Tag Archives: pushed

New York homeless men say they were offered money to pose as military veterans and falsely claim they were pushed out of a hotel to make room for migrants – CNN

  1. New York homeless men say they were offered money to pose as military veterans and falsely claim they were pushed out of a hotel to make room for migrants CNN
  2. NY lawmaker denounces claim that veterans were evicted in favor of migrants as false, calls for investigation Fox News
  3. Longtime advocate lied about vets getting kicked out of NY hotels for migrants: pol New York Post
  4. Homeless men say they were recruited to pose as displaced vets Times Union
  5. Democrats’ message to Americans: If you’re not a migrant, go to the back of the line Fox News
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NBC Fall 2023 Schedule: ‘Night Court’ Moves To Fall In Tuesday Comedy Block, ‘Law & Order: Organized Crime’ & ‘La Brea’ Pushed To Midseason – Deadline

  1. NBC Fall 2023 Schedule: ‘Night Court’ Moves To Fall In Tuesday Comedy Block, ‘Law & Order: Organized Crime’ & ‘La Brea’ Pushed To Midseason Deadline
  2. NBC Fall Schedule: Quantum Leap on the Move, One Law & Order Series and La Brea Held for Midseason TVLine
  3. NBC Sets (Mostly) Strike-Proof Schedule for Fall 2023 Hollywood Reporter
  4. NBC Reveals Mostly Strike-Proof Fall 2023 Schedule, Including Three New Series and Midseason ‘Deal or No Deal’ Spinoff Variety
  5. NBC’s Fall Schedule Was Not at All Impacted by WGA Strike – IndieWire IndieWire
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Priyanka Chopra Jonas Quit Bollywood Because ‘I Was Being Pushed Into a Corner’ and ‘I Had Beef With People’ – Variety

  1. Priyanka Chopra Jonas Quit Bollywood Because ‘I Was Being Pushed Into a Corner’ and ‘I Had Beef With People’ Variety
  2. Priyanka Chopra Reveals Why She Left Bollywood: “I Had Beef With People” NDTV
  3. Kangana says KJo ‘banned’ Priyanka from Bollywood over SRK ‘friendship’ Greatandhra
  4. Priyanka Chopra recalls panicking after 6 FLOPS, says “I was terrified because I’m not a nepo baby…” Indiatimes.com
  5. Priyanka Chopra’s Viral Interview Is A Hit On Twitter. “She Is A Phoenix,” Say Fans NDTV Movies
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Occupier’s sabotage-reconnaissance groups fought their way to Kharkiv Oblast, one was pushed back to Russia – Yahoo News

  1. Occupier’s sabotage-reconnaissance groups fought their way to Kharkiv Oblast, one was pushed back to Russia Yahoo News
  2. Russian Troops Breached Ukrainian Defenses On February 21, But Were Pushed Back, Says Governor Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  3. Wednesday, February 22. Russia’s War On Ukraine: Daily News And Information From Ukraine Forbes
  4. Report to Congress on Military, Intelligence Issues on Russian Invasion of Ukraine – USNI News USNI News
  5. Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 364 Al Jazeera English
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NewsNation reporter was pushed by National Guard official during an argument before his arrest at an Ohio news conference, video shows – CNN

  1. NewsNation reporter was pushed by National Guard official during an argument before his arrest at an Ohio news conference, video shows CNN
  2. Body-worn camera video shows reporter in Ohio pushed down, arrested WSYX ABC 6
  3. East Palestine police defend arrest of NewsNation correspondent covering Ohio train derailment presser Fox News
  4. Police: Reporter in Ohio pushed down, arrested had refused to leave ABC6OnYourSide.com
  5. NewsNation reporter arrested during a news conference after Ohio law enforcement told him to stop his live broadcast CNN
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North Korea says U.S. drills have pushed situation to ‘extreme red-line’ -KCNA

SEOUL, Feb 2 (Reuters) – North Korea’s Foreign Ministry said on Thursday that drills by the United States and its allies have pushed the situation to an “extreme red-line” and threaten to turn the peninsula into a “huge war arsenal and a more critical war zone.”

The statement, carried by state news agency KCNA, said Pyongyang was not interested in dialogue as long as Washington pursues hostile policies.

“The military and political situation on the Korean peninsula and in the region has reached an extreme red-line due to the reckless military confrontational maneuvers and hostile acts of the U.S. and its vassal forces,” an unnamed ministry spokesperson said in the statement.

In Washington, the White House rejected the North Korean statement and reiterated a willingness to meet with North Korean diplomats “at a time and place convenient for them.”

“We have made clear we have no hostile intent toward the DPRK and seek serious and sustained diplomacy to address the full range of issues of concern to both countries and the region,” said a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council.

