If she had any physical ailments, I would never abort her for that issue." Elizabeth thought of abortion rights in broad terms: "I have said throughout my life I believe that women should have the access to the right to an abortion. I personally would never get one." And at this particular point in her life, pregnant for the first time at age 26, it was still somewhat abstract: "I had not been put in a position to where I had to weigh the real nuances that went into this situation. I had not been put in the crossroads of this issue." But in early May, not long after the uneventful anatomy scan, the Wellers suddenly arrived at that crossroads. There they found themselves pinned down, clinically and emotionally, victims of a collision between standard obstetrical practice and the rigid new demands of Texas law. It was May 10, 2022. Elizabeth was 18 weeks pregnant. She ate a healthy breakfast, went for a walk outside and came back home. In the nursery upstairs, they had already stashed some baby clothes and new cans of paint. Down in the kitchen, images from recent scans and ultrasounds were stuck to the fridge. Elizabeth stood up to get some lunch. That's when she felt something "shift" in her uterus, down low, and then "this burst of water just falls out of my body. And I screamed because that's when I knew something wrong was happening." Her waters had broken, launching her into what she calls a "dystopian nightmare" of "physical, emotional and mental anguish." She places the blame for the ensuing medical trauma on the Republican legislators who passed the state's anti-abortion law, on Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who signed it, and on the inflamed political rhetoric, which Elizabeth says only sees abortion "as one thing, a black-and-white issue, when abortion has all of these gray areas." State abortion laws are complicating other types of obstetric care Elizabeth's pregnancy crisis began — and ended — weeks before June 24, when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the federal right to abortion in its Dobbs v. Jackson ruling. But the Wellers and 28 million other Texans had already been living under a de facto abortion ban for 8 months, since September 2021. That's when a new state law banned all abortions after fetal cardiac activity is detected — usually at about six weeks of pregnancy. Since that time, thousands of women have left Texas to obtain abortions in other states. Today, abortion is also illegal in Texas under an old 1925 law that the state's Attorney General Ken Paxton declared to be in effect after Roe was overturned. Another pending ban, a so-called "trigger law" passed by Texas in 2021, is expected to go into effect within weeks. The crisis the Wellers endured is emblematic of the vast and perhaps unintended medical impacts of the criminalization of abortion in Republican-led states. The new abortion bans — or the old laws being resurrected in a post-Roe world — are rigidly written and untested in the courts. Many offer no exemptions for rape, incest or fetal anomolies. But the most confusing development involves the exemptions that exist for the woman's life or health, or because of a "medical emergency." These terms are left vague or undefined. The result has been disarray and confusion for doctors and hospitals in multiple states, and risky delays and complications for patients facing obstetrical conditions such as ectopic pregnancies, incomplete miscarriages, placental problems, and premature rupture of membanes. "It's terrible," says Dr. Alan Peaceman, a professor of maternal-fetal medicine at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine. "The care providers are treading on eggshells. They don't want to get sucked into a legal morass. And so they don't even know what the rules are." 'I need you to tell me the truth' James rushed home from work and drove Elizabeth to the nearby Woodlands Hospital, part of the Houston Methodist hospital system. An ultrasound confirmed that she had suffered premature rupture of membranes, which affects about 3% of pregnancies. A doctor sat down and told her: "There's very little amniotic fluid left. That's not a good thing. All you can do now is just hope and pray that things go well." The staff remained vague about what came next, Elizabeth recalls. She was admitted to the hospital, and later that night, when her own obstetrician called, she begged her for information. "I told her 'Look, Doctor, people around me are telling me to keep hope. And they're telling me to think of the positives. But I need you to tell me the truth, because I don't think all the positive things that they're telling me are real. I need you to give me the facts.'" The facts were grim. At 18 weeks, the watery, protective cushion of amniotic fluid was gone. There was still a fetal heartbeat, but it could stop at any moment. Among other risks, both the fetus and Elizabeth were now highly vulnerable to a uterine infection called chorioamnionitis. The ob-gyn, who said she could not speak to the media, laid out two options, according to Elizabeth. One option was to end the pregnancy; that's called "a termination for medical reasons." The other option is called expectant management, in which Elizabeth would stay in the hospital and try to stay pregnant until 24 weeks, which is considered the beginning of "viability" outside the womb. Outcomes from expectant management vary greatly depending on when the waters break. Later in pregnancy, doctors can try to delay delivery to give the fetus more time to develop, while also warding off infection or other maternal complications such as hemorrhage. But when membranes rupture earlier in pregnancy, particularly before 24 weeks, the chance of a fetus surviving plummets. One reason is that amniotic fluid plays a key role in fetal lung development. For a fetus at 18 weeks, the chance of survival in that state is almost nonexistent, according to Peaceman: "This is probably about as close to zero as you'll ever get in medicine." Fetuses who do survive a premature delivery can die soon after birth, or, if they survive, may experience major problems with their lungs, or suffer strokes, blindness, cerebral palsy or other disabilities and illnesses. For the women, expectant management after premature rupture of membranes comes with its own health risks. One study showed they were four times as likely to develop an infection and 2.4 times as likely to experience a postpartum hemorrhage, compared with women who terminated the pregnancy. In some cases, the infection can become severe or life-threatening, leading to sepsis, hysterectomy or even death. In 2012, a woman died in Ireland after her waters broke at 17 weeks and doctors refused to give her an abortion. The case spurred a movement that led to the overturning of Ireland's abortion ban in 2018. A clinical battle begins behind the scenes Although distraught and heartbroken at this news, Elizabeth forced herself to think it through. After talking with James, they both agreed they should end the pregnancy. The risks to Elizabeth's health were simply too high. To Elizabeth, termination also felt like the most merciful option for her fetus. Even with the slim chance of survival to 24 weeks, the newborn would face intense physical challenges and aggressive medical interventions. "You have to ask yourself, would I put any living thing through the pain, and the horrors, of having to try to fight for their life the minute that they're born?" The next day, Elizabeth's ob-gyn came to the hospital to arrange the procedure. Right away, she ran into obstacles because of the Texas law. A fight began, which Elizabeth first became aware of as her doctor paced the hall outside her room, talking on her phone. "I remember hearing her, from my room, speaking loudly about how nothing is being done here." After one conversation, the doctor returned to her bedside. "I can tell that she's been beat down, because she has been trying to fight for me all day, advocating on my behalf," Elizabeth says. "And she starts to cry and she tells me: 'They're not going to touch you.' And that 'you can either stay here and wait to get sick where we can monitor you, or we discharge you and you monitor yourself. Or you wait till your baby's heartbeat stops.'" It was because of the state law which forbids termination of a pregnancy as long as there is fetal cardiac activity. The law, which still remains in effect, does contain one exception – for a "medical emergency." But there is no definition for that term in the statute. No one really knows what the legislature means by that, and they are afraid of overstepping. A wait for fetal death, or her own encroaching illness To Elizabeth, it seemed obvious that things were deteriorating. She had cramps, and was passing clots of blood. Her discharge was yellow and smelled weird. But the hospital staff told her that those weren't the right symptoms, yet, of a growing infection in her uterus. They told her the signs of a more severe infection would include a fever of 100.4 degrees and chills. Her discharge had to be darker. And it had to smell foul, really bad. Enough to make her retch. Houston Methodist Hospital declined to comment on the specifics of Elizabeth's care, except to say they follow all state laws and that there's a medical ethics committee that sometimes reviews complex cases. To Dr. Peaceman at Northwestern, it sounded like the hospital's clinicians were using the most common clinical signs of chorioamnionitis as a guideline. If Elizabeth exhibited enough of them, then it would be possible to document the encroaching infection, and therefore terminate the pregnancy under the law's "medical emergency" clause, he said. Elizabeth found this maddening. "At first I was really enraged at the hospital and administration," she says. "To them my life was not in danger enough." Their conundrum became painfully, distressingly clear: wait to get sicker, or wait until the fetal heartbeat ceased. Either way, she saw nothing ahead but fear and grief — prolonged, delayed, amplified. "That's torture to to have to carry a pregnancy which has such a low chance of survival," says Dr. Peaceman. "Most women would find it extremely difficult and emotionally very challenging. And that's a big part of this problem, when we as physicians are trying to relieve patients' suffering. They're not allowed to do that in Texas." Later on, Elizabeth said she realized that her anger at Methodist was misplaced. "It wasn't that the Methodist Hospital was refusing to perform a service to me simply because they didn't want to, it was because Texas law ... put them in a position to where they were intimidated to not perform this procedure." Under Texas law, doctors can be sued by almost anyone for performing an abortion. An agonizing wait at home Elizabeth chose to go home rather than wait to get sick at the hospital. But she was barely out the door, still in the parking lot, when her phone rang. It was someone else at Methodist Hospital, perhaps a clerk, calling to go over some paperwork. "It's this woman who was saying 'Hi Miss Weller, you're at the 19 week mark. We usually have our moms register for delivery at this point. So I'm here to call you to register for your delivery on October 5th, so I can collect all your insurance information. How are you doing, and are you excited for the delivery?'" Elizabeth knows it was just a terrible coincidence, an awful bureaucratic oversight, and yet it drove home to her how powerless she was, how alone, in that vast medical system of rules, legal regulations and revenue. "I just cried and screamed in the parking lot," she recalls. "This poor woman had no idea what she was telling me. And I told her 'No, ma'am. I'm actually headed home right now because I have to await my dead baby's delivery.' And she goes 'I'm so sorry, I'm so sorry, I didn't know.'" For Elizabeth, that tragic conversation was just "the beginning of the hell that was going to ensue" for the rest of the week. The next day, a Thursday, she started throwing up. But when she called, they told her that nausea and vomiting weren't among the symptoms they were looking for. On Friday, when she woke up, she was still passing blood and discharge, still feeling sick, and feeling strange things in her uterus. She felt lost and confused. "I was just laying in bed, you know, wondering: Am I pregnant or am I not pregnant? And it's this stupid, like, distinction that you're just making in this grief. You're trying to understand exactly what's going on. Because at this point, I'm in survival