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Ms. Daniels could take the stand to testify against Mr. Trump as early as this week. Her presence would let Mr. Trump’s defense lawyers attack Ms. Daniels as an extortionist and question her credibility. Nor can she testify about the plan for Mr. Trump to hide his reimbursements to Mr. Cohen by characterizing them as legal fees. Mr. Trump’s lawyers contend that he did not know that the checks he signed for Mr. Cohen were not for legal fees, and that Mr. Cohen and Mr. Trump’s employees were responsible for any false records. “He has never thought that the little man, or especially women, and even more, women like me, matter,” Ms. Daniels said.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, Alvin L, Bragg, Trump’s, Michael Bachner, Bachner, Dave Sanders, Stephanie Clifford, Barrett, “ I’m, Donald Trump, ” Ms, Norm, , Peacock, J., r. “ Organizations: Mr, The New York Times Locations: Manhattan, New York City, Baton Rouge, La, Texas, Florida, New York
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — New York Giants quarterback Tyrod Taylor and tight end Darren Waller left in the first half against the Jets on Sunday with injuries. Taylor was ruled out with a rib injury, and the team announced he was taken to a hospital to be further evaluated. Political Cartoons View All 1223 ImagesWaller injured a hamstring early in the second quarter after a 4-yard catch on third-and-5. Nose tackle Al Woods was ruled out in the second quarter with a calf injury. Newman's first snap to Zach Wilson late in the first half was fumbled by the quarterback and the Giants recovered.
Persons: Tyrod Taylor, Darren Waller, Taylor, Quinton Jefferson, C.J, Mosley, Tommy DeVito, Daniel Jones, Waller, Al Woods, Connor McGovern, Wes Schweitzer —, , Xavier Newman, McGovern, Schweitzer, Billy Turner, Newman's, Zach Wilson, Xavier Gipson, ___ Organizations: — New York Giants, Jets, Giants, Washington, The Jets Locations: RUTHERFORD, N.J, Syracuse, New Jersey
Hospitals in the Gaza Strip are nearing collapse under the Israeli blockade that cut power and deliveries of food and other necessities to the territory. Israel's offensive has devastated neighborhoods, shuttered five hospitals, killed thousands and wounded more people than its remaining health facilities can handle. The medical center is still treating hundreds of patients in defiance of an evacuation order the Israeli military gave Friday. A shortage of surgical supplies forced some staff to use sewing needles to stitch wounds, which Abed said can damage tissue. When Israel cut fuel to the territory's sole power plant two weeks ago, Gaza's rumbling generators kicked in to keep life-support equipment running in hospitals.
Persons: Nidal Abed, Abed, ” Abed, doesn’t, ” Mehdat Abbas, , Khan Younis, Mohammed Abu Selmia, ___ DeBre Organizations: Israel, Hamas, Associated Press, Al Quds Hospital, World Health Organization, Health Ministry, United Nations, Nasser Hospital, Shifa Hospital, Gaza’s Locations: DEIR, Gaza, Gaza City, Al Quds, Egypt, Israel, Jerusalem
Across the country, federal workers still stung by the memories of past government shutdowns are grimacing and bracing for another potential extended closure. Johnny J. Jones, secretary-treasurer of the TSA workers unit within the AFGE, said even a temporary loss in pay is a massive disruption for government workers who live paycheck to paycheck. LaPointe, a mother of four who is also a union leader for 30,000 Social Security workers through AFGE, said a shutdown would be “a catastrophe" personally. A Partnership for Public Service survey ranks the Social Security Administration last among agencies in the “Best Places to Work” government-wide index. “We don’t often feel like it’s worth it to be federal employees at the time of a shutdown,” LaPointe said.
Persons: — John Hubert, Steve Reaves, Jessica LaPointe, she's, “ We’re, , Hubert, , Washington gridlock, we've, Tom Vilsack, Johnny J, Jones, ” Jones, LaPointe, ” LaPointe, Reaves, Organizations: WASHINGTON, Security Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA, Social Security, Disney, TSA, American Federation of Government Employees, Democrats, White House, USDA, Social, Republicans, Public Service Locations: Fort Lauderdale , Florida, Madison , Wisconsin, Washington, AFGE
Usyk knocks out Dubois in nine after low blow controversy
  + stars: | 2023-08-26 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
[1/4] Boxing - WBA, IBF & WBO Heavyweight Titles - Oleksandr Usyk v Daniel Dubois - Tarczynski Arena, Wroclaw, Poland - August 26, 2023 Oleksandr Usyk celebrates with the belts after winning his fight against Daniel Dubois REUTERS/Kacper Pempel Acquire Licensing RightsSummary Usyk retains heavyweight titles and remains unbeatenDubois counted out after second knockdown'Low blow' controversy erupted in round fiveBriton says he was 'cheated' of victoryWROCLAW, Poland, Aug 26 (Reuters) - Ukraine's Oleksandr Usyk knocked out British challenger Daniel Dubois in nine rounds on Saturday to retain his WBA, IBF and WBO heavyweight boxing world titles in a fight overshadowed by a low blow controversy. The referee ruled it a low blow and told Usyk to take his time as he remained on the canvas grimacing and shaking his head, with the round eventually continuing. Dubois, who lasted longer than expected but took some big blows with blood oozing from his nose early in round nine, said the blow was legal. The Ukrainian said he was now ready to fight WBA heavyweight champion Tyson Fury if the Briton was willing. "The strength of our people as mighty as Oleksandr Usyk, the strength of our friends as solid as Daniel Dubois."
