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2021-22 NBA awards picks: Experts leaning Nikola Jokic for MVP, agree on Sixth Man winner, split on rest

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The 2021-22 NBA regular season has finally come to a close. While most of the attention will turn to postseason play, there’s still some awards to be handed out. Just as there is going to be endless debate over Nikola Jokic and Joel Embiid for first-team All-NBA (at least for those who choose not to put two centers on their first team), the Twitter battles over this year’s MVP race might never end. 

This could very well end up as the closest vote ever. You can’t go wrong with tabbing Jokic, Embiid or Giannis Antetokounmpo as your MVP. I’m taking Jokic. As you’ll see below, so do most of my CBS colleagues. 

In addition to MVP, we voted on Rookie of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, Sixth Man of the Year, Most Improved Player, Coach of the Year and Executive of the Year. Read ’em and weep (and go easy on our mentions). 

Most Valuable Player

Rookie of the Year

Defensive Player of the Year  

Sixth Man of the Year 

Most Improved Player  

Coach of the Year

First Second Third

Bill Reiter

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)

Monty Williams (PHO)

Erik Spoelstra (MIA)

Brad Botkin

Monty Williams (PHO)  

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)  

Erik Spoelstra (MIA)

James Herbert

Monty Williams (PHO)  

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)  

Erik Spoelstra (MIA)  

Sam Quinn

Monty Williams (PHO)  

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)  

Ty Lue (LAC)

Colin Ward-Henninger

Monty Williams (PHO)

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)

Erik Spoelstra (MIA)

Jasmyn Wimbish

Monty Williams (PHO)  

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)  

J.B. Bickerstaff (CLE)

Michael Kaskey-Blomain

Monty Williams (PHO)  

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)  

Ime Udoka (BOS)  

Jack Maloney

Monty Williams (PHO)

Ime Udoka (BOS)

Taylor Jenkins (MEM)

Executive of the Year

First Second Third

Bill Reiter

Arturas Karnisovas (CHI)

Zachary Kleiman (MEM)

Pat Riley (MIA)

Brad Botkin

Brad Stevens (BOS)  

Pat Riley (MIA)  

Masai Ujiri (TOR)  

James Herbert

Brad Stevens (BOS)  

Lawrence Frank (LAC)  

Pat Riley (MIA)  

Sam Quinn

Masai Ujiri (TOR)

Kevin Pritchard (IND)

Brad Stevens (BOS)  

Colin-Ward Henninger

Brad Stevens (BOS)

Pat Riley (MIA)

Arturas Karnisovas (CHI)  

Jasmyn Wimbish

Brad Stevens (BOS)  

Masai Ujiri (TOR)  

Lawrence Frank (LAC)  

Michael Kaskey-Blomain

Pat Riley (MIA)  

Arturas Karnisovas (CHI)  

Brad Stevens (BOS)  

Jack Maloney

Brad Stevens (BOS)

Lawrence Frank (LAC)

Arturas Karnisovas (CHI)

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This motorized gaming bed lets you rest your gamer head

Here at The Verge, we occasionally like to write about gaming thrones, whether they’re shaped like scorpions, semi-circles, or… well, I’m not sure how to describe this one. But the thing with thrones is that the crown often weighs heavy — being MVP and getting play of the game every round can be tiring. Thankfully, Gizmodo found just the thing to help with that: a motorized gaming bed that moves you from the sleeping position to the pwning position with the press of a button, all the while keeping your gaming setup within arms’ reach.

The Bauhutte Electric Gaming Bed and Bed Desk are made to work in tandem: your rig goes on the adjustable desk, which is designed to have a bed placed under it, and the bed frame uses motors to elevate your back and knees into a seated position (though, admittedly, not a very ergonomic one). After your gaming session, you can use a remote stored on the side of your bed to lower yourself back into a sleeping position, so you can curl up and rest your weary eyes. It can also raise or lower the head and feet sections separately, giving you a few configurable sleeping and sitting positions.

There’s also a fleet of accessories. Bauhutte’s website suggests pairing your gaming bed with an “energy wagon” that stores gamer fuel, a combo clothing rack, table, and storage unit (for your gaming peripherals, of course), or even a “ninja onesie 4G” that makes sure you’re as stealthy IRL as you are in the game. Bauhutte isn’t just selling you a bed / gaming chair — it’s selling you a lifestyle. It’s worth noting that the company seems to have been building up to this point: there was a non-motorized version of the gaming bed setup in 2020, and in 2021 we heard about its gaming mattress. Now, it’s all come together into motorized bliss.

