Yankees Notebook: Bombers top Phillies behind Gerrit Cole’s strong start, Michael King and Aaron Hicks face adversity
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
After a strong 2023 debut, Gerrit Cole shoved again. Gleyber Torres, meanwhile, continued his hot start to the season. But it was catcher Jose Trevino who put the nail in the Phillies’ coffin as the Bombers beat Philadelphia, 4-2, in a series-deciding game on Wednesday afternoon.With the Yankees already up 2-1 in the seventh inning, Trevino lined a two-run homer to left field, his first longball of the season. The shot, which came off Phillies reliever Gregory Soto, gave the Yankees a desirable cushion after the Phillies found their way onto the scoreboard earlier in the frame.Phillies slugger Kyle Schwarber hit a solo homer in the eighth, but that was the most Philadelphia’s offense could muster.Prior to Trevino’s home run, Torres picked up a pair of RBI singles in the first and sixth innings. He added a double in the eighth, and he also stole two bases on the day. Torres is now hitting .421 with two dingers, six RBI and five swipes over six games to start the yea...Johns Hopkins surgeons get $21.4 million to study pig-to-human organ transplants
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
Angela Roberts | (TNS) The Baltimore SunBALTIMORE — Two Johns Hopkins Medicine surgeons will receive $21.4 million over the next two years to advance research needed to successfully transplant living cells, tissues and organs from animals to humans.The scientists, Dr. Kazuhiko Yamada and Dr. Andrew Cameron, will receive the funding under two research agreements with the United Therapeutics Corp., a biotechnology company that focuses on projects meant to expand the availability of transplantable organs, Johns Hopkins Medicine said last week in a news release.Over the next two years, Yamada and Cameron plan to advance the use of genetically modified pigs in human organ transplants, improving techniques already used in the approach to reduce the risk of organ rejection and failure and to increase the likelihood of a patient’s long-term survival.The funding will help Yamada and Cameron complete the necessary studies in animals requested by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration before th...Body discovered at Otay Lakes
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
SAN DIEGO -- An unidentified body was found at Otay Lakes on Wednesday, the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department confirmed.The body was discovered sometime Wednesday in the City of San Diego reservoir and authorities entered the incident into the dispatch system at 12:07 p.m, according to SDFD. Supervisors address Fletcher scandal in first meeting since resignation announcement The cause of death is not known at this time. The San Diego County Medical Examiner's Office will be working to identify if foul play is involved.SDFD lifeguards will be searching the lake for any additional people in the water, a spokesperson for the department said.This is a developing story. Check back for updates.Ontario NDP, ATU Canada increase calls for funding, staffing for transit safety
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
Toronto mayoral candidates, labour leaders and Ontario’s Opposition NDP all urged various solutions Wednesday to a wave of violence on transit, including more operational funding, a task force, social supports, and physical barriers on platforms.Amalgamated Transit Union Canada president John Di Nino said at a news conference with the NDP that his union is renewing its calls for a national task force led by the provinces, adding it should be a priority for the Ontario government.“Front-line transit workers are getting assaulted with deadly weapons. Passengers are getting murdered on platforms and subway cars. And the provincial government just doesn’t give a damn,” said Di Nino.The union initially called for a national transit safety task force in late January, and said it must include transit agencies from across Canada and representatives from all levels of government.Di Nino said transit safety issues are “a national crisis” that is particularl...Suspects in Aylmer arson that destroyed $1.1M home have ties to GTA: police
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
Peel Regional Police are assisting an arson investigation in Aylmer, Ont. after a newly built home was intentionally destroyed by a group of suspects with ties to the Greater Toronto Area (GTA).Aylmer’s Police Service began investigating an arson incident on Aspen Parkway on March 24, 2023, at approximately 2:30 a.m.Investigators said the home had been built and completed but not moved into at the time of the fire and was destroyed with a total loss of 1.1 million.It’s alleged that a group of suspects used a large amount of gasoline that resulted in an explosion impacting the residence.The suspects then fled in a vehicle. Investigators do not know the make and model.Police believe one suspect suffered serious burn injuriesPeel police said smouldering discarded clothing was located at the scene, and investigators located and seized other evidence.With the help of the Ontario Fire Marshall and the Ontario Provincial Police Forensic Identification Unit, authorities believe ...Police: 1 hospitalized in incident at Chicago’s Trump Tower