mode. I'm trying to understand. I'm trying to mentally survive this." How the law led to medical trauma Elizabeth's experience amounts to a kind of medical trauma, which is layered on top of the grief of pregnancy loss, says Elaine Cavazos, a psychotherapist specializing in the perinatal period, and the chief clinical officer of Reproductive Psychiatry and Counseling in Austin. "It's just really unimaginable to be in a position of having to think: How close to death am I before somebody is going to take action and help me?" Losing a pregnancy is a particular kind of loss, one that tends to make other people — even health professionals — uncomfortable. All too often, Cavazos says, patients are told to get over it, move on, try again. These dismissals only increase the sense of isolation, stigma and shame. And now the Texas abortion law has created an additional bind, Cavazos explains. In a sudden obstetrical emergency, a termination might be the least risky option, clinically. But now "your medical provider says that it's illegal and they can't provide it. And not only can they not provide it, but they can't talk to you about it," Cavazos says. "It might even be scary for you to reach out and seek support — even mental health support. Because the state has made it very clear that if you talk about this, you're vulnerable to to being sued," she added. An invisible panel weighs their case As Friday dragged on, Elizabeth started wondering if maybe the heartbeat had stopped. She called her doctor and begged to get in. At the office, her ob-gyn turned down the ultrasound volume so they wouldn't have to hear. "I said 'Well, is there a heartbeat still?' And she says 'Yes. And it's strong.'" "It was devastating to hear that," Elizabeth says. "Not because I wanted my baby to die, but because I needed this hell to end. And I knew my baby was suffering, I knew I was suffering, I knew my husband was suffering." Her doctor said she had been calling other hospitals, but none of them would help. She said Houston Methodist had convened an ethics panel of doctors, but her doctor didn't seem very optimistic. Right there in the office, James pulled out his cell phone, and started looking for flights to states with less restrictive abortion laws. Maybe they could get the abortion in Denver or Albuquerque. "He and I kept telling each other 'What is the whole point of the Hippocratic Oath to do no harm?'" Elizabeth says. "And yet we're being pulled through this." Back at home, the Wellers got more serious about their travel plans and started booking tickets. Then Elizabeth felt another sudden, forceful gush of fluid leave her body. The color was darker and the odor was foul. Enough to make her retch. When they called the doctor's office back, they were told to go straight to the emergency room. And quickly. They now had some of the symptoms they needed to show the infection was getting worse. Before they drove off, Elizabeth paused to do something. She took a swipe of the new discharge, and placed the toilet paper in a Ziploc bag to carry with her. It was like an evidence bag. She was through with being dismissed, being told to wait. There was an infection, and she did need treatment. She had the proof. "Because I didn't want anybody to tell me they did not believe me," she says. "And if they didn't believe me, I was going to show it to them and say "Look! You open it. You smell it yourself. You're not going to tell me that what I'm experiencing isn't real, again." She never had to use that bag. Because once they reached Methodist, while they were still checking in at the emergency room, her doctor called. The ethics panel had reached a decision, the doctor told them. Unnamed, unknown doctors somewhere had come to an agreement that Elizabeth could be induced that night. As Elizabeth recalled hearing, it was one particular doctor who had argued her case: "They found a doctor from East Texas who spoke up and was so patient forward, so patient advocating, that he said 'This is ridiculous.'" James and Elizabeth cried out their thanks to the doctor. They stood up in the middle of the ER and embraced. "We shouldn't have been celebrating," Elizabeth says. "And yet we were. Because the alternative was hell." A mournful birth Elizabeth was induced late Friday night, and the labor became painful enough that she had to get an epidural. Midnight came and went in a blur. On Saturday, May 14, about 2 a.m., she gave birth. Their daughter, as expected, was stillborn. "Later they laid down this beautiful baby girl in my arms. She was so tiny. And she rested on my chest ... I looked at her little hands and I just cried. And I told her 'I'm so sorry. I couldn't give you life. I'm so sorry." When Roe v. Wade fell in June, Elizabeth's pain and anger surged up again. "You know they paint this woman into being this individual that doesn't care about her life, doesn't care about the life of the children she creates or whatever. And she just recklessly and negligently goes out and gets abortions all willy-nilly, left and right," she says. "Abortions are sometimes needed out of an act of an emergency, out of an act of saving a woman's life. Or hell — it honestly it shouldn't even get to the point where you're having to save a woman's life." The Wellers do want to try again, but first they need to get to a "mentally healthier place," Elizabeth says. "It's not just the fear that it could happen again, but also the added fear of what if it happens again and I can't get help?" "Let's say I do have to go through this situation again. And how can I be so sure I'm not going to get too sick to the point where that's it ... now you can't have kids. It is a horrible gamble that we are making Texas women go through." Elizabeth has been sharing her story, and has found that whatever the political affiliation of the listener, they all agree her experience was horrible. Now she wants those sentiments translated into action. "We live in a culture that advocates small government and yet we are allowing states, we are allowing our Texas state government to dictate what women do with their own bodies and to dictate what they think is best, what medical procedures they think is best for them to get." In the medical profession, doctors will continue to grapple with the new legal restrictions, and the resultant dilemmas in obstetrical care, says Dr. Peaceman. "It's going to take a while before ... the medical community comes to some kind of consensus on where you draw this line, and where you say enough is enough." "Because that doesn't really exist right now," he added. "And if you leave it up to individuals, you're going to get uncertainty and people unwilling to make decisions." Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
https://www.wlrn.org/2022-07-26/because-of-texas-abortion-law-her-wanted-pregnancy-became-a-medical-nightmare
2022-07-26 12:55:35
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https://www.wlrn.org/2022-07-26/because-of-texas-abortion-law-her-wanted-pregnancy-became-a-medical-nightmare
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Chad is nationalizing all assets from multinational oil giant Exxon Mobil, including its hydrocarbon and exploration permits, said the government. ″The finance and budget minister must make sure the said decree is implemented from the date of its publishing," said Haliki Choua Mahamat the government's general secretary on state media. The nationalization of a private company means that all assets are now owned by the government. While this used to happen in the 1960s and 1970s, it hasn't happened recently and doesn't conform to usual legal frameworks in the sector, say energy experts. Chad began producing oil in 2003 and Exxon has been operating in the country for several decades. It was running the Doba oil project in Chad. The move could scare away investors from West Africa at a time of growing global energy demand and a decline in foreign investments in the region, said Olufola Wusu, a partner and head of the oil and gas desk at Megathos Law Practice based in Nigeria. “Expropriation of any sort without compensation is not a step in the right direction, because it is going to erode investor confidence in that particular country and once investors are jittery, they pull back their investment, so regulators and leaders in Africa need to play by the rules,” he said. The government’s decision came after a long dispute between Exxon and Chad, which rejected the sale of the company’s operations last year. Tensions have risen in the West African nation in recent months with unprecedented protests mounting against the government of President Mahamat Idriss Deby. Deby was declared the head of state after his father’s death in April 2021. The son's succession did not follow Chad's constitutional line of succession. Opposition political parties at the time called the handover a coup d’etat, but later agreed to accept Deby as interim leader for 18 months. ———- Associated Press reporter Chinedu Asadu in Abjua Nigeria contributed
https://www.mrt.com/news/world/article/chad-nationalizes-assets-by-oil-giant-exxon-says-17858184.php
2023-03-24 15:44:54
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https://www.mrt.com/news/world/article/chad-nationalizes-assets-by-oil-giant-exxon-says-17858184.php
What to know about the charges against George Santos and what happens next By Tierney Sneed and Fredreka Schouten, CNN Rep. George Santos has been charged in a federal criminal probe that — from a legal standpoint — won’t affect his status as a member of Congress but will ensnare him in a potentially yearslong court process that could result in a sentence of several years in prison. The Long Island congressman, who has an extraordinary trail of falsehoods that emerged soon after he was elected and helped cement the narrow GOP House majority, pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to charges that range from wire fraud to theft of public money to false statements on his House disclosure reports. Santos is accused of funneling contributions meant to support his campaigns into his personal bank accounts, from where it was spent on luxury clothes and paying off debt. Prosecutors also allege he fraudulently applied for and received Covid-related unemployment benefits while receiving a six-figure salary working for an investment firm. If convicted of the top counts in the indictment, Santos faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, according to the Justice Department, though it’s more likely he’d receive a much lesser sentence. Here’s what to know about the significance of the charges and what happens next: Three main buckets of charges The indictment lays out three main buckets of alleged criminal activity by Santos. The first scheme described by prosecutors are alleged false representations made by Santos to political donors that led them to make contributions that were not ultimately used to support his campaign. That alleged scheme has prompted five counts of wire fraud and three counts of unlawful monetary transactions. The second set of accusations concern Santos’ allegedly false applications for unemployment benefits, resulting in a theft of public money count and two more wire fraud counts. False statements that Santos is accused of making on financial disclosures he filed in the House led to two additional counts. Shanlon Wu, a white collar defense attorney and a former federal prosecutor, noted on CNN’s “Inside Politics” on Wednesday that the alleged fraud took place over a varied collection of supposed schemes, making it a tough case for Santos to mount a defense against. “They’re actually all so different. He doesn’t have a single unifying theme, like, ‘oh I misunderstood the unemployment benefits, I didn’t realize I couldn’t raise money falsely for my campaign.’ It’s so diverse,” Wu said. What’s the big deal about allegedly lying on a government form? Prosecutors say Santos lied in documents submitted to Congress about the size and sources of his income in both of his bids for the US House of Representatives. It’s against the law to make false statements on the financial disclosure reports that all congressional candidates and federal lawmakers must file, and the investigation appears to have uncovered more details about Santos’ true financial picture. Ever since his surprise election win last fall, Santos has faced questions about his representation that he earned big sums in 2022 from a firm he had established, a dramatic change in his financial circumstances after reporting no assets and a salary of just $55,000 in his failed House bid just two years earlier. The charging documents made public Wednesday claim Santos misrepresented his actual income in both campaigns and inflated his income and assets ahead of the 2022 election, falsely claiming a paycheck of $750,000 from his firm, the Devolder Organization, and purporting to have a savings account worth between $1 million and $5 million. None of that was true, prosecutors say. Instead, Santos earned $28,107 from an investment firm ahead of the 2022 election and a little more than $20,000 in unemployment insurance benefits “all of which he failed to report as required,” according to the complaint. Erin Chlopak, senior director of campaign finance with the Campaign Legal Center watchdog group, said these financial disclosures are crucial to helping voters understand candidates and potential financial conflicts of interest with the offices they are seeking. “Where (candidates) get their money from is part of the picture that voters assess,” she said. “When someone lies about it, voters are misled and potentially duped into making a different decision.” How do prosecutors plan to prove their case? If the case against Santos does go to trial, prosecutors have indicated they have financial records, text messages and other forms of evidence to support their case. Prosecutors aren’t required to show their full hand at the charging phase, so it could be that the new indictment is just a preview of what investigators have collected. The indictment suggests that investigators have obtained emails and texts messages where Santos allegedly made false representations that led to contributions to what donors thought were entities that were supporting this campaign. “It appears that they have pretty strong documentary evidence” and are not relying on circumstantial evidence to establish motives, Chlopak said. The Campaign Legal Center filed a complaint against Santos with election regulators in January and urged the Justice Department to investigate his actions. The speed at which the probe has moved indicates “how easy of an investigation it’s been, up until this point,” Wu said. Key to the alleged scheme was an individual identified in the indictment as “Person 1,” who is described as a “political consultant operating in Queens County and the surrounding areas.” The charging papers indicate that investigators have texts and emails that individual sent to contributors, too, and prosecutors may also have that person’s testimony. The indictment describes that person taking certain actions to allegedly further the scheme “at the direction” of Santos and testimony would flesh out that allegation. It appears prosecutors also have financial records that would allegedly show that the political contributions that were wired to an entity identified as “Company 1” — which is described in the indictment as a Florida LLC, for which Santos’ company is listed as a manager. Transfers were then allegedly made from Company 1 to Santos’ personal bank accounts, and financial records would also help back those accusations. Prosecutors allege Santos spent the money on “luxury designer clothing, credit card payments, a car payment, payments on personal debts,” as well as with cash withdrawals and transfers to associates. Those are allegations prosecutors may seek to prove to the jury through receipts or other evidence of the alleged purchases. To establish the alleged unemployment fraud scheme, investigators likely have the attestations Santos allegedly made to participate in the public benefits program. The federal and state agencies that administer the pandemic benefits program are thanked in DOJ’s press release for their assistance. The indictment suggests investigators also obtained bank records indicating that Santos allegedly was receiving regular deposits from a $120,000 per year salary while he was said to have been enrolled in the unemployment program. The House disclosure documents that Santos allegedly lied on are publicly available documents. Many of the same financial records prosecutors say they have obtained to establish the other alleged crimes appear to support their accusations that he made false statements on the forms. What happens next in the legal process? On Wednesday afternoon, Santos made his first appearance in court, pleaded not guilty and was released on a $500,000 bond. He had to surrender his passport and will need court approval to travel beyond New York and Washington, DC. The proceedings will now enter a pre-trial phase that could stretch out for several months. Santos’ lawyers will have the chance to ask that his case be dismissed. If the judge declines to and rules that the case can advance towards trial, there will be pretrial litigation over what kind of evidence the prosecutors can put before the jury and what kind of defense Santos can mount in response. Other procedural disputes may well come up in this phase. There’s also the potential that, instead of a jury trial, Santos seeks a bench trial — i.e. a trial before just the judge. At any point, it’s possible that Santos and the Justice Department could reach a plea deal that would make a trial unnecessary. If the case goes to trial and Santos is ultimately convicted, he will have a chance to appeal the verdict. What’s next for Santos in Congress? A criminal indictment does not automatically lead to removal from Congress. There are no federal laws that affect the status of a lawmaker who has been charged with — or even found guilty of — a felony. Despite calls to resign from many Democrats and some Republicans in New York state, Santos has so far resisted those efforts. Lawmakers can opt for expulsion to remove a convicted House member, but it’s a rare occurrence. Only five members of the House have been removed — and just two since the aftermath of the Civil War. The sanction requires a two-thirds vote. The most recent case involved Ohio Democrat Jim Traficant, who was convicted in 2002 on bribery, racketeering and tax evasion charges. Later that year, he was expelled from the House by a 420-1 vote. The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.
https://localnews8.com/politics/cnn-us-politics/2023/05/10/what-to-know-about-the-charges-against-george-santos-and-what-happens-next/
2023-05-10 21:22:04
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https://localnews8.com/politics/cnn-us-politics/2023/05/10/what-to-know-about-the-charges-against-george-santos-and-what-happens-next/
TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — With the pirate invasion approaching, some of us are already prepped and ready to party, but others are still putting the finishing touches on their outfits. Tons of last-minute shoppers browsed through the South Tampa Trading Company store on Friday. “I hadn’t made up my mind what I wanted yet, so I let the time run out. I knew I could come here and get everything I needed,” Tampa Bay Resident Sulucinda Askew said. Some were looking for the perfect pirate hat and accessories, others needed decor for their homes. “So I want an eye patch, maybe a mustache, some gold accessories, and a parrot,” Abby Viglia said. “I’m trying to go for the girl version of Jack Sparrow. That’s the vibe.” South Tampa Trading Company will be open on Friday until 8 p.m. Pirate Fashions will also be open Friday until 9 p.m. and on Saturday 10 a.m. – 1 p.m., according to their website.
https://www.wfla.com/news/gasparilla/last-minute-shoppers-rush-to-local-shops-ahead-of-gasparilla/
2023-01-28 00:00:53
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https://www.wfla.com/news/gasparilla/last-minute-shoppers-rush-to-local-shops-ahead-of-gasparilla/
PISCATAWAY, N.J, Jan. 31, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Crave InfoTech has unveiled its new SAP Business Technology Platform (BTP) powered product – cMaintenance. This ready-to-deploy product is ideal to usher in Industry 4.0, Process Automation, Enterprise Mobility, and Predictive Maintenance in the Manufacturing industry. It can work online or offline, and cross platform whether its Apple iOS, Windows, or Android. cMaintenance merges automation and efficiency where users can follow smart Workflows in their Crave InfoTech app to move from assignment to technical completion in simple steps. The Workflows are pre-built, which means that the plant managers can instantly deploy the app for any asset maintenance process. The Workflow would work perfectly for its maintenance, right out of the box. It leverages the industry know-how of Crave InfoTech and the platform intelligence of SAP BTP. The product is part of the greater Intelligent Asset Management suite of solutions from Crave InfoTech that helps companies along their Maintenance Maturity Curve. If a company wants to move from reactive to predictive maintenance, Crave InfoTech enables the underlying Internet of Things (IoT), Industry 4.0 automation, Mobility, and process optimization with cMaintenance. Shrikant Nistane, CEO, Crave InfoTech, said, "We all want better Manufacturing processes that are efficient, compliant, cost-effective, controllable, and with perfect task visibility. Using SAP BTP's fast processing and SAP Build Process Automation, cMaintenance can ensure the full compliance, efficiency, and task visibility along with full enterprise mobility." Shrikant continued, "Simply put, the technicians and engineers can get their inspection or maintenance tasks on-the-go, scan the required assets and parts, follow the Workflow, and be done quickly. Everything is 100% digitized and 100% accurate." Crave InfoTech is a key SAP and Zebra Technologies partner. This means that Crave can offer end-to-end automation, maintenance, and mobility solutions in one go – where everything works like clockwork. About Crave InfoTech Crave InfoTech is a fast-growing global tech company with deep expertise in SAP Business Technology Platform (BTP), Industry 4.0, Intelligent Enterprise, and Enterprise Mobility enablement with quick-to-deploy Intelligent Asset Management, Supply Chain Management, and Warehouse Management solutions. Media Contact: Faiz Shaikh Faiz.shaikh@craveinfotech.com https://www.craveinfotech.com/products/intelligent-asset-management/maintenance/ https://www.craveinfotech.com/ Global number: 1-844-CRAVEIT (272-8348) Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1741167/Crave_Logo.jpg View original content: SOURCE Crave InfoTech
https://www.1011now.com/prnewswire/2023/01/31/crave-infotech-unveils-sap-btp-powered-cmaintenance-usher-industry-40-manufacturing/
2023-01-31 20:20:21
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https://www.1011now.com/prnewswire/2023/01/31/crave-infotech-unveils-sap-btp-powered-cmaintenance-usher-industry-40-manufacturing/
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland is turning to laboratories abroad in a bid to solve the mystery of a massive fish die-off in the Oder River, authorities said Tuesday, while the government pledged to toughen laws against environmental polluters. Experts in Poland and Germany, which share the lower course of the river, describe the deaths first observed last month as the worst natural disaster in the two countries in many years. Polish Climate and Environment Minister Anna Moskwa said on Twitter Tuesday that samples were being sent to laboratories in Czechia, where the Oder starts its course, and also to the Netherlands and the U.K. She did not specify whether the samples were of water, silt or fish. Poland's government, which has been accused of responding too slowly to the problem, vowed Tuesday to track down those responsible and was discussing significantly increasing penalties for polluters. “We are determined to make every person and every establishment responsible for this kind of incident bear the consequences," said Michal Dworczyk, the Polish prime minister’s chief of staff. For most of its course, the river flows through Poland. Dead fish in the Oder were first noticed by fishermen in southwestern Poland in late July. Polish firefighters say they have removed almost 100 tons of dead fish so far, while German authorities downstream have put oil barriers on the river to contain the spread of rotting fish. Some environment experts say climate change could be to blame, as due to the low summer river level fish would have come closer to toxins potentially resting on the riverbed. A marine expert at Poland’s Academy of Sciences, Jacek Piskozub, said it would be worse if climate change was behind the disaster because it’s much harder to address than any case of incidental pollution.
