Patriots’ eight most difficult decisions on 53-man roster cutdown day

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Patriots’ eight most difficult decisions on 53-man roster cutdown day Training camp has concluded. The preseason is mercifully over. It’s time for the Patriots to trim their roster to 53 players and get ready for their season opener against the Philadelphia Eagles.It won’t be a simple process. The Patriots have difficult decisions to make prior to Tuesday’s cuts as they deal with injuries and determine whether to keep players they know they can trust or younger players with higher upside.The Patriots already started the process on Saturday.These are the eight toughest decisions the Patriots must make before Tuesday’s cutdown deadline:Keep or risk losing UDFAUndrafted rookie Malik Cunningham is a man without a position on the Patriots. His development at wide receiver has been slowed by the snaps he gets at his college position of quarterback, but the Patriots have been hesitant to give him a full slate of snaps under center.Related ArticlesNew England Patriots | Patriots roster cuts tracker: Quandre Mosely, Carl Davi...

Russia says it has confirmed Prigozhin died in the plane crash

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Russia says it has confirmed Prigozhin died in the plane crash MOSCOW (AP) — Russia’s Investigative Committee has confirmed Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin was killed in a plane crash. The committee said in a statement Sunday that after forensic testing, all 10 bodies recovered at the site of the crash were identified, and their identities “conform to the manifest.” Russia’s civil aviation authority earlier this week said Prigozhin, along with some of his top lieutenants, were on the list of those on board the plane that crashed Wednesday. The Associated Press

London’s Metropolitan Police force ups security after a supplier’s IT system is hacked

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

London’s Metropolitan Police force ups security after a supplier’s IT system is hacked LONDON (AP) — London’s Metropolitan Police force says it has stepped up security after a company that holds details of its officers and staff was hacked.The force said late Saturday that there had been “unauthorized access to the IT system” of one of its suppliers. It said the company, which it did not name, had access to names, ranks, photos, vetting levels and payroll numbers for officers and staff, but did not hold personal information such as addresses, phone numbers or financial details.The force said it was “working with the company to understand if there has been any security breach relating to Metropolitan Police data,” and had referred the incident to the National Crime Agency.The Metropolitan Police Federation, a staff association for officers, said the breach had caused “incredible concern and anger.”“This is a staggering security breach that should never have happened,” said federation Vice Chair Rick Prior. “Given the roles we ask our colleagues to undertake, sign...

Denis LePage, co-founder of Montreal disco powerhouse duo Lime, dies at 74

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Denis LePage, co-founder of Montreal disco powerhouse duo Lime, dies at 74 TORONTO — Disco producer Denis LePage had a knack for drawing revellers to the dance floor, and in the heart of Montreal’s pumping 1980s nightlife, the musician’s hitmaking skills were unmistakable.With a stream of Billboard chart hits, LePage helped define an era of Canada’s discotheques as part of the duo Lime. LePage, who identified as non-binary and later took the name Nini Nobless, died Monday of cancer at age 74, said former manager Yvon Lafrance.While not exactly a household name, LePage’s infectious synthesizer hooks made Lime’s songs favourites at dance clubs around the world.“He was a genius,” explained Claude Chalifoux, who co-owned Lime Light, the bustling Montreal dance club that regularly spun Lime’s dance tracks.“All of the music that Denis did was a smash hit. People went crazy when they’d play ‘Your Love,’ ‘You’re My Magician’ and ‘Guilty.’”Years before those electronic disco favourites, LePage was already chasing a music career.As a teenager, they...

Readers and writers: A novel of hope and a memoir of optimism

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Readers and writers: A novel of hope and a memoir of optimism Fiction or non-fiction — we have both today; a novel about family and memory, and a memoir about the power of living with hope, both from authors who will be at Magers & Quinn.“The Gravity of Love”: by Brian Duren (Willow River Press, $15.99)Brian Duren and his new book.That day in April, when she disappeared, she became a missing person for my sisters, me, and Ken, but Dad had been a missing person for her for over twenty years. Her love for him, like some gravitational force that operates through time as well as space, drew her back here. And I realized, too, as I looked down at his name, that the absence of love also exerted gravitational pull. Dad had always been the missing person in my life, and that absence had haunted me and never let me go. — from “The Gravity of Love”What price does a man pay when his father never loved him? What does a mother do, torn between her love for husband and son who cannot get along?Those are questions at t...

