Boston University has something to prove in NCAA softball tournament
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
The next stop on the Boston University Terriers “Revenge Tour” is Athens, Ga.After missing last season’s NCAA Division 1 softball tournament, the Terriers began the 2023 campaign determined to avenge their lost opportunity.The Terriers rolled through a solid non-league slate and the Patriot League regular season at a record pace. The run culminated in a 2-0 victory over Army in the PL championship game that secured an automatic berth in the NCAA tournament.“I think this team is really special,” said Terriers third basewomen Caitlin Coker, after a spirited practice on Tuesday morning at BU Softball Field. “2021 was a great year because we won as well, but this whole year our motto was the Revenge Tour because we lost last year.“We are playing with a little bit of a chip on our shoulders and that kept us hungry all season. It does not matter who is on the other side of the field. We are just worried about us and trying to get the job done.“It has been our motto the whole season and we...Former sex workers back partial decriminalization and more exit services
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
Audrey Morrissey, co-executive director of My Life My Choice, said she showed up to the State House Tuesday to fight for Black and brown women of color who are stuck in the commercial sex industry.As a survivor of the industry herself, Morrissey said trying to get out of sex work is difficult. It’s hard to find a job and housing, she said, and most survivors return to the life because there is no path out.“I stayed in after my exploiter went to jail, and I come from that Combat Zone area,” Morrissey said of her time in the industry. “It wasn’t until after I left that the traumatic impacts caught up with me.”Morrissey was among a coalition of advocates who packed a State House hearing room to speak in favor of legislation from a trio of Democrats that ensure people who are bought and sold for sex will not be criminalized and repeal laws on common streetwalking, nightwalking, sex for a fee, and solicitation for prostituted persons.It was among a handful of bills addressing sex ...Garrett Crochet returns to the Chicago White Sox bullpen, while Liam Hendriks’ timetable remains ‘day by day’
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
The emotions hadn’t hit Garrett Crochet yet.“Probably after I get my feet wet, whenever that might be,” Crochet said Tuesday afternoon.The Chicago White Sox activated the reliever Tuesday as he made his way back from Tommy John surgery. The left-hander missed all of last season.“Arm has been feeling good,” Crochet said before the series opener against the Cleveland Guardians at Guaranteed Rate Field. “Just excited to get here and help the guys out.”Crochet exited a March 31, 2022, Cactus League game against the Cincinnati Reds in Goodyear, Ariz., with the elbow injury and had surgery five days later.“Sometimes (the process) feels long, but it also feels like yesterday,” he said. “Just taking it one day at a time, following the program. Being present with every moment. Doesn’t really feel like it took that long.”He made six rehab appearances this spring at Double-A Birmingham and Triple-A Charlotte with a combine...California pledges to build channel for threatened fish to bypass Gold Rush-era dam
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
MARYSVILLE, Calif. (AP) — California officials on Tuesday said they will spend about $60 million to build a channel along the Yuba River so that salmon and other threatened fish species can get around a Gold Rush-era dam that for more than a century has cut off their migration along the chilly waters of Sierra Nevada streams.The project is the latest example of state and federal officials trying to reverse the environmental harms caused by the century-old infrastructure along California’s major rivers and streams. Those dams and canals allowed the state to grow into the economic powerhouse it is today. But they have devastated natural ecosystems that have pushed salmon — a species once so abundant it sustained Native American populations — to the edge of extinction. Last year, federal regulators approved the largest river restoration project in U.S. history that will remove four dams along the Klamath River near the Oregon-California border. State and federal officials have pl...Democratic primary for mayor in Philadelphia crowded with 5 front-runners
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
Voters in Philadelphia are determining who will likely lead the nation’s sixth-largest city from a crowded field of Democratic candidates on Tuesday, as the city faces upticks in gun violence and quality-of-life issues that make people feel unsafe.Five front-runner candidates — including former city council members, former city officials and a grocery store franchiser — have sought to differentiate themselves in a tight contest. The Philadelphia race serves as the latest barometer of how residents of some of the nation’s largest cities hope to emerge from the pandemic, which heightened concerns about crime, poverty and inequality. The results have sometimes been tumultuous in other parts of the country, leading to the defeat of the incumbent mayor of Chicago in February and the ouster of San Francisco’s district attorney last year.Philadelphia voters will choose between front-runner candidates including former council members Allan Domb, Helen Gym and Cherelle Parker; former c...Biden speaks out against ‘antisemitic bile’ during Jewish American Heritage Month celebration
