Dolphins’ Tyreek Hill says he’s ‘never racing again’ after ‘looking wild’ in 60-meter dash at USA Track and Field event | Video

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

Dolphins’ Tyreek Hill says he’s ‘never racing again’ after ‘looking wild’ in 60-meter dash at USA Track and Field event | Video Miami Dolphins speedster Tyreek Hill ran 6.70 seconds in the 60-meter dash at the USA Track and Field Masters Indoor Championships on Saturday in Louisville, Kentucky.The wide receiver dominated the race, but the time ranks Hill, who was competing in the 25-29 age group, outside the top 200 men in the world this year in the event.“Never racing again had me out there looking wild,” tweeted the seven-time Pro Bowl selection shortly after his performance.Earlier this week, Hill posted a video on social media of him practicing a block start on a track at the University of Miami, with the caption, “Felt good to put the spikes back on !!!”.Hill, 29, a world-class sprinter in high school, was participating in his first track meet since 2014, when he ran a 6.64 in the 60-meter dash. Hill, nicknamed “Cheetah” for being widely considered the fastest player in the NFL, qualified for the 2012 Olympic Trials.He and teammate Jaylen Waddle have formed one of the...

North County sinkhole expands due to rain

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

North County sinkhole expands due to rain SAN DIEGO -- A sinkhole in North County has expanded due to overnight rainfall, the City of Encinitas said Saturday.Located at on Lake Drive in Cardiff, the sinkhole was reported to have grown in size after bouts of rain and wind returned to San Diego County Friday night. The city said rainfall levels in the area reached 1.3 inches. Scattered showers in San Diego are expected to taper off at this time Officials say crews relocated all of the utilities, including gas, electric, water and cable. Once all the utilities had been relocated, work began on designing and installing shoring to stabilize the sinkhole and provide a safe area for workers.According to the city, crews are working through the weekend to continue installing shoring and to stabilize the bottom of the sinkhole to prevent additional erosion.Looking ahead, crews will reconstruct the embankment and reconstruct the drainage pipe, stormwater detention basin, roadway and sidewalk before reopening the area, officials said...

CP NewsAlert: Flair Airlines says four of its aircraft seized

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

CP NewsAlert: Flair Airlines says four of its aircraft seized Flair Airlines says passengers were “impacted” after four of its leased aircraft were seized in Toronto, Edmonton and Kitchener, Ont. in what the company is calling a “commercial dispute.”More coming.The Canadian Press

Ex-Navajo president honored in funeral procession, reception

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

Ex-Navajo president honored in funeral procession, reception LOW MOUNTAIN, Ariz. (AP) — Former Navajo Nation President Peterson Zah was honored Saturday with a funeral procession that stretched for 100 miles (160 kilometers) from western New Mexico into eastern Arizona.People lined roads on the reservation to say their final farewells to a monumental leader who made education, family, culture and Navajo language the hallmarks of his life. He fought tirelessly to correct wrongdoings against Native Americans. “He led with compassion and a crystal-clear vision of what is right for the people first,” said Robert Joe, who served as the master of ceremonies at a public reception Saturday afternoon. “He always put the people before him to do what was right and for the interest of the people.”Zah died late Tuesday in Fort Defiance, Arizona, surrounded by his family and after a lengthy illness. He was 85.Zah was buried in a private service at his family’s cemetery in Low Mountain, Arizona, where he was born. The procession passed thr...

Tropical Cyclone Freddy hammers Mozambique for second time

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

Tropical Cyclone Freddy hammers Mozambique for second time MOMBASA, Kenya (AP) — Record-breaking Cyclone Freddy made its second landfall in Mozambique Saturday night, pounding the southern African nation with heavy rains and disrupting transport and telecommunications services.French weather agency Météo-France warned of “destructive and devastating” winds and “dangerous seas and heavy rains” that could lead to landslides. It said Freddy will go further inland through the weekend, generating heavy rains in Mozambique and southern Malawi, with rain also likely in Zimbabwe and Zambia. Its the second time Freddy has hit the country, with the cyclone originally making landfall late last month. Météo-France also raised concerns that Freddy is unlikely to weaken over land in the coming week and has a high probability of exiting back into the sea. Freddy made landfall with maximum wind speeds at sea measuring 155 kilometers (around 100 miles) an hour and sea gusts averaging 220 kilometers (around 140 miles) an hour, the agency said.Freddy wa...