https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Poland-consulting-foreign-labs-over-Oder-River-17376468.php
2022-08-16 14:48:48
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https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Poland-consulting-foreign-labs-over-Oder-River-17376468.php
In Partnership with Publishers, New Program Aggregates Audiences Around Popular Interests PALO ALTO, Calif., June 29, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- For the first time, brands looking for alternatives to programmatic targeting can reach millions of people around specific interests using the new Interest Collectives from Flipboard, the world's first social magazine. Starting with key verticals travel and technology, ad campaigns that run on Flipboard can now expand to contextually relevant partner sites. To create the first Interest Collectives, Flipboard is teaming up with publisher partners such as Atlas Obscura, Frommer's and VentureBeat, to bundle inventory around top interests, increasing a brand's reach as much as tenfold. The Travel and Tech Collectives launch today, and Finance Collective will roll out over the summer. The Interest Collectives bring together select content from Flipboard curators, creators, email newsletters and high-quality relevant publisher partner sites with the purpose of creating highly engaged audiences at scale around a single interest. For instance, the Travel Interest Collective combines the audience of Flipboard's popular travel destination with visitors to renowned travel sites such as Atlas Obscura, Explore, Fodor's and Frommer's, helping brands connect with people who are looking for destinations, attractions, travel-planning advice and places to stay. "Over the past few years, we have partnered closely with Flipboard on a number of initiatives and we have seen substantial referral traffic and engagement from an audience that goes deep on travel," said Pauline Frommer, editorial director at Frommer's,. "We view this program as a win-win because it allows us to continue growing engagement on Flipboard, while supplementing our direct sales efforts with new monetization opportunities." Similarly, the Tech Interest Collective attracts an audience that's interested in all things tech, including gadgets, AI and startups, on Flipboard and partner sites such as 9to5Mac, Digital Trends and VentureBeat. The Finance Collective consists of publications like Moneywise that provide financial news, money-saving advice and smart investing tips, allowing brands to align with savvy readers interested in market trends and wealth management. "As privacy concerns continue to grow and data collection becomes more restricted, contextual advertising will be one of the most effective ways to reach qualified audiences in quality environments," said Mike McCue, CEO and cofounder of Flipboard. "We are creating the Interest Collectives to help brands reach individuals united by common interests, with high intent, and actively seeking to learn, share experiences, and form opinions about brands, products, and services, both on and off our platform." The Interest Collectives build on the ability for advertisers to connect with audiences in contextually relevant ways via Flipboard's Interest Graph informed by the platform's 30,000 topics and indexed via machine learning algorithms based on content from more than 4,000 publishers. This creates an opportunity for brands to scale strategic contextual targeting: advertisers can reach relevant audiences across platforms, formats and devices. An Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) study found that integrating contextual and audience targeting led to a 68 percent increase in ad effectiveness. Along with the benefits to advertisers, publishers participating in the Interest Collectives are able to show high quality ads to readers, increase their advertiser mix and diversify their revenue. When an ad is served from the open marketplace, publishers have limited control over the context or quality; Interest Collectives restore their ability to ensure high quality and relevant ads. About Flipboard Flipboard is the world's first social magazine where people go for information and inspiration. On Flipboard, quality articles, videos, podcasts and products are recommended for enthusiasts, by enthusiasts from around the world. It is a platform that lets people spend time on their interests, develop deeper understanding of issues, and share the best ideas with others by collecting them into their own Flipboard Magazines. Download Flipboard for free in any app store or visit flipboard.com. Follow Flipboard on Mastodon and/or Bluesky. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Flipboard
https://www.wbtv.com/prnewswire/2023/06/29/flipboard-launches-interest-collectives-advertisers/
2023-06-29 11:38:33
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https://www.wbtv.com/prnewswire/2023/06/29/flipboard-launches-interest-collectives-advertisers/
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., Aug. 18, 2022 Electromedical Technologies, Inc. (OTCQB: EMED) ("Electromedical" or the "Company"), a pioneer in the development and production of bioelectronic devices designed to relieve chronic, intractable, and acute pain by using frequencies and electro-modulation, is pleased to provide its Financial and Operational Highlights for the three and six months ended June 30, 2022. "We continue to drive toward scalable growth and new innovations, positioning the Company as an emerging leader in technologies that offer a drug-free path to a pain-free life," noted Matthew Wolfson, Founder and CEO of Electromedical. "Q2 delivered another quarter of robust growth in net sales. And we made significant progress in board governance and product development." Financial Performance Highlights for the Three Months Ended June 30, 2022 - Net Sales increased 11% over Q2 2021 to $225k primarily due to increased unit sales. - Gross Margin increased to 80% as compared to 75% in Q2 2021. - Loss from operations was ($283K) versus ($525K) in Q2 2021, an 85% improvement. - Net loss was ($536K) versus ($775K) in Q2 2021, a 31% improvement, reflecting increased gross profit and reductions in selling, general and administrative expenses and interest. Financial Performance Highlights for the Six Months Ended June 30, 2022 - Net Sales increased 21% year over the six months ended June 30,2021 to $447K. - Gross Margin remained at 75% for both six-month periods. - Loss from operations was ($672K) versus ($1.2M) in the six months ended June 30, 2021, a 46% improvement. - Net loss was ($1.7M) versus ($3.3M) in the six months ended June 30,2021, a 49% improvement, reflecting increased gross profit and reductions in selling, general and administrative expenses and interest. The Company's business model remained resilient during the quarter ended June 30 despite macro headwinds, including inflation, a slowdown in consumer spending, and continued global supply chain concerns. During the quarter, Electromedical was able to achieve top and bottom-line growth at improved margins, shrinking the Company's loss from operations by over 50% year over year, moving the Company closer to EBITDA profitability. The Company continues to invest in expanding its sales and marketing resources as well as developing next-generation technology capable of providing scalable accelerating growth in the months and quarters ahead. The Company was also able to shore up its balance sheet during the quarter by working with one of its most significant stakeholders to reduce debt carried by the Company by more than $600k in a debt-to-equity conversion involving restricted shares. In addition, the Company added strong talent and experience to its Board of Directors with the addition of Lee Benson, a proven leader with an established track record of profound success in business and the engineering space. Wolfson added, "We have reduced dilution risk, shored up the balance sheet, and added proven leadership talent to our board, building governance and strategic value into the core of the Company as we move toward scaling the business. We have a number of updates in the works related to R&D achievements and further investments in driving expanding sales. I look forward to providing additional updates soon." About Electromedical Technologies Headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona, Electromedical Technologies, Inc. is a commercial stage, FDA cleared, bioelectronic medical device manufacturing company initially focused on the treatment of various chronic, acute, intractable, and post-operative pain conditions. Through University collaboration agreements, the Company is working to develop a comprehensive research program in defining the effects of electro-modulation on the human body. By studying the impacts of electrical fields in cell signaling and effects on virus assembly and immune responses, the Company's goal is to reduce pain and improve overall human wellbeing. The Company's current FDA cleared product indications are for chronic acute post traumatic and post-operative, intractable pain relief. For more information, please visit www.electromedtech.com. Note: Nonhuman preliminary studies that we are planning to start in the near future and their applications are not related to our current product in any way and are currently not cleared in the US. Safe Harbor Statement This release contains forward-looking statements that are based upon current expectations or beliefs, as well as a number of assumptions about future events. Although we believe that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements and the assumptions upon which they are based are reasonable, we can give no assurance or guarantee that such expectations and assumptions will prove to have been correct. Forward-looking statements are generally identifiable by the use of words like "may," "will," "should," "could," "expect," "anticipate," "estimate," "believe," "intend," or "project" or the negative of these words or other variations on these words or comparable terminology. The reader is cautioned not to put undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, as these statements are subject to numerous factors and uncertainties, including but not limited to: adverse economic conditions, competition, adverse federal, state and local government regulation, international governmental regulation, inadequate capital, inability to carry out research, development and commercialization plans, loss or retirement of key executives and other specific risks. To the extent that statements in this press release are not strictly historical, including statements as to revenue projections, business strategy, outlook, objectives, future milestones, plans, intentions, goals, future financial conditions, events conditioned on stockholder or other approval, or otherwise as to future events, such statements are forward-looking, and are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The forward-looking statements contained in this release are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the statements made. Corporate Contact: Electromedical Technologies, Inc. Iconic Tel: 1.888.880.7888 Email: ir@electromedtech.com https://electromedtech.com 1) Public Relations: EDM Media, LLC https://edm.media a) The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements b) The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements View original content: SOURCE Electromedical Technologies, Inc
