Digital Arkansas News

4529 bookmarks
Custom sorting
As Alex Jones Stands Trial Newtown Would Rather Forget Him
As Alex Jones Stands Trial Newtown Would Rather Forget Him
As Alex Jones Stands Trial, Newtown Would Rather Forget Him https://digitalarkansasnews.com/as-alex-jones-stands-trial-newtown-would-rather-forget-him/ Nearly 10 years after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School — and the conspiracy theories propagated by Mr. Jones — Newtown residents are trying to move past their grief and anger. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. At Sandy Hook Cafe, Sue Bucur and Barb Baldino, both 59 and local residents, were not watching the trial but remained incensed about the role that Alex Jones had played in circulating falsehoods about the attack.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times Oct. 5, 2022Updated 1:55 p.m. ET NEWTOWN, Conn. — Less than 20 miles from the place where a gunman massacred 20 first graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School, the man who has spent much of the decade since the attack spreading lies about what happened that day stood trial on Tuesday. The closely watched courtroom spectacle playing out just up Interstate 84 has featured wrenching testimony and explosive outbursts. But in Newtown, people are done talking about Alex Jones. “I think that most of the people in this town would like to forget about him, to forget his name,” said Richard Fattibene, 81, as he sat in the town’s general store having a coffee on Tuesday morning. The founder of the conspiracy website Infowars, Mr. Jones was found liable last year in four defamation lawsuits, and this week, a jury in nearby Waterbury, Conn., is expected to start deliberating about how much he should pay in compensatory and punitive damages. But for the very real town where his twisted fantasies were focused, the trial has been less a courtroom reckoning than an unwelcome reminder of the tragedy that has become synonymous with its name. Mr. Fattibene is semi-retired from his business selling parts to auto body shops. He recalled the brutal aftermath of the attack, the police cars on his street guarding the houses of children who had perished, the universal anguish. “The town was upside down,” he said. Image A school bus taking students home past the downtown area of Sandy Hook in Newtown, Conn.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times A friend who had joined him that morning, Dominic Calandruccio, 80, also semi-retired, from his job selling insurance, sounded a similar note. He hadn’t been following the Jones trial, but he had strong feelings about the man at its center. “We hate him,” he said, adding, “I hope he goes to jail.” Mr. Calandruccio, who moved to Newtown in 1978, thinking it would be a great place to raise his family, said he still loved the town, with its rolling hills, its well-preserved architecture and its access to nature. He often walks his dog near a site that is slated to become an animal sanctuary named for Catherine Violet Hubbard, a little girl lost in the tragedy who had loved animals. It left him dumbfounded that people could target victims’ families after what happened. “How can anybody be so cruel to those people?” he said of the conspiracy theorists who had harassed and stalked family members of the victims. Image Dominic Calandruccio, 80, has lived in Newtown since 1978. “How can anybody be so cruel to those people?” he said.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times Almost immediately after the attack, conspiracy theorists seized upon the toxic notion that the tragedy had been staged by the government as a pretext to advance gun control. It was trauma layered on trauma, and one of the key figures behind the lies was Mr. Jones, stoking the frenzy on his popular Infowars show and website. Mr. Jones and anguished families have both testified in that trial, and though he had been expected to take the stand again on Wednesday, he did not. A previous trial found him liable for nearly $50 million. In Connecticut, there are no limits on the damages, so the decision could ruin Mr. Jones financially. He has made millions hawking survivalist gear, diet supplements and gun accessories on his broadcasts — and was found to have violated a state law prohibiting the use of lies to sell products. At a cafe near the new Sandy Hook Elementary School — the old building was razed — Sue Bucur and Barb Baldino, both 59 and local residents, were catching up over lunch. They were not watching the trial, but they remained incensed about the role that Mr. Jones had played in circulating falsehoods. “For someone to deny what happened — he didn’t sit here and watch a line of hearses go by on the way to the cemetery,” said Ms. Bucur, who owns a crystal shop near the cafe. Ms. Baldino, who works in media sales, added that the money could not reverse the damage that had been done by the lies or the pain that the families had been subjected to during the trial. “I don’t know how you can punish him enough,” she said. “The money’s not going to do anything for anybody.” Image The Rev. Andrea Castner Wyatt, rector of the Trinity Episcopal Church, which organizes an annual interfaith service of remembrance.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times The Rev. Andrea Castner Wyatt, rector at Trinity Episcopal Church, has been painfully aware since she arrived in Newtown two years ago that the work of healing the trauma the town endured would be ongoing. The church helps organize an annual interfaith service of remembrance. The community hasn’t settled on a location for the service next month, which will mark 10 years since the attack. Part of the deepest distress is that mass shootings continue to take place around the country, she said. The church also hosted a well-attended vigil for the victims of the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting in May, which she said was painfully similar to the Sandy Hook attack. “They’ve had 10 years of learning what it’s like to live with this,” she said of the town. “That’s why their hearts really went out to Uvalde.” Image John Bergquist, 47, who grew up in Newtown, said the shadow of what had happened always looms.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times For John Bergquist, 47, the trial was a reminder of the political divisions roiling the country. He grew up in Newtown and works in a winery nearby, and was sipping a rosé at a favorite haunt, My Place, after work on Monday. “People have reached their saturation point with talking about the tragedy,” he said. “Not that they don’t care, but it’s been re-litigated so many times, it’s difficult.” But he added that the shadow of what had happened always loomed. “Even if you do stop talking about it, I think everybody feels a connection to what happened,” he said. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