Sleeping in the ninja onesie 4G, surrounded by your Bauhutte products.
Image: Bauhutte

While I don’t imagine that this product is terribly comfortable as either a bed or a chair, I don’t think it’s entirely fair to write it off completely. For someone who lives in an extremely small space like a single bedroom or studio apartment, this could actually be a decent way to fit both a bed and desk into a confined area. It could also be useful to people with limited mobility; some mechanical assistance getting out of bed could be an extraordinary help.

Gizmodo reports that the bed frame costs around $480 (or 59,800 yen) by itself, and one Amazon seller has it listed for around $680 (84,709 yen) with a gaming mattress. The frame is roughly 78 inches long, and 37 inches wide, which should let it hold a US twin-size mattress. Unfortunately, it seems like Bauhutte is mainly focused on selling the bed in its home country of Japan, and the solo frame is sold out on Amazon Japan.

Thankfully, there are plenty of other motorized bed frames out there — though it’s hard to say if it would feel the same without the associated desk and gamer branding.

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Why a good night’s rest gets harder with age

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

It’s well known that getting a good night’s sleep becomes more difficult as we age, but the underlying biology for why this happens has remained poorly understood.

A team of US scientists has now identified how the brain circuitry involved in regulating sleepfulness and wakefulness degrades over time in mice, which they say paves the way for better medicines in humans.

“More than half of people 65 and older complain about the quality of sleep,” Stanford University professor Luis de Lecea, who co-authored a study about the finding published Thursday in Science, told AFP.

Research has shown that sleep deprivation is linked to an increased risk of multiple poor health outcomes, from hypertension to heart attacks, diabetes, depression and a build up of brain plaque linked to Alzheimer’s.

Insomnia is often treated with a class of drugs known as hypnotics, which include Ambien, but these don’t work very well in the elderly population.

For the new study, de Lecea and colleagues decided to investigate hypocretins, key brain chemicals that are generated only by a small cluster of neurons in the brain’s hypothalamus, a region located between the eyes and ears.

Of the billions of neurons in the brain, only around 50,000 produce hypocretins.

In 1998, de Lecea and other scientists discovered that hypocretins transmit signals that play a vital role in stabilizing wakefulness.

Since many species experience fragmented sleep as they grow old, it’s hypothesized that the same mechanisms are at play across mammals, and prior research had shown degradation of hypocretins leads to narcolepsy in humans, dogs and mice.

The team selected young (three to five months) and old mice (18 to 22 months) and used light carried by fibers to stimulate specific neurons. They recorded the results using imaging techniques.

What they found was that the older mice had lost approximately 38 percent of hypocretins compared to younger mice.

They also discovered that the hypocretins that remained in the older mice were more excitable and easily triggered, making the animals more prone to waking up.

This might be because of the deterioration over time of “potassium channels,” which are biological on-off switches critical to the functions of many types of cells.

“The neurons tend to be more active and fire more, and if they fire more, you wake up more frequently,” said de Lecea.

Identifying the specific pathway responsible for sleep loss could lead to better drugs, argued Laura Jacobson and Daniel Hoyer, of Australia’s Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, in a related commentary article.

Current treatments, such as hypnotics, “can induce cognitive complaints and falls,” and medicines that target the specific channel might work better, they said.

These will need to be tested in clinical trials—but an existing drug known as retigabine, which is currently used to treat epilepsy and which targets a similar pathway—could be promising, said de Lecea.


Brain neurons identified in pre-sleep routine


More information:
Shi-Bin Li et al, Hyperexcitable arousal circuits drive sleep instability during aging, Science (2022). DOI: 10.1126/science.abh3021

© 2022 AFP

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Science of sleep: Why a good night’s rest gets harder with age (2022, February 24)
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Michigan vs. Wisconsin fight: Juwan Howard suspended for rest of regular season; Greg Gard hit with fine

 Michigan coach Juwan Howard received a five-game suspension for his role in a postgame scuffle after the Wolverines’ loss at Wisconsin on Sunday which will keep him off the sidelines for the remainder of the regular season, the Big Ten announced Monday. He is the only coach involved in Sunday’s melee facing a suspension, though three players — Michigan’s Moussa Diabate and Terrance Williams II and Wisconsin’s Jahcobi Neath — each received one-game suspensions. Howard was also fined $40,000 from the league and Wisconsin coach Greg Gard was fined $10,000.