https://www.dakotanewsnow.com/prnewswire/2022/08/18/electromedical-technologies-announces-financial-operational-highlights-three-six-months-ended-june-30-2022/
2022-08-18 14:01:22
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https://www.dakotanewsnow.com/prnewswire/2022/08/18/electromedical-technologies-announces-financial-operational-highlights-three-six-months-ended-june-30-2022/
NEW YORK, Oct. 27, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Rodel Institute is pleased to announce the creation of the Edwards Book Award, an annual prize recognizing books that make an outstanding contribution to the understanding and practice of democracy and American politics. The prize will carry an honorarium of $10,000. The award is named in honor of former Congressman Mickey Edwards, who has inspired generations of American public servants and students as a Member of Congress, faculty member at Harvard, Princeton, and American Universities, author of highly respected books on the American political process, and founding Executive Director of the Rodel Fellowship, the nation's premier bipartisan leadership development program for elected leaders. Rodel Institute President and CEO John Kroger commented: "Our goal for this award is to draw greater attention to new books that help us deepen our understanding of democracy. With threats to democracy increasing across the globe, recognizing books addressing how democracies thrive is more important than ever." Mickey Edwards remarked: "I am deeply honored, and I want to thank all Rodel Fellows. I hope this new prize will help us highlight important work by scholars researching this vital topic." Since its founding in 2005, the Rodel Fellowship has helped nearly 400 state and local elected officials reach their full potential as public servants. Through a series of seminars, Rodel Fellows read and discuss classic texts dealing with ethical values, democratic principles, and wise and effective leadership. Past fellows include five sitting governors, three U.S. Senators, three members of the current cabinet, and the Vice President. Books must be nonfiction and published in 2022. Selections from the winning book will be taught in Rodel seminars. The nomination deadline is January 31, 2023 at 11:59pm ET. For more information, please visit https://www.rodelinstitute.org/programs/edwards-book-prize/. The Rodel Institute seeks to strengthen democracy and public leadership in the U.S. A nonpartisan center for leadership and intellectual growth, we help America's most promising leaders deepen their commitment to democracy and the rule of law and work together to address some of our nation's most important challenges. The Institute's programs convene diverse leaders from across the country and the political and legal spectrum in an effort to find common ground, build enduring relationships, and encourage the understanding and cooperation needed to move our nation forward. For more information, visit www.rodelinstitute.org. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Rodel Institute
https://www.kait8.com/prnewswire/2022/10/27/rodel-institute-announces-new-book-award-honor-outstanding-works-democracy-american-politics/
2022-10-27 14:53:29
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https://www.kait8.com/prnewswire/2022/10/27/rodel-institute-announces-new-book-award-honor-outstanding-works-democracy-american-politics/
SEC brings charges against cryptocurrency trading platform Coinbase NEW YORK (AP) — The Securities and Exchange Commission sued cryptocurrency platform Coinbase on Tuesday, charging the company with operating an unregistered securities platform and brokerage service. The lawsuit comes a day after the SEC filed charges against Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, and its founder Changpeng Zhao are accused of misusing investor funds, operating as an unregistered exchange and violating a slew of U.S. securities laws. Coinbase shares plunged nearly 20% in the early morning trading on the news. In its complaint, the SEC said Coinbase made billions in being the middle man for cryptocurrency buyers and sellers but did not give investors lawful protections while acting as a broker. “Coinbase has for years defied the regulatory structures and evaded the disclosure requirements that Congress and the SEC have constructed for the protection of the national securities markets and investors,” the SEC said in its complaint, which was filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. It seeks injunctive relief, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains plus interest, penalties, and other equitable relief. Coinbase did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The SEC had warned Coinbase in March that it could face securities charges and had long signaled that Coinbase had been flouting securities laws with its position that cryptocurrencies were not securities and therefore did not need to register as a broker. “You simply can’t ignore the rules because you don’t like them or because you’d prefer different ones: the consequences for the investing public are far too great,” said Gurbir S. Grewal, director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, in a statement. U.S. prosecutors and the SEC charged FTX’s founder Sam Bankman-Fried with a host of money laundering, fraud and securities fraud charges in December. His criminal trial is likely to be in the fall. Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
https://www.wkyt.com/2023/06/06/sec-brings-charges-against-cryptocurrency-trading-platform-coinbase/
2023-06-06 14:15:16
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https://www.wkyt.com/2023/06/06/sec-brings-charges-against-cryptocurrency-trading-platform-coinbase/
Nestled among the hills and mountains, in the heart of coal country, they are reaching for the stars – literally. "The two products we make both have opportunities to go to space," said Rudy Olson, director of Consol Innovations, makers of CFOAM, a type of carbon foam used in the aerospace industry. The material is prized for how it interacts with heat. "I'll demonstrate that with this, our standard carbon foam," Olson said as he held a blowtorch to one of the carbon foam squares. "That flame is probably approaching 1,500 degrees Celsius, and you can see the carbon — it's starting to glow." It won't break, though, which is one of the reasons it's part of the building blocks of space exploration. "One of the biggest applications is really aerospace," Olson said, "and it turns out carbon foam is an ideal material for making those types of parts." It all begins inside their manufacturing facility in Triadelphia, West Virginia, a small town of just over 600 people. "We're kind of a small group, you know. So, we're kind of tight knit, stay together," said employee Jonathan Faldoski. He has worked there for three years and is one of a dozen employees. SEE MORE: Private space stations take shape amid new space exploration era "For it to be advancing into something else and not just the same thing, which is just mining and everything like that — I think that's pretty cool," Faldoski said. It's a far cry from the historic use of coal as fuel, which is getting phased out from power plants in many parts of the country. It's not just coal that's used here, but also coal waste. "Most definitely, we can use coal waste to make valuable carbon products," Olson said. Justine Kasznica is with the Keystone Space Collaborative, which works with aerospace-related companies from Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. "We should not overlook the rural communities as well," Kasznica said. "You travel to any rural community in northwest Pennsylvania, northeast Pennsylvania, Ohio — Youngstown area — West Virginia, and you will find tremendous amounts of suppliers who supply Navy, NASA, Air Force — and no one knows about them and no one's put them on the map." That is something Rudy Olson hopes may be starting to change. "We're going to be able to grow into aerospace applications even further," he said. "I think people really have a passion for this kind of a concept."
https://www.kxxv.com/news/national/rural-communities-tap-into-space-economy
2023-04-03 19:11:19
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https://www.kxxv.com/news/national/rural-communities-tap-into-space-economy
BEIJING, July 4, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- SmartX has released CloudTower 2.0, a central management platform for multiple clusters across data centers. CloudTower is a crucial member of the SmartX HCI product portfolio, providing visibility and easy management across all HCI clusters. With new features including cross-cluster VM migration, content library, VM user view, access control and security settings, and an optimized interface, CloudTower 2.0 has improved the efficiency, security, and user experience for operations and maintenance. In addition, the optimized interface and VM user view are also included in the community edition of CloudTower, as part of the SmartX HCI Kit Community Edition. Below are the details of the new features. This feature supports the unified management of multiple clusters and cross-cluster sharing of virtual machine templates and ISO images. Users could create virtual machine templates and upload ISO images in one cluster and get access to all of them on any other clusters managed by CloudTower, reducing repetitive tasks. This feature supports VM migration across clusters through hot migration, cold migration and staged migration. 1) Hot migration: allows users to migrate powered-on VMs without any interruption in services. It requires a directly connected network among clusters. 2) Cold migration: allows users to migrate powered-off VMs. A directly connected network is not necessary as data can be transmitted through CloudTower. 3) Staged migration: allows users to migrate full data without compromising VMs' availability. With VM user view, IT administrators could efficiently distribute VMs to users and allow users to use and manage VMs independently. Users could directly manage VMs' downtime through CloudTower and access clients' operational systems through the VNC panel. This feature allows users to reinforce O&M security by restricting the access and login to CloudTower through the settings of Access Restriction, Session Timeout, Password Security and Custom Role. Allows administrators to flexibly customize the interface through "dragging to customize the width of the resource navigator" and "customizing frequently-used function tabs in the cluster module". Increases management efficiency through "adding frequently used O&M functions such as Monitoring, Log, Snapshot Plan, etc., on each cluster's management panel" and "adding Alert Email Notification and Recycle Bin Rule in each of their modules for an easy setting". View original content: SOURCE SmartX Inc.