As Alex Jones Stands Trial Newtown Would Rather Forget Him
Arkansas's Top News Stories For October 5 2022
Arkansas's Top News Stories For October 5 2022
Arkansas's Top News Stories For October 5, 2022 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/arkansass-top-news-stories-for-october-5-2022/ Mackailyn Johnson provides the top news stories for October 5, 2022 including a Little Rock woman being charged with manslaughter after the death of a 1-year-old. Author: thv11.com Published: 12:15 PM CDT October 5, 2022 Updated: 12:30 PM CDT October 5, 2022 Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Arkansas's Top News Stories For October 5 2022
PRADCO Fishing Acquires Whisker Seeker Tackle
PRADCO Fishing Acquires Whisker Seeker Tackle
PRADCO Fishing Acquires Whisker Seeker Tackle https://digitalarkansasnews.com/pradco-fishing-acquires-whisker-seeker-tackle/ FORT SMITH, Arkansas – PRADCO Fishing has acquired Whisker Seeker Tackle, a premium brand of catfish tackle located in Grimes, Iowa. Whisker Seeker Tackle was founded in 2015 by Matthew Davis, who will continue to operate in Iowa as its Vice President and General Manager. Whisker Seeker Tackle has a direct-to-consumer model and will continue to conduct business this way. Whisker Seeker Tackle’s vast array of products is explicitly built for catfishing and includes: Fishing rods Rigs and lures Hooks, swivels, and terminal tackle Landing nets Floats Monofilament and braided fishing line Scales, grips, and knives FishFry Breading The complete WST product listing can be viewed at www.whiskerseeker.com. For Davis, joining the PRADCO fishing family of brands will ensure he’s well-positioned to continue the growth of Whisker Seeker Tackle. With PRADCO’s expertise in product development, logistics, and distribution, WST can remain committed to delivering high-quality, innovative catfishing products to its customers. “With PRADCO’s support, we’re well positioned to propel Whisker Seeker Tackle to the next level,” said Davis, the company founder. “I’m honored that Whisker Seeker Tackle will be alongside some of the most iconic fishing brands in the world. I remember seeing many of these brands in my grandfather’s tackle box, so joining forces with PRADCO is a true honor. I look forward to our partnership as we work together to bring more innovative catfish tackle products to our current and future catfish anglers.” Bruce Stanton, Vice President and General Manager of PRADCO Fishing, said his company has wanted to enter the catfish market in a big way for a long time. “Every time we started talking about plans and what we wanted to look like in the catfish business, we kept saying we wanted to be like Whisker Seeker Tackle,” he said. “Instead of fighting against Whisker Seeker, we are now all working together to grow what is already the premium brand of catfish-specific tackle in North America.” For PRADCO Outdoor Brands, PRADCO Fishing’s parent company, the Whisker Seeker Tackle deal marks its first acquisition since 2019. It also is the first acquisition with Brett Basik in charge of mergers and acquisitions. “Whisker Seeker is a unique brand with a focus on an important market for us going forward,” said Basik, who operates from PRADCO Outdoor Brands’ home office in Birmingham, Alabama. “We are thrilled for Matt and his team to join PRADCO, and we believe the ceiling for this brand is very high.” About PRADCO Outdoor Brands operates some of the most famous brands in hunting and fishing, including Moultrie Mobile, Summit Tree Stands, Heddon, BOOYAH, YUM, Bobby Garland, Thill, Bandit, and Rebel. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
PRADCO Fishing Acquires Whisker Seeker Tackle
Abel RuRu Russo Woodruff
Abel RuRu Russo Woodruff
Abel “RuRu” Russo Woodruff https://digitalarkansasnews.com/abel-ruru-russo-woodruff/ Abel “RuRu” Russo Woodruff, 49, passed on Friday, Sept. 30, 2022, at Baptist Health Medical Center in Little Rock. Abel was born Jan. 17,1973, in Blytheville to Dorothy Mae (Johnson) Tunstall and the late Aron Lee Woodruff. Abel graduated in 1991 from Blytheville High School and later attended Arkansas State University in Jonesboro. Abel co-owned a barbershop in Little Rock. He poured his heart and soul into everything he did for his clients, friends and family. In addition to being a barber, he worked as a process server for Little Rock and was a member of the Masonic Lodge. Abel was of Pentecostal faith and professed his life to Christ at an early age. Abel cared for and loved everyone. “No one was considered a stranger.” He loved riding his motorcycle, going to car shows, fishing, hunting, listening to music, playing pool, and most importantly spending time with his family. Abel was predeceased by his father, Aron Lee Woodruff, Sr., and his sister, Tiffany Mitchell. Abel leaves to cherish his loving memory his four children, Kaley A. Woodruff, Caleb Woodruff, Kristopher S. Woodruff and J’Den M. Gray, all of Little Rock; his mother and stepfather, Dorothy Mae (Johnson) Tunstall and Ernest Tunstall of Blytheville; his brothers, Aaron Lee and (Valerie-Sis) Woodruff, Jr. of Blytheville, Eric and (Tina) Woodruff of Dallas, Texas; a very special friend, Adria Bryant; and a host of other family and friends. Funeral services will be Saturday, Oct. 8, at 12 p.m. at Living Word Cathedral C.O.G.I.C., 207 N. Elm Street, Osceola, AR 72370 with Pastor M.L. Smith officiating. Visitation will be 10 a.m. until noon. Burial will be held at Carney Cemetery at 1501 Byrum Road, Blytheville, AR 72315. Repast will be located at Living Word Cathedral C.O.G.I.C. Condolences may be offered at carneyfuneralhome.com. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Abel RuRu Russo Woodruff