“Big Ten Conference coaches and student-athletes are expected to display the highest level of sportsmanship conduct,” Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren said in a statement announcing the fines and suspensions. “I am grateful for the partnership with Michigan Athletics Director, Warde Manuel and Wisconsin Athletics Director, Chris McIntosh. Our expectation is that the incident yesterday will provide our coaches and student-athletes with the opportunity to reflect, learn and move forward in a manner that demonstrates decorum and leadership on and off of the court.”

The punishments come after a melee that began when Howard struck Wisconsin assistant Joe Krabbenhoft following a tense exchange with Gard in the handshake line after the game. Gard’s decision to call timeout with 15 seconds left and the Badgers holding a 15-point lead is what sparked Howard’s ire. With the Wolverines maintaining full-court pressure after Wisconsin went to a lineup of walk-ons and reserves, Gard later explained that he called the timeout to help his team avoid a 10-second violation. But it did not sit well with Howard.

“I didn’t like the timeout they called, I’ll be totally honest,” Howard said. “I thought it was not necessary at that moment, especially with it being a large lead. … I thought that wasn’t fair to our guys.” 

Following Monday’s punishment, Howard issued an apology. 

“After taking time to reflect on all that happened, I realize how unacceptable both my actions and words were, and how they affected so many. I am truly sorry,” said Howard. “I am offering my sincerest apology to my players and their families, my staff, my family and the Michigan fans around the world. I would like to personally apologize to Wisconsin’s Assistant Coach Joe Krabbenhoft and his family, too.”

The ordeal brought a swift rebuke from Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel on Sunday, and the Big Ten pledged “swift and appropriate disciplinary action when it completes its review.”

Howard’s suspension comes with Michigan needing a late surge to reach the NCAA Tournament. The Wolverines are one of the “First four out” of the projected NCAA Tournament field, according to CBS Sports Bracketology Expert Jerry Palm. Their next game comes Wednesday against Rutgers.

The program does have a natural fill-in on staff in associate head coach Phil Martelli. The former longtime St. Joseph’s head coach is in his third season on Howard’s staff after a storied 24-year run in the Atlantic-10.

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Juwan Howard must be suspended for the rest of the season

Juwan Howard created a brawl. He swung. Everything else is noise. 

Whether the Michigan coach was right or wrong — and all indications are the latter — is irrelevant. His job as a college basketball coach is partly as an educator. He’s a mentor. He’s supposed to be a leader. 

He wasn’t any of those things on Sunday afternoon in Madison, Wis., after his team suffered a 14-point loss. He acted like a child. He lost his temper. He got physical with not one — but two — opposing coaches, escalating a situation that needed to be de-escalated. 

For that reason, he has to be suspended for the rest of the season, until Michigan has played its final game. He can’t be part of this program until the year is over. 

Some will say that is too harsh. Others will say it’s too light. It is a warning: One more incident and you’re gone. This cannot be tolerated. In a statement, Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel said there is “no excuse” for what took place, which is a promising start. 

Howard, the 49-year-old former NBA player and Michigan star, was upset that Wisconsin coach Greg Gard called a timeout in the final minute resetting the 10-second half-court clock. Michigan, down 15 points with 15 seconds left, was pressing the Badgers backups. He let Gard know about it in the handshake line and Gard stepped in front of him to address the matter. Shortly thereafter, Howard landed what appeared to be an open-handed swing to the face of Wisconsin assistant Joe Krabbenhoft. 

After the game, Howard didn’t seem to understand the gravity of the situation. He said he felt the “need to defend himself,” that someone — presumably Gard — touched him first. Howard is 6-foot-9. Gard isn’t anywhere close to that. Was Howard concerned for his knees? After the initial incident, they were separated. But Howard returned to the skirmish for more, which is when he raised his right hand, leading to more punches from what looked like Michigan players. 

Wonder where they got the idea that was OK? Right, the guy who is supposed to lead them, and didn’t apologize for the ugliness that took place. 

