Tua Tagovailoa trying to ‘work on everything’ entering 4th NFL season
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Miami Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel wanted to see a “graduation” from Tua Tagovailoa entering his fourth year in the NFL and second in McDaniel’s system.In Year One, the Dolphins starting quarterback had to learn and adapt weekly. In Year Two, McDaniel expects more command and consistency from him. So far this offseason, he’s seeing it.“I think Year Two, the prerequisite is that he as the quarterback has to have ownership of everything that he’s doing and what everyone else is doing as the facilitator of the offense,” McDaniel said, “and he’s checked that box every day.”Tagovailoa arrived at the Dolphins minicamp visibly bigger than he was last season, something he attributed to his commitment to working on more than what happens on the field.“I’m trying to work on everything. As much as I’m trying to work on throwing that ball, getting the ball to the guys, being able to push the ball a lot more down the field, I’m doing the same thing with my body,” Tagov...‘Everything is still up for negotiation’: Migration reform hangs in the balance
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
EU governments are racing against the clock to clinch their first major overhaul in years of the bloc’s key asylum policies, but as of late Wednesday, “everything is still up for negotiation,” Sweden’s Migration Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard told POLITICO. Sweden currently holds the Council of the EU’s rotating presidency, putting it in charge of navigating the bloc’s latest attempt to seal a new deal on how it processes and relocates asylum seekers. In recent weeks, officials sent signals that an agreement on the two very contentious files on the table may soon be possible. But talks have grown tense as negotiators near a potential finish line, with officials still fighting over the specifics of how migrants could be more evenly distributed across Europe. Still, while Malmer Stenergard conceded that numerous issues remained unresolved, she said a deal was not out of the question.“I am prepared for negotiations all night [but] I’m hopeful,” she...Trial begins for Parkland school resource officer who stayed outside during shooting, as defense argues ‘biased’ investigation
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
(CNN) — The trial of Scot Peterson began Wednesday, as jurors heard opening statements about whether the former school resource officer reacted appropriately when he remained outside a Parkland, Florida, high school while 17 people were gunned down five years ago.Peterson’s attorney argued his client could not discern the location of the shooter, based on the sound of the gunshots, and reacted as best he could with the information he had.A prosecutor told jurors that the state has witnesses that will say they heard gunfire from the 1200 building.The state has accused Peterson, then a deputy with the Broward Sheriff’s Office, of failing to follow his active shooter training by staying outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on February 14, 2018, taking cover for at least 45 minutes while a former student carried out what remains the deadliest high school shooting in US history. Among the slain were 14 students and three staff members; 17 others...Massachusetts declared a ‘safe haven’ as Pride flag is raised at State House
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
Top state officials made clear Wednesday that Massachusetts welcomes people of all sexual orientations as they raised the Pride flag outside the State House and lambasted governors in other states for what they say are restrictions on LGBTQ rights.As legislatures across the country consider bills restricting drag performers, transgender healthcare, and books they deem inappropriate, politicians in Massachusetts said the state is a “safe haven” for people from across the country. Their remarks come as Boston prepares for a Pride parade on Saturday.There are “so many efforts to simply deny who we are and deny civil rights and protections, basic protections for people” in other states, said Gov. Maura Healey, one of the first lesbians elected governor in the United States.“We are open for business in Massachusetts. Come to school here. Raise a family here, maybe meet someone here. Get married here. Grow a business here, vacation here. There’s so much about our beautiful, beautifu...Want to talk to your child about race? This children’s book from a pediatric psychologist and family therapist may help.
