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In Dallas, where temperatures dropped as low as 10 degrees last week, highs were forecast to reach the 60s on Wednesday. In New York City, where the low dropped to 17 on Wednesday, unseasonably high temperatures in the 50s were expected by Thursday. And in St. Louis, which was covered in ice on Monday, a high of 50 was expected on Wednesday. Sitting in a frigid Bryant Park in New York City on Monday, Adia Rafio, 26, of Queens said she was considering making outdoor plans later this week. “I’m definitely going to take advantage,” she said as workers shoveled snow and ice nearby.
Persons: Louis, Adia Rafio, Queens, “ I’m, Locations: Dallas, New York City, St, Bryant, United States
Tyler Goodson, who was featured in the “S-Town” podcast series, died on Sunday after he was shot during a standoff with the police, the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency said on Monday. A standoff followed between Mr. Goodson and law enforcement officials from several agencies, during which Mr. Goodson “brandished a gun at officers,” the agency said. Mr. Goodson, 32, was shot, and was later pronounced dead, according to the agency. It was unclear who had shot Mr. Goodson. The Alabama Law Enforcement Agency said that the shooting was under investigation, and that its findings would be turned over to the local authorities.
Persons: Tyler Goodson, Goodson, Goodson “ Organizations: Agency Locations: Alabama, Woodstock, Ala, Birmingham, Bibb County
“To the extent there’s panic here about nonconsensual taking of contact information, I’m not that worried,” he said. To use the feature, Apple users need to have updated their devices to the latest version of the operating system — iOS 17.1 for the iPhone or WatchOS 10.1 for the Apple Watch, both of which have the feature enabled as a default setting. They can then choose to exchange contact details, or one may simply receive contact information from the other without reciprocating. NameDrop works similarly to AirDrop, which allows users of Apple laptops, iPhones and iPads to exchange photos as long as they are within Bluetooth and Wi-Fi range. And even then, the only information that is shared are the details that users have added to their contact cards.
Persons: , NameDrop Organizations: Apple, Apple Watch, Bluetooth
A former Colorado sheriff’s deputy pleaded guilty this week to failure to intervene in connection with the fatal shooting last year of a man who had called 911 for roadside assistance, prosecutors said on Friday. Six other law enforcement officers who responded to the 911 call were also charged in the case. Under the deal, more serious charges of criminally negligent homicide and reckless endangerment that had been brought against Mr. Gould in the fatal shooting of Christian Glass, 22, were dropped. Bob Weiner, a lawyer representing Mr. Gould, said on Friday that Mr. Gould was at home and off duty on June 10, 2022, the night of the shooting. Still, it was determined that Mr. Gould had played a role in the fatal shooting as the supervisor of one of the deputies who responded to the 911 call.
Persons: Kyle Gould, Gould, Christian Glass, Bob Weiner, Glass Organizations: Colorado sheriff’s, Sheriff’s Department, Fifth Judicial, Mr, Colorado State Patrol Locations: Colorado
Kaitlin Armstrong was found guilty of first-degree murder on Thursday in the death of Moriah Wilson, a professional cyclist who had briefly dated Ms. Armstrong’s boyfriend and was killed while visiting Austin, Texas, for a bike race 18 months ago. State District Judge Brenda Kennedy said that the jury delivered the guilty verdict against Ms. Armstrong after deliberating for about two hours. It was unclear when Ms. Armstrong would be sentenced. Rickey Jones, a state prosecutor, said in his opening statement that Ms. Armstrong was “not happy” that her boyfriend at the time, Colin Strickland, had been communicating with Ms. Wilson. Mr. Strickland and Ms. Armstrong had an “on-and-off-again” relationship and lived together, Mr. Jones said, though he had briefly dated Ms. Wilson during an off-period in October 2021.
Persons: Kaitlin Armstrong, Moriah Wilson, Armstrong’s, Brenda Kennedy, Armstrong, Rickey Jones, , Colin Strickland, Wilson, Mr, Strickland, Jones Locations: Austin , Texas
Peter Seidler, the San Diego Padres owner who spent hundreds of millions of dollars on the as-yet elusive goal of bringing the city its first World Series title, died on Tuesday in San Diego. His death was confirmed in a statement on Tuesday from the Padres. Seidler was not shy about his ambitions to win a World Series with the Padres, no matter the cost. Under his leadership, the Padres spent big on players in hopes of winning a title. “I kind of like spending money,” Seidler told The San Diego Union-Tribune last year.
