Tag Archives: 7th

White House scrambles to distance itself from Islamic group after leader’s praise for Hamas’ Oct 7th slaughter – Fox News

  1. White House scrambles to distance itself from Islamic group after leader’s praise for Hamas’ Oct 7th slaughter Fox News
  2. White House cuts ties with CAIR on antisemitism strategy after director says Hamas attacks made him ‘happy’ New York Post
  3. White House slams US Muslim leader’s ‘shocking, antisemitic’ remarks on Oct. 7 Hamas attacks The Times of Israel
  4. CAIR director says he was ‘happy’ to witness Oct. 7 attacks, Israel ‘does not have right to self-defense’ Fox News
  5. CAIR Director Stands by Celebration of October 7 Attack, Claims He Was Praising ‘Everyday Palestinians’ National Review

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Khloé Kardashian Celebrates Dream’s 7th Birthday! | E! News – E! News

  1. Khloé Kardashian Celebrates Dream’s 7th Birthday! | E! News E! News
  2. Kim Kardashian and Sister Khloé Celebrate Niece Dream’s 7th Birthday with Spa Party — See The Photos! PEOPLE
  3. Khloé Kardashian and Kris Jenner Kick Off Dream’s 7th Birthday Celebrations: ‘Little Ball of Sunshine’ Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Inside Dream’s lavish spa-themed bash: Rob Kardashian and Blac Chyna’s daughter celebrates her seventh birthday with avocado face masks and bubble bath ball pits Daily Mail
  5. Kim Kardashian caught off guard in the background of mom Kris Jenner’s unedited photo for Dream’s 7th bir… The US Sun
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Khloé Kardashian and Kris Jenner Kick Off Dream’s 7th Birthday Celebrations: ‘Little Ball of Sunshine’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Khloé Kardashian and Kris Jenner Kick Off Dream’s 7th Birthday Celebrations: ‘Little Ball of Sunshine’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Khloé Kardashian Celebrates Dream’s 7th Birthday! | E! News E! News
  3. Kim Kardashian caught off guard in the background of mom Kris Jenner’s unedited photo for Dream’s 7th bir… The US Sun
  4. Inside Dream’s lavish spa-themed bash: Rob Kardashian and Blac Chyna’s daughter celebrates her seventh birthda Daily Mail
  5. Khloe Kardashian Gives Inside Look at Birthday Party for Niece Dream E! NEWS
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Hero Michigan 7th grader saves school bus after driver passes out – Fox News

  1. Hero Michigan 7th grader saves school bus after driver passes out Fox News
  2. Michigan 7th grader safely brings full school bus to a stop after driver loses consciousness CNN
  3. Macomb County middle school student stops school bus as driver passes out Click On Detroit | Local 4 | WDIV
  4. Kindergartner hit by school bus now recovering – WSB-TV Channel 2 – Atlanta WSB Atlanta
  5. A Michigan 7th grader pulled off the heroic act of stopping a school bus carrying around 66 students after his bus driver lost consciousness at the wheel Yahoo! Voices
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UFC 286 bonuses: Justin Gaethje takes home 7th Fight of the Night for latest war with Rafael Fiziev – MMA Fighting

  1. UFC 286 bonuses: Justin Gaethje takes home 7th Fight of the Night for latest war with Rafael Fiziev MMA Fighting
  2. Justin Gaethje Octagon Interview | UFC 286 UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship
  3. Fighters react to Leon Edwards’ win over Kamaru Usman, Justin Gaethje’s epic bout with Rafael Fiziev at UFC 286 ESPN
  4. Justin Gaethje felt bored during UFC 286 win vs. Rafael Fiziev | ESPN MMA youtube.com
  5. UFC 286: ‘Pressure Is on’ for Justin Gaethje | Rockdale Newton Citizen Sports Illustrated Content | rockdalenewtoncitizen.com Rockdale Newton Citizen
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rumour: Nintendo Direct supposedly happening 7th February (update: mods not confident)

Update: Reddit mods have now removed the initially mod approved post saying user contacted with valid proof of contact with employee for company working closely with Nintendo. Employee was asked if there will be a direct on the 7th of February, and replied “confirmed” That’s it.

The moderators on the Gaming Leaks subreddit have apparently verified that a site member has supposedly shared proof with them that a Nintendo Direct presentation is happening on Tuesday, 7th February. The moderators of the subreddit would not elaborate about the proof provided by the user to verify it, but they seem confident enough to make a post about the Nintendo Direct along with sharing the aforementioned date. If we hear anything official regarding a Nintendo Direct presentation then we will certainly let you all know.