Persons: Oleksandr Usyk, Daniel Dubois, Kacper, Dubois, Luis Pabon, Usyk, I've, Frank Warren, Tyson Fury, Will Tyson Fury, Dubois's, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, Zelenskiy, Alan Baldwin, Ken Ferris, Pritha Organizations: WBA, IBF, WBO, Tarczynski, Daniel Dubois REUTERS, Puerto, TNT Sports, Briton, Thomson Locations: Wroclaw, Poland, WROCLAW, Puerto Rican, Russia's, Ukraine, London
Injured Gardiner misses out on 400m final
  + stars: | 2023-08-22 | by ( Mitch Phillips | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
[1/4] Athletics - World Athletics Championship - Men's 400m Semi Finals - National Athletics Centre, Budapest, Hungary - August 22, 2023 Bahamas' Steven Gardiner receives medical attention after sustaining an injury during heat 3 REUTERS/Marton Monus Acquire Licensing RightsBUDAPEST, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Olympic champion and race favourite Steven Gardiner of the Bahamas pulled up injured in his world championship 400m semi-final on Tuesday and failed to progress to the final. Gardiner, the 2019 world champion and fastest in the world this year, was well-placed coming off the final bend but stopped, grimacing in pain clutching the back of his leg. Former Olympic and world champion Wayde van Niekerk was the chief beneficiary as he advanced as a fast loser. Jamaica's Antonio Watson was the fastest qualifier with a personal best 44.13, while Briton Matthew Hudson-Smith set a European record of 44.26 winning his heat. Reporting by Mitch Phillips, editing by Toby DavisOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Steven Gardiner, Marton Monus, Gardiner, Wayde van Niekerk, Jamaica's Antonio Watson, Briton Matthew Hudson, Smith, Mitch Phillips, Toby Davis Organizations: Athletics Centre, Rights, Olympic, Briton, Thomson Locations: Budapest, Hungary, Bahamas
Put a Louvre Masterpiece on Your Wrist
  + stars: | 2023-08-09 | by ( Nazanin Lankarani | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
The enameled dial of a new custom watch by Vacheron Constantin depicts grimacing soldiers and their lunging horses, all engaged in deadly combat. Unveiled in May, it is the Swiss watchmaker’s reproduction of “The Fight for the Standard” from the “Battle of Anghiari,” a 1603 drawing by the Flemish artist Peter Paul Rubens that is kept — behind the scenes, and viewable by appointment — in the Department of Graphic Arts of the Louvre in Paris. “This timepiece is the first in a new program called ‘A Masterpiece on the Wrist’ we have developed with the Louvre,” Christian Selmoni, the watch brand’s director of style and heritage, wrote in an email. “We invite clients to choose from a catalog of works defined with the museum, and we will reproduce the artwork on the dial of a unique watch.”
Persons: Vacheron Constantin, grimacing, Peter Paul Rubens, , ” Christian Selmoni, , Organizations: of Graphic Arts, Louvre Locations: Swiss, Anghiari, , Flemish, Paris
Usme leads Colombia to first World Cup quarter-finals
  + stars: | 2023-08-08 | by ( Ian Ransom | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
[1/5] Soccer Football - FIFA Women’s World Cup Australia and New Zealand 2023 - Round of 16 - Colombia v Jamaica - Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Melbourne, Australia - August 8, 2023 Colombia's Catalina Usme celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Hannah MckayMELBOURNE, Aug 8 (Reuters) - A second-half goal by Catalina Usme fired Colombia to a 1-0 win over Jamaica on Tuesday and carried the South Americans to their first Women's World Cup quarter-final. "We are representing the whole continent of South America," Colombia coach Nelson Abadia told reporters. When we qualified for the World Cup the first thing I said to my team was, 'We’re not just here to spend time, we want to make history'." Having not conceded a goal all tournament, Jamaica stifled Colombia early, often leaving their players grimacing on the turf after heavy tackles. Usme showed a deft touch to slip past Jamaica defender Deneisha Blackwood and fire a low, left-foot strike inside the far post.