Persons: Peter Seidler, Seidler, ” Seidler, Organizations: San Diego Padres, Padres, San Diego Union, Tribune Locations: San Diego
Lost: One tool bag. Last seen this month floating through space near the International Space Station. Two NASA astronauts set out on Nov. 1 for their first spacewalk around the International Space Station to take care of some routine maintenance. But when they re-entered the space station, they noticed that something was missing: their tool bag. “During the activity, one tool bag was inadvertently lost,” NASA said in an update on its website about the spacewalk.
Persons: Jasmin Moghbeli, Loral O’Hara Organizations: Space, NASA
Adding decorations to a steering wheel can liven up a dull commute, and the internet now offers endless possibilities. Fuzzy steering wheel covers, stickers that look like diamonds or embroidered flowers, and even steering wheel trays with room for electronics and food are all easy to find online. But the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said this week that what may seem like a harmless decoration could cause a serious injury in a crash. A consumer alert issued by the agency on Monday warned drivers not to adorn their steering wheels with decorative emblem decals because in a crash they could come off and hurt someone. “In a crash, the force of a deploying airbag can turn the product into a projectile, resulting in serious injury or death,” the alert said.
Organizations: Traffic Safety Administration
Passengers who were on British Airways’ Flight 112, from Kennedy International Airport in New York to Heathrow Airport outside London, received some good news early Thursday morning. The flight, which normally would have taken about six hours, was going to arrive 50 minutes early. Other flights traveling east over the Atlantic Ocean this week have been arriving ahead of schedule, up to an hour early in some cases, thanks to a jet stream that has been blowing in their favor. An Emirates flight on Tuesday from Dallas Fort Worth International Airport to Dubai in the United Arab Emirates was supposed to take 13 hours 44 minutes. It landed 57 minutes early, according to FlightAware.
Persons: Charles de Gaulle Organizations: British Airways ’, Kennedy International, Heathrow Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport, Emirates, Dallas Fort Worth International, United Arab Emirates Locations: New York, London, Paris, Dallas, Dubai
Alexander Zverev, the German tennis star who is accused of physically abusing the mother of his child, was ordered by a court in Berlin to pay a fine in the case, his lawyers said on Tuesday. Zverev, 26, was ordered to pay an undisclosed amount of fines by a criminal court in Berlin for physically abusing and injuring Brenda Patea, a former partner, during an argument in May 2020. The tennis star denied the charges and objected to the fines, which would likely lead to a trial. He has been trailed for years by abuse accusations in a case involving another former partner, Olya Sharypova, a Russian former tennis player, who said that Zverev assaulted her in 2019. Officials at the court in Berlin did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Tuesday evening.
Persons: Alexander Zverev, Brenda Patea, Zverev, Olya, Sharypova Organizations: Zverev Locations: German, Berlin, Zverev, Russian
When several articles were published last week on Reviewed, a USA Today-owned website that recommends products, something seemed off. No one at Reviewed recognized the bylines on the pieces. Writers and editors at Reviewed started to look up the names, but struggled to find proof — such as a LinkedIn account — that the people existed. That’s when they started to wonder: Did artificial intelligence write these articles? Gannett, the parent company of USA Today, says no A.I.
Organizations: Gannett, USA
Hours after the Texas Rangers beat the Houston Astros on Monday night to advance to the World Series, Adolis García, the Rangers right fielder, posted 29 shushing-face emojis on X, the social platform once known as Twitter. It was a message to the Astros fans who had booed him during his at-bats. Dozens of Rangers fans immediately chimed in. Sports reporters shared the post, and hundreds of other observations about the Rangers’ victory quickly followed. Since Elon Musk bought Twitter last year, many users have abandoned the platform, spurred by a number of unpopular changes.
Persons: Adolis García, Elon Musk Organizations: Texas Rangers, Houston Astros, Rangers, Astros, Sports, Elon, Twitter
Two jets collided at an airport in Houston on Tuesday when one took off without permission as another was landing, the National Transportation Safety Board said. The safety board said in a statement on Wednesday that a twin-engine Hawker 850XP took off from William P. Hobby Airport, about 10 miles southeast of downtown Houston, as a twin-engine Cessna C510 was landing there. An air traffic controller told the Hawker to line up and wait on the airport’s Runway 22 around 3:20 p.m., the safety board said in a statement on Wednesday. The Hawker then started to take off from Runway 22, and the jet’s wing struck the tail of the Cessna as it was landing on a nearby runway, the agency said. The pilot of the Hawker continued take off from Runway 22 after the collision before returning to the airport.
