US government tracking more than 650 potential UFO cases, Pentagon says
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
(CNN) — The US government is tracking more than 650 potential cases of so-called “unidentified aerial phenomena,” commonly known as UFOs, according to the director of the office created last year to focus on the sightings.Sean Kirkpatrick, director of the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, told a Senate Armed Services subcommittee Wednesday that the number of cases was up from the 350 reports referenced in an unclassified intelligence report on unidentified aerial phenomena released earlier this year.“Of those over 650, we’ve prioritized about half of them to be of anomalous interesting value, and now we have to go through those and go ‘How much of those do I have actual data for?'” Kirkpatrick said.Kirkpatrick outlined to lawmakers how his office is helping the Pentagon and intelligence community to identify emerging foreign technologies, including his role in helping to identify the high-altitude surveill...Ravens free agency tracker 2023: Practice squad WR Tarik Black re-signs, adding depth ahead of draft
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
Welcome to the Ravens’ free-agency tracker, which will be updated throughout the offseason.With the NFL’s new league year beginning Wednesday at 4 p.m., teams can officially announce signings and trades. Here’s a rundown of who the Ravens have agreed to sign, who they’ve lost and who’s still on the open market:Free agent additionsWide receiver Tarik Black: The Ravens added to their receiving corps on April 19, signing Black after he joined their practice squad in January.Undrafted out of Texas in 2021, the 25-year-old has appeared in one NFL game, with the Jets in 2022. He caught one pass for 10 yards in New York after spending his rookie season on the Colts’ practice squad.The 6-foot-3, 217-pound receiver began his college career at Michigan before transferring in 2020 to Texas, where he had 10 catches for 240 yards and a touchdown in six games.Wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.: The Ravens made their biggest splash of the offseason to date on Easte...Max Scherzer ejected in 4th inning vs. Dodgers while being checked for sticky substance
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
LOS ANGELES — Max Scherzer made an early exit from his start Wednesday, being thrown out of the Mets’ game against the Los Angeles Dodgers after a heated argument with umpires.In the third inning, the umpires showed some concern about his glove and he was forced to change it. The Mets ace then came out of the visitor’s dugout to start the fourth and was checked by Dan Bellino again. Scherzer insisted that he only had rosin on his hands, but Bellino and first base umpire Phil Cuzzi seemed unconvinced. Manager Buck Showalter came out to diffuse the situation but his ace became extremely animated with Bellino and Cuzzi and was ejected.It’s unclear whether he was ejected for a substance or for arguing with the officiating crew.Scherzer’s ejection comes four days after Yankees’ starter Domingo German was checked twice due to excessive stickiness on his throwing hand during a 6-1 victory over the Twins. German was allowed to continue after washing his h...What’s Hot in Healthcare: Florida researchers can diagnose stroke with 83% accuracy
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
Cindy Krischer Goodman | South Florida Sun-SentinelIn the nation’s emergency rooms, strokes are regularly misdiagnosed, but now Florida International University researchers have created an algorithm to diagnose this medical condition more quickly and accurately.The FIU-created algorithm uses hospital data and social determinants of health data such as age, race and underlying conditions to diagnose a stroke even before the results of laboratory tests or diagnostic images are available. The researchers believe currently used pre-hospital stroke scales miss about 30% of cases.With stroke diagnosis, there is a critical window. Patients who are treated within an hour of the onset of symptoms have a much greater chance of surviving and avoiding long-term brain damage. FIU researchers say their machine learning algorithm, if used by emergency department care teams, would improve the patients’ medical outcome by allowing doctors to make better and faster decisions.The FIU study, published ...Chris Perkins: I liked what Tua said about considering retirement, but worried about him as a human being
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
A human story broke out Wednesday during a football news conference. It’s a story of hope and trust. It’s a story of family and fatherhood. It’s a story of love and life.Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa revealed, yes, he considered retiring from football in the offseason because of the concussions he sustained.But in the end he couldn’t tear himself away from the game that he loves, not even for the family he loves even more than the game.Tagovailoa is a 25-year-old millionaire with a wife and young son. That’s one of the reasons he had retirement conversations with his family. He doesn’t need football.“But really it would be hard for me to walk away from this game,” Tagovailoa said, “with how old I am, with my son. I always dreamed of playing as long as I could to where my son knew exactly what he was watching his dad do.“And, yeah, it’s my health, it’s my body, and I feel like this is what’s best for ...Photos: Want to be Brad Pitt’s neighbor? Rare Carmel home listed for $8.8 million
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