Michigan coach Juwan Howard smacked one of Wisconsin’s assistants.
CBS
Juwan Howard did not apologize during his postgame press conference.
AP

Overall, Howard has done a solid job in his three years at Michigan. He reached an Elite Eight in his second season and has recruited well. But he has been prone to blowups like this one. During last year’s Big Ten Tournament, he was ejected after getting into a shouting match with Maryland coach Mark Turgeon and needed to be restrained by his assistant coaches. 

Michigan and the Big Ten need to take a stand. Send a message to Juwan Howard that he has to be better. He can’t coach another game this season. 

Coming up short 

Unless there is an unforeseen development, the Big East season will end with a handful of significant games not being played due to earlier COVID-19 pauses that may impact the postseason. Creighton, firmly on the bubble, will not make up its home game with No. 8 Providence. St. John’s, trying to play its way into the tournament picture, will not play its home game with Marquette. And Providence, the league leader at this moment, isn’t expected to play the aforementioned Creighton game or visit Seton Hall or host No. 24 Connecticut. 

According to sources, the league discussed playing games the Monday before the conference tournament begins, but it was agreed upon not to do so. These games were not able to be made up because there wasn’t time to fit them in under the parameters that were set. That includes teams not playing three games the final week of the regular season or having consecutive weeks with three games in a single week. Those parameters could only be bypassed if both teams agreed, and that didn’t happen in these instances. 

St. John’s is losing opportunities to add wins to its NCAA Tournament resume.
Robert Sabo

But the league is only hurting itself by not making sure the games are played. St. John’s and Creighton lose out on résumé-building games while Providence may end up the regular-season champion despite a much easier schedule than others. More should’ve been done, and still could be, to get these games in. 

No’ way 

Saturday, the NCAA Tournament selection committee released its made-for-television top 16 just over three weeks before Selection Sunday. Mostly, it went as expected. The one-seeds were Gonzaga, Auburn, Arizona and Kansas. The Big 12 had four teams while the SEC and Big Ten had three apiece. One major problem with it was the placement of 10th-ranked Villanova, the three-seed in the East, which is being played at Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia. The Wildcats would basically be playing home games the second weekend if they get there. That would be unacceptable and unfair to the teams seeded ahead of the Big East’s best team, Kansas and No. 2 Kentucky. They are supposed to be protected from such regional advantages even if Villanova only scheduled three games at Wells Fargo Center this year so it couldn’t be counted as one of its home sites.

Game of the Week 

No. 6 Kansas at No. 7 Baylor, Saturday, 8 p.m. 

Kansas has reclaimed its spot atop the treacherous Big 12, and, owning a two-game lead over Texas Tech and Baylor, it may be able to clinch the regular-season title Saturday night in Waco. Since an ugly 18-point home loss to Kentucky, the Jayhawks have won five of six, which includes a 24-point beatdown of Baylor. The battle in the backcourt will be fun to follow, as Ochai Agbaji, Christian Braun and Remy Martin of Kansas meet James Akinjo, Adam Flagler and LJ Cryer of Baylor. 

Seedings: 

1: Gonzaga, Arizona, Auburn, Kansas 

2: Kentucky, Purdue, Duke, Baylor 

3: Villanova, Texas Tech, Illinois, Wisconsin, 

4: UCLA, Providence, Houston, Tennessee, 

Stock Watch 

Eric Mussleman – Up

Has anyone handled the move from the NBA to college better? The former Warriors and Kings coach is on track to reach his fifth NCAA Tournament in seven seasons as a college coach at Nevada and Arkansas, and of those two years he missed the Dance, one was the COVID-19-shortened season. After leading the Razorbacks to the Elite Eight a year ago, expectations were lowered. The 23rd-ranked Hogs lost four of their top six scorers and started slowly. But Mussleman has figured it out, leading his reshaped team to 11 wins in 12 games to climb into third place in the loaded SEC. 

Eric Mussleman
Getty Images

South Dakota State – Up

Keep an eye on this potential March sleeper, one of only three teams undefeated in conference play. Gonzaga and Murray State are the others. The Jackrabbits are a lethal shooting team, making 45.2 percent of their attempts from distance — that’s the highest mark in the country — and feature a three-headed scoring machine of Noah Freidel, Douglas Wilson and Baylor Scheierman, all of whom average 15 points per game. They played No. 25 Alabama tough, beat Nevada and George Mason, and of their 16 Summit League wins, 11 have come by double figures. 