https://www.kfyrtv.com/prnewswire/2022/07/04/smartx-releases-cloudtower-20-enhances-simplicity-security-operations-amp-maintenance/
2022-07-04 09:59:23
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https://www.kfyrtv.com/prnewswire/2022/07/04/smartx-releases-cloudtower-20-enhances-simplicity-security-operations-amp-maintenance/
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak promised 125 anti-aircraft guns and other air-defense technology as he made an unannounced visit Saturday — his first — to Ukraine’s snow-blanketed war-time capital for talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The air-defense package, which Britain valued at 50 million pounds ($60 million), comes as Russia has been pounding Ukraine’s power grid and other key infrastructure from the air, causing widespread blackouts for millions of Ukrainians amid frigid weather. The package includes radar and other technology to counter Iran-supplied exploding drones that Russia has used against Ukrainian targets. It comes on top of a delivery of more than 1,000 anti-air missiles that Britain announced earlier this month. The U.K. has been one of the staunchest Western supporters of Ukraine’s resistance to Russia’s invasion, giving Kyiv 2.3 billion pounds ($2.7 billion) in military aid. Zelenskyy described the two countries as “the strongest of allies.” Video that Zelenskyy posted showed him greeting Sunak at a presidential palace as snowflakes fell and the two men holding talks. “With friends like you by our side, we are confident in our victory. Both of our nations know what it means to stand up for freedom,” the Ukrainian leader said on Twitter. Former U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who stepped down in July amid ethics scandals, won wide praise in Ukraine for his backing and made repeated visits to Kyiv. Sunak is keen to reassure Ukraine’s leaders that there will be no change of stance under his leadership, although when he was U.K. Treasury chief under Johnson he was considered resistant to demands for higher defense spending. “The courage of the Ukrainian people is an inspiration to the world,” Sunak said in comments alongside Zelenskyy in the presidential palace. “In years to come, we will tell our grandchildren of your story.” He pledged that Britain “will stand with you until Ukraine has won the peace and security it needs and deserves and then we will stand with you as you rebuild your great country.” Sunak also laid flowers at a memorial for the war dead, lit a candle at a memorial for victims of a deadly Soviet-era famine in Ukraine in the 1930s, and met first responders at a fire station, his office said. Sunak said it was “deeply humbling” to visit Kyiv “and to have the opportunity to meet those who are doing so much, and paying so high a price, to defend the principles of sovereignty and democracy.” On the battlefield, Russian forces launched 10 airstrikes, 10 missile strikes and 42 rocket attacks on Ukraine in the last day, the General Staff of Ukraine’s armed forces said Saturday. Russia is pressing an offensive in the eastern Donetsk region, and Ukraine reported heavy fighting around the city of Bakhmut, town of Avdiivka and village of Novopavlivka. Russian forces claimed to have repelled a Ukrainian counteroffensive to take back the settlements of Pershotravneve, Kyslivka and Krokhmalne in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv province. Ukrainian forces said they killed or wounded scores of Russian soldiers during an attack on the village of Mykhailivka in the southern Kherson region, and the wounded were taken to hospitals in Crimea. The claim could not be independently verified. Ukrainian forces also reported they conducted deadly strikes on the Kinburn Spit in Ukraine’s southern Mykolaiv province, a key site for Russian electronic warfare. Russia kept up its strikes on critical infrastructure, with a rocket attack overnight causing a fire at a key industrial facility in Ukraine’s southern Zaporizhzhia region, according to the region’s chief. Some areas in the regional capital of Zaporizhzhia were left without heating. The head of Ukraine’s biggest private energy firm told the BBC that Ukrainians who can afford it should consider leaving the country to relieve the pressure on its war-damaged power system. “If they can find an alternative place to stay for another three or four months, it will be very helpful to the system,” said Maxim Timchenko, chief executive of DTEK. “If you consume less, then hospitals with injured soldiers will have a guaranteed power supply.” In Poland, a funeral was held Saturday for one of the two men who died when a missile landed there this week, according to the state news agency PAP. NATO member Poland and the head of the military alliance have both said that the missile strike in an eastern farming region appeared to be unintentional and was probably launched by air defenses in neighboring Ukraine. Russia had been bombarding Ukraine at the time in an attack that savaged its power grid. The U.K. Ministry of Defense noted Saturday that Russia on Wednesday conducted its largest ever-debt issuance in a single day, raising $13.6 billion. It said debt issuance is a key mechanism to sustain defense spending, which has increased significantly in Russia since its invasion of Ukraine in February. ___ Elise Morton in London contributed to this story. ___ Follow all AP stories about the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine.
https://www.cenlanow.com/international/ap-international/ap-uk-pm-sunak-on-surprise-trip-to-ukraine-meets-zelenskyy/
2022-11-19 16:58:09
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https://www.cenlanow.com/international/ap-international/ap-uk-pm-sunak-on-surprise-trip-to-ukraine-meets-zelenskyy/
So much of the talk about Georgia last year focused on a defense that produced five NFL first-round draft picks. The Bulldogs’ defense showed no sign of dropping off against No. 11 Oregon, but it was the offense that was front and center statistically in a 49-3 win Sunday. The No. 3 and defending national champion Bulldogs became the second team in 15 seasons to score a touchdown on its first seven possessions against a ranked opponent. The seven TD drives ranged from six to 12 plays, the first six under the direction of quarterback Stetson Bennett. Backup Carson Beck was in the game for the seventh. The streak ended when they went three-and-out on their first full series of the fourth quarter. Last year Ohio State reached the end zone on its first seven drives, all in the first half, against then-No. 9 Michigan State. BLOCK THAT KICK FBS kickers have been pretty much automatic on extra points, having converted 577 of 586 this season. Of the nine misses, three were blocked — none bigger than Shyheim Brown’s deflection of Damian Ramos’ try on the final play of Florida State’s 24-23 win over LSU on Sunday. In the past 20 years, according to Sportradar, no previous one-point game involving an FBS team had ended with the winning team blocking an extra point with no time left in the fourth quarter. Kickers for Baylor and Akron also had extra-point tries blocked over the weekend. SCORING EXPLOSION Appalachian State’s 40 points in the fourth quarter of its 63-61 loss to North Carolina were the most by a team in a quarter since BYU hung 42 on Massachusetts in the second in 2019 and most by a team in a fourth quarter in 20 years, according to Sportradar. According to Stats Perform, Saturday marked the first time an FBS team scored at least 60 points and lost and an FBS scored fewer than 10 points and won on the same day. Iowa turned a field goal and two safeties into a 7-3 win over South Dakota State. ROCK CHALK RUN Kansas heads to West Virginia this week with a shot of confidence from some of its offensive feats, albeit against Tennessee Tech of the Championship Subdivision. The Jayhawks’ average of 9.9 yards per carry was their highest in a game since at least 2000. Their 297 rushing yards were their most since they had 508 against Rutgers in 2018. Kansas’ won 56-10, scoring its most points in an opener since 1912 and most in a home game since a 76-39 win over Nebraska in 2007. RULE OF 70 Wisconsin, in a 38-0 win over Illinois State, was the first FBS team in four years to have a run, pass and interception return of at least 70 yards in the same game. Braelon Allen’s 96-yard touchdown against Illinois State was the longest run from scrimmage in program history, John Torchio set a school record with a 100-yard interception return and Chimere Dike turned a short pass into a 74-yard gain for the longest completion in quarterback Graham Mertz’s career. Middle Tennessee was the previous team with 70-yard plays three different ways, doing it against Old Dominion in 2018. No Big Ten team had done it since 2003. ‘AIR’ AIR FORCE Haaziq Daniels put the air in Air Force on his first pass attempt of the season. The Falcons, whose triple-option offense has had a run-pass ratio of nearly 90-10 the past two seasons, scored their first touchdown in a 48-17 win over Northern Iowa on Daniels’ 80-yard pass to Dane Kinamon. Air Force faced third-and-12 from its 20 when Daniels scrambled to his left and threw to Kinamon, who had his defender beat by 5 yards and caught the ball in stride. It was Air Force’s longest pass since Daniels’ school-record 92-yarder against Colorado State last year. ___ AP Sports Writer Steve Megargee in Wisconsin contributed to this report. ___ More AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25 Sign up for the AP’s college football newsletter: https://apnews.com/cfbtop25
https://www.texomashomepage.com/sports/ap-stat-watch-georgia-offense-hot-from-start-with-7-tds-in-row/
2022-09-06 21:53:46
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https://www.texomashomepage.com/sports/ap-stat-watch-georgia-offense-hot-from-start-with-7-tds-in-row/