A property in the picturesque Carmel Highlands coastal community, an enclave popular with celebrities, is for sale for $8.8 million.A property in the Carmel Highlands, an enclave popular with celebrities, is for sale for $8.8 million. (Wayne Capili)This past summer, Brad Pitt paid $40 million for a home in the secluded area overlooking the Pacific. Other previous residents include Betty White, “Little Mermaid” composer Alan Silvestri, and others. A nearby home was also featured in the Sharon Stone thriller “Basic Instinct.”A property in the Carmel Highlands, an enclave popular with celebrities, is for sale for $8.8 million. (Wayne Capili)The previous owner of the midcentury modern-style home was Anthony Frank, the late U.S. Postmaster General and former CEO of First Nationwide Bank. The property has a coveted design built on rocks that extends over the Pacific. And it is one of few homes in the area that has a stairway that leads to a hidden beach. Today, new buildings are not allow...MBTA targeting Blue Line speed restrictions
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
MBTA General Manager Phillip Eng said speed restrictions could remain in place on the Blue Line until the end of November, but work to eliminate them could be accelerated by shutting down service earlier on weeknights.Eng said Wednesday that the T is planning to lift seven of the 21 current speed restrictions on the Blue Line by the end of May, by suspending service at 7 p.m. on April 24-27 and May 1-4.He told the Board of Directors that the T was considering shutting down the line each night at 7 for a month to lift the remaining speed restrictions, “saying that we could take that work down from six month’s time period to a one-month time period, and that’s what we’re proposing to do.”However, the MBTA later walked back that statement, with a spokesperson stating that “his verbal remarks intended to show that this work could be accomplished within one month during evening diversions that start at 7 p.m., not for the entirety of one consecutive month.”“There are additional opportuni...PHOTOS: Velella velellas, or By-the-Wind sailors, spotted on San Diego beaches
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
SAN DIEGO – Thousands of blue jellyfish-like creatures have been spotted on Southern California beaches in the last few weeks – from Los Angeles to San Diego.These blueish, purple creatures known as Velella velella, or By-the-Wind sailors, have been captured dotting the shoreline in piles for the first time in years, amazing scientists and beachgoers alike.“They’re kind of what I would consider an ephemeral species – a little bit rare and exciting to come across,” Anya Stajner, a PHD student at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, told FOX5SanDiego.com. Stajner has studied the velella velellas extensively, in addition to kinds of zooplankton. “Sometimes you’ll find them in large amounts, and sometimes, you won’t find them at all,” she continued. Sea lions at La Jolla Cove: What to know before visiting Velella velella are known as a colonial hydroid, which is a type of species similar to the Portuguese Man O’War. While they have a jelly-like appearance, they are not closel...‘The Last Wild Horse’ cloned in San Diego
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
SAN DIEGO -- A once endangered species of wild horse has been successfully cloned -- again.A Przewalski’s horse, sometimes called “the Last Wild Horse,” was born at ViaGen Pets & Equine’s cloning facility in Texas on Feb. 17 and will soon be moved the San Diego Zoo Safari Park. That's according to an announcement by the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance on Wednesday. Officials said, "Scientists are elated with the recent birth of the world’s second successfully cloned Przewalski’s horse, supporting the concept that cloning can be used as a viable tool for genetic rescue and contribute to new options for fostering resilience and genetic sustainability of endangered species."The foal is a clone of a male Przewalski’s horse stallion whose living cell line was cryopreserved over 40 years ago in the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance Biodiversity Bank’s Frozen Zoo, the organization explained in a news release.Back in August 2020, the world's first cloned Przewalski’s horse, Kurt, was bor...No vote after Uvalde parents plead for tougher gun laws
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:54:37 GMT
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — It was getting close to midnight when Kimberly Mata-Rubio finally got her first chance since the Robb Elementary School massacre in Uvalde — nearly one year ago — to ask Texas lawmakers to their faces to pass proposed restrictions on guns that had finally gotten a hearing.Sobbing, she pleaded for them to raise the purchase age for semiautomatic rifles like the one an 18-year-old gunman used to kill her daughter Lexi.“Did you look at images of children running for their lives, and think, ‘What if we had enacted stricter gun laws?’'” Mata-Rubio asked a state House committee, wiping away tears.The hearing adjourned — shortly after 3 a.m. Wednesday — without a vote, and with no certainty that one will happen later. The result was the end, in the middle of the night, of what may wind up as the only debate in the Texas Capitol this year over a raft of stricter gun proposals filed following the deaths of 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde last May.Other than ...Latest news
- Hundreds of flights across Italy are canceled amid air transport strike at peak of tourism season
- The latest legacy of Canada’s wildfire smoke? Wisconsin’s new beer-and-burger pairing
- Fade into the night: Fireflies facing threats from climate change and light pollution
- No permit required: Camping, canoeing options just outside the Boundary Waters
- Ask Amy: Writers’ group transitions to TED Talk
- Pierre Marcolini opens London boutique
- Bridge: July 15, 2023
- Word Game: July 15, 2023
- An egg-ceptional rescue: Chicks saved from Fairfax Co. dumpster
- Swiss goalkeeper Philipp Köhn joins Monaco on 5-year deal