Do the Ravens trade down? They will face this draft-altering question with the No. 22 pick.

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

Do the Ravens trade down? They will face this draft-altering question with the No. 22 pick. The Ravens had six picks in the fourth round of the 2022 NFL draft. They currently have five for the seven rounds of the 2023 draft.General manager Eric DeCosta has long said there’s a natural ebb and flow to pick totals. Some years, the Ravens want a big pile because of roster needs or the depth of the talent pool. Others, they’re content to take a smaller swing.Even so, this is shaping up as an extreme case for a team that has always viewed the draft as its prime avenue for roster building. If the Ravens stand pat and don’t add a pick, this five-player draft class would be their smallest since 1999. This at a time when they need all the frugal additions they can find given the $32.4 million nonexclusive franchise tag on quarterback Lamar Jackson, not to mention the $15 million they just handed to wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.Which leads to an obvious question: As the No. 22 overall pick draws near, will DeCosta look to trade down?He did not dismiss the possibil...

Burbank athlete’s giving nature leads to award from Chicago Bears

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

Burbank athlete’s giving nature leads to award from Chicago Bears Whether he’s dressed as the Easter Bunny, in Santa’s red suit or in the traditional black and gold football uniform at St. Laurence High School in Burbank, Jack McGeehan finds ways to make a huge impact at his high school and in his community.Now finishing up his junior year in high school, McGeehan recently was named the third recipient of the Chicago Bears’ Community High School All-Star award.He is one of just nine high school players who will be named and recognized by the Bears through May for taking the lessons learned from playing football and using them to benefit the community, according to a news release from the Bears.“Since day one he’s been the kind of St. Laurence player you want to be,” St. Laurence football coach Adam Nissen said. “He’s phenomenal. What makes him stand out is all the work he does off the football field. He takes the lead. There’s nothing he won’t do if it really benefits the greater good of ...

NATO chief visits Ukraine for 1st time since Russia invaded

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

NATO chief visits Ukraine for 1st time since Russia invaded KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg visited Ukraine on Thursday for the first time since Russia invaded more than a year ago, a highly symbolic trip that underscores the alliance’s commitment to helping Kyiv defend itself.The Kremlin quickly warned that Ukraine must not be allowed to join NATO. Russia has given various and shifting justifications for going to war, but it has repeatedly pointed to the expansion of the military alliance toward its borders in recent years, including citing fears that Kyiv would be admitted.Images published in local media showed Stoltenberg apparently paying tribute to fallen Ukrainian soldiers in Kyiv’s St. Michael’s Square.The visit, just two days after Russian President Vladimir Putin himself went to Ukraine, holds important symbolism, but its exact purpose wasn’t immediately clear.NATO has no official presence in Ukraine, but Stoltenberg has been the strong voice of the alliance throughout the war. He has been instrume...

Singapore to resume executions after 6-month break

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

Singapore to resume executions after 6-month break KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — A Singaporean man is scheduled to be hanged next week for abetting an attempt to smuggle cannabis into the island-state, in a resumption of executions after a half-year pause, activists said Thursday.The family of Tangaraju Suppiah, 46, was notified in a letter that he would be executed next Wednesday, anti-death penalty activist Kokila Annamalai said.Tangaraju was detained in 2014 for drug consumption and failure to report for a drug test, according to another activist, Kirsten Han. He was later linked to two drug traffickers through a phone number used to coordinate the delivery of cannabis. The High Court found Tangaraju guilty of conspiring to traffic 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of cannabis and sentenced him to mandatory death in 2018, Han said.“The last execution carried out in Singapore was in October 2022. Death row prisoners, their family members and abolitionists have been holding our breath for the past six months, terrified of when the killing sp...

Biden labor secretary nominee Su faces doubts in Senate

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

Biden labor secretary nominee Su faces doubts in Senate WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s nominee to be the next labor secretary, Julie Su, will testify to the Senate Thursday with key Democrats unwilling to voice support for her confirmation, creating uncertainty about her prospects in the narrowly divided chamber.A handful of moderate Democrats have not publicly stated whether they will vote for Su’s nomination ahead of her confirmation hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Biden in February picked Su, a civil rights attorney and the current deputy labor secretary, to replace Marty Walsh, the former mayor of Boston, to lead the Department of Labor.The daughter of an immigrant mother who arrived on a cargo ship, Su would be the first Asian American in the Biden administration to serve in the Cabinet at the secretary level. Biden called her path proof of the “American dream” and that “she’s committed to making sure that dream is in reach for every American.”Su was previously confirme...

