Tag: General News

  • Warriors take on Spurs top pick Victor Wembanyama in first preseason loss

    SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors’ best shooters need only a second of daylight to get their shots off. San Antonio Spurs phenom Victor Wembanyama’s eight-foot wingspan closed any and all gaps in a Warriors’ 122-117 loss in the preseason finale on Friday night at Chase Center. The Warriors finish 4-1 in the preseason.

    A few Warriors tried to shoot over the 7-foot-4 rookie with little success. He blocked Andrew Wiggins twice, first swatting a 3-point attempt then batting away his jumper after Wiggins tried to take him to the rim one-on-one. He blocked Klay Thompson’s 3-pointer, leading to a transition dunk in which Wembanyama waited a beat under the basket with the ball to let gunning defenders fly by him before barely lifting his feet to slam the ball.

    Jonathan Kuminga had some relative success going at Wembanyama, at the start of the second half taking him one-on-one on a drive to the basket for a layup. Earlier, he rainbow-ed a jumper over Wembanyama’s outstretched arms. Kuminga finished with 13 points and a team-high five assists and six rebounds in 21 minutes.

    The Warriors learned their lesson mid-way through the first quarter: Don’t shoot the ball with Wembanyama anywhere near. But the smaller Warriors didn’t have an answer defensively for the young, athletic Spurs, who put up 72 points at the half.

    Chris Paul took on his expected role as a second unit organizer for a good chunk of the first half with a lineup of Jonathan Kuminga, Dario Saric, Gary Payton II, Cory Joseph — replaced by Thompson at the start of the second quarter. They kept the all moving often and quickly to generate open looks to make the non-Curry minutes on offense productive.

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  • Minor Fire Outbreak At Warri Refinery Won’t Affect Delivery Date For Rehabilitation Project, NNPC Limited Assures

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has assured that the minor fire outbreak at the cooling tower of the Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company Limited (WRPC) will not affect the delivery schedule of the project.

    The NNPC Limited gave the assurance in a statement issued on Friday.

    The minor fire which started in the afternoon at about 3:02pm affected the cooling tower of the Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company Limited.

    The fire occurred as a result of ongoing welding activity at the top of the cooling tower.

    The NNPC Limited said the safety officers at the Refinery acted immediately and put out the fire at about 3:30pm, adding that normalcy has since been restored

    The statement reads, “This afternoon, at about 15:02hrs, there was a minor fire incident at the cooling tower of Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company Limited (WRPC).

    “The fire which occurred as a result of ongoing welding activity at the top of the cooling tower will not affect the refinery rehabilitation project delivery schedule.

    “NNPC Limited safety officers at the Refinery acted immediately and put out the fire at about 15:30hrs; normalcy has since been restored.

    “NNPC Limited will continue to adhere to the best safety standards in all its business operations.”

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  • Fact Check: Video no muestra disturbios en una manifestación propalestina en Barcelona, es de 2020

    Las manifestaciones alrededor del mundo debido a la guerra entre Israel y Hamas no se han hecho esperar.   

    Un video en Facebook afirma mostrar enfrentamientos entre un grupo de personas y la policía de Barcelona. “AHORA: Manifestantes pro palestinos y policías se enfrentaron en las calles de Barcelona, ​​España. Las protestas son parte de represalias después del bombardeo de un hospital en Gaza”, dice la publicación del 17 de octubre.

    La publicación fue marcada como parte del esfuerzo de Meta para combatir las noticias falsas y la desinformación en su plataforma. (Lea más sobre nuestra colaboración con Meta, propietaria de Facebook e Instagram).

    En Barcelona ha habido concentraciones pro palestina recientemente, pero estas imágenes no corresponden a estas manifestaciones.

    El video es real, pero no actual, tal como dice la publicación. El video muestra los enfrentamientos entre la policía y los manifestantes en octubre de 2020, a raíz de una protesta contra las restricciones por la pandemia de COVID-19. 

    Captura de pantalla del video que muestra una manifestación en octubre de 2020 contra de las medidas de restricciones por la pandemia de COVID-19 en Barcelona.

    El video que está grabado desde un balcón, muestra a un grupo de personas que lanzan objetos contra vehículos de la policía catalana, conocida como Mossos d’Esquadra.

    Poco después, más agentes llegan al lugar y se inicia una persecución de los protestantes por parte de las autoridades.

    A través de una búsqueda en Google Street View, una función de Google Maps que permite ver la calle como si estuvieras caminando en ella, PolitiFact identificó diversos edificios de Via Laietana, la calle de Barcelona donde tuvieron lugar los enfrentamientos. Asimismo se identifican edificios concretos como la Oficina de Correos o el Instituto Nacional de Estadística.

