Israel’s Netanyahu recovers from a heart procedure while his judicial overhaul plan moves forward

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

Israel’s Netanyahu recovers from a heart procedure while his judicial overhaul plan moves forward TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was recovering in a hospital on Sunday after an emergency heart procedure while opposition to his government’s contentious judicial overhaul plan reached a fever pitch and unrest gripped the country. Netanyahu’s doctors said on Sunday the heart pacemaker implantation went smoothly and that Netanyahu, 73, felt fine. According to his office, he was expected to be discharged later in the day. But tensions were surging as lawmakers began a marathon debate over the first major piece of the overhaul, ahead of a vote in parliament enshrining it into law on Monday.Mass protests continued, part of seven straight months of the most sustained and intense demonstrations the country has ever seen. Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets across Israel on Saturday night, while thousands marched into Jerusalem and camped out near the Knesset, or parliament, ahead of Monday’s vote.Netanyahu’s sudden...

Greek authorities evacuate some 19,000 people as wildfire blazes on the Greek island of Rhodes

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

Greek authorities evacuate some 19,000 people as wildfire blazes on the Greek island of Rhodes ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Some 19,000 people have been evacuated from the Greek island of Rhodes as wildfires continued burning for a sixth day on three fronts, Greek authorities said on Sunday.The Ministry of Climate Change and Civil Protection said it was “the largest evacuation from a wildfire in the country.”Local police said that 16,000 were evacuated by land and 3,000 by sea, from 12 villages and several hotels, with no casualties. Six people were briefly hospitalized with respiratory problems and were later released.On Sunday morning, 266 firefighters and 49 engines on the ground were joined by five helicopters and 10 planes – seven Greek, two Turkish and one Croatian to help put out the wildfire, authorities said. A further 15 engines are expected later in the day.In the mountainous part of Rhodes, an active front of the wildfire, firefighters have been trying to stop the blaze from spreading to nearby dense forests.Southwest of the resort of Kiotari, the main focus of Saturday’...

5 dead, 2 missing after seasonal floods hit village in eastern China

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

5 dead, 2 missing after seasonal floods hit village in eastern China BEIJING (AP) — Five people died and two others were missing after floods caused by heavy rain hit a village in eastern China, state media reported on Sunday. China National Radio said the massive floods swept through the village in the Fuyang district of the city of Hangzhou, engulfing many villagers’ houses on Saturday afternoon. Authorities were conducting rescue operations and relocating affected residents.Every year, seasonal flooding hits large parts of China, particularly in the semitropical south. However, some northern regions this year have reported the worst floods in 50 years. The torrents have been affecting different parts of the country this month and have caused casualties. Earlier this month, at least 15 people were killed by floods in the southwestern region of Chongqing. According to CCTV on Sunday, torrential rain also turned many streets in Liaoning, a northeastern province, into rivers, forcing 5,590 people to be evacuated. About 30 houses and 54 hectares ...

David Fickling: Our civilization was built for a climate that’s vanishing

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

David Fickling: Our civilization was built for a climate that’s vanishing You can learn a lot about the climates we live in by the buildings we construct.The steep roofs of Thai temples and Norwegian stave churches are clues to the heavy loads of rain and snow that fall in those countries, which threaten to damage a structure if they don’t slide quickly to the ground.The traditional mud brick architecture of Africa’s Sahel is a marker of an arid environment with hot days and cool nights, where thick adobe walls can keep the interior cooler than the outside air.That parsimonious approach — adding only the features that are necessary for us to thrive in local conditions — applies across the world and throughout history. We’ve built our civilization on a series of local equilibria, paying the short-term cost of adapting to immediate conditions to avoid the long-term risks from extreme weather.With each tenth of a degree that the planet warms, we are breaking those equilibria.Climate records are falling on a daily basis right now...

Conor Sen: The White House knows where inflation’s headed. You can too.

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

Conor Sen: The White House knows where inflation’s headed. You can too. The White House embraced “Bidenomics” to describe its economic agenda last month, reclaiming a term that President Joe Biden’s detractors have frequently used as a pejorative. Various administration officials have since talked up its ambitions. I have no doubt that they’re sincere about the importance of the middle-class, infrastructure investments and union jobs with an eye to the presidential election, but this is really a gamble on inflation — the tax that has hit middle-class pocketbooks hard these past two years.President Joe Biden’s team is betting that moderating price pressures, and the significant future declines in inflation already baked in, will boost consumer confidence and his standing with voters. The shifts we’ve already seen in the past few months suggest it’s a smart move.One of the architects of this strategy is likely Lael Brainard, a long-time member of the Federal Reserve who became the head of the White House Nat...