This year's conference and digital experience highlight innovations in healthcare management and future-forward solutions that can elevate medical practices to the next level. ENGLEWOOD, Colo., July 28, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) recently announced this year's Medical Practice Excellence: Leaders Conference (#MPE22) will explore the next generation of operational innovations and provide transformative leadership insights to help practices reach new horizons in the industry. The MPE: Leaders Conference is considered a must-attend event for medical practice leaders looking to arm themselves with the latest industry knowledge and best practices for solving challenges like improving patient outcomes, increasing efficiencies and optimizing revenue cycles. The in-person conference will be held October 9–12, 2022, at the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center featuring exclusive sessions and networking opportunities. The line-up is packed with thought leaders and industry influencers who will share their expertise and forward-thinking strategies for building successful practices and leading them into the future. The online conference will be held November 8–10, 2022, and will feature sessions from the event as well. The MPE: Leaders Conference is designed for healthcare and medical practice leaders looking to level up their industry intelligence and gain actionable strategies that can be put into practice immediately. This year's conference will feature the following content learning tracks: - Leading People: Offers guidance on team building and performance management - Strategic Decisions: Provides insights for building and growing practices - Financial Mastery: Explores how practices are containing costs and maximizing revenue cycles - Operational Excellence: Shares tips for building better systems - Transforming Patient Care: Delivers tactics that drive better patient outcomes "This has become the ideal event for the healthcare community to come together to share how they are changing the game and overcoming unthinkable obstacles to excel in today's practice management landscape," said Halee Fischer-Wright, MD, MMM, FAAP, FACMPE, president and chief executive officer at MGMA. "This year's theme, "Reaching New Horizons," sets the tone for where we are as an industry — and is a call to action for where we need to go as leaders. I'm looking forward to learning about innovative leadership strategies and connecting with my colleagues and peers at the conference — see you in Boston." The theme for this year's MPE: Leaders Conference is "Reaching New Horizons" in recognition of the amazing hurdles the industry has overcome in the past few years, but also a rallying call to continue the momentum and reach for new opportunities. The conference will feature four keynote sessions and more than 100 sessions throughout the four days. To register and get more information about the MPE: Leaders Conference, please visit this site. Founded in 1926, the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) is the nation's largest association focused on the business of medical practice management. MGMA consists of 15,000 group medical practices ranging from small private medical practices to large national health systems representing more than 350,000 physicians. MGMA helps nearly 60,000 medical practice leaders and the healthcare community solve the business challenges of running practices so that they can focus on providing outstanding patient care. Specifically, MGMA helps its members innovate and improve profitability and financial sustainability, and it provides the gold standard on industry benchmarks such as physician compensation. The association also advocates extensively on its members' behalf on national regulatory and policy issues. To learn more, go to MGMA.com or follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook. Media Contact: Brad Krebs 314-973-8090 press@mgma.org View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Medical Group Management Association
https://www.wcjb.com/prnewswire/2022/07/28/mgmas-2022-medical-practice-excellence-leaders-conference-focuses-empowering-medical-practices-reach-new-horizons/
2022-07-28 15:12:54
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https://www.wcjb.com/prnewswire/2022/07/28/mgmas-2022-medical-practice-excellence-leaders-conference-focuses-empowering-medical-practices-reach-new-horizons/
Dover Days will celebrate its 90th festival on May 5 and 6 as it displays history and entertainment within the community. After having a three year hiatus, locals looking forward to the event. Friday there will be a performance by Dover High School Drumline in front of Legislative Hall starting at 7:15 p.m., followed by a fireworks display. The next day, a parade will start the day at 9:15 a.m. Maypole dancing by elementary school children will take place on The Green after the parade. Historical demonstrations, crafts, food trucks, a balloon ride, and bounce houses will be there as well. Additional vendors can sign up until April 25. Due to State Street water main construction, the parade route will proceed west through Loockerman Street, turn onto Queen Street and end at Bank Lane. The parade announcing stage will be at Federal and Loockerman streets. It was noted that because of safety considerations, parade participants will not be allowed to toss candy from vehicles to the crowds. Volunteers to assist with audio equipment on The Green and in other areas of the historic festival are welcome. Email doverdaysfestivalde@gmail.com.
https://www.wdel.com/news/dover-days-90th-festival-will-be-may-5-6/article_f85a69d2-e13b-11ed-995a-9bcf14472092.html
2023-04-22 22:37:15
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https://www.wdel.com/news/dover-days-90th-festival-will-be-may-5-6/article_f85a69d2-e13b-11ed-995a-9bcf14472092.html
DEAR ABBY: I’m in mourning for my husband. He’s still alive, but he up and left six months ago and sent me a text saying he’s done. He is living with another woman. I didn’t see it coming. We were planning our retirement move up to our cabin. One weekend he kicked me out of the cabin, and three hours later had her join him there. I feel so lost. At this point, I don’t want him back because I feel he has committed the ultimate betrayal. I have started counseling because I’m so confused, grieving and upset. My counselor seems to think he is leaving the door open to one day return. He still comes once a month to pay the bills. However, when he does, he doesn’t want me there. He texts to make sure I will be gone for a few hours, so I leave. I miss him, but I can’t get beyond the pain and betrayal. He has lost a ton of weight and looks terrible. He has aged so much. He’s 66, clinically depressed and an alcoholic. He’s also a narcissist. He would never admit he did something wrong; it was always “my fault.” I never knew what I would be facing after work. I’m still in the house and slowly packing up his clutter that I was never allowed to touch. (He is a hoarder.) I’m lonely, but I’m enjoying my peace. We don’t communicate at all. My question is, do you think he is going to come walking back in like nothing happened? -- ABANDONED IN MINNESOTA DEAR ABANDONED: I hope not! And if he did show up, why on Earth would you want him back? (Frankly, I am surprised that your therapist would suggest you would open the door to him.) You are free. Consult an attorney, clear out the physical and emotional debris in your life and enjoy it. DEAR ABBY: My fiance and I are preparing to move south because we’re tired of cold weather. The biggest issue is my cat, Buster.” He isn’t a kitten anymore; he is 9. Buster’s in good health, but we are being advised not to take him from the apartment we share with my dad due to Buster’s age. My father is a mediocre caretaker at best. Half the time he doesn’t clean the litter box or even take out the garbage. I’m convinced Buster would end up being neglected. I have been accused of planning to steal him. Yesterday, I found out Dad tested positive for COVID and didn’t tell anyone until we were in the apartment, too. He put us all at risk. This kind of carelessness scares me about leaving Buster with him. Should I take him with us, or heed the advice about not stressing an older pet and leave him with dad? I will be heartbroken if I can’t take him. -- SAD, STRESSED CAT MOM DEAR SAD: If the advice about “stressing an older cat” came from a veterinarian, it merits consideration. If it didn’t, then have no qualms about taking Buster with you when you make the move. It would be better to do that than to leave him in an environment where you would worry that he’s being neglected. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
https://www.al.com/life/2023/02/dear-abby-will-my-narcissistic-husband-who-dumped-me-walk-back-in-my-life-like-nothing-happened.html
2023-02-21 09:02:52
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https://www.al.com/life/2023/02/dear-abby-will-my-narcissistic-husband-who-dumped-me-walk-back-in-my-life-like-nothing-happened.html
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 11, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Former Attorney General of Louisiana, Charles C. Foti, Jr., Esq., a partner at the law firm of Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC ("KSF"), announces that KSF has commenced an investigation into SunPower Corporation (NasdaqGS: SPWR). On January 20, 2022, the Company disclosed that it had "identified a cracking issue that developed over time in certain factory-installed connectors" and that replacement of the connectors would cause the Company to incur "approximately $27 million of supplier-quality related charges in fourth quarter 2021 and approximately $4 million in the first quarter of 2022." Thereafter, the Company and certain of its executives were sued in a securities class action lawsuit, charging them with failing to disclose material information during the Class Period, violating federal securities laws, which remains ongoing. KSF's investigation is focusing on whether SunPower's officers and/or directors breached their fiduciary duties to its shareholders or otherwise violated state or federal laws. If you have information that would assist KSF in its investigation, or have been a long-term holder of SunPower shares and would like to discuss your legal rights, you may, without obligation or cost to you, call toll-free at 1-877-515-1850 or email KSF Managing Partner Lewis Kahn (lewis.kahn@ksfcounsel.com), or visit https://www.ksfcounsel.com/cases/nasdaqgs-spwr/ to learn more. KSF, whose partners include former Louisiana Attorney General Charles C. Foti, Jr., is one of the nation's premier boutique securities litigation law firms. KSF serves a variety of clients – including public institutional investors, hedge funds, money managers and retail investors – in seeking recoveries for investment losses emanating from corporate fraud or malfeasance by publicly traded companies. KSF has offices in New York, California, Louisiana and New Jersey. To learn more about KSF, you may visit www.ksfcounsel.com. Contact: Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC Lewis Kahn, Managing Partner lewis.kahn@ksfcounsel.com 1-877-515-1850 1100 Poydras St., Suite 3200 New Orleans, LA 70163 View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC
https://www.wistv.com/prnewswire/2022/11/12/sunpower-investigation-initiated-by-former-louisiana-attorney-general-kahn-swick-amp-foti-llc-investigates-officers-directors-sunpower-corporation-spwr/
2022-11-12 05:33:05
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https://www.wistv.com/prnewswire/2022/11/12/sunpower-investigation-initiated-by-former-louisiana-attorney-general-kahn-swick-amp-foti-llc-investigates-officers-directors-sunpower-corporation-spwr/