Zach Freemantle – Down

The Teaneck, N.J., native was considered one of the best returning players in the Big East, a legitimate Player of the Year candidate in the conference. He’s not even a top-three player on Xavier at the moment. His offensive numbers are decidedly down across the board, particularly his 3-pointer shooting, a ghastly 14.7 percent. Obviously, part of his down junior season is the result of October foot surgery. He didn’t make his debut until the start of December and hasn’t regained his confidence. As the Musketeers struggle in February, losing four of their last five games, the standout forward needs to find his form. 

Oregon – Down

Nobody has benefitted more in recent years from transfers. They spearheaded Oregon’s Sweet 16 run a year ago. But it clearly isn’t easy to make new rosters work on a yearly basis, and it hasn’t happened this season for Dana Altman and Co. The Ducks, despite big additions of Jacob Young (Rutgers), De’Vion Harmon (Oklahoma) and Quincy Guerrier (Syracuse), are skidding at the wrong time, dropping three of their last four games, suffering brutal losses to woeful Arizona State and California in that span. With a NET ranking of 63 and six sub-Quad 1 losses, a bid seems unlikely for Oregon barring a Pac-12 conference title. 



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2022 Super Bowl halftime show: Get to know Snoop Dogg, Mary J. Blige, Eminem and rest of the performers

Want to watch a group of performers who have taken home a combined 44 Grammy Awards? Well, then you better tune in to the halftime show of Super Bowl LVI between the Los Angeles Rams and Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday evening. 

There are five performers set to take the stage during the biggest sporting event of the year: Eminem, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Kendrick Lamar and Mary J. Blige. Eminem has 15 Grammys, Kendrick Lamar has taken home 13 Grammys, Mary J. Bilge has nine awards from 31 nominations and Dr. Dre has seven Grammys. (Snoop Dogg is the only one with none, despite 17 nominations).

Here is a closer look at each artist, some of their accomplishments and what we can expect from them on Feb. 13.

Eminem

Marshall Mathers, known as Eminem or Slim Shady, is a rapper, songwriter, producer and starred in “8 Mile,” a movie based on his life that won an Oscar for Best Original Song. 

The Detroit native has long mentioned football in his songs, referencing Tom Brady, Russell Wilson, John Madden, LaDainian Tomlinson, field goals and more.

Eminem and Dr. Dre have a long history together, with Dre discovering Eminem after an early mixtape of his ended up in Dre’s hands.

Dr. Dre

Dr. Dre is known as a rapper, record producer, actor, entrepreneur and is the CEO of Aftermath Entertainment and Beats Electronics. He co-founded and co-owned Death Row Records. 

Dr. Dre rose to fame in the 1990s with the rap group N.W.A. and released his first solo album “The Chronic” in 1992. On top of his own music career, he helped launch the career of many — including Eminem and 50 Cent.

Dre has songs with Eminem, Snoop Dogg and Mary J. Blige, all of whom are set to perform during halftime. Dre has added two deaf rappers, Sean Forbes and Warren “WaWa” Snipe, to the halftime performance, marking the first time sign language interpreters will be included in the halftime show.

Snoop Dogg

Snoop Dogg is no stranger to the sports world. He has dipped his foot into everything from hockey commentary to coaching a youth football team to operating a youth football league. 

Snoop’s favorite football team is the Pittsburgh Steelers, though he has been seen rooting for and at stadiums of the Las Vegas Raiders, New England Patriots and more. The 50-year-old rapper first started under the name Snoop Doggy Dogg and the exposure of being on Dre’s debut album helped launch his solo career. 

Kendrick Lamar

Kendrick Lamar, 34, is the youngest performer of the five to take the stage during the Super Bowl LVI halftime show. His mainstream debut came in 2012 with his album “Good Kid, M.A.A.D City.” The rapper, songwriter and record producer is from Compton, Calif. and is a Rams fan.

This will not be Lamar’s first halftime show at a football game. He performed at the College Football Playoff National Championship Game between the Alabama Crimson Tide and Georgia Bulldogs.