Bridge: July 23, 2023

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

Bridge: July 23, 2023 “You know that Greek myth about the nymph Echo?” a club player asked me.“She displeased Hera, the queen of the gods,” I replied, “and was punished by not being able to speak first. She could only repeat what others said. The Greeks knew nothing of reflected sound waves; they concocted all kinds of pretty tales that attributed natural phenomena to divine influence.”“Well, my partner should be named Echo,” my friend grumbled. “She always has to have the last word.”My friend had been South in today’s deal from a team match. When North doubled West’s one club, South was willing to jump to four spades. West’s decision not to bid again was odd.“West led the king of clubs and shifted to the ten of diamonds,” South told me. “East captured dummy’s king and returned a diamond. I discarded a heart on dummy’s queen and drew trumps. Next, I led the ace and a second heart, playing low from ...

Senate Committee Passes Potential First Step to Radically Lower Drug Prices

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

Senate Committee Passes Potential First Step to Radically Lower Drug Prices On Thursday, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions voted to take a significant first step on a long road that could lead to far lower prices on new, better pharmaceutical drugs for Americans.The measure was part of an amendment to a bill reauthorizing the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act, and was reported out of the committee 17-3. It allocates $3 million for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to study different models to pay for the development of new drugs. NASEM, which was created by Congress to provide high-quality advice on technical issues, would have to produce the report within two years.The bill’s language specifically instructs NASEM to examine two ways of funding new drugs: the government paying for it directly, and innovation prizes for inventors. Drugs created in this manner would presumably then be placed in the public domain and sold as generics.This issue is almost never discussed in U.S...

Missile barrage batters Odesa, heavily damaging cathedral

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

Missile barrage batters Odesa, heavily damaging cathedral KYIV — Russia unleashed a missile barrage early Sunday on Ukraine’s southern port city of Odesa, leaving one person dead and heavily damaging the cathedral in the historic city center.Moscow has been bombarding Odesa and its surroundings with different types of missiles for nearly a week after Russia withdrew from the Black Sea Grain Initiative, the U.N.-brokered deal to export Ukrainian grain.The attack on Odesa Sunday came hours before Russian President Vladimir Putin met with Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko in St. Petersburg.Russian forces attacked the Odesa region with 19 missiles, including cruise, anti-ship and ballistic missiles, in Sunday’s barrage. Ukrainian air defense managed to shoot down nine of them, the country’s air force said in a statement.More than 19 people were wounded and one person was killed in the attack. Odesa’s historical city center, a UNESCO world heritage site, was badly damaged by the attack. Six residential buildings were destroyed. ...

Greece evacuates thousands of tourists in Rhodes as wildfire burns

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

Greece evacuates thousands of tourists in Rhodes as wildfire burns (CNN) — A large wildfire tearing through the Greek island of Rhodes has forced thousands of tourists to evacuate their hotels, officials say.The wildfire in the central and south part of Rhodes has been burning since Tuesday. It is the largest of a number of blazes in Greece, which is sweltering due to a heat wave that experts say is likely to become the country’s longest on record.Photos on Greek TV showed fires and smoke nearing properties and beaches in Rhodes and videos posted on social media show large groups of tourists evacuating hotels on foot.An estimated 10,000 tourists were safely taken to the northern part of the island on Saturday, according to the Rhodes Hotel Association.The association said on Greek TV that tourists from 12 hotels were transported by buses, on foot and by sea.The coastguard told CNN on Saturday that four of its boats had assisted, as well as 20 private vessels.Local fire officials said boats had evacuated about 2,000 people. They said the n...

‘We’ve organized, strategized, now it’s time to pulverize,’ says Teamsters union president ahead of looming UPS strike

Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 14:21:27 GMT

‘We’ve organized, strategized, now it’s time to pulverize,’ says Teamsters union president ahead of looming UPS strike New York (CNN) — Ahead of a looming UPS nationwide strike, Teamsters union President Sean O’Brien said during a rally speech in Atlanta Saturday, “We’ve organized, strategized, now it’s time to pulverize.”Speaking with CNN’s Isabel Rosales, O’Brien said 95% of the contract has been negotiated, and “now we’re down to economics, and UPS knows they need to pay our members, especially the part-timers.”A UPS spokesperson has said part-timers receive the same benefits as full-time workers. However, they do make less than full-time employees who make, on average, $95,000 a year, as CNN previously reported. Part-timers start by earning $16.20 an hour and are eligible for a higher hourly rate after 30 days. On average, part-time workers make $20 an hour, according to the spokesperson.When asked what happens if a deal is not reached by July 31, O’Brien said they would withhold their labor on August 1 at 12:01 a.m.“UPS represents our members that deliver goods and services that deliv...