Stocks Making The Biggest Moves Midday: Tesla Enphase Energy Exxon Mobil And More
Stocks Making The Biggest Moves Midday: Tesla Enphase Energy Exxon Mobil And More
Stocks Making The Biggest Moves Midday: Tesla, Enphase Energy, Exxon Mobil And More https://digitalarkansasnews.com/stocks-making-the-biggest-moves-midday-tesla-enphase-energy-exxon-mobil-and-more/ A Tesla service and sales center is shown in Vista, California, June 3, 2022. Mike Blake | Reuters Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Wednesday. Tesla, Twitter — Shares of Tesla fell 5.5% after a Tuesday filing confirmed that CEO Elon Musk agreed to buy Twitter for $54.20 per share, the original price he’d agreed upon for the acquisition. Shares of Twitter slumped 1%, taking a breather after surging more than 22% on Tuesday. related investing news Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs — Shares of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs dropped 2.3% and 2.8%, respectively, following downgrades from Atlantic Equities. The firm said the two investment banks have few positive catalysts ahead as they continue to deal with macro challenges. Morgan Stanley was downgraded to neutral from overweight, and Goldman Sachs was lowered to underweight from neutral. Airbnb — Shares of the travel rental company fell 1.5% even after Bernstein initiated the stock as outperform with a price target of $143, indicating an upside of about 30%. The Wall Street firm said Airbnb is on track to become the biggest travel western travel platform over the next five years. Carnival — Cruise line stocks declined as a group. Shares of Carnival fell 7%, Royal Caribbean Group dropped 3.5%, and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings declined 3.4%. The group got a boost a day earlier, after Norwegian said it would end all Covid-19 testing and vaccination requirements. Enphase Energy, Sunrun — Solar stocks declined Wednesday after their rally earlier this week. Shares of Enphase Energy declined 13%, and Sunrun tumbled 9.5%. Schlumberger — Energy stocks spiked as a group after OPEC+ decided to cut oil output by 2 million barrels a day. Schlumberger advanced 6.4%, Exxon Mobil gained 4.3%, and Phillips 66 rose 3%. Lamb Weston Holdings — Shares of the food products company climbed 4.7% after Lamb Weston reported large increases in net sales and net income for its fiscal first quarter. Lamb Weston’s adjusted earnings of 75 cents per share beat analyst estimates of 50 cents per share, according to StreetAccount. The Idaho-based company also maintained its full-year outlook despite seeing a volume decline in the quarter. Lumen Technologies — The tech company’s shares plummeted 10.3% to a 52-week low after Wells Fargo cut its price target on Lumen 56% and downgraded the stock from overweight to equal weight. Wells Fargo said its mass market segment was seeing downsides that put the dividends at risk. — CNBC’s Alexander Harring, Yun Li, Jesse Pound and Carmen Reinicke contributed reporting. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Stocks Making The Biggest Moves Midday: Tesla Enphase Energy Exxon Mobil And More
Analysis | U.S. Encourages Women-Driven Protests In Iran
Analysis | U.S. Encourages Women-Driven Protests In Iran
Analysis | U.S. Encourages Women-Driven Protests In Iran https://digitalarkansasnews.com/analysis-u-s-encourages-women-driven-protests-in-iran/ Welcome to The Daily 202! Tell your friends to sign up here. On this day in 1947, President Harry S. Truman delivered the first televised address from the White House. (The first presidential Emmy wouldn’t come until Dwight D. Eisenhower.) Are you ready for the midterm elections, which are a scant five weeks away? Use our nifty and personalized “Democracy Toolkit” to get up to speed. U.S. encourages women-driven protests in Iran The Daily 202 pointed out 10 days ago how President Biden has gone farther, faster in supporting protests in Iran than Barack Obama did in 2009. Since then, the administration has gone farther — and promises even more to help demonstrators and punish the regime. So far, things seem to be moving on three fronts: Rhetorical encouragement for Iranians who took to the streets after the death of Mahsa Amini, 22, in custody of the so-called Morality Police. The authorities grabbed her for supposedly covering her hair improperly. Sanctions on officials and entities seen as repressing the demonstrations. Support for steps to circumvent the Islamic Republic’s efforts to smother access to the Internet and other communications that might help organize the protests or spread the activist cause. In an interview with CBS’s Norah O’Donnell this week, CIA Director William Burns promised support for the free flow of information inside Iran, while sidestepping questions on whether the U.S. government would help actually deploy the technical means to skirt an Internet blackout. “The U.S. government has made very clear our support for the free flow of information and freedom of the Internet,” he said. Pressed on whether the U.S. would help deploy Starlink terminals to help Iranians get back on the web, Burns repeatedly demurred. EXCLUSIVE: CIA Director Bill Burns tells @NorahODonnell that the U.S. is committed to supporting the “free flow of information,” after the Iranian government shut down internet access for its people amid ongoing protests. More of the conversation tonight on the CBS Evening News. pic.twitter.com/l0ASFxOtFU — CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) October 3, 2022 “All I can say is, you know, we are going to continue to be strongly supportive as a government in the free flow of information,” Burns said. (Any CIA action inside Iran would be fraught because the agency once helped overthrow an Iranian government.) Asked whether the protests, which have swept across Iran, might be the start of a revolution, Burns did not answer directly. But he didn’t dispute the premise, either. “I don’t think they are isolated protests. And you know what is striking — at