Mary J. Blige:

Mary J. Blige has 41 singles that have hit the Billboard Top 100 charts. She was signed to Uptown Records in 1991 and has since dominated the hip hop world. 

The 51-year-old singer has also made an impact in film and in 2017 became the first person nominated for an Academy Award in acting and songwriting in the same year (the film was “Mudbound.”)

For someone with the discography and level of popularity as Mary J., narrowing down a performance to a few songs or less will likely be difficult.

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Washington shooting latest news: Police ‘will not rest’ until Fred Meyer shooter is found

Fred Meyer shooting: Worker critical and one dead in Washington

Police in Richland, Washington have responded to a shooting at a Fred Meyer grocery store.

One person was killed and another, a Fred Meyer employee, was injured in the shooting. Eyewitnesses claim to have heard as many as a dozen shots.

Employees and customers hid and sheltered in place in stock rooms, restrooms, the pharmacy and offices until police could reach them to escort them to safety.

Local police have released images of the suspect taken from security cameras and are seeking information on their identity and location. The suspect should be considered armed and dangerous and people have been advised to avoid the area due to police activity.

The first call to police came at 11.03am local time reporting yelling and possible gun shots within the store. Officers were dispatched and arrived on scene at 11.04am.

Officials have a person of interest in the shooting but have not yet apprehended any suspects.

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How gun violence has affected Americans in recent days

Richland, Washington, isn’t the only place struggling with instances of gun violence.

Here are some of the other major gun violence news stories The Independent has covered in recent weeks.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 03:20

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Grocery store will remain closed overnight as police analyse crime scene

The Fred Meyer where an individual shot two people on Monday in Richland, Washington, will remain closed overnight as police process the crime scene.

It will take at least 6 more hours to go through the store, according to Richland police chief Brigit Clary.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 02:50

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FBI and other federal agencies join search for Fred Meyer shooter

Multiple federal agencies have joined in the manhunt for an individual who shot multiple people inside a Washington grocery store on Monday.

The FBI, Drug Enforcement Agency, and US Marshals are all assisting Richland, Washington, police as they seek to find the suspect, who is accused of killing one person and seriously harming a second.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 02:20

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Where to find information about the Fred Meyer shooting in Washington

As police continue to investigate the multi-person shooting at a Fred Meyer grocery store in Washington, the best place for official updates is the Richland Police Department Facebook page, which you can find below.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 01:50

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How police identified the Fred Meyer shooting suspect

Police are still hunting for the individual suspected of shooting two people at a Fred Meyer grocery store in Richland, Washington, but officials have located a person of interest in the case.

“We had multiple investigative efforts concentrated at the scene. Just through witnesses. We had a large amount of witnesses inside the store,” said Richland police chief Brigit Clary during a press conference on Monday. “We posted a picture on social media, and we had a lot of information flooding in regard the suspect.”

Police aren’t releasing details about the person of interest to protect their ongoing investigation.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 01:20

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No other victims inside store besides two affected: Richland police chief

Police located only two victims inside the Fred Meyer store in Richland, Washington, where a shooting took place: one who was deceased and another who is now receiving critical care at a local hospital.

That’s the latest from police chief Brigit Clary, who updated the community on Monday evening, suggesting the incident will not be the sort of large mass shooting that are becoming frightfully common in the US.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 00:51

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WATCH: Richland Police provide update about Fred Meyer shooting

Richland, Washington, police are about to start a press conference providing updates about this morning’s shooting at a Fred Meyer grocery store.

You can watch the remarks on Facebook Live at the link below.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 00:44

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‘We don’t know what that conversation was’: Police analysing security footage for clues to motive

Richland Police have confirmed that security footage captured the alleged Fred Meyer shooter having an interaction with someone in the store before fatally shooting them.

“The suspect and the deceased male from inside had some sort of interaction inside the store. We don’t know exactly to what extent that was,” an officer told reporters on Monday afternoon. “What we saw on video was a conversation. We don’t know what that conversation was.”

Police have identified a person of interest in the crime, but aren’t yet releasing his name to the public to protect an ongoing investigation.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 00:41

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READ: Fred Meyer grocery statement makes statement on shooting inside Richland, Washington store

The Fred Meyer grocery chain has made a statement about a shooting that took place Monday morning inside one of its stores in Richland, Washington.