    La agencia de noticias Scarcity Studios, publicó el 1 de noviembre del 2020 en X, antes conocido como Twitter, las mismas imágenes del video de la publicación. Estas iban acompañadas de un mensaje que decía “Barcelona,Spain : Clashes with police over lockdown restrictions results in officers injured . police used motorbikes to chase down rioters tonight with several arrests made as large crowds gathered in other places in the city to protest #worldnews #spain #Barcelona“.

    Otra publicación en X de una periodista especializada en sucesos del periódico español La Vanguardia, muestra las mismas imágenes grabadas desde otro ángulo. La publicación es del 31 de octubre de 2020. 

    También hay imágenes del mismo enfrentamiento en otros medios españoles e internacionales que escribieron sobre el tema.

    Los Mossos d’Esquadra no respondieron a la solicitud de comentarios. 

    Nuestro veredicto

    Un video dice, “AHORA: Manifestantes pro palestinos y policías se enfrentaron en las calles de Barcelona, ​​España. Las protestas son parte de represalias después del bombardeo de un hospital en Gaza”.

    El video es real, pero no actual. Fue grabado en Barcelona durante manifestaciones en contra de las restricciones por la pandemia de COVID-19, en octubre de 2020.

    Calificamos la publicación como Falsa. 

    Lea más reportes de PolitiFact en Español aquí.

    __________________________________________________________________________

    Debido a limitaciones técnicas, partes de nuestra página web aparecen en inglés. Estamos trabajando en mejorar la presentación.



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  • Can psilocybin help ease existential despair in patients with advanced cancer? Researchers hope to find out. – Paradise Post

    A new study in Colorado is trying to answer definitively whether psychedelics help at least some patients dealing with distress over advanced cancer.

    Dr. Stacy Fischer, co-leader of cancer prevention and control at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, said several small studies have found that psychedelic drugs may help patients who are experiencing demoralization or despair because of their impending mortality. The study CU is part of will have a larger and more diverse group of people, which hopefully will produce more conclusive evidence of whether there’s a benefit, she said.

    “There’s so much science that needs to be done in this space,” Fischer said.

    Psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, is still a Schedule 1 drug, meaning the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration determined it has high potential for misuse and no accepted medical use.

    But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration also released guidance earlier this year for trials involving psilocybin and some other psychedelics, and designated it as a “breakthrough” therapy for some mental health conditions, which would ease the path to getting treatments approved.

    If the data shows that psilocybin is helpful for at least some people dealing with existential despair, that information could be useful to the FDA, even though no drug companies are asking for the agency’s approval to market it for that condition, Fischer said.

    Generally, doctors can prescribe FDA-approved drugs “off label” for any condition where they might be helpful, but the agency also has the option to limit how a drug can be used if it is concerned about risk, said Dr. Brian Anderson, a psychiatrist at University of California San Francisco who is also studying psilocybin.

    That means that it’s important to have robust data justifying that it works for people nearing the end of life if patients are going to have that option, he said.

    All of the participants in the CU study will receive six hours of therapy before taking the drug and eight hours afterward, spread across multiple sessions. Half will get a dose of psilocybin and the other half will get niacin, a vitamin that causes flushing and some physical symptoms meant to mimic the effects of the psychedelic.

    “I think even those receiving the placebo are getting some benefit” from the therapy, Fischer said.

    Jim Grisgby, a professor at CU’s Denver and Anschutz campuses and one of the participating therapists, said much of the initial therapy is about preparing for the experience, since people are more likely to benefit if they’re ready to release control and go where the drugs take them. Afterward, they process anything from the experience, as well as patients’ feelings about their cancer and the grief that comes with it, he said.

    “Everybody’s got their own sense of loss,” Grisgby said.

    Research is still trying to determine how important the drug itself is, versus the therapy to integrate the experience into patients’ lives, Grigsby said. It’s likely both matter, since people who took psychedelics at Phish and Grateful Dead concerts didn’t usually come away changed, he said.

    “You’d have a lot more people having these profound experiences” if drugs were all that was needed, he said.

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  • EndSARS: Court Dismisses Suit By Fouani Nigeria Ex-Employee Alleging Torture By Nigerian Army

    A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja on Friday dismissed a lawsuit filed by an ex-employee who alleged that he was tortured by the Nigerian Army during the EndSARS protests in 2020.

    The employee, Akpan S. Jonathan, had accused his former employer, Fouani Nigeria Limited, of engaging soldiers to torture him after he was suspected of being part of the hoodlums that looted the company’s stores during the protests.