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden marked Jewish American Heritage Month on Tuesday by highlighting his administration’s efforts to combat rising antisemitism, at a White House reception that featured performances from the stars of the Broadway revival of “Parade.”Biden told the crowd it was important to him personally to guard against the rise of “antisemitic bile” in the world, and in particular the U.S. “Jewish Americans are shattered by a long and painful history of the oldest, the most sinister forces hate and anti-semitism,” he said, talking about how he learned of the horrors of the Holocaust from his father and how it has motivated him to speak out against hate.He also reiterated how his decision to run for the White House in 2020 was shaped by a 2017 neo-Nazi march in Charlottesville, Virginia. The president, who just weeks ago announced he would run for reelection, spoke frequently during the 2020 campaign about the “Unite the Right” rally led by white nationalis...New Liberal law would make it harder for some repeat violent offenders to get bail
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
OTTAWA — The Liberals’ new bail-reform legislation includes new measures that would make it more difficult for some repeat violent offenders to get released on bail.Justice Minister David Lametti introduced the bill Tuesday morning amid an ongoing plea from premiers, police associations and victims’ rights groups to strengthen the law. He said the bill responds “directly” to their concerns.The legislation introduces reverse-onus bail conditions for people charged with serious violent offences involving a weapon, in cases where the person was convicted of a similar violent offence within the past five years.It will also add some firearms offences to existing reverse-onus provisions, and expand the provision of that measure in cases where the alleged crimes involve intimate partner violence.While the burden of proof usually rests on prosecutors to convince judges why offenders should stay behind bars, this means that in some cases, the offender will now be the ...Minnesota man accused of building arsenal to fight police pleads guilty to possessing machine gun
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minnesota man who told an FBI informant that he was building an arsenal of automatic weapons to use against police and admired mass shooters pleaded guilty Tuesday to illegally possessing a machine gun.River Smith, 21, of the Minneapolis suburb of Savage, entered his plea on the single count before U.S. District Judge David Doty. His sentencing will be scheduled later. The maximum sentence is 10 years.Smith was initially charged in December with possession of a machine gun — specifically devices to convert guns to fully automatic fire — and attempting to possess unregistered hand grenades. He paid an FBI informant $690 for four “auto sear” devices and three dummy grenades, prosecutors alleged at the time.“Law enforcement took him down before he could execute his plan,” federal prosecutor Manda Sertich said at a hearing in December, when a magistrate judge denied bail.FBI Special Agent Mark Etheridge testified at that hearing that when Smith was arrested he had a...Montana abortion clinics ask judge to block law that bans second-trimester abortion method
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Planned Parenthood of Montana on Tuesday asked a state judge to temporarily block a law that bans the abortion method most commonly used after 15 weeks of gestation, arguing it is unconstitutional.The organization filed the complaint over the law to ban dilation and evacuation abortions just hours after Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte’s office announced he had signed the bill.The law “is the latest salvo in the Legislature’s ongoing assault on Montanans’ right to seek safe and lawful pre-viability abortions — a right guaranteed by the Montana Constitution,” the complaint states.Montana’s Supreme Court ruled in 1999 that the state constitutional right to privacy includes the right to a pre-viability abortion from a provider of the patient’s choice, the lawsuit states.Under the new ban, which took effect immediately, anyone who performs a dilation and evacuation abortion can be charged with a felony that can be punished by 5 to 10 years in prison and a fine of up t...Former tribal leader sentenced for taking bribes in North Dakota
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:19:20 GMT
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A former government official of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation has been sentenced to five years in prison for accepting bribes and kickbacks from a construction contractor at Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota. Randall Phelan, 58, of Mandaree, was an elected representative of the governing body of the Three Affiliated Tribes from 2013 to 2020. Investigators said Phelan solicited and accepted bribes totaling more than $645,000 and helped the contractor’s business by awarding contracts, fabricating bids and managing fraudulent invoices.He was sentenced Monday after pleading guilty in October to conspiracy to commit bribery concerning programs receiving federal funds, honest services wire fraud and bribery concerning programs receiving federal funds. He had faced a maximum of 20 years in prison.Co-conspirator Delvin Reeves, who was a project manager, was sentenced in November to about five years in prison after pleading guilty in 2021 to one ...Latest news
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