We are deeply saddened by the incident that occurred at our Fred Meyer store located on 101 Wellsian Way in Richland, WA.

The entire Fred Meyer family offers our thoughts, prayers, and support to all affected individuals and families during this difficult time.

We are cooperating with local law enforcement, who have secured the store and parking lot. The store will remain closed while the police investigation continues, and we have initiated counseling services for our associates.

To protect the integrity of the ongoing investigation, we are referring questions to the Richland Police Department.

Josh Marcus8 February 2022 00:10

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Police identify person of interest in Fred Meyer shooting

Washington police have identified a person of interest in the shooting that took place on Monday morning in a Fred Meyer grocery store in Richland, which killed one person and severely injured another.

Richland police have not yet named the individual, but said he had a history known to the police department, though it didn’t involve any crimes related to weapons.

Josh Marcus7 February 2022 23:44

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James Webb Space Telescope team taking a rest day before sunshield tensioning begins

To celebrate the new year, consider taking a day to rest.

That’s what the team managing the complicated process of deploying the James Webb Space Telescope are doing, taking Saturday (Jan. 1) off. Work will resume on Sunday (Jan. 2), according to an agency update.

The pause comes after a long day on Friday (Dec. 31), which the team spent deploying the two mid-booms that support the width of the observatory’s kite-shaped sunshield.

Live updates: NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope mission
In photos: The Christmas launch of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope

“Work on the deployment of Webb’s sunshield mid-booms went late into the night yesterday,” agency officials wrote in the update. “Webb mission management decided this morning to pause deployment activities for today and allow the team to rest and prepare to begin Webb’s sunshield tensioning.”

Today also marks one full week since the observatory’s long-awaited Christmas-morning launch.

But launch wasn’t the most nerve-wracking time for JWST. During its first week in space, the telescope has deployed its solar arrays, conducted two course-correcting burns, and unfolded the massive sunshield that will protect sensitive instruments from the sun. The full deployment process requires one month and more than 300 points where a wrong step will doom the observatory.

The next step in that marathon is to separate the five membranes of the sunshield in a process that NASA calls “tensioning” and that is expected to take two days. Originally expected to begin today and conclude tomorrow, it will now begin tomorrow and conclude Monday (Jan. 3), if all goes smoothly.

The successful tensioning of the sunshield will mark the end of the deployment process for this key piece of JWST. The agency has said that it will hold a press conference after tensioning is complete. The observatory will then move on to unfolding its secondary mirror, according to a NASA timeline detailing the deployment process.

As of today at 1:30 p.m. EST (1830 GMT), JWST was located more than 475,000 miles (760,000 kilometers), more than halfway through its long journey to its final station in orbit around what astronomers call Earth-sun Lagrange point 2, or L2.

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her on Twitter @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook. 



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Desmond Tutu laid to rest at state funeral in South Africa

Tutu died last Sunday at the age of 90, sparking a global outpouring of tributes to the anti-apartheid hero. He had been in poor health for several years.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who delivered the main eulogy during the service at St. George’s Cathedral on Saturday, hailed Tutu as “our national conscience.” Tutu’s widow Nomalizo Leah, known as “Mama Leah,” sat in a wheelchair in the front row of the congregation, draped in a purple scarf, the color of her husband’s clerical robes.

For decades, Tutu was one of the primary voices pushing the South African government to end apartheid, the country’s official policy of racial segregation and White minority rule. He won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, before apartheid ended in the early 1990s and the long-imprisoned Nelson Mandela became the nation’s first Black president.

The revered anti-apartheid fighter will be remembered as one of the most important voices of the 20th century. However, his funeral was subdued: Before he died, Tutu asked for a simple service and the cheapest available coffin, according to two of his foundations. Tutu’s funeral was limited to just 100 people, in line with current Covid-19 regulations.

In his address at St. George’s Cathedral, a church famous for its role in the resistance against apartheid, Ramaphosa described Tutu as “a man with a faith as deep as it was abiding,” and “a crusader in the struggle for freedom, for justice, for equality and for peace, not just in South Africa, the country of his birth, but around the world as well.”

“Archbishop Desmond Tutu has been our moral compass and national conscience,” Ramaphosa said. “He saw our country as a ‘rainbow nation’, emerging from the shadow of apartheid, united in its diversity, with freedom and equal rights for all.”

