Tomas Nosek signs with the New Jersey Devils
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
The last of the Bruins’ unrestricted free agents has finally hooked on somewhere else.Tomas Nosek signed a one-year deal with the New Jersey Devils for $1 million on Wednesday. Though he had a very gOd season in his fourth line center role with the Bruins, Nosek was the only one of the five UFAs to take a pay cut.Connor Clifton, signed by Buffalo, bumped his annual pay up from $1 million to $3.33 for three years; Garnet Hathaway went from a $1.5 million to a $2.35 million AAV for two years with Philadelphia; Tyler Bertuzzi bumped up from $4.75 million to $5.5 million on a one-year prove-it contract with Toronto; and Dmitry Orlov hit the short-term jackpot, signing with Carolina on a two-year deal worth a $7.75 AAV, up from the $5.1 annual payout on his last contract.But Nosek appears to have been a victim of the stagnant salary cap. If anyone deserved a raise – and not a break-the-bank one, but an acknowledgment of a job well done – it would have been Nosek. Employed almost ex...Shooting at a South Florida Walmart kills 1 person and wounds 2 others
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
MIAMI (AP) — One person was dead and two others were wounded following a shooting Wednesday at a South Florida Walmart, authorities said.The shooting occurred at the Walmart in Florida City, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of Miami, Miami-Dade police spokesman Luis Sierra said.Rescue workers transported three victims to a nearby hospital, and one later died. The victims weren’t immediately identified.Officials didn’t immediately release details about the shooting, but police confirmed that one person was in custody.David Fischer, The Associated PressPittsburgh synagogue attack survivors testify about overcoming physical and emotional wounds
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Officer Tim Matson described in federal court Wednesday how a resilient weed helped to restore his will to live after his body was shattered by bullet wounds in the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history.Matson was shot in his head and body on Oct. 27, 2018, when he and other police officers charged into Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue to halt the massacre that left 11 worshippers dead. The SWAT police officer was hospitalized for months, endured off-the-chart pain and underwent 25 surgeries. He had to relearn how to walk. “I was in a pretty dark place,” he testified, admitting to suicidal thoughts.“I got to the point where I had enough, I was in constant pain, I knew I would never be the same,” Matson said. But in his yard, which had recently been weed-whacked, he found a weed in a bucket that was growing still.“Somebody tried to kill it,” yet it survived, he said. Matson realized then the importance of the support from his family and colleagues.“I...Jason Aldean’s new music video was filmed at a lynching site. A big country music network pulled it
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
Country music star Jason Aldean ‘s latest music video for “Try That In A Small Town,” lasted just one weekend on Country Music Television before the network pulled it in response to an outcry over historically charged references.In the video, Aldean — who has been awarded county music artist of the decade by the Academy of Country Music — performs in front of the Maury County Courthouse in Columbia, Tennessee. This is the site of the 1946 Columbia race riot and the 1927 mob lynching of an 18-year-old Black teenager named Henry Choate. Aldean’s video, which was released last Friday, has received fervent criticism online, with some claiming the visual is a “dog whistle” and others labeling it “pro-lynching.”Interspersed between performance footage of Aldean are news clips of violent riots and flag burning. A Fox News chyron reads: “State of emergency declared in Georgia.” “Cuss out a cop, spit in his face / Stomp on the flag and light it up / Yeah, ya think you...Quebec needs to do more to protect traffic signallers on work sites, union says
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
MONTREAL — After a hit-and-run that killed one traffic signaller and injured another last week in Montreal, a union representing traffic controllers says the province needs to do more to protect them.A 39-year-old signaller died on Monday as a result of his injuries, police confirmed Wednesday. The other worker, also 39, suffered minor injuries. The driver who allegedly caused the July 12 collision, a 68-year-old man, surrendered to authorities and was later released.Martin L’Abbée of United Steelworkers, the union that represents around 1,000 traffic signallers in the province, says the incident marks Quebec’s 19th traffic controller death in the last three decades, including signallers and workers installing signage.He called the figure “inconceivable,” likening the work controllers do to protect road users to that of police officers.“This has to stop,” he said. “They’re not policemen, but they’re protecting everyone.”Uni...Gunman toting heavy ammo and explosives cased scene before fatal ‘ambush’ shooting on Fargo police
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
