The Schlafly Stout and Oyster Festival returns this weekend
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
ST. LOUIS -- The Schlafly Stout and Oyster Festival is this weekend. It's happening at the Schlafly Tap Room on Locust Street.They fly in more than 80,000 oysters from both coasts and 20 pro shuckers from across North America.What can Broncos get in trade for receivers Jerry Jeudy, Courtland Sutton? Patience may prove to be a virtue.
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
As head coach Sean Payton graduated from the snorkel mask to the scuba tank and worked through a deep dive on the Broncos roster in recent weeks, the question that popped up most frequently around the league was whether he and general manager George Paton might consider dealing from their wide receiver group.The Broncos, after all, are heavy salary cap-wise at receiver and light on draft capital.Throw in an underwhelming free agent crop of pass-catchers and it’s no surprise that Jerry Jeudy and Courtland Sutton have been the subject of trade calls from teams around the NFL. The landscape continually changes. Just this week, two notable receivers have been dealt, KJ Hamler suffered a torn pectoral muscle while training on his own that will sideline him 4-6 months and on Friday Denver signed receiver Marquez Callaway to a one-year deal.The central question remains the same, though: Deal Sutton, Jeudy, both or neither? If the Broncos are serious about sticking to their high asking pric...How Colorado’s top picks have fared from every MLB Amateur Draft since 1992
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
According to data available on sports-reference.com, 72.4% of first-round players reached the majors between the 2000 and 2017 drafts. For the Rockies, that number is 70.4%, meaning that almost 30% of their first-round picks never made it to the big leagues.Following is a look at the Rockies’ first pick each year:1992: John Burke, RHP, University of Florida (No. 27). Cherry Creek High grad went 4-6 with a 6.75 ERA in 28 games (nine starts) before retiring in 1998.1993: Jamey Wright, RHP, Westmoore High School (Okla.) (No. 28). Spent 19 years in the bigs, including two stints with Colorado.1994: Doug Million, LHP, Sarasota High School (Fla.) (No. 7). Died in 1997, at age 21, after suffering an asthma attack.1995: Todd Helton, 1B, University of Tennessee (No. 8). Played all 17 seasons for Colorado and will likely make Hall of Fame.Todd Helton (17) of the Colorado Rockies looks on during an interleague game against the Oakland Athletics at Coors Field in Denver on June 28, 1998. ...Mathews: California and I need a jubilee to reflect on the future
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
Ye shall hallow the 50th year, and proclaim liberty throughout all the land… it shall be a jubilee unto you. Leviticus 25:10I’m not grown-up enough to be 50.So perhaps it’s fitting that I passed the half-century mark while coaching California kids in their Little League opener. My party was post-game cupcakes and fourth-grade humor.Or maybe I missed an opportunity to take some time off. Under the Biblical tradition of jubilee, every 50 years you are supposed to forgive debts, free slaves, return property to its owners, and go home to rest.Rest and reassessment sound pretty good right now, and not just for your columnist, who has been banging out these weekly pieces for 10 years.California could use its own jubilee year, to reflect on its future.I, like the state’s 21st century governing system, -am a rare bird, and a child of the 1970s. Fewer people were born in the United States in 1973 than in any year since 1945. It was a tough time — gas lines, Vietnam, Watergate.The resulting p...Brooks: The Cold War with China is changing everything
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
So I guess we’re in a new cold war. Leaders of both parties have become China hawks. There are rumblings of war over Taiwan. Xi Jinping vows to dominate the century.I can’t help wondering: What will this cold war look like? Will this one transform American society the way the last one did?The first thing I notice about this cold war is that the arms race and the economics race are fused. A chief focus of the conflict so far has been microchips, the little gizmos that not only make your car and phone work, but also guide missiles and are necessary to train artificial intelligence systems. Whoever dominates chip manufacturing dominates the market as well as the battlefield.Second, the geopolitics are different. As Chris Miller notes in his book “Chip War,” the microchip sector is dominated by a few highly successful businesses. More than 90% of the most advanced chips are made by one company in Taiwan. One Dutch company makes all the lithography machines that are required to build cut...Opinon: Why winter storms won’t end California’s water shortage problems
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
During a winter of blizzards, floods and drought-ending downpours, it’s easy to forget that California suffers from chronic water scarcity — the long-term decline of the state’s total available fresh water. This rainy season’s inundation isn’t going to change that.How is this possible, given the unrelenting series of atmospheric river systems that have dumped near-record snowfall over the Sierra and replenished the state’s reservoirs?It’s all about groundwater.California uses more water each year — most of it for food production — than is supplied by renewable sources such as rain and snowfall, even in the wettest of winters like this one. The gap is filled by groundwater, which has for a century underpinned California’s water resources — in particular, during drought, when it provides 60% or more of agriculture’s irrigation water supply.But groundwater can be renewed only slowly, to the extent it can be renewed at all.It is the long-term disappearance of groundwater that is the maj...Pope expands norms to fight sex abuse to cover lay leaders, reaffirms that vulnerable adults can also be victims.