US invests in alternative solar tech, more solar for renters

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

US invests in alternative solar tech, more solar for renters The Biden administration is set to announce more than $80 million in funding Thursday in a push to produce more solar panels in the U.S., make solar energy available to more people, and pursue superior alternatives to the ubiquitous sparkly panels made with silicon. The Department of Energy will announce the investments in the morning and Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm plans to visit a community solar site in Washington in the afternoon. Community solar refers to a variety of arrangements where renters and people who don’t control their rooftops can still get their electricity from solar power. Two weeks ago, Vice President Kamala Harris announced what the administration said was the largest community solar effort ever in the United States. Now it is set to spend $52 million on 19 solar projects across a dozen states, including $10 million from the infrastructure law, as well as $30 million on technologies that will help integrate solar electricity into the grid.The DOE al...

It will take more than money to fix health care: Canadian Medical Association

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

It will take more than money to fix health care: Canadian Medical Association OTTAWA — The president of the Canadian Medical Association says the new health funding deal struck between provinces and the federal government represents the biggest nominal injection of cash into Canada’s health system, but that won’t be enough to fix what’s broken.The association compared the deal with other health agreements over the last two decades and found it to be the largest by a significant margin at about $16 billion in increases per year over 10 years.The analysis also looked at whether such funding agreements have made a difference in the past.Association president Dr. Alika Lafontaine says big investments do seem to have made a difference, but progress backslid when parties stopped working together.He points to the $1 billion former prime minister Stephen Harper put toward lowering wait times, which appeared to make a fairly significant improvement Now he says the problems faced by the health-care workforce are much more serious and it will take poli...

The Supreme Court fight over an abortion pill: What’s next?

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

The Supreme Court fight over an abortion pill: What’s next? WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court initially gave itself a deadline of Wednesday to decide whether women seeking access to a widely used abortion pill would face more restrictions while a court case plays out. But on the day of the highly anticipated decision the justices had only this to say: We need more time.In a one-sentence order, the court said it now expects to act by Friday evening. There was no explanation of the reason for the delay.The new abortion controversy comes less than a year after the Supreme Court’s conservative majority overturned Roe v. Wade and allowed more than a dozen states to effectively ban abortion outright.The following is a look at the drug at issue in the new case, how the case got to the nation’s highest court and what the delay might say about what’s going on.___WHAT IS MIFEPRISTONE?Mifepristone was approved for use by the Food and Drug Administration more than two decades ago. It has been used by more than 5 million women to safe...

Helping out: How American volunteerism is changing – and why

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

Helping out: How American volunteerism is changing  –  and why NEW YORK (AP) — Daniela Fernandez has no trouble attracting volunteers to her group Sustainable Ocean Alliance. Last month, she presided over the Our Ocean Youth Leadership Summit in Panama, where 77 participants from 45 countries volunteered their time to develop solutions to protect the oceans. The summit focused on participants between 18 and 35, the age group many in the philanthropic sector worry are not volunteering enough. It had to turn away more than 900 applicants.“Young people crave having sustained impact and seeing how their time, their energy and their passion is actually moving the needle,” Fernandez said. “The problem is, a lot of organizations don’t have the process or the tools or the projects that will deliver on that need — that urgency that young people have.”For decades, volunteerism in America has been declining. But according to a recent U.S. Census Bureau and AmeriCorps survey, it dropped another 7 percentage points between 2019 and 2021. The survey found ab...

To stay out of their heads, goaltenders find ways to unwind

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:33:25 GMT

To stay out of their heads, goaltenders find ways to unwind DENVER (AP) — To keep his racing mind in check, Edmonton goaltender Stuart Skinner sometimes turns to the chess board. Anything to unwind and not constantly dwell — even obsess — on stopping shots. In an effort to escape a bit from their high-pressure jobs, goalies take different approaches. It could be picking up chess (Skinner’s move), reading a good book (a novel approach by Colorado’s Alexandar Georgiev ), binging a Netflix show (Carolina’s Antti Raanta ) or just taking the dog for a walk (Seattle’s Philipp Grubauer).The point is to find a way to slow things down to make sure their dreams aren’t haunted by high-speed shots flying at them from the likes of Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon or David Pastrnak. Because at this time of year, every save — or non-save — takes on greater importance. Replaying the goals in the mind can become an occupational hazard. “That balance between not being 24/7 hockey is really important for their mental health because they...