Source

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Tyre Nichols latest news: Memphis police accused of ‘shielding’ white officer as 7th ousted for killing

Protesters march in Memphis after video released of Tyre Nichols being beaten by police

The Memphis Police Department has been accused of “shielding” the only known white officer involved in Tyre Nichols’ arrest, as it was revealed two more officers were placed on leave in connection with the man’s death at the hands of police.

Lawyers for the Nichols family denounced the Memphis police for allegedly giving special treatment to a white official by placing him on leave despite his involvement.

It comes as Memphis police disclosed that seven of its officers, including five Black officers who have already been charged over Nichols’ death, had been relieved of duty.

The sixth officer, identified as Preston Hemphill, who is white, was suspended with pay pending a hearing, and a seventh officer who was not immediately identified was relieved of duty without pay, police said.

Nichols’ parents – RowVaughn Wells and Rodney Wells – have accepted an invitation from the Congressional Black Caucus to attend Joe Biden’s State of the Union address next week.

Nichols, 29, was pulled over for a traffic stop in Memphis on 7 January. He died three days later in hospital.

Footage of the fatal encounter was released on Friday, capturing Nichols being punched, kicked and beaten with batons.

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Eric Garcia: ‘Republicans choose their words carefully on Tyre Nichols’

The Independent’s Washington chief Eric Garcia writes about a long weekend of relative silence from the GOP:



The statements from the Republicans who have spoken show that they clearly know the video is disturbing. But the rhetoric they use show that they likely hope to treat this as an isolated incident and likely won’t spring into action on it.

Alex Woodward31 January 2023 15:30

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‘Police are not always telling the whole truth’

The Independent’s Josh Marcus writes:



As the nation turns its attention to the death of Tyre Nichols, there’s something you need to know. In cases like these, police don’t always tell the full truth. Sometimes they seek to distract from it. Other times they flat-out lie.

This is well known to victims of police violence, civil rights organisers, and those, like me, who spend their days covering policing. But it’s an important thing to remember after the Friday release of law enforcement video of Nichols’s 7 January arrest, perhaps the most explosive instance of police misconduct since George Floyd.

Read what he has learned about law enforcement distortions while covering the cops:

Alex Woodward31 January 2023 15:00

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How to support the family of Tyre Nichols

A fundraiser created by the mother of Tyre Nichols has raised more than $1m for the family in the wake of his death.

“My husband and I have had our entire world turned upside down by what happened to our son,” RowVaughn Wells wrote in the description of a GoFundMe page raising funds for the family.

“We are two hardworking, loving parents, [and] now have to turn our full-time attention to seeking proper justice for our son,” she added. “We have yet to have the proper space to begin our grieving process, which will be long and burdensome.”

The fundraiser will help cover the costs of mental health services and time off work, where they do not have unlimited paid time off, she said.

The funds will also support the creation of a memorial skate park for Nichols, “in honor of his love for skating and sunset,” according to Ms Wells.

Alex Woodward31 January 2023 14:30

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Four videos, 56 minutes, seven Memphis police officers, one deadly arrest: What the Tyre Nichols footage shows

The release of footage of the fatal assault of Tyre Nichols graphically depicted the prolonged and savage fatal beating that was meted out by five Memphis Police Department officers.

But questions persist that the edited footage failed to answer, most notably the claimed traffic violation that had led officers to pull Nichols over in the first place, and what caused the officers to respond so violently.

The Independent’s Bevan Hurley has more in the story below:

Graig Graziosi31 January 2023 14:00

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Republican Congressman Jim Jordan says ‘no law’ could stop the ‘evil’ in Tyre Nichols police bodycam footage

Conservative Congressman Jim Jordan told NBC News’ Meet the Press that he was unsure if any law could stop the “evil” on display in the police bodycam footage showing Tyre Nichols being beaten by officers.

“I don’t know that there’s any law that can stop that evil that we saw,” he said on the program.

He then accused Democrats of trying to use legislation to solve issues like systemic police abuse.

“The Democrats always think that it’s a new law that’s going to fix something that terrible,” he said.

Graig Graziosi31 January 2023 13:00

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Congressional Black Caucus pushes Biden to restart police reform talks

Representative Steven Horsford, the Nevada congressman who serves as chair of the CBC, said in a statement on Sunday that the caucus is asking for a sit-down with Mr Biden “to push for negotiations on much needed national reforms to our justice system – specifically, the actions and conduct of our law enforcement”.

Mr Horsford said Mr Nichols’ death, which was captured on disturbing video showing him being beaten and kicked by a group of officers who are now facing murder charges, is “a grim reminder that we still have a long way to go in solving systemic police violence in America”.

