Yankees Notebook: Aaron Judge playing more sim games in Tampa
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
After taking cuts in a simulated game at Yankee Stadium on Sunday, Aaron Judge is doing more of the same in Florida.The reigning MVP, recovering from a torn ligament in his right big toe, played five simulated innings in Tampa on Tuesday, according to Aaron Boone. Judge hit, ran the bases and played the field, though the manager said the slugger didn’t see any action on defense. Boone had yet to receive a final report on Judge’s day when he spoke to reporters Tuesday, but he assumed it went well and expected Judge to play in another sim game with “maybe a little more volume” on Wednesday.Boone added that he doesn’t know if Judge will require a rehab assignment once he’s ready for actual games. “Everything’s in play,” the skipper said before the start of the Subway Series, but the current focus is on getting Judge as many at-bats as possible while he remains on a “day-to-day” schedule.“I wouldn’t rule anyth...‘Good morning’ attack lands alleged assailant locked up
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
The man accused of punching a woman no less than seven times in the face because she did not tell him “Good morning” has been found dangerous and will be detained for 120 days.“When people say good morning to you, you should say ‘Hi,’ you crazy (expletive),” Ian Atkinson allegedly said to his alleged victim, a 59-year-old woman who at the time prosecutors say was watering her shrubs on Balsam Street in Dorchester after getting home from an overnight shift on July 13.Atkinson, 33, of Dorchester, appeared Tuesday morning in municipal court in Dorchester for a dangerousness hearing. Judge Maureen Flaherty ordered Atkinson detained for 120 days.Assistant District Attorney Michael Tomasini said Atkinson got out of his Mercedes sedan parked in the area of the alleged victim’s home, walked over and then, “unprovoked,” assaulted her as she was singing. The punches, according to a hospital report summarized by the prosecutor at the hearing, left her with a fractured nose, subconjunctival hem...‘I really feel good’: Yoán Moncada returns from the injured list and the Chicago White Sox move Jake Burger to 2B
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
There were times that manager Pedro Grifol wasn’t sure if Chicago White Sox third baseman Yoán Moncada would return this season from lower back inflammation.“It was day to day,” Grifol said Tuesday afternoon. “He’d come in and say, ‘I feel good,’ and I would be optimistic that he would be back. And at times he would say, ‘I’m not feeling good.’”The last couple of weeks had Grifol believing Moncada was heading in the right direction. Tuesday, the Sox reinstated Moncada from the 10-day injured list and he was in the lineup for the City Series against the Cubs at Guaranteed Rate Field.“I feel good,” Moncada said through an interpreter. “After all I’ve been dealing with, this is the first time I really feel good.”Back issues have limited Moncada this season.He went on the IL on June 14 with the lower back inflammation, his second back-related stint. He was on the IL from April 11 to May1...Crews battle fire near MCAS Miramar
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
SAN DIEGO -- A fire caused by a military explosion broke out on Tuesday near Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, according to officials.The fire occurred in East Miramar around 2:34 p.m. and has now spread at least 50 acres, MCAS Miramar tweeted at 4:38 p.m.MCAS Miramar says the fire was caused by an Explosive Ordnance Disposal detonation during training.Multiple agencies are at the scene working to put out the fire. Two helicopters and two Type 3 Strike Teams from San Diego Fire-Rescue are also on site to assist in containing it.No injuries or structural damage has been reported at this time, officials said.Check back for updates on this developing story.500-year-old manuscript signed by Spanish conquistador Hernando Cortés returned to Mexico
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
BOSTON (AP) — A nearly 500-year-old manuscript signed by the Spanish conquistador Hernando Cortés in 1527 has been returned to the Archivo General de la Nación de México – Mexico’s national archives in Mexico City, U.S. officials said Tuesday.The manuscript is a payment order signed by Cortés on April 27, 1527, authorizing the purchase of rose sugar for the pharmacy in exchange for 12 gold pesos.It is believed to be one of several pieces unlawfully removed from a collection of documents concerning a Spanish expedition to Central America in 1527 that is housed in Mexico’s national archives.Last week officials from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts and the FBI participated in a formal repatriation ceremony at Mexico’s national archives, where the manuscript is believed to have been unlawfully removed sometime before 1993.It is a violation of federal law to transport or receive stolen goods valued at more than $5,000 that have traveled in foreign or interstat...West Africa recorded over 1,800 terrorist attack in first six months of 2023, regional official says