least to me and our analysts here — is the sweep of those protests right now,” he told CBS, adding that Iranians were “fed up in a lot of ways” with their government. “They’re willing to take the risk of getting out and demonstrating because they’re fed up with economic decay, with corruption, with the social restrictions, especially, that Iranian women face, and with political repression as well,” the CIA director said. Separately, the White House and the State Department have gone beyond the usual broad lip service to international principles of human rights to specifically embrace the cause that triggered the unrest: flouting repressive dress codes for women. “Women should be able to wear what they want, free from violence or harassment,” Biden press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters Tuesday. “Iran must end its use of violence against its own citizens simply for exercising their fundamental freedoms, their fundamental rights.” (Interestingly, Jean-Pierre played down the significance of the CIA director making such sweeping remarks about Iran, noting that the president, his national security adviser and other top officials have also spoken out.) That wasn’t the first time over the past two weeks that the United States made such common cause with Iranian protesters — particularly the women who have burned the traditional hijab headscarf and cut their hair in public to denounce Amini’s death. While Biden did not do so in his most recent statement, late Monday, the State Department (and Jean-Pierre) have done so. On Sept. 28, State Department spokesman Ned Price described Amini as “a young woman who was arrested for exercising what should have been a universal right to freedom of expression, in this case specifically the right to determine for herself her appearance, what she chose to wear.” A day earlier, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said “Mahsa should be alive today.  The only reason she’s not is because a brutal regime took her life and took her life because of decisions she should be making about what she would wear or not wear. “Women in Iran have the right to wear what they want; they have the right to be free from violence; they have the right to be free from harassment,” he added. None of this is astonishing or deserves the three-siren treatment on social media. But given that the protests show no signs of fading away — quite the opposite — and given that (as we pointed out in that Sept. 23 column) the protests over the headscarf rules also build on a reservoir of anger at political repression and a terrible economy, with potentially calamitous results for the regime, it all deserves our unveiled attention. OPEC and its allies move to slash oil production by 2 million barrels a day “A coalition of oil-producing nations led by Saudi Arabia announced Wednesday it would slash oil production by 2 million barrels per day, in a rebuke to President Biden that could push up gas prices worldwide and worsen the risk of a global recession,”  Jeff Stein, John Hudson and Rachel Lerman report. “The OPEC Plus coalition said the cut in production would take effect in November. This would be the first time the group cut oil production targets since the beginning of the pandemic.” White House says Biden’s Florida visit will be ‘above politics’ White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Tuesday that Biden’s visit Wednesday to Florida to assess hurricane damage would be “above politics,”  John Wagner and Mariana Alfaro report. “There will be plenty of times — plenty of time to discuss differences between the president and the governor … but now is not the time,” Jean-Pierre said. South Korea apologizes for missile crash during drill with U.S. “South Korea’s military apologized Wednesday after a missile crashed during joint drills with the United States, alarming some residents on the country’s eastern coast. The U.S. military and South Korea fired surface-to-surface missiles into the sea in response to North Korea launching a ballistic missile over Japan on Tuesday, for the first time since 2017,”  Ellen Francis reports. Putin faces limits of his military power as Ukraine recaptures land “Russian President Vladimir Putin is betting that an impending infusion of drafted troops can change the dynamic on the battlefield in Ukraine, but analysts say he is losing time, as his military operation succumbs further to Ukrainian advances and shows signs that it needs more than just raw personnel to regain the initiative,” Paul Sonne reports. Lunchtime reads from The Post Trump asks Supreme Court to intervene in Mar-a-Lago search case “By taking the case to the Supreme Court, Trump gets another chance to publicly argue that he is being treated unfairly by the Justice Department, and if he succeeds, it could stymie or stall the ongoing investigation into his conduct,”  Devlin Barrett and Robert Barnes report. Xi Jinping’s quest for total control of China is just getting started “Over the last decade, Xi has reversed political changes of the 1980s designed to prevent over-centralization of power. He has done away with presidential term limits, reasserted party control and elevated his personal status to a level unseen in at least 30 years, if not the Mao era,”  Christian Shepherd and Eva Dou report. “At a crucial party congress beginning Oct. 16, Xi is set to complete his elevation to uncontested paramount leader. ‘Xi Jinping is somebody who has spent years making the whole ideological apparatus say that the party only works with him as leader, and only his way of thinking about things is accurate,’ said Joseph Torigian, a China historian at American University in D.C.” Fauci says he’ll testify if GOP holds hearings. ‘If they call me, of course.’ “Anthony S. Fauci, the government’s top infectious-disease expert, said Tuesday that he would cooperate with probes led by congressional Republicans, should the GOP retake Congress this fall and hold hearings on coronavirus next year as its members have vowed to do,” Dan Diamond reports. Mar-a-Lago documents included pardons, emails, legal bills “The thousands of documents seized from former President Donald Trump’s Florida home included a mix of government, business and personal affairs, including analysis about who should get a pardon, call notes marked with a presidential seal, retainer agreements for lawyers and accountants, and legal bills, according to newly disclosed logs created by federal investigators,” Bloomberg News‘ Zoe Tillman reports. Whoops: “The detailed lists of seized materials were attached to a recently unsealed Aug. 30 report from the Justice Department. A judge had ordered the logs stay under seal but they appeared to be inadvertently posted to the public court docket. They’re no longer publicly visible.” Talk of ‘civil war,’ Ignited by Mar-a-Lago search, is flaring online “Polling, social media studies and a rise in threats suggest that a growing number of Americans are anticipating, or even welcoming, the possibility of sustained political violence, researchers studying extremism say. What was once the subject of serious discussion only on the political periphery has migrated clos...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Analysis | U.S. Encourages Women-Driven Protests In Iran
Analysis | The Politics-Religion Overlap Is Murkier Than Kellyanne Conway Suggests
Analysis | The Politics-Religion Overlap Is Murkier Than Kellyanne Conway Suggests
Analysis | The Politics-Religion Overlap Is Murkier Than Kellyanne Conway Suggests https://digitalarkansasnews.com/analysis-the-politics-religion-overlap-is-murkier-than-kellyanne-conway-suggests/ Kellyanne Conway began a new job this week, appearing on Fox News as a paid contributor. It’s a good fit for Conway, who has always excelled at presenting punchy rhetorical points on the fly. It’s also a good fit, of course, because Conway has spent most of the past six years deploying such points in service of Donald Trump and his politics — precisely the sort of thing Fox News viewers have grown accustomed to hearing. On Tuesday night, Conway appeared on Sean Hannity’s eponymous show. When Hannity asked whether Conway expected to see “a dramatic demographic shift this election,” she replied that she did — particularly among Hispanics. “Hispanics are realigning,” she said, first pointing to economic considerations as a cause. Then, she added, “they’re also very religious and they see a Democratic Party that’s openly hostile to religion most days. They can’t even give you thoughts and prayers when there’s a tragedy. It’s only thoughts now.” This is not an uncommon argument. But it’s an overly simple and, in part, an explicitly dishonest one. As a general rule, it is true that Hispanic and Black Americans are more likely to identify as Christian and less likely to say they have no religious identity than White Americans. Data from the biannual General Social Survey (GSS) shows that over the past two decades, religious identity as Christian has waned across racial groups and rejection of religious identity has increased. You can see this in the two graphs in the left-hand column, below. Conway’s point, though, is centered on the right-hand column. Democrats are more likely to reject religion than Republicans — if we’re talking about White Democrats. Non-White Democrats identify along religious lines about the same way that White Republicans do. There were not enough Black and Hispanic Republicans included in the survey to show on the graph, which says something by itself. This is only one measure of religion, of course. The GSS also asks about religious attendance where, again, we see that Whites are least likely to say they attend religious services regularly. But that’s mostly because White Democrats are much less likely to do so. White Republicans attend religious services at about the same rate as Black Democrats. So should we assume that Black Americans will similarly “realign” with Republicans? Well, no, because we understand that the religious traditions between those groups are largely dissimilar and because we recognize that there are other historic reasons that Black Americans align with the Democratic Party. Church attendance, in fact, likely reinforces that alignment. What these graphs are reinforcing, really, is that the distinction between religious identities can be as important as the distinction between religious and nonreligious. At the outset, we considered religious identity through the lens of Christianity, because when Conway talks about religion she’s talking about the particular version of religion that is most common in her party. When she talks about the left’s purported “hostility” to religion, she’s talking about conflicts rooted in how her allies think religion should be practiced and manifested. There are wide differences in how different religious groups overlap with political preferences. Pew Research Center matched voter files with polling to determine how religious identification related to voting in the 2018 midterm elections. It was a broadly Democratic-friendly election, but if we compare the margin among religious groups to the national margin, we get a sense of the spread. The margin among White evangelical Protestants was 73 points more Republican than the national margin. Among White Catholics, it was 29 points more Republican. Among Hispanic Catholics, though, it was 35 points more Democratic. Among Black Protestants, it was 80 points more Democratic. There was a shift to the right among both Blacks and Hispanics in 2020, as Pew’s data documents. But the gaps above are wide. If White Catholics and Hispanic Catholics deviate by 64 points in their national vote margin, that suggests pretty strongly that there are other pulls on political choice besides simply religious identity. A third of Trump’s support in 2020 came from evangelicals, according to Pew, a group with a very specific view of religion and religion’s role in society that is not shared even by other Christians. Conway’s certainly right, though, that some Hispanics are increasingly choosing to vote Republican. Texas Monthly’s Jack Herrera wrote an excellent assessment of the shift in the southern part of that state in 2020. To oversimplify, the suggestion from Herrera’s article is that religious identity is a subset of cultural changes that are affecting vote choice. This doesn’t conflict with Conway’s