Glimpse into Oscars rehearsals shows stars at Dolby Theatre

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

Glimpse into Oscars rehearsals shows stars at Dolby Theatre LOS ANGELES (AP) — On Oscars Sunday, audiences can expect to see stars reunited from some of their favorite films. “Four Weddings and a Funeral” co-stars Hugh Grant and Andie MacDowell will stand beside one another to present an award at the show, as will Harrison Ford and Glenn Close, the President and Vice President of the United States in “Air Force One,” and “Creed III” frenemies Michael B. Jordan and Jonathan Majors. The Associated Press got to take a peek inside Oscars rehearsals at the Dolby Theatre Saturday.The presenters made the trek to the theater as a light, chilly rain fell outside, to run through their lines and practice handing out awards. It’s one of several rehearsals in the leadup to the show, culminating with a full run through that stretches late into the night. The theater, populated by a few dozen people from Janet Yang, the President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, to the stagehands and camera operators practicing their movements, had an ai...

Teenager killed after storm sweeps through Florida Panhandle

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

Teenager killed after storm sweeps through Florida Panhandle TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A 16-year-old girl in the Florida Panhandle was killed when a tree fell on the vehicle she was in during a fierce storm that saw wind speeds reach 80 mph (129 km), authorities said.The girl was killed and the vehicle’s driver was hospitalized Friday after the storms swept through the Tallahassee area, according to the Leon County Sheriff’s Office.Because of the damaging winds, authorities in neighboring Jefferson County temporarily closed Interstate 10, the main highway through the Florida Panhandle.Damage was caused by straight-line winds that reached speeds of between 60 and 80 mph (96 and 129 kph), according to the National Weather Service.The Associated Press

WV legislators OK transgender care ban with health exemption

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

WV legislators OK transgender care ban with health exemption CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia’s Republican supermajority House of Delegates swiftly OK’d a proposal to add mental health exemptions to a bill that would ban certain health care for transgender youth during the last day of its 60-day legislative session Saturday. The chamber approved changes made by the state Senate late Friday that would allow some transgender youth to continue receiving medical interventions, including hormone therapy, if they are at risk of self-harm or suicide.The bill now heads back to the Senate for final approval, which it is likely to receive Saturday before heading to the desk of Gov. Jim Justice. The Republican governor has not taken a public stance on the measure.Lawmakers in West Virginia and other states advancing bans on transgender health care for youth and young adults often characterize gender-affirming treatments as medically unproven, potentially dangerous in the long term and a symptom of “woke” culture.But every major medical...

Nipissing First Nation Chief asks for return of headdress

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

Nipissing First Nation Chief asks for return of headdress Nipissing First Nation Chief Scott McLeod is asking for the return of the Nipissing First Nation Chief headdress that was stolen along with his vehicle on Saturday morning.Chief Scott McLeod was in Mississauga to host the Little Native Hockey League (LNHL) tournament on Mar. 11 where his vehicle was stolen with the headdress inside.The Nipissing First Nation headdress was constructed with over two years of research by elders, academics, historians, and geographers, with the beadwork representing women’s roles in supporting the leader wearing the ceremonial headdress, seven white eagle feathers signifying a commitment that a leader makes following the seven grandfather/grandmother teachings to lead responsibly.“I ask that the perpetrators of this theft find it upon themselves to kindly return the headdress, this can be done anonymously, to the Sandman Signature Mississauga hotel or to one of the arenas where the event is taking place,” says Chief McLeod in a statement.

Purdue University professor working to help robots better work with humans

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 06:48:22 GMT

Purdue University professor working to help robots better work with humans WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — A team of students and professors at Purdue University are working to make robots smarter and able to help in more situations, like natural disasters.Anikert Bera, an associate professor, and the university’s IDEAS lab are researching to make AI, or artificial intelligence, and robots smarter. ‘Robot dogs’ to help agents patrol Southwest border Bera said the team focuses on social robotics and is trying to bring robots closer to humanity and solving tasks.“We realized that most of these robots are fairly dumb, we tell them what to do,” Bera said. “And it does that right, with a high level of precision, because that's what we're going for.”But the goal is to make them smarter and work alongside humans to complete more complex tasks, including after natural disasters, like the recent earthquake in Turkey.“The biggest problem is that first responders by the time they reach the location, it's very hard for them to look at, you know, rubble and where people are s...