    Defendants in the suit were the Nigerian Army, his former employer, Fouani Nigerian Limited and Mr Mustapha Kharis, a Lebanese serving as the company’s general manager.

    The applicant claimed he was arrested and detained by officers of the Nigerian Army at Mambilla Barracks, on instigation of his boss, alleging he was “beaten, tortured and given dehumanizing treatment” in detention which allegedly landed him in a hospital after he was released.

    The applicant then sought an order of court for general damages against the respondents while asking the court to restrain security agencies from arresting him over the alleged invasion of his former employer’s stores.

    He attached a medical report as part of his exhibits that he was tortured.

    But in his statement on oath deposed before the court, Kharis, the company’s general manager in Nigeria’s northern region, stated he was not in Abuja on the day of the incident.

    He also denied inviting soldiers to beat up Jonathan, adding that the noise from the plaintiff and the company’s security men attracted the soldiers who were on patrol.

    Kharis maintained that during the ENDSARS protests, employees of the company whose employment were terminated were discovered to be among those who led hoodlums into the warehouse of the company and looted virtually everything in the showroom and store.

    He added that the management gave security guards instructions that none of the former employees should be allowed entry into its premises following a prior notice to them.

    In his written address, the lawyer representing the company and its general manager, Chief David More B. Orji, described the applicant as a gold digger whose job was terminated in 2019.

    “The applicant alleged he was arrested, detained and severally beaten, sustained injury, dehumanized, the doctor’s report which is the pivot of the case, was silent on the injury,” Orji submitted while asking the court to dismiss the application.

    The legal team of the Nigerian Army also denied detaining the applicant, saying during the ENDSARS protests, hoodlums arrested by the army were handed over to the Nigeria Police Force for prosecution.

    In its judgement on Friday, the court found that Jonathan did not provide credible evidence to support his allegations.

    The court noted that Jonathan’s medical report showed that the drugs administered to him were for malaria treatment, not injuries sustained from torture.

    The court also held that the time frame within which the applicant got the medical report defeated his earlier arguments that he was immediately rushed to the hospital after the allegedly came out of detention.

    “This application cannot stand and same is discountenanced by this court. As a consequence, the applicant’s application is hereby dismissed for lacking in merit, ” the court declared.

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  • Fact Check: Israel-Hamas war: How politicians, media outlets amplified uncorroborated report of beheaded babies

    Editor’s note: This story contains references and links to graphic images and videos.

    Footage of death and destruction in Israel and Gaza is plentiful, disturbing and all too real. At the same time, misinformation about the war has thrived.

    There have been verified reports that Hamas, which attacked Israel on Oct. 7, committed violence against children. But one particularly disturbing claim — that the Palestinian militant group beheaded dozens of babies — gained prominence in the days after the massacre, amplified at the U.S. and Israeli governments’ highest levels. This report remains unverified.

    Since the attack, the claim has been widely repeated by politicians including President Joe Biden, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y.; news outlets, such as CNN, Fox News and the New York Post; Israeli officials, including the prime minister’s office; actor Noah Schnapp and other social media users with large followings.

    The war’s devastation has intensified in subsequent days. The Associated Press reported Oct. 20 that in Gaza, Palestinian health authorities said at least 4,137 people have been killed and more than 13,200 injured — including more than 500 deaths in a hospital explosion. In Israel, at least 1,400 people have been killed and 4,500 injured as of Oct. 20. The death toll includes 32 Americans. And Hamas took more than 200 people hostage, NBC News reported.

    The confirmed violence is horrible enough. So why did a weakly sourced claim about 40 beheaded babies travel far and wide?

    Experts on disinformation and the Middle East pinpointed the emotional response elicited by violence against children, along with a lack of confirmation from official sources.

    “Because it is such a shocking claim … it has garnered significant attention as well as attempts to support or rebut,” said Osamah Khalil, a Syracuse University history professor specializing in the modern Middle East and U.S. foreign policy.

    PolitiFact examined the claim’s origin and documented how U.S. and Israeli politicians and media repeated it and walked it back.

    Claim originates with a field report

    The claim that Hamas beheaded 40 babies traces back to an Israeli reporter’s on-air comments.

    On Oct. 10, three days after Hamas’ attack on Kibbutz Kfar Aza in southern Israel, the Israel Defense Forces, the nation’s military, allowed news outlets to report from the ravaged site. Reporter Nicole Zedeck of i24 News, an Israeli news channel, said Israeli soldiers told her infants had been killed in the attack.