FARGO, N.D. — A man armed with 1,800 rounds of ammunition, a grenade and other explosives in his car ambushed officers who were investigating a crash, killing one and wounding two before a fourth stopped him, thwarting what authorities described as plans for further mayhem, officials said Wednesday.Mohamad Barakat, 37, shot Officers Jake Wallin, Andrew Dotas and Tyler Hawes from inside his car on Friday before they could even draw their guns, North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley said at a news conference. Wallin was killed while Dotas and Hawes remain hospitalized in critical condition. Wrigley said Barakat also shot and injured a bystander.But Officer Zach Robinson disabled Barakat’s .223 -caliber rifle with a shot from his 9 mm handgun from 75 feet (22.86 meters) away, Wrigley said, leaving about 20 rounds still in the magazine. Robinson ordered Barakat 16 times to drop the handgun he continued to wave as he moved in closer and finally killed the suspect in a confronta...CP NewsAlert: Surrey, B.C., police issue Amber Alert for brother and sister
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
KELOWNA, B.C. — An Amber Alert has been issued across all of British Columbia for an eight-year-old girl and her 10-year-old brother. Surrey RCMP say Aurora Bolton and Joshuah Bolton were last seen in Krafty’s Kitchen and Bar in Kelowna.Police say the suspect is Verity Bolton, who is five-foot-two-inches tall, with brown hair and eyes. The three are possibly travelling in a blue Dodge D250 pickup with licence plate number SJ2708. Aurora is described as three-feet-11-inches tall, with shoulder length brown hair and eyes, while her older brother has brown hair and blue eyes. Police say that anyone spotting the vehicle or the suspect should not approach and should call 911. This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 19, 2023. The Canadian PressTimeline of events surrounding failed talk leading to the B.C. port strike
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
The union representing about 7,400 port workers in British Columbia has issued a new 72-hour strike notice that could shut down cargo movements across the province again on Saturday.Here is a timeline surrounding the events.2022Nov. 30: The British Columbia Maritime Employers Association provides notice to commence collective bargaining to the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada.2023Feb. 16: Negotiations begin.March 20: The ILWU serves a notice of dispute to the federal government, signalling an impasse, and requests the appointment of a conciliation officer.March 29: Talks enter a 60-day conciliation period.March 31: The existing collective agreement between the BCMEA and the ILWU expires.May 30: Conciliation ends. Talks enter a cooling-off period of 21 days.June 5: The ILWU’s negotiating committee authorizes a strike vote to be conducted on June 9 and 10.June 12: The ILWU says members voted 99.24 per cent in favour of supporting strike action if necessary.June...Biden administration tells judge that its new asylum rule is not a reboot of Trump’s efforts
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration argued Wednesday that its new asylum rule is different from versions put forward under President Donald Trump in a court hearing before a judge who threw out Trump’s attempts to limit asylum on the U.S.-Mexico border.“2023 is not 2019,” said Erez Reuveni, the Department of Justice lawyer who argued the case.The rule makes it extremely difficult for migrants who come directly to the southern border to get asylum unless they use a government app to make an appointment or they have already tried to seek protection in a country they passed through on their way to the U.S.Opponents say it’s essentially a rehash of Trump efforts — a question that gave the online hearing Wednesday a sense of deja vu. The San Francisco-based federal judge who will decide the case, Jon S. Tigar, ruled against the Trump administration’s two attempts to limit asylum. President Joe Biden’s administration instituted its rule on May 11 with the ex...Skilling: Cloudy with possible showers Thursday
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:25:31 GMT
Chicago's weather remained comfortable today even as much of the country to the south—all the way from California to Florida---baked. There have been 860 record high temps broken in the past 7 days nationally. Extreme heat is making news on three continents in the northern hemisphere, taxing electrical grids given the demand for fans and air conditioners. Meantime, a combination of heat and drought in Canada has nearly 900 fires still burning in that country's worst fire season on record. Two-thirds of those fires are out of control. Exhausted firefighters who have never had to fight so many fires so early in a fire season are being supplemented by 1,000 Canadian military personnel. Every time steering winds shift into the Lower 48 from Canada, a veil of smoke sweeps into Chicago's airspace.Air quality has actually improved a bit today coming in at the low end of the "MODERATE" range on EPA's 6 tier air quality scale.Chicago logged its 4th con...Latest news
- Stock market today: Wall Street holds steady ahead of retail sales data
- Supreme Court to review Democratic lawmakers’ suit over Trump hotel lease
- Supreme Court to review South Carolina congressional map for discrimination against Black voters
- NATO mulls future security guarantees for Ukraine but wary of igniting a wider war
- Philadelphia Democratic mayoral primary pits moderates against progressives
- April’s national home sales up 11.3% from March: CREA
- Statistics Canada says wholesale sales excluding petroleum down 0.1 per cent in March
- Body found near train tracks in Morton Grove overnight
- One of Kenya's oldest lions, Loonkiito, among 10 killed by herders
- Dean's A-List Interviews: Michael J. Fox on his life and Parkinson's awareness in new film