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The North Korean statement cited a visit to Seoul this week by U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. On Tuesday Austin and his South Korean counterpart vowed to expand military drills and deploy more “strategic assets,” such as aircraft carriers and long-range bombers, to counter North Korea’s weapons development and prevent a war.

“This is a vivid expression of the U.S. dangerous scenario which will result in turning the Korean peninsula into a huge war arsenal and a more critical war zone,” the North Korean statement said.

North Korea will respond to any military moves by the United States, and has strong counteraction strategies, including “the most overwhelming nuclear force” if necessary, the statement added.

More than 28,500 American troops are based in South Korea as a legacy of the 1950-1953 Korean War, which ended in an armistice rather than a peace treaty.

“We reject the notion that our joint exercises with partners in the region serve as any sort of provocation. These are routine exercises fully consistent with past practice,” the White House statement said.

Last year, North Korea conducted a record number of ballistic missile tests, which are banned by United Nations Security Council resolutions. It was also observed reopening its shuttered nuclear weapons test site, raising expectations of a nuclear test for the first time since 2017.

In New York, South Korea’s foreign minister, Park Jin, met with the United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday and called for the U.N.’s continued attention to North Korea’s recent provocations and efforts to implement sanctions on the reclusive regime.

Guterres said any resumption of nuclear testing by North Korea would deal a devastating blow to regional and international security, and reaffirmed support to build lasting peace on the Korean peninsula, according to Park’s office.

Park is on a four-day trip to the United States, which will include a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Washington on Friday.

On Wednesday the United States and South Korea carried out a joint air drill with American B-1B heavy bombers and F-22 stealth fighters, as well as F-35 jets from both countries, according to South Korea’s Defense Ministry.

“The combined air drills this time show the U.S.’ will and capabilities to provide strong and credible extended deterrence against North Korea’s nuclear and missile threats,” the Defense Ministry said in a statement.

Reporting by Josh Smith; Additional reporting by Soo-hyang Choi and Steve Holland; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Bill Berkrot and Gerry Doyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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2023’s Big Games That Could Get Pushed Into 2024

Image: Square Enix / Wildcard / Focus Entertainment / Kotaku

Video games are very hard to make, take years to finish, and require many people to work together to create them. As a result, video games are incredibly complex and more prone to delays than movies, books, or TV shows. So just because a game is set to come out in 2023 doesn’t mean it actually will…

It should be noted that we can’t tell the future and don’t have any inside knowledge on these projects that we haven’t already reported. So we could (and likely will) be wrong about some or even all of these. But as the pandemic continues to cause production problems around the world, it’s harder than ever to ship a game on time. If these games do get delayed, I hope it spares the devs from having to crunch for months to get something out the door. But even delays can lead to crunch and overtime, as we’ve unfortunately learned this year.

Now, let’s take a look at some games currently scheduled to launch in 2023 that we think might end up getting pushed back into 2024.

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RocketLab’s first North American launch pushed back again

Enlarge / The Electron rocket, covered in white protective material, on its side on its launch pad on Wallops Island.

John Timmer

Update, 11:45 Eastern:

Rocket Lab had a two-hour launch window that would enable its Electron rocket to send its payload to its intended orbit. Unfortunately, high altitude winds were above allowable safety limits throughout the window. As a result, the launch was postponed. The launch window will be open again at the same time tomorrow night, so we expect that another attempt will be made then.

Original coverage follows.

On Sunday, RocketLab plans to send its small launch rocket, the Electron, into orbit from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport, or MARS. The launch is scheduled for 6 pm US Eastern; we’ve embedded a livestream below.

This will be RocketLab’s first launch from MARS, and the first by any company not currently owned by Northrop Grumman, which has used the site for its Minotaur and Antares rockets. Prior to today, RocketLab has done all its launches from a site in New Zealand, where its Electron vehicles are built. MARS is located at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility, on the Virginia portion of the Delmarva Peninsula, which separates Chesapeake Bay from the Atlantic Ocean.

RocketLab CEO Peter Beck told Ars that the site offers access to some additional orbital trajectories that can’t be reached from New Zealand, and allows the company to compete for business with US government agencies that have a requirement for US-based launches. MARS was appealing in part because the lower launch cadence there means that there’s less potential for scheduling conflicts.

That said, the launch has experienced several delays from its original planned date due to weather, other events downrange, and a last-minute delay in the exchange of some paperwork between NASA and the Federal Aviation Administration. The last hurdle was cleared yesterday, setting the stage for tonight’s launch.

The launch will take place after sunset—the launch window is open between 6 pm and 8 pm—and should be visible from much of the Northeast, weather permitting. The company has a map that indicates potential viewing from as far away as Georgia, Ohio, and Maine.

