‘Gone in an instant:’ Manitoba RCMP release names of 16 seniors killed in bus crash
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
DAUPHIN, Man. — Family members of 16 seniors who died in a highway crash honoured their loved ones Thursday, silently placing large photos of them on easels as police publicly confirmed the names of the victims.“We lost 16 people who are mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers (and) grandparents whose decades of contributions helped make this community what it is. They’re gone in an instant,” said RCMP Supt. Jeff Asmundson, in charge of Manitoba’s west district.They ranged in age from 68 to 88, with 11 of them in their 80s. All but two were women and all came from Dauphin and the surrounding area.“Words cannot express the loss you have experienced over the last few days or the trauma that continues as you visit the loved ones in the hospital,” said Ernest Sirski, the reeve of the Rural Municipality of Dauphin.“We cannot feel your pain. We can only offer our sympathies. We cannot suffer your loss, but we can share your grief.”The victims were: Claudia Zurba, 87; Patsy Zamrykut, 88; Lilli...S&P/TSX composite down Thursday as energy, base metal stocks fall, U.S. stocks mixed
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
TORONTO — Canada’s main stock index was down more than 100 points Thursday as the price of oil weakened energy stocks amid weakness in base metals and financials, while U.S. markets were mixed. The S&P/TSX composite index was down 125.05 points at 19,580.90.In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 4.81 points at 33,946.71. The S&P 500 index was up 16.20 at 4,381.89, while the Nasdaq composite was up 128.41 points at 13,630.61.The Canadian dollar traded for 75.99 cents UScompared with 75.86 cents US on Wednesday.The August crude oil contract was down US$3.02 at US$69.51 per barrel and the July natural gas contract was up a penny at US$2.61 per mmBTU.The August gold contract was down US$21.20 at US$1,923.70 an ounce and the July copper contract was down two cents at US$3.89 a pound.This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 22, 2023.Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD=X)The Canadian PressBatavia police looking for woman who stole purse while woman was sleeping in senior living community
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
BATAVIA, Ill. — Police in Batavia are looking for a woman who broke in and took a woman's purse while she was sleeping at her apartment at a senior living community.The Batavia Police Department said the woman broke into at least two apartments between 10 p.m. and midnight on Monday in the 2400 block of Hawks Drive. Man faces several felony charges after hitting, critically injuring boy riding his bike in Batavia In a Facebook post, police said there were no signs of forced entry into the units but she did cause minor damage to get into the building.The woman allegedly got into one unit and took a woman's purse while she was sleeping, police said. She got into another unit but it is believed nothing was taken.Anyone with information on the identity of the woman is asked to call police at 630-454-2500.Police are reminding people to call 911 to report any suspicious activity and make sure to lock their doors, including patio doors.How long had the Titan journeyed before its 'catastrophic implosion'?
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
(NEXSTAR) – Coast Guard officials briefed the media Thursday following the discovery of debris determined to belong to the Titan submersible, which lost contact with its support crew less than two hours after embarking on its dive to the wreckage of the Titanic on Sunday.The vessel, officials said, suffered a “catastrophic implosion” during its journey to the wreckage, the cause of which is still under investigation.On Thursday afternoon, just hours after experts estimated the oxygen on the Titan would have run out for any surviving passengers, Coast Guard officials confirmed that at least five pieces of the vessel had been found during search-and-rescue efforts. Missing Titan submersible begs the question: Are the risks worth the rewards? The pieces, found approximately 1,600 feet from the bow of the Titanic, included the nose cone, pieces of the hull, and the front and aft end bells, according to Paul Hanken, an undersea expert who spoke at Thursday afternoon’s news conference.“...APD to conduct DWI enforcement, extended no refusal during Independence Day holiday season
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) — The Austin Police Department said officers would be on patrol and enforcing a DWI enforcement initiative and an extended no refusal period during the Independence Day holiday season.APD said the DWI enforcement would begin Friday and continue each night through July 9. The extended no refusal period would be in effect from June 29 through July 9.“This initiative is an effort to enforce DWI laws while keeping the public safe by encouraging drivers to make responsible decisions,” APD said.The department said this initiative would also focus on highways and high-speed roadways.“The Austin Police Department and the City of Austin Transportation Department continue to focus on preventing lives from being lost on Austin's streets, highways, and waterways,” APD said. “The Department is dedicated to making the roadways and waterways of Austin safe for residents and visitors through education and enforcement.”How do other cities deal with extreme heat?