Persons: Catalina Usme, Hannah Mckay MELBOURNE, Nelson Abadia, Jamaica's, Lorne Donaldson, Linda Caicedo, Jorelyn, Kate Jacewicz, Chantelle Swaby, Drew Spence, Ana Maria Guzman, Deneisha Blackwood, Jody Brown, Khadija Shaw, Jamaica's Drew Spence, Tiffany Cameron, Ian Ransom, Christian Radnedge Organizations: Soccer Football, FIFA, Jamaica, American, South Americans, Thomson Locations: New Zealand, Colombia, Jamaica, Melbourne, Australia, Colombian, England, South America, France
CNN —Throughout her storied career, triathlete and Paralympian Marieke Vervoort captured the imagination of her native Belgium and the wider world. … The fact that that had given her so much mental liberation and spiritual liberation, I thought, was a fantastic story,” Rapaport told CNN Sport. “If I didn’t have the papers, I think I would have already committed suicide,” Vervoort told reporters in 2016. And in this case, having control over decision-making about the end of your life,” Rapaport explained. Vervoort died in October 2019.
Edward Koren, the New Yorker cartoonist who created a fantasy world of toothy, long-nosed, hairy creatures of indeterminate species that articulated the neuroses and banalities of middle-class America for six decades, died on Friday at his home in Brookfield, Vt. His wife, Curtis Koren, said the cause was lung cancer. In the gentle, affable kingdom of Koren, the beasts form a polite queue in the woods at a 24-hour banking A.T.M. With Charles Addams, James Thurber and Saul Steinberg, Mr. Koren was one of the most popular cartoonists in The New Yorker’s long love affair with humor. In a bed for three, a grimacing psychiatrist squeezed between battling spouses takes “couples therapy” notes.
The Night Patrick Mahomes Won Without All His Magic
  + stars: | 2023-02-13 | by ( Jason Gay | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
From experience, and our own eyeballs, we know that the Patrick Mahomes Football Experience habitually offers so much more than this. What we witnessed Sunday night in Super Bowl LVII was barely a fraction of the Kansas City quarterback’s full-capacity, electric-athletic magic. Mahomes was injured, he was hobbling, he was grimacing—after a low tackle on a second quarter scamper, he reinjured a right ankle he hurt a few weeks ago. Suddenly he wasn’t Magical Mahomes. He looked like a man in need of an ice bucket for a foot and a whiskey for the pain.
Eagles lead Chiefs 24-14 at halftime of Super Bowl
  + stars: | 2023-02-13 | by ( Steve Keating | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
GLENDALE, Ariz, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Jalen Hurts ran for two touchdowns and passed for another as the Philadelphia Eagles led the Kansas City Chiefs 24-14 at halftime of the Super Bowl on Sunday. An entertaining opening half ended in a cliffhanger when Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes appeared to re-injure his right ankle that had been a major worry entering the National Football League championship game. Kansas City answered right back with Mahomes hitting his favorite target Travis Kelce with an 18-yard pass to cap their own 75-yard drive. The fireworks continued into the second when Hurts, on the first play of the quarter, spotted A.J. Eagles kicker Jake Elliott kicked a 35-yard field goal on the final play of the half to send Philadelphia into the break 24-14.
It’s not a fresh take or a wrong one, but the tone is so self-conscious and surreal as to blunt those insights. Dominik also distastefully deals with Monroe’s lost pregnancies by peeking at the fetus inside her, which becomes symbolic of just how overdone much of the movie is. Still, “Blonde” is almost wholly de Armas’ show, and to the extent it’s worth sitting through at all give her every ounce of credit. Indeed, once you get past admiring de Armas’ immersion into the role, that’s the only itch that “Blonde” seems to know how to scratch. “Blonde” premieres September 16 in select US theaters and September 28 on Netflix.
Fetuses in the womb scowled after their mothers ate kale but smiled after they ate carrots, according to a new study of around 100 pregnant women and their fetuses in England. Thirty-five women consumed the equivalent of one medium carrot, and 34 women consumed the equivalent of 100 grams of chopped kale. An image from the FETAP (Fetal Taste Preferences) study showing a grimacing reaction to kale flavor. The grimaces in the ultrasounds "might be just the muscle movements which are reacting to a bitter flavor," Reissland said. In designing the new study, Reissland and her team chose powdered kale and carrots over juices or raw vegetables for a few reasons.
Rapper Post Malone bruised his ribs after falling through a hole on stage during a performance in St. Louis over the weekend, his manager said. The 27-year-old artist was performing at the Enterprise Center in downtown St. Louis Saturday when he fell mid-song. His manager, Dre London, shared a post Sunday revealing the singer suffered bruised ribs in the fall, and is on the mend. He praised Post Malone for continuing the sing and finish the show, even after the accident. He also shared a video message from Post Malone himself, which the artist shared on Twitter, explaining the tricky fall.
Netflix will surely get its money’s worth attention-wise thanks in part to its restrictive NC-17 rating, but the film’s merits burn out long before its credits ever roll. It’s not a fresh take or a wrong one, but the tone is so self-conscious and surreal as to blunt those insights. Norma Jeane is eventually transformed into Marilyn Monroe, but even then she consistently speaks of her star persona in the third person, as if the image stands apart and utterly separate from the human being behind it. Still, “Blonde” is almost wholly de Armas’ show, and to the extent it’s worth sitting through at all give her every ounce of credit. Indeed, once you get past admiring de Armas’ immersion into the role, that’s the only itch that “Blonde” seems to know how to scratch.
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