Persons: 850XP, William P, Hawker Organizations: National Transportation Safety, Hobby, Cessna, Hawker Locations: Houston, downtown Houston
“We are overwhelmed with the love and support from everyone. Grateful doesn’t scrape the surface of the posture of our hearts.”It was unclear when Retton, 55, was discharged from the hospital. It was also unclear where Retton had been hospitalized. Her family did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Monday afternoon. This month, Kelley said that her mother had been in the intensive care unit for more than a week with a “very rare form” of pneumonia, and that she was “not able to breathe on her own.”
Persons: Mary Lou Retton, , ” McKenna Lane Kelley, Retton’s, Retton, Kelley,
A high school football coach in the Cleveland area resigned on Monday after he and his team repeatedly used the word “Nazi” as a play-call reference during a game on Friday night, school officials said. The coach, Tim McFarland, who led Brooklyn High School’s football team, and his players used the term in the first half of a game against Beachwood High School, Robert Hardis, the superintendent of the Beachwood schools, said in a statement. Brooklyn High School, from the southwest Cleveland suburb of Brooklyn, was playing as the visiting team in Beachwood, Ohio, a predominantly Jewish suburb southeast of Cleveland. After Beachwood High School officials, including the athletic director and the head coach, learned what was happening on the field late in the first half of the game, they notified game officials, Mr. Hardis said. Mr. McFarland acknowledged that his team had been using the word “Nazi” as a play call, apologized and said his team would use another word for its play call in the second half of the game, Mr. Hardis said.
Persons: Tim McFarland, Robert Hardis, Hardis, McFarland Organizations: Nazi, Brooklyn High School’s, Beachwood High School, Brooklyn High School Locations: Cleveland, Brooklyn, Beachwood , Ohio
This U.S. Open men’s final will get a rematch — just not between Djokovic and Alcaraz. Daniil Medvedev of Russia, after defeating Alcaraz on Friday night in four sets, will play Djokovic on Sunday afternoon for the championship. It will be a rematch of the 2021 U.S. Open final, which Medvedev won, stopping Djokovic from completing a calendar Grand Slam that year. Here’s what you need to know about the match on Sunday:Djokovic and Medvedev took different paths to the final. But Djokovic was able to will his way back to win, wrapping up at around 1:30 a.m.
Persons: Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz, Djokovic, Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev, Medvedev Organizations: Wimbledon Locations: Russia, Serbian
The U.S. Open women’s singles final is set: Coco Gauff, the 19-year-old American, will play Aryna Sabalenka, the No. Gauff has already played in a Grand Slam final in 2022, when she lost the French Open to Iga Swiatek. Sabalenka, 25, will also be playing in a U.S. Open final for the first time after reaching the semifinals of the tournament in 2021 and 2022. She won the Australian Open in January for her first Grand Slam title, and she reached the semifinals of the French Open and Wimbledon. Before the semifinals, Sabalenka had sailed through the tournament, winning her first five matches without dropping a set.
Persons: Coco Gauff, Aryna Sabalenka, Serena Williams, Gauff, Sabalenka, Madison Keys Organizations: U.S, Wimbledon, Madison Locations: Belarus, U.S, New York
The U.S. Open semifinal match on Thursday night between Coco Gauff and Karolina Muchova was delayed by 49 minutes early in the second set by four environmental protesters in the upper levels of Arthur Ashe Stadium who were calling for an end to fossil fuels. The protest confused fans, television commentators and the players themselves, who were trying to understand what the group was protesting and why the match had been delayed so long. As stadium security tried to remove the protesters from the stadium, at least 10 New York City police officers were seen surrounding the disturbance in the upper level. Chris Widmaier, a spokesman for the United States Tennis Association, which hosts the U.S. Open, said after the match that three of the four protesters were escorted out of the stadium without any issues. But police officers and medical personnel were brought in to safely remove the fourth protester who had affixed his feet to the ground with some sort of product, Widmaier said.
Persons: Coco Gauff, Karolina Muchova, Arthur Ashe, Chris Widmaier, Widmaier Organizations: U.S, New York City, United States Tennis Association, U.S .
The topic of the panel, mental health and sports, is one that Osaka has spoken about often since she cited mental health concerns in her withdrawal from the French Open in 2021. Her exit then led to a break from tennis. Osaka, who turned pro in 2013 as a teenager and came to be seen as the heir apparent to Serena Williams, is away from tennis now, too. In January she announced she was pregnant but planned to play in the 2024 Australian Open. Osaka did not say when she planned to return to tennis during the panel, but she later told ESPN in an interview that she had designs on playing in 2024, adding that she has been training and should be hitting balls soon.