The Independent’s Andrew Feinberg has more in his story:

Graig Graziosi31 January 2023 12:00

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Sixth officer suspended in Tyre Nichols confirmed to have fired stun gun during encounter

Preston Hemphill, the sixth Memphis police officer to face disciplinary action in the beating of Tyre Nichols, reportedly fired a stun gun at Mr Nichols the night of the encounter that preceded his death.

The Memphis Police Department announced that Mr Hemphill had been placed on administrative leave in connection with the encounter.

He was the officer who fired a stun gun at Mr Nichols when he tried to escape from the police who had pulled him over, according to ABC 7.

Graig Graziosi31 January 2023 11:00

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Newly-suspended Memphis police officer Preston Hemphill tased Tyre Nichols during traffic stop

Memphis police officer Preston Hemphill was reportedly the third officer on the scene of Tyre Nichols’ beating.

Mr Hemphill’s attorney, Lee Gerald, confirmed to ABC 7 that his client was the third officer at Nichols’ initial traffic stop.

“As per departmental regulations Officer Hemphill activated his bodycam,” Mr Gerald said in a statement. “He was never present at the second scene. He is cooperating with officials in this investigation.”

The officer’s bodycam footage was included with the footage released on Friday.

Graig Graziosi31 January 2023 09:00

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ICYMI: Sixth Memphis officer suspended

A sixth Memphis police officer has reportedly been suspended from the department in the wake of the death of Tyre Nichols.

A department spokesperson speaking to Fox13 Memphis said officer Preston Hemphill has been relieved of duty.

The spokesperson did not provide details on how Mr Hemphill’s release is related to Mr Nichols.

Graig Graziosi31 January 2023 08:00

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Skatepark vigil planned for Tyre Nichols in Sacramento

A skatepark in Sacramento that Tyre Nichols visited regularly said it planned to hold a vigil for him at 6:30pm PST.

Mr Nichols was a regular at the park before he moved to Memphis in 2020.

Niko Chapman, who grew up in the area, remembered Mr Nichols fondly. He recalled to Fox 2 how, when he was younger, his parents would only let him visit the skatepark if they knew Mr Nichols was there to help look out for him.

“You remember people that are really kind to you, and Tyre was just a really kind person,” Mr Chapman said. “He just always made me feel really welcome.”

Graig Graziosi31 January 2023 07:00

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No. 4 Alabama wins 7th straight on emotional night at Vanderbilt

The emotion was unmistakable Tuesday night in Nashville.

There were a few tears wiped on warmups in the pregame shootaround on a heavy night for the No. 4 Alabama basketball team. The 78-66 win over Vanderbilt came just three days after former teammate Darius Miles was charged with capital murder in what’s been a mentally taxing stretch.

The seventh straight Crimson Tide win was never particularly close until the closing moments. A 23-point Alabama lead slipped all the way to 68-62 with under a minute left before the Tide pulled away one final time from the foul line.

The tragedy from Tuscaloosa was still looming large over this game.

“I didn’t see a ton of emotion pregame necessarily but I did see some guys break down postgame,” Alabama coach Nate Oats said via Zoom after the game. “I think they were bottling some stuff up. You know, we had a job to do. We had to get to the game, got to the game, took care of business and then it’s almost like there’s a big relief the game is over and we let out a sigh of relief.”

Crimson Tide players were not available for comment after the game.

Alabama (16-2, 6-0 SEC) got a game-high 30 from star freshman Brandon Miller in a homecoming game for the Nashville-area product. The forward added his 10th rebound late for a double-double on a night he made 10 of his 16 shots.

Alabama players huddle before an NCAA college basketball game against Vanderbilt on Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn. Alabama’s Darius Miles was removed from the team and has been charged with murder, along with another man, after a fatal shooting near campus Sunday. (AP Photo/John Amis)AP

Though a few hours from home, the quirky Memorial Gymnasium on Vanderbilt’s campus had a heavy crimson presence. The visiting crowd was in party mode when Miller’s 3 made it 53-30 with 12:44 left but Vanderbilt’s frigid shooting turned thawed for a time. Commodore Tyrin Lawrence scored 17 of his 20 after halftime but the Commodores got no closer than six in the final moments.

It wasn’t enough to end Alabama’s streak of holding seven straight opponents under 70 points.

“I think we’ve shown mental toughness in the past,” Oats said. “We won at Houston, the No. 1 team in the country after being down 15 at the half. We won at Arkansas, one of the toughest places to play. They were picked to be in the top two or three in the league by everybody. So we’ve gone on the road and won in the past. We had a little bit different circumstances — a lot different circumstances here — it’s still a road win. I just think we have a mentally tough group.”