    “The Israeli military still says they don’t have a clear number (of the casualties), but I’m talking to some of the soldiers, and they say what they’ve witnessed is they’ve been walking through these different houses, these different communities — babies, their heads cut off. That’s what they said,” Zedeck said during her English-language broadcast from Kfar Aza.

    Also Oct. 10, Zedeck posted on X that “one of the commanders told me they saw babies’ heads cut off.” Thirty-five minutes later, she posted again, saying “soldiers told me they believe 40 babies/children were killed.”

    She did not say Hamas beheaded 40 babies, but several news outlets and social media posts conflated those reports.

    On Oct. 11, United Kingdom news outlets ran headlines declaring that Hamas had beheaded 40 babies. Some American media outlets, including CNN, Fox News and the New York Post, repeated the claim that babies had been beheaded, citing Israeli media or the prime minister’s office as sources.

    On Telegram on Oct. 11, Hamas dismissed “the false claims promoted by some Western media outlets, such as Palestinian freedom fighters killing children and targeting civilians,” without mentioning beheadings specifically.

    Evidence disputed Hamas’ broad rebuttal, however: Women, children and older people were among the thousands killed or wounded in the militant group’s surprise attack, ABC News and The New York Times reported. Multiple news outlets have reported that women were among the people Hamas kidnapped.

    The militant group “has repeatedly said that it does not intentionally target or kill women and children,” despite the overwhelming evidence contradicting this claim, Khalil said.

    Israeli and U.S. officials repeated the claim, then gave it distance

    Political leaders, first in Israel, then the U.S., gave the beheadings claim more credibility early on. But officials then amended their statements, which increased confusion.

    On Oct. 11, a spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told CNN that babies and toddlers were found in Kfar Aza with their “heads decapitated.” The next morning, CNN reported that the Israeli government could not confirm the claim that Hamas beheaded babies, contradicting the prime minister’s office’s previous statement.

    President Joe Biden also repeated the claim during an Oct. 11 roundtable with Jewish leaders, saying, “I never really thought that I would see and have confirmed pictures of terrorists beheading children.”

    But Biden had neither seen photos nor received confirmation that Hamas beheaded babies or children, the White House later told CNN. Biden was referring to public comments from media outlets and Israeli officials.

    Biden was more careful in his Oct. 18 remarks in Israel: “Children slaughtered. Babies slaughtered. Entire families massacred. Rape, beheadings, bodies burned alive.”

    Netanyahu said during Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Biden’s visits to Israel that Hamas beheaded people, but Netanyahu did not say whether the victims were infants.

    The Israeli prime minister’s office shared Oct. 12 photos of babies it said were “murdered and burned” by Hamas. The post did not depict beheadings.

    Blinken said he was shown documentation of “an infant riddled with bullets, soldiers beheaded, young people burned alive” during his Oct. 12 visit.

    When asked about the authenticity of the images of dead children Netanyahu had shared, White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said Oct. 12, “I don’t think we’re in the business of having to validate or approve those kinds of images. They’re from the prime minister of Israel and we have no reason to doubt their authenticity.”

    The i24 News reporter said the claim came from Israeli soldiers, but the Israel Defense Forces had not confirmed how many babies were killed or if any were beheaded. On Oct. 12, an Israel Defense Forces spokesperson told PolitiFact that the attack on Kfar Aza was “a massacre in which women, children, toddlers and elderly were brutally butchered in an ISIS way of action.” 

    How the claim became so pervasive

    The speed at which information was shared following Hamas’ attack vastly outpaced journalists’ and researchers’ ability to verify or raise questions about what happened.

    “It’s all tied to the lack of certified trustworthy information,” said Dina Sadek, Mideast research fellow for the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab. “(It) lets people speculate and believe a lot of things that they’re seeing on the internet before waiting for official confirmation.” 

    The beheadings claim traced back to a reporter who said she was relaying soldiers’ firsthand accounts. But other journalists on the ground in Kfar Aza, including Oren Ziv of +972 Magazine, which covers Israel and Palestine, and Samuel Forey of the French news outlet Le Monde, said their reporting did not corroborate this report.

    During the tour through Kfar Aza, Ziv said he saw no evidence that Hamas beheaded babies, “and the army spokesperson or commanders also didn’t mention any such incidents,” he posted on X. Ziv said journalists in Kfar Aza were allowed to talk to hundreds of soldiers without supervision from the Israel Defense Forces’ communication team.

    Similarly, Forey said, “No one told me about beheadings, even less about beheaded children, even less about 40 beheaded children.” Forey said emergency services personnel he spoke with had not seen any decapitated bodies. (Forey’s X posts were translated from French to English.) 