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — West Africa recorded over 1,800 terrorist attacks in the first six months of the year resulting in nearly 4,600 deaths with dire humanitarian consequences, and a top regional official said Tuesday that’s just “a snippet of the horrendous impact of insecurity.”Omar Touray told the U.N. Security Council that half a million people in the 15-nation Economic Community of West African States known as ECOWAS are refugees and nearly 6.2 million are internally displaced. If there isn’t an adequate international response to the 30 million people ECOWAS assesses need food right now, he said, the number of people in need will increase to 42 million by the end of next month.Touray, who is president of the ECOWAS Commission, singled out the following drivers of insecurity in the region: terrorism, armed rebellion, organized crime, unconstitutional changes of government, illegal maritime activities, environmental crises and fake news.He said the region is worried about the re...Anchorage mayor wants to give homeless people a one-way ticket to warm climates before Alaska winter
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — An unfunded proposal by Anchorage’s mayor to pay for plane tickets to warmer climates for homeless people who would otherwise be forced to winter outside in the bitter cold has caused a stir in Alaska’s biggest city.Last year, eight people — a record for the city — died of exposure in Anchorage and the closure of a large arena earlier this year that served as a makeshift city shelter is sure to exacerbate the crisis in a place where winter temperatures regularly dip below zero.“When people approach us and want to go to someplace warm or they want to go to some town where they have family or friends that can take care of them, if they choose to go there, we’ll support that,” Mayor Dave Bronson said at a Tuesday news conference.If the program moves forward, people can choose to relocate to the Lower 48 or somewhere else in Alaska where it might be warmer or where they have relatives.With the pandemic, officials configured the roughly 6,000-seat Sullivan Arena ...Vatican abuse investigators begin their audit of secretive Peru-based Catholic society
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
LIMA, Peru (AP) — Two key Vatican investigators on Tuesday began an audit in Peru’s capital of a secretive Roman Catholic society with chapters across South America and in the U.S. following allegations that its founder sexually molested young recruits.Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna and Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu, from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, questioned the society’s spokespeople along with alleged abuse victims and journalists who have written on the case. The questioning took place in the Apostolic Nunciature in Lima.The scandal at the Peru-based Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, or Sodalitium of Christian Life, has close parallels to other cases of charismatic Catholic leaders in Latin America being accused of sex abuse — as well as the church dragging its feet on investigating claims and trying to keep scandals quiet.Founded in 1971, Sodalitium has a presence in schools and churches and runs retreat facilities with communities in Peru, Argentina, Colombia, Br...Lawmakers say the UK should ban Russia’s Wagner as a terrorist group
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
LONDON (AP) — Britain has “underplayed and underestimated” the threat posed by the Russian Wagner mercenary group and should ban it as a terrorist organization, a powerful committee of U.K. lawmakers said Wednesday.The House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee said the sanctions imposed by Britain on Wagner are “underwhelming” and U.K. authorities have done little to track the private army’s activities beyond Ukraine, where it has fought as part of Russia’s invading forces.“There are serious national security threats to the U.K. and its allies of allowing the network to continue to thrive,” said the committee, whose members come from both governing and opposition parties. It said Britain should “urgently proscribe the Wagner Network as a terrorist organization,” something the Conservative government has so far been unwilling to do.In a 78-page report, the committee said Wagner, which has close ties to the Russian state, operates like an “international crimin...Colorado students at private career school that lost accreditation get federal loan relief
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:30:59 GMT
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — The federal government will forgive loans for thousands of Colorado students who attended a private career school that lost accreditation and advertised with misleading data on alumni job placement and earnings that was more rosy than realistic, federal and state officials announced Tuesday.CollegeAmerica, owned by Salt Lake City-based Center for Excellence in Higher Education, Inc., had locations in Colorado and Arizona and offered associate degrees in business, computer technology and medical assisting, and bachelor’s degrees in business and computer science. It closed in 2021.In all, 7,400 former students enrolled at the three CollegeAmerica locations in Colorado between Jan. 1, 2006, and July 1, 2020, will have their federal student loans refunded and remaining balances forgiven after the school overstated — sometimes by double — the salaries that graduates could earn, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser said in a news conference.“They basical...Latest news
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