Hastings riverfront factory soon to reopen as $30M Confluence Hotel

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Hastings riverfront factory soon to reopen as $30M Confluence Hotel After 14 years of planning and more than a couple of setbacks, the Confluence Hotel in downtown Hastings will be open to the public starting next month.What used to be the H.D. Hudson Manufacturing plant on the banks of the Mississippi River is now home to a boutique hotel with 77 guest rooms, nine apartment-style rooms, a bar and restaurant and a banquet hall, said the Confluence’s general manager, Deanna Payne.Located at 200 Second Street W., near where the Mississippi and the St. Croix rivers merge, the 100,000-square-foot building was used for more than 100 years to manufacture handheld compression sprayers.In 2010, the property was acquired by the Hastings Economic Development and Redevelopment Authority for nearly $3 million and put to a vote: tear it down or rehabilitate it?“The public overwhelmingly wanted the building to be rehabilitated,” said John Hinzman, Hastings’ community development director.Multimillion-dollar cleanupRehabilitating a property that manufactured comme...

Skywatch: An earlier start for stargazers in September

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Skywatch: An earlier start for stargazers in September Summer stargazing can be so comfortable! However, for many folks with Monday through Friday jobs, the wake-up call for work restricts extended nights under the stars to the weekend. In September, though, nightfall begins much earlier, especially later in the month. That’s extra good news because Saturn returns in glory to the early evening sky this September.This coming Thursday we have a rare blue moon, the second full moon this month. The next full moon, on Sept. 29, will be considered the full harvest moon of 2023 since it’s within 10 days of the Autumnal Equinox, the astronomical beginning of autumn. This year the equinox is on Sept. 22, when the northern and southern hemispheres will experience nearly equal amounts of daylight and darkness. From then until Dec. 21, the sun’s daily path across the sky will get progressively lower around here as days get shorter as nights get longer.The planet Saturn is putting on a big show this month. Look for it in the low southeastern sky jus...

Trudy Rubin: Why Ukraine’s fight is America’s fight

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Trudy Rubin: Why Ukraine’s fight is America’s fight On my recent trip to Ukraine, I met with a friend who is now a commander on the front line, someone I highly respect and have known since before Russia invaded last year. He posed a question I think Americans should ponder.“Why don’t Americans have optimism about Ukraine?” he asked me in a darkened restaurant in a frontline city. “Americans fought for independence against the most powerful empire at that time, the British, who had the world’s best military. Many of the American fighters were farmers. Yet you won. So why don’t you believe in our fight?”Of course, many Americans do support Ukraine. But too many fail to understand that Ukraine is battling a dictator, Vladimir Putin, who longs to restore the Russian empire.Putin has declared that Ukraine has no right to exist as a sovereign nation. He already claims to have “annexed” four Ukrainian provinces, giving him control of the country’s seacoast.Ukraine is not, as many ...

Letters: Don’t overlook Al Quie’s pioneering role in improving the judiciary in Minnesota

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

Letters: Don’t overlook Al Quie’s pioneering role in improving the judiciary in Minnesota Gov. Quie’s meritorious legacyOne overlooked feature last weekend in the reporting about the death of former Gov. Al Quie was his pioneering role in improving the judiciary in Minnesota.During his single term from 1979-1982, Quie, a non-lawyer, established an informal advisory group to provide guidance to him on selection of judges to fill vacancies on state court benches, which  is the exclusive prerogative of the governor, although judges stand for re-election every six years.Quie’s unofficial approach marked a departure from past practice in which selections to open positions were often made in the form of a patronage system based on political pay-backs, personal factors, and even friendships. While those considerations continued to exist — and still do to some extent — under Quie’s initiative merit became the most salient qualification.While not novel, that process formed a template for other states and also is used informally by senators in recommending candidates for the...

MN Department of Human Services shares smartphone-hacking tool with St. Paul police, other agencies

Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:40:46 GMT

MN Department of Human Services shares smartphone-hacking tool with St. Paul police, other agencies When St. Paul police need to hack into a suspect’s cellphone, they don’t have to go far.Under a deal with the Minnesota Department of Human Services, approved by St. Paul City Council in June, police officers have around-the-clock access to a controversial smartphone-hacking device called GrayKey. Under the joint-powers agreement, the St. Paul Police Department agreed to pay $7,000 a year for access to the device located in the digital forensics lab that DHS operates from its building at 444 Lafayette Road.DHS also has deals to share access to the smartphone hacking and data-extraction device with the state departments of Commerce and Natural Resources, according to records obtained by the Pioneer Press. The state Department of Public Safety has its own GrayKey device, too.These deals are the latest local examples of how GrayKey, which was created by the technology company GrayShift to crack cellphone encryption, is being used by an increasing number of law enforcement a...