“He embraced all who had ever felt the cold wind of exclusion and they in turn embraced him,” Ramaphosa added, praising Tutu’s advocacy for LGBTQ rights, campaigning against child marriage, and support for the Palestinian cause.

“His was a life lived honestly and completely. He has left the world a better place. We remember him with a smile,” Ramaphosa said.

Tutu’s daughter Naomi also paid tribute to her father and thanked the public for their prayers. “Thank you, daddy, for the many ways you showed us love, for the many times you challenged us, for the many times you comforted us,” she said.

Reverend Michael Nuttall, the retired Bishop of Natal who was once Tutu’s deputy, delivered the main sermon, calling Tutu a “giant among us morally and spiritually.”

His voice breaking at times, Nuttal said being Tutu’s deputy between 1989 and 1996 “struck a chord perhaps in the hearts and minds of many people: a dynamic Black leader and his White deputy in the dying years of apartheid; and hey presto, the heavens did not collapse. We were a foretaste, if you like, of what could be in our wayward, divided nation.”

In a video message played at the ceremony, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, said an Archbishop of Canterbury giving a tribute to Archbishop Tutu was “like a mouse giving a tribute to an elephant.”

Tutu’s body will be cremated in a private ceremony after Saturday’s requiem mass and will then be interred behind the pulpit at the cathedral.

Events were planned throughout the country to give South Africans the opportunity to collectively mourn ‘”the Arch,” as he was known, while still practicing social distancing.

A week-long remembrance began Monday with the ringing of the bells at St. George’s Cathedral, which held a special place in the late archbishop’s heart, so much so that he requested his ashes be interred there in a special repository.

On Wednesday, several religious leaders gathered outside Tutu’s former home on Vilakazi Street — where his friend and ally Nelson Mandela also grew up — in Soweto, a township in Johannesburg, for a series of events. Another memorial service was held Wednesday in Cape Town, and Tutu’s wife, Nomalizo Leah Tutu, met with friends of the late archbishop on Thursday for an “intimate” gathering.
South Africans also paid their respects before Tutu’s plain pine coffin on Thursday and Friday as it lay in state at the cathedral.

Tutu was born October 7, 1931, in Klerksdorp, a town in South Africa’s Transvaal province, the son of a teacher and a domestic worker. Tutu had plans to become a doctor, partly thanks to a boyhood bout of tuberculosis, which put him in the hospital for more than a year, and even qualified for medical school, he said.

But his parents couldn’t afford the fees, so he turned to teaching.

“The government was giving scholarships for people who wanted to become teachers,” he told the Academy of Achievement. “I became a teacher and I haven’t regretted that.”

However, he was horrified at the state of Black South African schools, and even more horrified when the Bantu Education Act was passed in 1953 that racially segregated the nation’s education system. He resigned in protest. Not long after, the Bishop of Johannesburg agreed to accept him for the priesthood — Tutu believed it was because he was a Black man with a university education, a rarity in the 1950s — and took up his new vocation.  

He was ordained in 1960 and spent the ’60s and early ’70s alternating between London and South Africa. He returned to his home country for good in 1975, when he was appointed dean of St. Mary’s Cathedral in Johannesburg. As the government became increasingly oppressive — detaining Black people, establishing onerous laws — Tutu became increasingly outspoken.

CNN’s Larry Madowo, Chandler Thornton, Allegra Goodwin and Niamh Kennedy contributed reporting.

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Vikings’ Adam Thielen to miss rest of regular season after surgery for ankle injury: Sources

Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen will miss the rest of the regular season after undergoing surgery on his ankle on Tuesday, sources told The Athletic. The Vikings placed Thielen on injured reserve Wednesday.

Thielen returned Sunday after missing two games because of a left ankle sprain, but re-injured his ankle in the Week 16 loss to the Los Angeles Rams. For the season, Thielen has 67 receptions for 726 yards and a team-leading 10 touchdowns in 13 games.

Sunday’s loss dropped Minnesota to 7-8 with two games remaining. The Vikings are a game behind the San Francisco 49ers and Philadelphia Eagles for the final two wild-card spots in the NFC.

Minnesota travels to the Green Bay Packers this week before closing the regular season at home against the Chicago Bears.

(Photo: Rey Del Rio / Getty Images)



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