Damion Lee with an assist vs the Toronto Raptors
Damion Lee (Phoenix Suns) with an assist vs the Toronto Raptors, 01/30/2023
Damion Lee (Phoenix Suns) with an assist vs the Toronto Raptors, 01/30/2023
Cities: Skylines 2 developer Colossal Order is unlisting and refunding purchases of its controversial Beach Properties asset pack less than a month after its release.
There are 12 species of snake in Idaho, two of which are venomous.
The incident happened Wednesday evening, the Placer County Sheriff’s Office said.
At an age when many contemporaries contemplate retirement, musician T Bone Burnett has made big changes in his life and art. Burnett, most celebrated for his production acumen, uprooted from Los Angeles to move to Nashville and recorded a warm-hearted disc of his own songs for the first time in nearly two decades. “I'm so grateful that this music has come to me out of nowhere and without even trying for it to happen,” Burnett, 76, says in an interview with The Associated Press.
Families gave a standing ovation to the jury which returned a verdict of unlawful killing for the 48 people who died in the Stardust fire.
The 2020 Miss Kentucky Basketball honoree and former McDonald’s All-American plans to announce a new opportunity soon.
The mom of two ran around N.Y.C. to make sure she caught her daughter's spring show
A cardinal fallacy reigns over the debate on green energy and global decarbonisation. It taps into deep Malthusian instincts and creates near universal confusion.
UnitedHealth Group said on Thursday it had resolved an issue that had hampered processing of batches of medical claims for some customers of its technology unit, Change Healthcare. A fix has been implemented and is being monitored to ensure operability, Change operator Optum, said in a statement, before confirming the issue was resolved. A spokesperson for Optum told Reuters the incident may have affected "a small subset and customers may have already been communicated", and that the company will provide more information when it has any.
The 24-year-old Nova Scotian is looking back at the time she "lost" because she was unhappy with how she looked.
Thousands of workers at a big Mercedes-Benz factory near Tuscaloosa, Alabama, will vote next month on whether they want to be represented by the United Auto Workers union. The National Labor Relations Board said Thursday that the vote will take place from May 13 to May 17 at the facilities in Vance and Woodstock, Alabama. The vote will be the second in the union's drive to organize 150,000 workers at more than a dozen nonunion auto manufacturing plants largely in Southern states.
“It’s important for us to be recognized and to show a different part of the world. Nepal Day is a proud moment for us.”
The justice whose retirement is referenced in the Facebook post serves on the state Supreme Court in Wisconsin, not the U.S. Supreme Court.
A British man who spent 17 years in prison for a rape he didn't commit received an “unreserved apology” Thursday from a review body that twice rejected his attempts to have his conviction referred to the Court of Appeal. Following an independent review of its involvement, the commission’s chair Helen Pitcher said it was “clear” that the body had failed Malkinson. “Nobody can ever begin to imagine the devastating impact that Mr. Malkinson’s wrongful conviction has had on his life, and I can only apologize for the additional harm caused to him by our handling of his case.”
New changes to the format of the FA Cup, including an end to replays and the final being played during the league season, have been met with strong criticism
U.S. electrical systems are not expanding fast enough to meet rapidly growing power needs of technology like Generative AI, prompting data center businesses to sometimes bypass utilities, executives said at an energy conference this week. Layers of regulations, citing and permitting processes, and frequent legal fights brought by environmental and community groups, have slowed new power projects from connecting to the grid, and posed a threat to profits by traditional power companies like regulated electric utilities. "Regulation and permitting within the United States is abysmal," Brad Stansberry, who leads the financial management practice for the power and utility industry at services firm KPMG, said at the AI: Powering the New Energy Era summit in Washington on Wednesday.
A Polish citizen has been arrested in Poland and charged with plans to cooperate with Russian foreign intelligence services in preparation for a possible attempt to assassinate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, prosecutors said on Thursday. A hub for Western military supplies to Ukraine, Poland says it has become a major target of Russian spies, accusing Moscow and its ally Belarus of trying to destabilise it. "The findings of the investigation show that the suspect Pawel K. declared his readiness to act for the military intelligence of the Russian Federation," the Polish prosecution said in a statement.
Robert Baker, Kaslo’s latest Chief Administrative Officer (CAO), is “absolutely enjoying” his new role. “It was a seamless transition and a perfect fit,” he told the Valley Voice. Baker began his CAO position on March 18. “I feel totally comfortable with all the staff I’ve started to work with, and all the people in the community, the user groups that I’ve been introduced to, as well as the other community organizations,” he said. “It’s an indication that it was the right move.” Baker spent his
AFP via Getty Images A Russian military court convened on Thursday to rage against the press secretary of Facebook’s parent company over a tweet posted more than two years ago.Andy Stone, the press secretary of Meta, was not present in the Moscow District Military Court. Andy Stone will probably never be present in a Russian court.But that did not stop a high-profile prosecutor from trying to call up a witness to make the Kremlin’s case that Stone is guilty of “justifying terrorism” for announci
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — While Deshaun Watson's rehab from right shoulder surgery is on a conservative track, the Cleveland Browns are expecting the quarterback to be ready for their season opener. “We feel really good about it,” general manager Andrew Berry said Thursday at his annual pre-draft news conference. “I’m not going to make any predictions, just because you just never know. But that’s certainly our expectation.” Watson suffered a fracture to the glenoid bone in his throwing shoulder and had