The Electron is a small, light rocket—light enough that it’s hauled to the launch pad by a heavy-duty pickup truck. It can handle payloads of up to 300 kg and is being used to put a commercial radiofrequency Earth-observing satellite into orbit in this case. While originally designed to be expendable, RocketLab has been experimenting with recovering Electrons using a parachute system that’s snagged by a helicopter. Today’s rocket won’t be recovered, though.

RocketLab’s livestream.



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Long covid has pushed brain fog into the spotlight

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Haze. Slow. Drunk. Lost. These are the words some people use to describe “brain fog.”

The condition, a form of cognitive dysfunction, has been plaguing people with certain chronic illnesses for years. But now, a new wave of people with long covid are experiencing it, casting a spotlight on the often debilitating condition.

“It’s a moment where the public and the medical community are realizing that this is real. This is what happens after certain infections,” said Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunobiology at Yale University and a co-author of a review article on covid-19-related cognitive impairment.

“I think it’s their time to be recognized,” she said.

How covid brain fog may overlap with ‘chemo brain’ and Alzheimer’s

Research shows a majority of people experiencing long-covid symptoms have reported brain fog — a collection of symptoms, including impaired attention, concentration, memory and processing speed. Iwasaki and Michelle Monje, a professor of neurology at Stanford University, examined more than 100 studies relevant to cognitive dysfunction after covid.

They outlined six potential causes for covid-related cognitive dysfunction and concluded that a likely common cause is lung inflammation that causes inflammation in the brain and subsequently, the dysfunction of neural cells.

Patients who have experienced brain fog, caused by a wide range of conditions, say the effects can be life-altering and devastating. They say it keeps them from many activities such as driving, biking and public speaking. Some have had to alter their work schedules or stop working entirely. And nearly all of them say it has forced them to rely on a notebook — keeping to-do lists that include the most basic tasks such as remembering to eat.

Depending on the underlying cause, there are treatments for brain fog ranging from exercise protocols to cognitive rehabilitation, but there is no method proven to work for all patients.

How long covid reshapes the brain — and how we might treat it

Dennis Kolson, a neurologist in the Penn Neuro COVID Clinic at the University of Pennsylvania, said that since the clinic opened last year, physicians have evaluated about 350 long-covid patients for complaints, including brain fog. He said people uniformly appreciated having the chance to talk with a physician who understands their symptoms.

“’Am I like the others? Are you seeing people like me?’ I get that question every time,” Kolson said. “I say, nearly always, ‘Yes. You’re not alone.’ ”

Edwin Hall, a 65-year-old Navy veteran from Fulton, Mo., spent 12 days during the summer of 2021 in a medically induced coma because of covid, breathing with help from a ventilator. Doctors also discovered signs of a probable stroke, though they did not know its timing, he said.

Even now, he said, he wrestles with brain fog. He searched for words to describe it.

He recalled an incident during a Walmart trip not long after his hospitalization that he attributes to brain fog. He and his wife went down separate aisles, and once she was out of sight, he could not remember whether she told him where she was going or think about how to handle it.

“I went into a major panic attack then and there,” he said, adding that he clung to a pillar and waited for his wife to find him.

Earlier this year, he said, his symptoms forced him to retire as the application systems manager for the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.

Another long-covid patient, Dave Nothstein, 52, of Colorado Springs, said he is still able to work remotely for an automobile dealership but only enough hours per week to pay for his insurance.

His greatest challenges are with word recall and short-term memory.

After his long-covid diagnosis in March, Nothstein said, his brain was so foggy that he had to make detailed to-do lists to get through the day. “As silly as it sounds, it included ‘make sure to eat breakfast,’ ‘make sure to feed the dogs,’ ‘get the mail,’ ‘do the laundry,’ ‘do the dishes,’ ” he said.

He’s now working with a cognitive therapist, which isn’t covered by insurance, to try to deal with his impairment.

Brain fog also can affect people with myalgic encephalomyelitis (also known as chronic fatigue syndrome), fibromyalgia, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), Lyme disease and depression, experts say.

Patients who have undergone chemotherapy also report brain fog, which is often described as “chemo brain.”

The severity and duration vary but the symptoms can have “an adverse effect on occupational, familial and social lives and can result in diminished quality of life,” said Jeffrey Wefel, a professor and chief of neuropsychology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

Angela Hernandez, 36, of Houston, said she fought through months of brain fog starting in 2018 after four rounds of chemotherapy for ovarian cancer.

“You know when you dream and then you wake up and you can almost remember what you were dreaming about, but then as the seconds pass, the dream gets further and further away?” she said. “That’s kind of what it felt like all the time.”