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Police said SWAT officers took one person to a hospital after responding to a domestic incident on Wednesday at the Trump International Hotel and Tower, located in the city’s central Loop near the Chicago River. The large police presence outside the condo-hotel quickly drew attention from workers and tourists in the busy area. Officers blocked access to the building using yellow caution tape and police vehicles.“At this time, we believe this is an isolated incident and there is no threat to the public,” Chicago Police media representatives said in a statement released Wednesday afternoon. Police later said the incident was resolved with no injuries and one person was taken to a hospital “for evaluation.”The department didn’t release more detail about what prompted the large police response or how it was resolved. The Associated PressWest Virginia atheist inmate sues over Christian programming
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — An atheist and secular humanist is suing multiple officials in charge of the agency that runs West Virginia’s jails and prisons, accusing the state of violating his constitutional rights by requiring Christian-affiliated programming as a condition of release. Andrew Miller, who is currently incarcerated at Saint Marys Correctional Center and Jail, filed a lawsuit in a federal district court Tuesday alleging the state is forcing Christianity on incarcerated people and has failed to accommodate repeated requests to honor his lack of belief in God. The suit claims Miller encountered “religious coercion” in June 2021 when he entered the Pleasants County correctional facility. Miller is serving a one- to 10-year, nondeterminative sentence for breaking and entering.Miller alleges the federally-funded substance abuse treatment program he is participating in — which is a requirement for his parole consideration — is “infused with Christian practices,” includin...S&P/TSX composite ends down more than 100 points, U.S. stock markets mixed
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
TORONTO — Canada’s main stock index closed down more than 100 points as losses in base metal, energy and technology stocks weighed on the market, while U.S. stock markets put in a mixed showing.The S&P/TSX composite index ended down 116.21 points at 20,159.55.In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average closed up 80.34 points at 33,482.72. The S&P 500 index was down 10.22 points at 4,090.38, while the Nasdaq composite was down 129.47 points at 11,996.86.The Canadian dollar traded for 74.31 cents US compared with 74.37 cents US on Tuesday.The May crude contract was down 10 cents at US$80.61 per barrel and the May natural gas contract was up five cents at US$2.16 per mmBTU.The June gold contract was down US$2.60 at US$2,035.60 an ounce and the May copper contract was up about two cents at US$3.99 a pound.This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 5, 2023.Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD=X)The Canadian PressEnd of legacy funding to send close to 4,000 children with autism back to school
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
Ontario’s Autism Coalition is sounding the alarm over the decision to reduce funding for 4,000 children with autism and moving them into the school system, starting as early as this week.They say the schools aren’t ready for them.Michelle MacAdam has two daughters with autism, some of the lucky few thousand children who had been receiving funding in the legacy program, which means they received full funding for therapy-based needs.However, the Ford government has just ended that program meaning legacy funding will now be capped. MacAdam’s daughters will now receive the same as other children who are enrolled in core services, a fraction of what they are used to.She said she doesn’t object to sending her children to school, she just fears the schools won’t have enough Educational Assistants to help them.“If they are put in a mainstream classroom, I don’t know if they will have support. My biggest fear for my girls is safety and being a flight...Dog owners on high alert, risk to humans remains low after pet dog dies of avian flu
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 03:36:13 GMT
Experts are warning GTA residents to be hypervigilant after pet dog has died of avian flu in Oshawa as Toronto confirms avian flu has been detected in the city.The dog was infected after chewing on a wild goose. It’s the only case of its kind in Canada so far.Toronto Animal Services confirmed there have been six confirmed cases in birds tested between late 2021 and the end of 2022 and one raccoon that tested positive in late 2022.They say the City and Toronto Public Health continue to monitor the situation.While the risk to humans is low, more avian flu cases are being reported in birds in nearby regions and dog owners are on high alert.Matthew Miller, director of the Michael G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research said, in some ways, it was inevitable that this would happen.“We do know domestic animals like dogs and cats are susceptible to influenza virus,” said Miller. “We’ve already heard reports of skunks and raccoons and other scaveng...Latest news
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