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) -- While Wednesday marked the official start of summer, June 1 commemorated the meteorological start of the summer season -- and the latest sweltering heat wave in Central Texas has reaffirmed it.How do other cities navigate extreme heat conditions?Phoenix, Arizona Phoenix consistently experiences some of the hottest temperatures nationally. Home to more than 1.6 million people, the city regularly experiences daily or near-daily triple-digit temperatures from late May through the middle of September, per AccuWeather analysis.Maricopa Association of Governments (MAG) is a regional planning agency servicing the Phoenix metro area. Each year, MAG collaborates with the Heat Relief Network, nonprofit organizations and faith-based community groups to operate hydration stations, cooling centers and respite locations along with water donation sites. A complete list of all Heat Relief Network centers is available online.The City of Phoenix also operates its Office of Heat Respo...Zeynep Tufekci: The government must say what it knows about Covid’s origins
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
Three researchers at a laboratory in Wuhan, China, who had fallen ill in November 2019 had been experimenting with SARS-like coronaviruses under inadequate biosafety conditions, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday, citing current and former U.S. officials.The Journal had reported in 2021 that some researchers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology had sought hospital care that November, around the time that evidence suggests COVID first began to spread among people. It was not publicly known, though, that those scientists had been experimenting with SARS-like coronaviruses — that is, pathogens related to the ones that cause SARS and COVID.Their role in that work is not proof that the virus initially leaked out of a lab rather than spreading from animals at a market in the city, the other theory into how the pandemic started. There is no proof of that path, either, since the known cases from market outbreak were too late to have been the origin, and no infected animal has been found...F.D. Flam: Want to be more creative? Try dream-hacking while you sleep
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
In our competitive society, some consider it a badge of honor to get only four or five hours of sleep a night, or pull all-nighters in the service of work. And forget naps. But sleep may have more benefits than just making you sharper and more alert during your waking hours. Sleep also brings dreams, and these, according to new research, can give shape to creative ideas that come to us like gifts from a muse.While you sleep, your brain isn’t idle. It’s still working for you — and now scientists have found ways to direct dreams and squeeze more creative juice from them.Even if you don’t remember what happened in a dream, synaptic pathways are changing in the brain, said Harvard Medical School psychiatrist Robert Stickgold, who has been studying dreams for decades. Associations are made and then strengthened while we sleep, he said, and that can lead to those ideas we get and wonder where they came from.Thomas Edison, Mary Shelly and Paul McCartney all reported...Other voices: True American courage
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
ALBANY, N.Y. — Could Leonidas Polk be rolling in his grave right now? Then let him roll. The Confederate general’s name has been scrubbed from a Louisiana military base, supplanted by that of Albany’s World War I hero Henry Johnson, a Black man — yes, one of those whom the Confederates were so determined to oppress that they tried to dissolve the union to do it.Even if all Sgt. Johnson had done was to fight for his country instead of against it, he would be far worthier of the honor than Mr. Polk ever was. But Sgt. Johnson’s qualities go deeper than that — and even deeper than the acts of bravery that secured him a long-overdue Medal of Honor in 2015.Usually, the contemporary tale of Henry Johnson goes like this: He was a war hero, and then, because he was Black, America forgot him. There’s more to the story than that, but let’s start there.William Henry Johnson belonged to a Black regiment that, because of Army segregation policies, was assigned to fight under French command....Former St. Paul man charged with murder in Itasca County
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 07:30:46 GMT
A former St. Paul man has been charged with second-degree murder in a fatal June 9 shooting in Itasca County.According to the criminal complaint, a woman called law enforcement June 13 to report there had been a shooting at her daughter’s Deer River home several days earlier and there may be a dead body still in the home.The daughter later told law enforcement that 33-year-old Nigel Randel Blackburn had shot a man identified in the complaint as J.C.K. Officers entered the woman’s home and found the man dead with bullet holes in his head and body.According to the complaint:The daughter said she previously had been in a relationship with Blackburn and that J.C.K. “had a romantic interest in her.”She told investigators that she, Blackburn and J.C.K. all went to her home June 8 after having dinner at J.C.K.’s mother’s house.The two men got into an argument early the next day, and the woman “heard a loud bang” and realized J.C.K. had been s...Latest news
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