    Given this topic’s heaviness and polarizing nature, Khalil, the Syracuse University professor, cautioned that “all claims and denials should be treated with skepticism and verified as much as possible.”

    RELATED: Amid images and news of actual war, false and misleading claims about Israel-Hamas thrive



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  • ‘Hitchcock’s Blondes’ explores the director’s films with Grace Kelly, Ingrid Bergman, more – Paradise Post

    As biographer Laurence Leamer settled in front of the television to research the films of Alfred Hitchcock, he realized he had a problem.

    “I started watching this as an author writing the book and trying to get material,” Leamer says on a recent call. “And after five minutes, his stuff is so fascinating I forget that and just watch it because I’m enjoying it so much.

    “That’s how good he is,” he says. “That’s how he involves you. He knows just what he’s doing.”

    Leamer persevered and “Hitchcock’s Blondes: The Unforgettable Women Behind the Legendary Director’s Dark Obsession” arrived on Tuesday, Oct. 10.

    In it, Leamer explores the work of Hitchcock and eight actresses with whom he worked, from June Howard-Tripp in 1925’s “The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog” to Tippi Hedren in “The Birds” and “Marnie” in 1963 and ’64.

    In between, Leamer explores Hitchcock’s work with Madeleine Carroll (“The 39 Steps,” “Secret Agent”), Ingrid Bergman (“Spellbound,” “Notorious,” “Under Capricorn”), Grace Kelly (“Dial M for Murder,” “Rear Window,” “To Catch a Thief”), Kim Novak (“Vertigo”), Eva Marie Saint (“North by Northwest”), and Janet Leigh (“Psycho“).

    Hitchcock’s life and career has been examined in numerous books from before and after his death at 80 in 1980. His infatuation with his leading ladies, particularly the blondes and his odd, sometimes cruel manner with them are well known.

    But Leamer is the first biographer to shift the focus from Hitchcock in the foreground to zoom in on the women with whom the director achieved some of his greatest works.

    “Hitchcock’s Blondes” is the second in a planned trilogy about male creative geniuses and their female friends, colleagues and confidants. Leamer, 81, is currently working on a book about artist Andy Warhol and his many muses.

    The first book in his series, “Capote’s Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era” arrived in 2021. Its story of writer Truman Capote and the New York City circle of women in which he moved arrives as the second chapter of producer Ryan Murphy’s FX anthology series “Feud” in 2024.

    Q: Do you remember when you first became aware of Alfred Hitchcock?

    A: He’s so much a part of our culture, I don’t even know. You know, if you go on Amazon Prime and plug in Hitchcock, there are over 40 of his films you can watch today. That’s the magnitude of that guy’s accomplishments.

    Q: How did you arrive at the framework of the book, focusing on these eight women?

    A: Well, chronology is God’s gift to a writer. You’d better have a damn good reason to do away with it. So the chronology is his life and the blondes are pretty obviously the candidates for telling it.

    When I write a book, I always write the ending in my head and then I try to write the book that would justify that ending. And that’s what I did here. I wanted the ending to be that AFI tribute (in March 1979). I wanted the audience at that point, the readers, to appreciate his greatness, and also the dark part of it as well. And to appreciate the actresses as well.

    Q: Three of the actresses are still living. Tippi Hedren doesn’t do interviews but you were able to talk with Eva Marie Saint from ‘North by Northwest’ and Kim Novak from ‘Vertigo.’ What was that like?

    A: Eva Marie Saint was fabulous. You know, she’s 99 years old now, living by herself in her apartment. She wants to have her own life. I think that’s incredible.

    Q: From her chapter in the book, she seems to be one of the most grounded of the Hitchcock actresses.

    A: She was grounded, but she is calculating. And I don’t say that as a criticism, just the opposite. She knew the life she wanted early on. She had some success in television. Got a little apartment. She was lonely, she wanted to marry. She didn’t want to marry an actor. She married this producer. And they had the most wonderful marriage.

    Then in her career, she loved her children. She liked to act, but when they were growing up, she’d do just one movie a year. She put her Academy Award statuette for ‘On The Waterfront’ in the closet and just forgot it. She really has immense character as far as I’m concerned.

    Q: A lot of the stories of Hitchcock and the actresses are well known. I’m curious what your conversation with her provided that you didn’t already have?

    A: She had some tidbits, but she’s told these stories many times. I found a few new things. It was just as much to get a real feeling of her emotionally. I think I wrote a much better chapter because I knew her in that way.

    Q: Kim Novak, from your chapter on her, seems like perhaps the actress Hitchcock treated the worst. What was she like?