assessment, necessarily; it’s just a different focus. The focus deployed by Conway is unsubtle. That Democrats are “openly hostile” to religion will likely come as a surprise to the heavy majority of Democrats who are religious, including White Democrats. It will come as a surprise to President Biden, a practicing Catholic who makes a point of attending service each week — and who defeated Conway’s boss in 2020, a president whose trips to churches were inseparable from politics. Her example is that Democrats object to the phrase “thoughts and prayers,” which, of course, is not an objection to praying but to Republican reliance on the phrase as a response to mass shooting events. This is one reason Conway is so good at what she does. She knows the data, certainly; her background is in polling. She’s adept at using factual points as a jumping off point for rhetorical ones. Like that Hispanics are more religious than (White) Democrats — ergo, they will be turned off by the purported anti-religious tendencies of the left. No wonder Fox News wanted to bring her onboard. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Analysis | The Politics-Religion Overlap Is Murkier Than Kellyanne Conway Suggests
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances https://digitalarkansasnews.com/gop-optimistic-about-senate-chances/ NEW YORK (AP) — Leading Republicans are entering the final month of the midterm campaign increasingly optimistic that a Senate majority is within reach even as a dramatic family fight in Georgia clouds one of the party’s biggest pickup opportunities. And as some Democrats crow on social media about apparent Republican setbacks, party strategists privately concede that their own shortcomings may not be outweighed by the GOP’s mounting challenges. The evolving outlook is tied to a blunt reality: Democrats have virtually no margin for error as they confront the weight of history, widespread economic concerns and President Joe Biden’s weak standing. There is broad agreement among both parties that the Democrats’ summertime momentum across states like Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin has eroded just five weeks before Election Day. “There’s reason to be apprehensive, not reason to be gloomy,” veteran Democratic strategist James Carville said. “It looked like at the end of August we had a little momentum. I don’t know if we’ve regressed any, but we’re not progressing in many places.” That tepid outlook comes even as Republicans confront a series of self-imposed setbacks in the states that matter most in the 2022 midterms, which will decide the balance of power in Congress and statehouses across the nation. None has been more glaring than Herschel Walker’s struggles in Georgia, where the Republican Senate candidate’s own son accused him of lying about his personal challenges — including a report from The Daily Beast alleging that the anti-abortion Walker paid for a girlfriend’s abortion in 2009. Walker called the accusation a “flat-out lie” and said he would sue. Walker had not taken legal action as of late Tuesday, but he repeated his denials Wednesday morning during a Fox News interview, even as he talked generally of a difficult past as a husband and father. Shown an image of the “get well” card the Daily Beast reported that he sent to the girlfriend — which was signed with an “H,” not his full signature — Walker said, he doesn’t sign cards with just an initial. The Republican establishment, including the Sen. Mitch McConnell-aligned Senate Leadership Fund, and former President Donald Trump himself remained staunchly behind Walker on Tuesday in his bid to oust first-term Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock. A Walker campaign adviser said the candidate has raised at least $500,000 since he first responded publicly to The Daily Beast report. “If you’re in a fight, people will come to your aid,” said Steven Law, head of the Senate Leadership Fund and a close ally of McConnell, R-Ky. Law said the Georgia race had grown increasingly competitive despite the Democrats’ focus on Walker’s personal life. And looking beyond Georgia, Law said the political climate was predictably shifting against the party that controls the White House, as is typically the case in midterm elections. “It certainly seems that voters are returning to a more traditional midterm frame of mind,” Law said. Should Republicans gain even one Senate seat in November, they would take control of Congress’ upper chamber — and with it, the power to control judicial nominations and policy debates for the last two years of Biden’s term. Leaders in both parties believe Republicans are likely to take over the House. Even facing such odds, it’s far too soon to predict a Republican-controlled Congress. Democrats remain decidedly on offense and are spending heavily to try to flip Republican-held seats in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and North Carolina. Voter opposition to the Supreme Court’s decision this summer to strip women of their constitutional right to an abortion has energized the Democratic base and led to a surge in female voter registrations. Republicans are most focused on Democratic incumbents in Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire and Nevada, although Republican officials believe that underwhelming Trump-backed nominees in Arizona and New Hampshire have dampened the party’s pickup opportunities. “The Republican candidates they’re running are too extreme,” said J.B. Poersch, who leads the pro-Democrat Senate Majority PAC. “I think this is still advantage Democrats.” Meanwhile, conditions in the top battleground states are rapidly evolving. In Pennsylvania, Republican Senate nominee Mehmet Oz faced difficult new questions this week raised by a Washington Post article about the medical products he endorsed as a daytime television star. Another news report by the news site Jezebel detailing how his research caused hundreds of dogs to be killed rippled across social media. Still, Democratic officials acknowledge the race tightened considerably as the calendar shifted to October. And White House officials are concerned about Democratic nominee John Fetterman’s stamina as he recovers from a