For Kelsey Botti, it started with a concussion from a snowboarding accident in 2012. Later, Botti, a 32-year-old physical therapist from Pittsburgh, was diagnosed with POTS, a syndrome often characterized by a fast heart rate, low blood pressure, and oftentimes dizziness, lightheadedness and fainting upon standing — and in some cases, brain fog.

“I wanted to cry because I was so thankful that someone was helping me, and I had a diagnosis and a direction,” she said. “And then I also wanted to cry because the person that I was, was completely gone.”

Botti underwent months of treatment that included medication and a controlled exercise program to build her tolerance. And though there were bumps and emergency-room visits along the way, she said she that her symptoms have improved.

One challenge in treating brain fog is that patients can appear healthy, but feel terrible, said Robert Wilson, a neurologist with Cleveland Clinic’s Neurological Institute. “If they don’t find the right medical team to understand them, they will pull away from health care and access health care less, so there are less opportunities for them,” he said.

A barrier to effectively care for patients with brain fog is the stigma attached to it, said Jacqueline Becker, a neuropsychologist at Mount Sinai who has studied cognitive impairment after covid.

“The stigma prevents people from getting adequate care where physicians tend to write them off and say, ‘No, you’re young. Don’t worry about it. You’ll get better.’ Or, ‘Look, your brain scan came back as normal. There’s nothing wrong with you,’ ” she said. “And on the other side of that, you have a patient who is really struggling to function.”

Rachael Grossman, a 22-year-old from Chagrin Falls, Ohio, said she started developing symptoms of brain fog after a bout of whooping cough when she was 17. “I was bounced back and forth to so many different physicians, told it was in my head, told it was anxiety,” she said.

Two years later, in 2019, she was diagnosed with POTS. Grossman is now a neuroscience major at Baldwin Wallace University and works part time as a medical scribe. She said she has to find ways to try to overcome her “haze.”

On bad days, she said she can spend hours studying for a test without retaining a word, struggle to perform at the level she wants to at work, or feel uncomfortable driving because she worries that she may zone out.

“It will continue to affect me, sadly, but it’s just figuring out ways to get around it,” she said.

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Boeing’s Starliner launch pushed back until April • The Register

The first crewed launch of Boeing’s Starliner has been delayed again, this time being pushed back to April 2023 from an earlier planned launch date of February.

The change came with little announcement from NASA, which tweeted out the new date as a scheduling update without any additional details. In an accompanying blog post, NASA said the change was being made to eliminate conflicts between “visiting spacecraft traffic at the space station,” but the agency didn’t elaborate much beyond that.

Starliner has been a drag on Boeing since the company unveiled the capsule in 2010. According to Boeing’s Q3 2022 filing, Starliner has lost the company $883 million since 2019.

That was the year Starliner made its first attempt at an uncrewed launch and docking with the International Space Station, which failed due to a pair of software errors that left it unable to dock and saw it returned to Earth early under less-than-ideal circumstances.

Attempts at a second launch in 2021 also failed when 13 of the Calamity Capsule’s propulsion system valves failed pre-flight checks. Starliner only made it to the ISS for the first time this past May, but even that launch wasn’t without issues as two of the craft’s 12 thrusters failed once in orbit.

NASA still has Starliner concerns

NASA’s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP) met on October 27 to discuss, among other things [PDF], updates on the Commercial Crew Program. ASAP panel member Mark Sirangelo said that issues remaining after the uncrewed launch in May could continue to have an effect – like delaying Starliner’s crewed launch, a decision made by NASA after the October 27 meeting, though it isn’t clear if ASAP’s discussion influenced its choice.

According to Sirangelo, the uncrewed launch in May “produced a number of in-flight anomalies that will need to be worked prior to the next flight test.”

Sirangelo also said that the new Starliner software would need to undergo additional avionics software integration lab testing prior to the launch. 

If and when Starliner carries crew to the ISS, it’ll be flown by Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita “Suni” Williams, who will stay on the ISS for around two weeks. Once the test flight is complete, Boeing will have a few other certification steps to take before it can elbow its way into the commercial launch rotation among SpaceX’s regular runs to the orbital lab. 

NASA said that SpaceX’s Dragon Endeavour will mark its fourth flight to the ISS when it launches in February on its Crew-6 mission, the month Starliner was originally scheduled for its first crewed flight. That launch will make Dragon Endeavour “the spacecraft fleet leader in number of flights to and from the station,” NASA said. 

Crew-7, meanwhile, is being planned for some time in the fall of 2023. Whether Starliner will get a chance to deliver humans to the ISS between those flights remains to be seen, but those willing to place a bet might want to wait until April to see if the Calamity Capsule can finally shed that pejorative. ®



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