    A: It’s inexplicable to me (how she was treated). He brings her up to luncheon and shows her his paintings, which he knows she won’t appreciate the way he appreciates them, and the vintage wine, which she doesn’t understand. Just to put her down. And the first day in the studio there’s this dead chicken attached to her mirror and Hitch and the other men standing around laughing at her.

    She said she didn’t know what that was about. I don’t know what it’s about. It just didn’t make any sense to me. But it’s not a great thing to do to this vulnerable, insecure actress on the first day.

    And then when she finished it, I think she deserved an Academy Award nomination because I think she’s magnificent. It’s a very difficult role. But Hitch put her down. Even when that putting down probably diminished the number of people wanting to see the movie.

    Q: Was she candid and open about her treatment by him?

    A: She really appreciated Hitchcock. She has nothing negative to say about it. It’s the best thing she did in her whole life, and she puts it in perspective.

    Q: In recent years, there’s been a lot of discussion about how to appreciate art made by men with problematic histories. Might this book change Hitchcock’s reputation?

    A: If the things about Woody Allen are true – and I don’t know if they are, but if they are, well, I wouldn’t want to watch his films, right? This stuff about Hitchcock isn’t at that magnitude, in my opinion. In the #MeToo times, people are just too easily dismissed, and I don’t think it’s fair to him.

    There was a biographer of him, Donald Spoto, who just focused on the darkness, and that had a big impact on Hitchcock’s reputation. I don’t think that’s fair.

    Q: Of the Hitchcock films you watched featuring these women, do you have a favorite you go back to?

    A: It depends on what you want. I mean, ‘To Catch a Thief’ is just pure fun. You can’t beat that. ‘Marnie,’ the dark brilliance of that is irresistible. And ‘Psycho,’ I mean, there’s nothing like ‘Psycho,’ right?

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  • Officer, Others Feared Dead As Robbers Invade Banks In Benue

    Edo-State-Map

    A yet-to-be-confirmed number of residents including personnel of the police force have been reported dead following an attack by armed robbery on three banks in the Itukpo area of Benue State on Friday.

    The assailants stormed the area while shooting sporadically to scare those around. They reportedly operated for about an hour in the affected banks.

    The robbers were said to have also thrown money carted away from the banks in the air as they left in two Hilux vehicles and one car.

    When contacted, the spokesperson for the state’s Police Command, SP Catherine Anene confirmed the robbery incident but gave no further detail on the incident.

    “Not yet, but I know it’s confirmed,” she responded in a WhatsApp text when asked by THE WHISTLER.

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  • Fact Check: Vivek Ramaswamy claims Russia leads the US in hypersonic missiles. That’s Half True

    After formally filing for the New Hampshire primary Oct. 18, Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy weighed in on whether the United States needs an Iron Dome missile defense system similar to Israel’s. Ramaswamy concluded it does because the U.S. lags its adversaries’ military capabilities.

    “I think the U.S. needs the equivalent of an Iron Dome because Russia has hypersonic missile capabilities ahead of that of the U.S.,” Ramaswarmy said. “We are vulnerable to new threats on our homeland. Those hypersonic missiles can reach the United States today, we’re badly vulnerable.” 

    Military experts told PolitiFact they agree that the U.S. lags Russia in the development of hypersonic missiles. However, Ramaswamy ignores that U.S. research and development is ahead of Russia in the pursuit of a more technologically sophisticated and useful generation of hypersonic missiles. The experts said Russia’s hypersonic weapons program is somewhat overhyped. 

    PolitiFact reached out to Ramaswamy’s campaign. We didn’t hear back. 

    Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy addresses voters Oct. 14, 2023, at a town hall in Exeter, New Hampshire. (Samantha Putterman/PolitiFact)

    We previously examined Ramaswamy’s comments about the Iron Dome, which is Israel’s air defense missile system designed to shoot down incoming projectiles. He said Oct. 9 that “we don’t have an Iron Dome in this country, yet, we’re vulnerable to nuclear missile attacks any given day.” We found his view was premised on misunderstandings about U.S. missile defense capabilities and needs.

    The race for hypersonic missiles

    Experts told PolitiFact that Ramaswamy has a point that today, Russia, unlike the U.S., is able to deploy hypersonic missiles. But they question whether this is as dangerous as Ramaswamy says.

    Hypersonic missiles have received heightened attention since Russia began deploying them in Ukraine. But they have existed for decades; since the 1950s, some missiles have qualified as hypersonic by traveling more than five times the speed of sound (or around 4,000 miles per hour). These include intercontinental ballistic missiles, known as ICBMs, which can carry nuclear warheads from one continent to another.