May stroke. “Senate Republicans had a very bad start to October, but we know each of our races will be tight and we’re going to keep taking nothing for granted,” said Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, who leads the Senate Democrats’ campaign arm. The GOP Senate candidates’ latest challenges in Georgia and Pennsylvania dominated social media Monday and Tuesday, according to data compiled by GQR, a public opinion research firm that works with Democratic organizations. News stories about Walker’s abortion accuser and Oz’s animal research had the first- and second-highest reach of any news stories on Facebook and Twitter since they surfaced Monday, topping content related to the television show “Sons of Anarchy,” another report about Planned Parenthood mobile abortion clinics and news about Kanye West. GQR used the social listening tool NewsWhip, which tracks over 500,000 websites in more than 100 languages roughly in real time. In swing-state Nevada, the rhetoric from Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto has become increasingly urgent in recent days as she fends off a fierce challenge from former state Attorney General Adam Laxalt. Within the White House, there is real fear that she could lose her reelection bid, giving Republicans the only seat they may need to claim the Senate majority. “We have a big problem, friend,” Cortez Masto wrote in a fundraising appeal Tuesday. “Experts say that our race in Nevada could decide Senate control — and right now, polling shows me 1 point behind my Trump-endorsed opponent.” Democrats and their allies continue to hope that backlash against the Supreme Court’s abortion decision will help them overcome historical trends in which the party controlling the White House almost always loses seats in Congress. Democrats, who control Washington, are also facing deep voter pessimism about the direction of the country and Biden’s relatively weak approval ratings. The traditional rules of politics have often been broken in the Trump era. In past years, Republicans may have abandoned Walker. But on Tuesday, they linked arms behind him. Law, of the Senate Leadership Fund, said he takes Walker at his word that he did not pay for a former girlfriend’s abortion, despite apparent evidence of a “Get Well” card with Walker’s signature and a check receipt. He said voters believe that “Walker may have made mistakes in his personal life that affected him and his family, but Warnock has made mistakes in public life in Washington that affected them and their families.” There were some signs of Republican concern on the ground in Georgia, however. Martha Zoller, a popular Republican radio host in north Georgia and one-time congressional candidate, told her audience Tuesday that the latest allegations require Walker to reset his campaign with a straightforward admission about his “personal demons” and what he’s done to overcome them. “He needs to fall on the sword. ‘I was a dog. … And I have asked forgiveness for it,’” she said, detailing the kind of message she believes Walker must give voters. “It would be so refreshing to have somebody just tell the truth.” Walker attempted his version of that strategy Wednesday on Fox News. “It’s like they’re trying to bring up my past to hurt me,” he said, before quoting Christian New Testament text. “I’m a sinner. We all sin before the glory of God.” Yet Walker insisted his past transgressions don’t include encouraging and paying for an abortion. “Everyone is anonymous, and everyone is leaking, and they want you to confess to something you have no clue about,” he said. Veteran Democratic strategist Josh Schwerin warned his party against writing off the Georgia Republican. “I wouldn’t say Walker is done. Over the last couple of cycles we’ve certainly seen Republican candidates survive things that are not supposed to be survivable,” Schwerin said. “There are a lot of close races, and the dynamics of this election are difficult to predict. Everybody is expecting multiple shifts in momentum between now and Election Day.” ___ Associated Press writers Zeke Miller in Washington and Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances
Keller Williams Releases Dates For 2023 Solo Winter Tour
Keller Williams Releases Dates For 2023 Solo Winter Tour
Keller Williams Releases Dates For 2023 Solo Winter Tour https://digitalarkansasnews.com/keller-williams-releases-dates-for-2023-solo-winter-tour/ Keller Williams has announced a set of impending dates for his 2023 solo winter tour, dubbed An Evening with Keller Williams. The run of concerts will begin on Jan. 20 at Revolution Music Room in Little Rock, Ark., followed by 12 stops and wrapping on April 1 at the Current Ballroom in Phoenix.  Following the tour kick off, Williams will trek through the Southern region of the United States, where he’ll take a stand in Arkansas, Texas and Oklahoma. Eventually, the musician will take a stand in Wisconsin and Indiana before making his way to Vermont in mid-February.  Then, there will be a break in the solo tour dates at the beginning of March as Williams plays three shows with Steve Poltz on the Shut the Folk Up and Listen series. Williams will resume his solo stand on March 9 in Telluride, Colo., before working his way west and ending in The Grand Canyon State on April 1. Tickets go on sale this Friday, Oct. 7, at 10 a.m. local time. Learn more here.   See the tour announcement below. An Evening with Keller Williams:  Jan. 20 – Revolution Music Room – Little Rock, Ark.  Jan. 21 – George’s Majestic Lounge – Fayetteville, Ark.  Jan. 27 – Tulips FTW – Fort Worth, Texas Jan. 28 – Tower Theatre – Oklahoma City, Okla. Feb. 10 – Stoughton Opera House – Stoughton, Wis. Feb. 11 – The Vogue – Indianapolis, Ind. Feb. 18 – Jay Peak Resort – Jay, Vt. March 9 – Sheridan Opera House – Telluride, Colo. March 10 – The Animas City Theater – Durango, Colo. March 11 – Meow Wolf – Santa Fe, N.M.  March 30 – The Holding Company – San Diego March 31 – Orpheum Theater – Flagstaff, Ariz.  April 1 – Current Ballroom – Phoenix Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Keller Williams Releases Dates For 2023 Solo Winter Tour
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody.