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
It’s Zahra’s first day of school. And she remembers her mother’s words about how her brown skin “glows and glows” as she steps into the classroom. But that self-confidence is shaken when her classmate, Zoey, says, “You’re so dark. I don’t like brown.”Zahra and Zoey are characters in a children’s book, “The Proudest Color,” written by Irvine-based authors and spouses Sheila Modir and Jeff Kashou. Modir drew from discrimination she faced as a child in elementary school to portray the racial incident Zahra experienced in the book.Following the murder of George Floyd in 2020, Modir and Kashou were inspired to contribute to the movement for social justice and wrote a children’s book using their clinical background — Kashou is a licensed family and marriage therapist, and Modir is a psychologist at the Children’s Hospital of Orange County — to give parents and children tools to navigate conversations about race and racism.Sheila Modir, a pediatric psychologist, and her husband Jeff Kashou...More misery as Ukraine rushes drinking water after dam breaks
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
KHERSON, Ukraine — Authorities rushed to rescue hundreds of people stranded on rooftops and supply drinking water to areas flooded by a collapsed dam in southern Ukraine, in a growing humanitarian and ecological disaster along a river that forms part of the front line in the 15-month war.The collapse of the Kakhovka hydroelectric dam and emptying of its reservoir on the Dnieper River added to the misery the region has suffered for more than a year from artillery and missile attacks.With humanitarian and ecological disasters still unfolding, it’s already clear that tens of thousands of people have been deprived of drinking water, many are homeless, crops are ruined, land mines have been displaced, and the stage is set for long-term electricity shortages.Some residents of Russia-occupied areas hit by high water complained that help was slow in arriving, with some stranded on roofs and streets passable only by boat in scenes more like natural disasters than wars. Others refused to leav...Pope Francis has scar tissue removed, hernia repaired during 3-hour abdominal surgery
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
By NICOLE WINFIELD, TRISHA THOMAS and MARIA CHENG (Associated Press)ROME (AP) — Pope Francis underwent successful surgery Wednesday to remove intestinal scar tissue and repair a hernia in his abdominal wall, the latest maladies to befall the 86-year-old pontiff who had part of his colon removed two years ago.The Vatican said there were no complications during the three-hour surgery, which required Francis to be under general anesthesia. The pontiff was expected to remain at Rome’s Gemelli hospital for several days, and all papal audiences were canceled through June 18.Dr. Sergio Alfieri, director of abdominal and endocrine sciences at Gemelli, who also performed Francis’ 2021 colon surgery, said the operation was successful, the pope was awake, alert and even joking.“When will we do the third one?” he quoted Francis as saying.During the operation, doctors removed adhesions, or internal scarring, on the intestine that had caused a partial blockage, as we...‘The Flash’ a fast-moving, Bat-tastic, universe-altering thrillfest
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
If it’s not one multiverse, it’s another.Coming hot on the superhero heels of the mind-blowingly multidimensional animated work of art that is “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” “The Flash” is an almost-as-excellent universe-hopping live-action extravaganza.Almost always moving at what feels like the speed of light (but, ironically, not in theaters until next week), this first feature film featuring the subatomically fast DC Comics hero is a zippy and entertaining blast. And yet it nonetheless manages to serve up a few heartfelt moments amid all its carefully choreographed chaos.As trailers have made very clear, among the familiar faces showing up in “The Flash” is Michael Keaton, who played the Dark Knight in Tim Burton’s 1989 megahit “Batman” and its 1992 sequel, “Batman Returns.”You wanna get nuts? This movie will GET NUTS.And while we get a lot of Keaton — initially as wealthy industrialist Bruce Wayne, retired from caped crusading and living alone in his mansion in a now-mu...Is it time for these film franchises to go away?
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
The lyrics to iconic Kenny Rogers’ song “The Gambler” could double down as the realization that should be coming to movie franchise biz.In that No. 1 1978 hit written by Don Schlitz, Rogers croons:You’ve got to know when to hold ‘em, Know when to fold ‘em, Know when to walk away, And know when to run. … Hollywood should tap into that sage advice when it comes to the proliferation of reboots, sequels and franchises that is choking the film industry. But with millions and millions of dollars at stake, and with audiences apparently still hungry for more “Fast and Furious” films (10 are in the books and at least two more are planned), the big-studio norm is to churn out sequels, reboots and origin stories.Sure, some indeed work, but others just clog up the cineplex and offer one empty shot after another.The story is the same for this summer, with franchises ruling the season and familiar faces suiting up to play familiar characters in familiar predicaments. Indiana Jones is back. Ethan ...FBI: Cyber crimes cost U.S. $10 billion in 2023, $300 million from New England
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 09:54:10 GMT
Cyber criminals stole over $10 billion from U.S. citizens and entities last year, an ‘unprecedented’ amount of loss resulting from a threat which is both growing in sophistication and increasingly harder for victims to protect themselves from, agents with the FBI said Wednesday.Speaking at Boston College for the seventh Boston Conference on Cyber Security, FBI Boston Division Special Agent in Charge Joe Bonavolonta said that in his division alone — one of the Bureau’s largest, covering Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire and Rhode Island — “victims reported more than $298 million in losses” as a result of cyber crime.“FBI Boston continues to receive as many as four reports per week from new victims, and in some cases they’ve suffered tens of millions of dollars in losses per individual report,” Bonavolonta said.In April, the city of Lowell was attacked by a cyber criminal group calling themselves “Play” which used malware — that’s computer software made...Latest news
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