Persons: Serena Williams, Organizations: ESPN Locations: Osaka
He will usually return to his bench, hydrate and towel off his face and body before slipping into a fresh shirt. Sometimes he’ll grab a fresh shirt out of his bag at the end of a set. It is not uncommon for a player who has been sweating in a competition to change into a clean shirt a few times each match. “You want to be as light as you can on the court,” Tiafoe said after his second-round victory, adding that if he feels even a small amount of moisture on his shirt, he’ll change it. For Tiafoe, it is a near obsession with changing shirts — perhaps more than any other player on the men’s tour.
Persons: Tiafoe, ” Tiafoe, I’m, Rafael Nadal
1 women’s player in the world, took the first set against Jelena Ostapenko on Sunday night, it seemed like business as usual. Swiatek, a four-time Grand Slam champion at 22, after all, was the reigning U.S. Open champion, and going into her match against Ostapenko, she had not dropped a set at this tournament. But while Swiatek is often able to cruise through matches, Ostapenko has been a bit of a thorn in her side. Ostapenko has been undefeated against Swiatek, and extended that to four wins with a victory on Sunday night, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1. When Ostapenko evened things up at a set apiece, Swiatek seemed to be out of her comfort zone.
Persons: Iga Swiatek, Jelena Ostapenko, Ostapenko, Swiatek Organizations: U.S, Ostapenko, Swiatek
Early in the second set of her second-round match on Thursday night, a ball bounced just past Ons Jabeur’s reach, and she lost the point, throwing her arms up in exasperation. 5 seed, would probably have reached the ball in time to return it down the line, but she has been playing while sick. Jabeur, who reached the U.S. Open final last year, is among several players who have had to contend with an illness of some sort at this year’s tournament. Dominic Thiem of Austria retired in the second set of his second-round match, doubled over at the net with what appeared to be a stomach-related issue. Tennys Sandgren, who failed to advance out of the qualifiers, wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, that he became ill after returning home from the tournament.
Persons: Jabeur, Dominic Thiem, Austria, Emil Ruusuvuori, Tennys Sandgren Organizations: U.S
Hurricanes are categorized by their wind speeds on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. Hurricanes are split into five categories based on the wind speeds they produce:Category 1: winds between 74 m.p.h. To be considered a “major” hurricane, according to the National Hurricane Center, a storm must reach Category 3 or above. A hurricane’s strength matters because it helps meteorologists give residents in its path an idea of what type of damage is possible. A Category 2 hurricane, for example, has the potential to cause major roof damage to homes, snap or uproot shallowly rooted trees, and knock out power in an area for days to weeks.
Persons: Herb Saffir, Bob Simpson Organizations: Hurricanes, National Hurricane Center
With the grass and clay seasons over, the eyes of the tennis world now turn to Flushing Meadows. The U.S. Open, played from Aug. 28 to Sept. 10 in Queens, is the last Grand Slam tournament of the calendar year, giving players one more chance to win a major title. At last year’s U.S. Open, Serena Williams largely stole the show during the first week as she closed out her storied career by reaching the third round of the singles draw. Both of the 2022 singles winners are back in the field: Iga Swiatek, the 22-year-old from Poland and a four-time Grand Slam tournament champion, and Carlos Alcaraz, the 20-year-old Spanish phenom with two Grand Slam singles titles under his belt. In the United States, ESPN will carry the action from the first ball of the day until late into the night.
Persons: Serena Williams, Williams, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Swiatek, Carlos Alcaraz Organizations: The U.S, U.S, ESPN, Labor, ABC Locations: Flushing Meadows, The, Queens, New York City, Poland, U.S, United States
Lolita, an orca at the Miami Seaquarium that had entertained guests for more than 50 years before the park bowed to public pressure and planned to release it into the ocean, died on Friday. The orca, also known as Tokitae and Toki, had shown “serious signs of discomfort” over the past two days before she died of what was believed to be a renal issue, the Miami Seaquarium said in a post on Facebook. “Toki was an inspiration to all who had the fortune to hear her story and especially to the Lummi nation that considered her family,” the Seaquarium said. “Those of us who have had the honor and privilege to spend time with her will forever remember her beautiful spirit.”Under pressure from animal advocates who protested against the Seaquarium, officials there announced in February that it was preparing to return Lolita to the ocean. The Dolphin Company, which owns the aquatic park, said in March that relocating Lolita would happen in about 18 to 24 months.
Persons: Miami Seaquarium, “ Toki Organizations: Miami, Facebook, Dolphin Company
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