Vanderbilt fell to 9-9, 2-3 in the SEC with the loss four days after beating No. 15 Arkansas on the same floor.

Alabama came out fast, sprinting to a 13-3 lead as the hosts missed 12 of its first 13 shots. The Tide was working the inside as Vanderbilt was playing without 7-foot leading scorer and rim protector Liam Robbins. Without the shot-blocking leader down low, Alabama outscored the Commodores 20-8 in the paint before halftime and 40-26 in the game.

Miller scored five of the first nine and 12 of the 36 by halftime as he played with an edge. Twice in the first half he said something to the Commodore bench after making shots at the rim as three of the first six Alabama baskets came on dunks.

Vanderbilt fired back as the Tide shifted its focus to the perimeter. After making its first two outside shots, Alabama missed its next eight as the Commodores took a 22-21 lead on a Malik Dia 3-pointer.

The 10-0 Alabama run that followed saw Vanderbilt again go cold while making just 2 of 12 shots. A 36-26 halftime margin saw the Commodores shooting just 25.6% from the field.

Michael Casagrande is a reporter for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @ByCasagrande or on Facebook.



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NJ governor: No pause in wind farm prep after 7th dead whale

BRIGANTINE, N.J. (AP) — New Jersey’s governor said Friday he does not think undersea preparations for offshore wind farms should be halted in response to a recent spate of whale deaths in New Jersey and New York.

Democrat Phil Murphy spoke after lawmakers at the local, state and federal levels called for a temporary pause in ocean floor preparation work for offshore wind projects in New Jersey and New York after another dead whale washed ashore in the area.

Also on Friday, most of New Jersey’s environmental groups warned against linking offshore wind work and whale deaths, calling such associations “unfounded and premature.”

The death was the seventh in a little over a month. The spate of fatalities prompted an environmental group and some citizens groups opposed to offshore wind to ask President Biden earlier this week for a federal investigation into the deaths.

The latest death Thursday was that of a 20- to 25-foot-long (6- to 7.6-meter-long) humpback whale. Its remains washed ashore in Brigantine, just north of Atlantic City, which itself has seen two dead whales on its beaches in recent weeks.

There was no immediate indication of what caused the latest death. The Marine Mammal Stranding Center, based in Brigantine, said it and several other groups were formulating plans Friday for a post-mortem examination of the whale’s remains before the animal’s carcass is disposed of, most likely through burial on the beach.

“We should suspend all work related to offshore wind development until we can determine the cause of death of these whales, some of which are endangered,” said New Jersey state Sen. Vince Polistina, a Republican who represents the area. “The work related to offshore wind projects is the primary difference in our waters, and it’s hard to believe that the death of (seven) whales on our beaches is just a coincidence.”

Murphy said he does not think pausing offshore wind prep is necessary.

“This is tragic, obviously,” he said.

Murphy cited the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which earlier this week said that no humpback whale — the species accounting for most of the recent whale deaths in New Jersey and New York — has been found to have been killed due to offshore wind activities.

“They have said it’s been happening at an increased rate since 2016, and that was long before there was any offshore wind activity,” the governor said. “It looks like some of these whales have been hit by vessels.”

Orsted, the Danish wind power developer tabbed to build two of the three offshore wind projects approved thus far in the waters off New Jersey, said its current work off the New Jersey coast does not involve using sounds or other actions that could disturb whales.

It did not say what specific type of work it is doing off New Jersey and did not answer that question in an email to The Associated Press on Friday.

The Clean Ocean Action environmental group said such site work typically involves exploring the ocean floor using focused pulses of low-frequency sound in the same frequency that whales hear and communicate, which could potentially harm or disorient the animals.

Brigantine’s mayor, Vince Sera, joined in the call for a temporary halt to offshore wind site prep, as did U.S. Rep. Jeff Van Drew, a Republican congressman representing southern New Jersey.

At a news conference Monday in Atlantic City, the groups calling on Biden to probe the deaths said offshore wind developers have applied for authorization to harass or harm as many as 157,000 marine mammals off the two states.

NOAA said 11 such applications are active in the area but involve nonserious injuries or harassment of marine animals, not killing them.

“NOAA Fisheries has not authorized, or proposed to authorize, mortality or serious injury for any wind-related action,” agency spokesperson Lauren Gaches said.

Most of New Jersey’s major environmental groups said this week that they support offshore wind energy.

“The climate crisis demands that we quickly develop renewable energy, and offshore wind is critically important for New Jersey to reach the state’s economic development and environmental justice goals,” the groups said in a statement.