Super Bowl LVII: Michael Irvin pulled from NFL Network's coverage PHOENIX - Michael Irvin has been pulled from the remainder of NFL Network’s Super Bowl week coverage after a complaint about Irvin’s behavior in a hotel Sunday night. The Hall of Fame wide receiver went on a Dallas radio station on Feb. 8 and said he was asked by network officials to move to another hotel on Monday after what he described as a brief encounter with a woman. "Michael Irvin will not be part of NFL Network’s Super Bowl LVII week coverage," NFL Network spokesman Alex Riethmiller said In interviews with Dallas’ 105.3 The Fan and the Dallas Morning News, Irvin said the conversation with the woman lasted between 45 seconds and one minute. Irvin also said he initially didn’t remember the meeting because "I had a few drinks, to tell you the truth." Irvin said he did not know the woman and that there was "no sexual wrongdoing." "Sunday night … when I came into the hotel, they asked what I did and I said, ‘I just went straight to the room,’" Irvin said during the "Shan & RJ" show. "But I guess I had met somebody in the lobby. Talked to somebody in the lobby for about a minute, and then I went to my room. And then after I got up there, they said they had to move me in the hotel. "I said: ‘I didn’t talk to anybody. I went straight to the room.’ And then they showed it on camera that I did talk to somebody. I talked to this girl for about a minute. I don’t know what — they didn’t show it to me. They told it to me. I didn’t see it. ... I guess the girl said I said something to her within that minute that we talked, and so they moved me." Irvin has been with NFL Network since 2009. He did appear during the network’s coverage of Super Bowl opening night on Monday. Glendale, Arizona, police said they have not received any reports about any incident involving Irvin. ___ AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL More Super Bowl headlines - Roger Goodell speaks at Super Bowl LVII news conference - Super Bowl traffic closures in Phoenix, Glendale and Scottsdale - Super Bowl LVII: Phoenix officials offer funny but serious advice for out-of-towners Michael Irvin interviews Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce at Super Bowl LVII Opening Night on Feb. 6 at the Footprint Center in downtown Phoenix. (Brent Corrado)
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/sports/super-bowl-lvii-michael-irvin-pulled-from-nfl-networks-coverage
2023-02-09 00:30:21
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https://www.fox10phoenix.com/sports/super-bowl-lvii-michael-irvin-pulled-from-nfl-networks-coverage
PARIS (AP) — Monaco followed up a stellar performance against French champion Paris Saint-Germain with a humiliating 4-2 loss to modest Troyes on Wednesday. Although Monaco coach Philippe Clement wants to play attacking soccer his side has now conceded eight goals in two home games. After securing a 1-1 draw at league leader PSG on Sunday night with a fine tactical display, Monaco led early on through central defender Guillermo Maripan, but then collapsed after he was sent off late in the first half. Later Wednesday, PSG, Marseille and Lens all protected their unbeaten records. PSG was at Toulouse, Lens faced Lorient and Marseille hosted Clermont. PSG dropped its first points of the season against Monaco on Sunday. Maripan put Monaco ahead in the 10th minute against Troyes but, after forward Florian Tardieu equalized for Troyes from the penalty spot, Maripan received a second caution for fouling Tardieu. Monaco was soon punished when forward Wilson Odobert struck in first-half injury time and striker Mama Baldé scored shortly after the break for 3-1. Midfielder Youssouf Fofana pulled one back for Monaco midway through the second half but left back Yoann Salmier sealed it for a Troyes side coached by former Monaco defender Bruno Irles. Elsewhere, fourth-place Lyon remains unbeaten after winning 2-1 at home against Auxerre, with goals from wide forwards Tetê and Karl Toko Ekambi. Lyon has 10 points but has played a game less than the top three. After netting two goals in a 7-0 win at Brest last weekend, 19-year-old Montpellier forward Elye Wahi scored again as his side beat promoted Ajaccio 2-0. Each side had a player sent off. Reims went 2-0 ahead and got pegged back to 2-2 before winning 4-2 at Angers and Nantes grabbed a 1-1 draw at Strasbourg. Habib Diallo put Strasbourg ahead in the 28th only for fellow striker Mostafa Mohamed to equalize in the 85th. ___ More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
https://www.seattletimes.com/sports/monaco-loses-4-2-at-home-to-modest-troyes-in-ligue-1/?utm_source=RSS&utm_medium=Referral&utm_campaign=RSS_all
2022-08-31 19:58:40
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NEW YORK (AP) — When President Joe Biden visits Ireland this week, he will mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, confer with top officials on current issues and honor his Irish ancestors. You can also count on Biden to quote an Irish poet or two, especially two late Nobel laureates — Seamus Heaney and William Butler Yeats. “I think that’s a safe guess to make,” says former Biden speechwriter Dan Cluchey, who worked with the president from 2018-2022. “Yeats and Heaney encompass so much of the universal catalog of emotions poetry can express and they are the major wells he (Biden) goes to when he needs the perfect words to encapsulate a feeling.” Presidents have long made a point of citing a favorite writer, and for Biden that often has been Heaney, renowned for what Nobel judges in 1995 called “works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth.” Besides his original poems, his noted works include a bestselling translation of the Old English epic “Beowulf” and his play “The Cure at Troy,” a verse adaptation of Sophocles’ “Philoctetes,” with Heaney’s inspirational alliteration about a time when “hope and history rhyme.” Biden’s affinity for Heaney dates back at least to an earlier presidential run in 2008, when he lost the nomination to Barack Obama and eventually became his running mate. In a speech early in his own campaign, Biden observed that he liked to quote Irish poets because they are “the best poets.” He listed Heaney as his preferred “contemporary” Irish bard, and referred to Heaney’s words from “The Cure at Troy,” saying he believed they were reflected in “the sentiments and hearts of the vast majority of the American people.” ___ History says, don’t hope On this side of the grave. But then, once in a lifetime The longed-for tidal wave Of justice can rise up, And hope and history rhyme. ___ “I believe with every fiber of my being,” Biden concluded, “we have a chance to make hope and history rhyme.” Biden biographer Evan Osnos says that by 2008 he had already quoted “The Cure at Troy” so frequently his daughter Ashley would tease him. In his 2017 memoir “Promise Me, Dad,” Biden remembered Ashley’s response when Obama choose him as the vice presidential candidate: “Dad, this is hope and history.” Biden answered with a joke: “Oh, great. He’s hope. And I’m history.” Biden has since invoked “hope and history” while serving as vice president, in his acceptance speech for the Democratic nomination in August 2020, in a widely seen campaign video from 2020, when presenting a National Humanities Medal last fall to Elton John, and even in last month’s reception marking the Persian new year. At the end of the Obama administration, when the president awarded Biden a Medal of Freedom, Obama joked that he was going to quote Yeats — because “Seamus Heaney is taken.” Biden, not surprisingly, quoted Heaney during his own remarks, but this time drew from the poem “From the Republic of Conscience” as he praised Obama for his humility. ___ You carried your own burden and very soon your symptoms of creeping privilege disappeared. ___ Biden might have claimed Yeats as well. Osnos, whose biography “Joe Biden” came out in 2020, says that Biden began memorizing Yeats as a teenager working to overcome his stutter. He would stand in front of a mirror and speak lines from Yeats and Ralph Waldo Emerson, straining to avoid the contortion of his face muscles. As vice president, Osnos says, Biden quoted Yeats’ “Easter 1916″ at least 20 times, especially the line, “The world has changed, changed utterly.” “He has quoted the line so many times that his aides can sense when he’s about to do it, a bit like the birds who can sense when an earthquake is coming,” Osnos told the AP in a recent email. A previous Irish-American president, John F. Kennedy, had his own history of reciting verse. According to JFK biographer Fredrik Logevall, Kennedy was a lifelong poetry reader who memorized works ranging from poems by Robert Frost to the British writer Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s “Ulysses.” In the summer of 1963, Kennedy became the first sitting president to visit Ireland and mentioned various Irish poets during his trip, which included an address to the country’s parliament. “There are those who regard this history of past strife and exile as better forgotten,” Kennedy said. “But, to use the phrase of Yeats, let us not casually reduce ‘that great past to a trouble of fools.’ For we need not feel the bitterness of the past to discover its meaning for the present and the future. And it is the present and the future of Ireland that today holds so much promise to my nation as well as to yours, and, indeed, to all mankind.” Heaney’s “The Cure at Troy” premiered in 1990 and politicians were soon quoting it. Mary Robinson, in her 1991 inaugural address as Ireland’s president, hoped for an era in Europe “where old wounds can be healed, a time when, in the words of Seamus Heaney, ‘hope and history rhyme.’” In November 1995, weeks after Heaney won the Nobel, Bill Clinton became the first sitting president to visit Northern Ireland and later made a stop in Dublin, part of his years-long effort to forge what became the Good Friday Agreement among Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom. “I could not say it better than your Nobel Prize winning poet, Seamus Heaney, has said: We are living in a moment when hope and history rhyme,” Clinton said while in Dublin. “In Dublin, if there is peace in Northern Ireland, it is your victory, too.” Clinton’s memories of the agreement have their own internal meter. Why did peace remain in Northern Ireland when treaties elsewhere so often fail, he asked in an essay published Sunday in The Washington Post? It was, he wrote, “a happy occasion of hope and history rhyming.”
https://www.wric.com/news/politics/biden-and-irish-poets-hope-and-history-a-lifelong-love/
2023-04-11 01:41:11
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https://www.wric.com/news/politics/biden-and-irish-poets-hope-and-history-a-lifelong-love/