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope expands norms to fight sex abuse to cover lay leaders, reaffirms that vulnerable adults can also be victims.SourceBrussels to Berlin: We’ll find a way to save the car engine
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
On the future of the internal combustion engine, Germany has gotten its own way, again.The European Commission and Germany’s Transport Ministry announced a deal Saturday morning that commits the EU executive to figuring out a legal way to allow the sale of new engine-installed cars running exclusively on synthetic e-fuels even after a mandate comes into force requiring sales of only zero-emission vehicles from 2035.“We have found an agreement with Germany on the future use of e-fuels in cars,” the Commission’s Green Deal chief Frans Timmermans said on Twitter. “We will work now on getting the CO2 standards for cars regulation adopted as soon as possible.”The deal heads off a row over car legislation that was all-but-agreed until Germany, along with a small club of allies, slammed on the brakes just days before formal final approval on a law that is the centerpiece of the EU’s green agenda.Timmermans said the Commission would “follow up swiftly” with “legal steps” to turn ...Fire officials investigating massive blaze that damaged multiple homes in Scituate
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
Fire officials are working to identify the cause of a massive, multi-alarm blaze that damaged at least five homes in Scituate Friday night.As fire crews worked late into the night to identify hot spots and extinguish the flames, heavy smoke cast a large plume across the scene on Glades Road near Minot Beach. In an update, officials said they first received a call about the fire shortly before 8 p.m. Officials said crews soon arrived to find three buildings already in flames. Officials said crews worked to contain the fire as wind blew through the area, though fire eventually spread to two additional homes. More than 60 firefighters joined in the fire response.There were no reported injuries as of around 10 p.m.In a statement Friday night, Scituate police asked anyone not immediately affected by the fire to stay away from the area. Residents, police said, should expect power outages and water related issues including pressure issues and discoloration as a result of the fire. Cell pho...Mississippi tornadoes kill 23, injure dozens overnight
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 07:33:05 GMT
ROLLING FORK, Miss. (AP) — Emergency officials in Mississippi said 23 people have been killed by tornadoes that tore through the state on Friday night, destroying buildings and knocking out power as severe weather that produced hail the size of golf balls moved through several southern states.The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency confirmed there had been 23 deaths as of 6:20 a.m. Saturday with dozens of injuries and four people missing throughout the state. The agency said in a Twitter post that search and rescue teams from numerous local and state agencies were deployed along with personnel to assist those impacted by the tornadoes.The National Weather Service confirmed a tornado caused damage about 60 miles (96 kilometers) northeast of Jackson, Mississippi. The rural towns of Silver City and Rolling Fork reported destruction as the tornado swept northeast at 70 mph (113 kph) without weakening, racing towards Alabama through towns including Winona and Amory into the night.The...Latest news
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