The groups include Clean Water Action, Environment New Jersey, the Sierra Club, New Jersey Audubon, NY/NJ Baykeeper and others.

“Blaming offshore wind projects on whale mortality without evidence is not only irresponsible but overshadows the very real threats of climate change, plastic pollution, and unsustainable fishery management practices to these animals,” said the Sierra Club’s New Jersey director, Anjuli Ramos-Busot.

“We need to base our decision making on science and data, not emotions or assumptions,” added Allison McLeod, policy director of the New Jersey League of Conservation Voters.

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Follow Wayne Parry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/WayneParryAC



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Earth Might Be Experiencing 7th Mass Extinction, Not 6th – “A True Decrease in the Abundance of Organisms”

New research indicates that a mass extinction occurred 550 million years ago, during the Ediacaran period.

550-million-year-old creatures’ message to the present.

Earth is currently in the midst of a mass extinction, losing thousands of species each year. New research suggests environmental changes caused the first such event in history, which occurred millions of years earlier than scientists previously realized.

“We’ve shown a true decrease in the abundance of organisms.” — Chenyi Tu

Most dinosaurs famously disappeared 66 million years ago at the end of the

Thanks to the efforts of researchers at the University of California, Riverside (UCR) and Virginia Tech, it’s now known that a similar extinction occurred 550 million years ago, during the Ediacaran period. This discovery is documented in a Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper.

Although unclear whether this represents a true “mass extinction,” the percentage of organisms lost is similar to these other events, including the current, ongoing one.

The researchers believe environmental changes are to blame for the loss of approximately 80% of all Ediacaran creatures, which were the first complex, multicellular life forms on the planet.

Diorama of the Ediacaran sea floor. Credit: Smithsonian Institution

“Geological records show that the world’s oceans lost a lot of oxygen during that time, and the few species that did survive had bodies adapted for lower oxygen environments,” said Chenyi Tu, UCR paleoecologist and study co-author.

Unlike later events, this earliest one was more difficult to document because the creatures that perished were soft-bodied and did not preserve well in the fossil record.

“We suspected such an event, but to prove it we had to assemble a massive database of evidence,” said Rachel Surprenant, UCR paleoecologist, and study co-author. The team documented nearly every known Ediacaran animal’s environment, body size, diet, ability to move, and habits.

With this project, the researchers sought to disprove the charge that the major loss of animal life at the end of the Ediacaran period was something other than an extinction. Some previously believed the event could be explained by the right data not being collected, or a change in animal behavior, like the arrival of predators.

“We can see the animals’ spatial distribution over time, so we know they didn’t just move elsewhere or get eaten — they died out,” said Chenyi. “We’ve shown a true decrease in the abundance of organisms.”

Dickinsonia, a creature resembling a bath mat from the Ediacaran period.

They also tracked creatures’ surface area to volume ratios, a measurement that suggests declining oxygen levels were to blame for the deaths. “If an organism has a higher ratio, it can get more nutrients, and the bodies of the animals that did live into the next era were adapted in this way,” said UCR paleoecologist Heather McCandless, study co-author.

This project came from a graduate class led by UCR paleoecologist Mary Droser and her former graduate student, now at Virginia Tech, Scott Evans. For the next class, the students will investigate the origin of these animals, rather than their extinction.

Ediacaran creatures would be considered strange by today’s standards. Many of the animals could move, but they were unlike anything now living. Among them were Obamus coronatus, a disc-shaped creature named for the former president, and Attenborites janeae, a tiny ovoid resembling a raisin named for English naturalist Sir David Attenborough.

“These animals were the first evolutionary experiment on Earth, but they only lasted about 10 million years. Not long at all, in evolutionary terms,” Droser said.

Though it’s not clear why oxygen levels declined so precipitously at the end of the era, it is clear that environmental change can destabilize and destroy life on Earth at any time. Such changes have driven all mass extinctions including the one currently occurring.

“There’s a strong correlation between the success of organisms and, to quote Carl Sagan, our ‘pale blue dot,’” said Phillip Boan, UC Riverside geologist and study co-author.

“Nothing is immune to extinction. We can see the impact of climate change on ecosystems and should note the devastating effects as we plan for the future,” Boan said.

Reference: “Environmental drivers of the first major animal extinction across the Ediacaran White Sea-Nama transition” by Scott D. Evans, Chenyi Tu, Adriana Rizzo, Rachel L. Surprenant, Phillip C. Boan, Heather McCandless, Nathan Marshall, Shuhai Xiao and Mary L. Droser, 7 November 2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2207475119



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