    Hypersonic missiles travel so fast because when they reach space, gravity hurls them to hypersonic speeds. 

    “It’s not hard to make a ballistic missile hypersonic,” said Brendan Green, a University of Cincinnati professor who has studied nuclear issues. “Nature will do this for you.”

    A more sophisticated type of hypersonic missile would be one that could “travel at a low level, to glide, to be launched from aircraft, to maneuver to avoid defenses,” or some combination of those traits, said Lance Janda, a Cameron University military historian. 

    One way these weapons can achieve long ranges with limited fuel is by deploying wings that allow them to “glide” for thousands of miles and maneuver without propulsion, at least for a limited time, Janda said. These are the kinds of advances that U.S. hypersonic missiles are expected to include. 

    Such missiles might be targeted at an aircraft carrier, a command-and-control center, or even a high-value individual, said Iain Boyd, director of the Center for National Security Initiatives at the University of Colorado Boulder. 

    U.S. engineers were at the forefront of hypersonic research in the late 1950s, but the Vietnam War crowded out that research because hypersonic aircraft weren’t relevant to fighting in the jungle, The Wall Street Journal reported Sept. 18. A lack of testing infrastructure has since slowed the pace of development.

    As the U.S. took a backseat, Russia accelerated its efforts on hypersonics.

    Now, though, new generation hypersonic missiles are “on the drawing board” for the United States, Janda said.

    The U.S. Army, Navy and Air Force are each developing these missiles, and the Pentagon’s 2023 budget includes around $5 billion for the weapons. 

    Designing and building the new generation of technologically advanced hypersonic missiles is challenging, experts say. Sensitive electronics in the missles have to be shielded from the extreme heat generated by traveling at high speed. 

    As a result, hypersonic missiles are estimated to cost about one-third more to procure and field than comparable ballistic missiles, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

    A common hypersonic glide body launches from the Pacific Missile Range Facility, in Kauai, Hawaii, in March 2020 during a Defense Department flight experiment. (U.S. Navy via AP)

    What does Russia have?

    The Pentagon hasn’t released estimates of how many hypersonic missiles they think Russia has. But in March 2022, Russia claimed it had reached a milestone after successfully launching two hypersonic Kinzhal missiles against Ukraine. Kinzhal means “dagger” in Russian.

    Available information suggests that Russia’s weapons use decades-old technology, not the advances sought by the United States. This is also supported by reports that Ukraine has been able to intercept and shoot down subsequent Kinzhal missiles. 

    Boyd called the Russian technology “primitive” compared to U.S. missiles in development.

    Janda said there is no evidence that Russians can mass-produce the missiles, “and it also doesn’t mean their missiles are reliable. … so we should all take any claims regarding Russian hypersonic weapons with a huge grain of salt.”

    China, meanwhile, tested a nuclear-capable hypersonic missile in August 2021. It circled the globe before hitting near its target. Military analysts believe it is much further along than Russia’s projects.

    Ultimately, “I don’t see hypersonics as that big of a deal,” Janda said. “They don’t upend our nuclear deterrence. Besides, we’re going flat out to develop new hypersonic systems of our own. And if history is any guide, our stuff will be much, much better.”

    Our ruling

    Ramaswamy said, “Russia has hypersonic missile capabilities ahead of that of the U.S.”

    Experts say Ramaswamy has a point: Russia has deployed hypersonic missiles against Ukraine while the U.S. is still developing its own hypersonic missiles. 

    But Ramaswamy’s statement ignores important context: Russia’s missiles are primitive and do not pose the level of threat that he suggests. And the versions the U.S. is developing are expected to have sophisticated abilities to glide, be launched by aircraft and maneuver to avoid defenses. 

    The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True.

    RELATED: The US may not have an Iron Dome, but the military is spending on this technology. Here’s how



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  • 49ers’ Brock Purdy intent on avoiding back-to-back road losses

    SANTA CLARA – It’s no wonder Brock Purdy flashed back to his Iowa State days when it came to coping with a loss, not that he had a ton there.

    He just hadn’t experienced defeat as the 49ers’ quarterback — in a regular-season game — until Sunday’s 19-17, down-to-the-wire upset in Cleveland.

    “Every game in college is so huge and crucial, and it is in the NFL, but one game can determine your season in college,” Purdy said Friday. “With this, it’s, ‘Alright, we lost, but, man, we have a lot to look forward to, and we have to move on quickly. We have a good team ahead of us.’ “

    The 49ers (5-1) look to rebound Monday night when they visit the blitz-heavy Minnesota Vikings (2-4).

    It’s been 14 months since Purdy went to Minnesota to prove worthy of a 49ers roster spot, and he obviously acquitted himself quite well in joint practices against the Vikings before their preseason game. Coach Kyle Shanahan came away impressed how the then-rookie quarterback “still did not hesitate” to throw in limited reps.

    “I was trying do little things right, make the right decisions, be consistent, and earn coaches’ and my teammates’ trust,” Purdy recalled. ” … Now, a year later, alright, this is the regular season, this is a real football game, not just practicing. They have some good players I remember facing in practice, but this is different.

    “I’m at another point obviously in my career being a starter, and not in that camp-mode mindset, so that’s where we’re at and we’re trying to win.”

    As Purdy steps into Monday’s prime-time spotlight, he’ll do so amid the home crowd’s cacophony of “Skol” chants and in the crosshairs of another elite sack artist, that being Danielle Hunter, whose eight sacks are tied for the NFL’s lead.

    The Vikings defense has blitzed on 60.5-percent of pass plays, according to The Associated Press, but such strategy has not unnerved Purdy in the past. He thrived against such tactics in his first meaningful game last year, against Miami, and, a month ago, he countered the New York Giants’ pressures (blitzes on 33-of-39 dropbacks) by passing for a season-high 310 yards and two touchdowns.

    “We gave him a bunch of really weird blitz looks throughout the week of practice (before facing the Giants), and we’re doing that again now,”  tight end George Kittle said. “… Brock is dominating that game plan, and as long as he’s confident, we’re very confident in our offense.”

    Purdy nearly pulled off a fourth-quarter comeback last Sunday, only for Jake Moody’s potential winning field-goal attempt to sail wide right in the final seconds. In the end, Purdy posted career-worst numbers as a starter (12-of-17, 125 yards) and, despite an opening-drive touchdown pass to Christian McCaffrey, Purdy also threw his first interception in 249 passes.

    “Yeah, it (stinks) initially, the first couple of days, especially with an extra day off,” Purdy said of losing. “You could feel the guys in the locker room and at practice were ready to move on.”

    Shanahan remains steadfast in support of Purdy, saying: “He has earned as much trust as you could have in a quarterback.”

    The Browns’ top-ranked defense flustered him with their consistent pass rush and man-to-man coverage, so much so that Purdy did not resemble the passer who, in two previous games, completed 20-of-21 throws against the Arizona Cardinals and produced a career-high four touchdown passes in a prime-time rout of the Dallas Cowboys.

    Purdy, by the way, endured 17 losses at Iowa State but the Cyclones finished with a winning record and a bowl appearance in his four seasons.

    McCAFFREY RUNNING

    Running back Christian McCaffrey showed no hindrance from an oblique injury as he ran on a side field the first 15 minutes of practice, nor were there any visible markings on his body as he walked shirtless into the locker room during media access. McCaffrey, who did not speak with reporters, has requested that Shanahan include him in the game plan, ESPN reported.

    McCaffrey, the NFL’s rushing leader, exited in the third quarter of last Sunday’s game, the 49ers’ first loss in 16 games with him in the starting lineup. Friday marked the one-year anniversary of the 49ers brokering his trade from the Carolina Panthers, although that deal formally went through a day later.

    General manager John Lynch, rather than project McCaffrey’s status for Monday, did share memories of last year’s trade. “I just remember the elation and getting off (the phone), letting a blood-curdling `Yes!’ from our bedroom, and my family going, `What is going on,’ ” Lynch said on KNBR 680-AM.

    Of the 49ers’ backups, Jordan Mason actually has appeared in more career games (22) than Elijah Mitchell (19), that mainly because of Mason’s special-teams use last season and Mitchell’s injury history since leading the 2020 team in rushing as a rookie. Mitchell has 270 career carries for 1,291 yards (4.8-yard average) and seven touchdowns; Mason has scored in each of the past two games but has just 64 career carries for 375 yards and three touchdowns.

    PRACTICE NOTES

    Linebacker Dre Greenlaw (hamstring) practiced for the first time since missing (and being missed) in Sunday’s loss, and left guard Aaron Banks (ankle) returned after missing Thursday’s session. Both were limited.

    Left tackle Trent Williams (ankle) remained out. If he misses his first game this season (and eighth in four years), Jaylon Moore likely would start in his place; Moore made five starts the previous two seasons combined.

    Wide receiver Deebo Samuel (shoulder) did not practice for a second straight day but emerged to do conditioning work on a side field. Cornerback Isaiah Oliver (knee) was limited, and safety George Odum (quadriceps) is fully cleared.

    The Vikings practiced only without left guard Ezra Cleveland (foot).

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