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody.
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody. https://digitalarkansasnews.com/a-student-was-killed-in-a-purdue-university-residence-hall-his-roommate-is-in-custody/ A Purdue University student will be charged with murder after his roommate was killed in a residence hall on the Indiana campus, according to the school’s police chief. Ji Min “Jimmy” Sha, a junior cybersecurity major and international student from Korea, called 911 around 12:45 a.m. to alert police about the death, Purdue University Police Chief Lesley Wiete said during a news conference Wednesday morning. Details of that call, including how the victim died in the room on the first floor of McCutcheon Hall, were not disclosed. However, the chief and the Tippecanoe County Coroner Office identified the slain student as Varun Manish Chheda, a 20-year-old senior from Indianapolis who was studying data science. An autopsy is scheduled for later in the day. The entrance to the campus of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.Daniel Acker / Bloomberg via Getty Images file Wiete said Sha, 22, was taken into custody minutes after the 911 call and transported to the police station for further investigation. He has not been booked yet, according to the chief. Following the homicide, school officials said there was no threat to the community. Wiete did not discuss a motive or details about potential weapons, but said that the 911 call came from the room and only Chheda and Sha were in it at the time. “I believe this was unprovoked and senseless,” she said, noting neither roommate was asleep when the incident happened. When asked why Sha made the 911 call, Wiete said, “he is the one who made the call and alerted us to the situation.” Purdue President Mitch Daniels called the news “as tragic an event as we can imagine happening on our campus and our hearts and thoughts go out to all of those affected by this terrible event.” Purdue has about 50,000 undergraduate and graduate students enrolled for the fall semester, according to its website. Staff at residence halls and clinicians with the school’s counseling and psychological services are providing support to students in need, he said in a statement Wednesday morning. Daniels assured everyone that the campus is a safe. “Compared with cities of Purdue’s population (approximately 60,000 in all), we experience a tiny fraction of violent and property crime that occurs elsewhere,” he said. “Such statistics are of no consolation on a day like this,” he added. “A death on our campus and among our Purdue family affects each of us deeply.” The investigation is ongoing. This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. Marlene Lenthang Marlene Lenthang is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody.
Inside The White House's Failed Effort To Dissuade OPEC From Cutting Oil Production To Avoid A 'total Disaster' | CNN Politics
Inside The White House's Failed Effort To Dissuade OPEC From Cutting Oil Production To Avoid A 'total Disaster' | CNN Politics
Inside The White House's Failed Effort To Dissuade OPEC From Cutting Oil Production To Avoid A 'total Disaster' | CNN Politics https://digitalarkansasnews.com/inside-the-white-houses-failed-effort-to-dissuade-opec-from-cutting-oil-production-to-avoid-a-total-disaster-cnn-politics/ Washington CNN  —  The Biden administration launched a full-scale pressure campaign in a last-ditch effort to dissuade Middle Eastern allies from dramatically cutting oil production, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter. But that effort appears to have failed, following Wednesday’s crucial meeting of OPEC+, the international cartel of oil producers that, as expected, announced a significant cut to output in an effort to raise oil prices. That in turn will likely cause US gasoline prices to rise at a precarious time for the Biden administration, just five weeks before the midterm elections. On Wednesday morning, OPEC+ oil ministers meeting in Vienna agreed to an even larger production cut than the White House had feared — 2 million barrels per day, beginning in November, according to a readout of the meeting released on Wednesday. The ministers said the cuts were necessary “in light of the uncertainty that surrounds the global economic and oil market outlooks.” President Joe Biden told CNN’s Arlette Saenz on Wednesday that he was “concerned” about the cuts, which he viewed as “unnecessary.” Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters when asked about the move that “when it comes to OPEC, we’ve made clear our views to the OPEC members.” For the past several days, Biden’s senior-most energy, economic and foreign policy officials were enlisted to lobby their foreign counterparts in Middle Eastern allied countries including Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates to vote against cutting oil production. Wednesday’s production cut amounts to the largest cut since the beginning of the pandemic and could lead to a dramatic spike in oil prices. Some of the draft talking points circulated by the White House to the Treasury Department on Monday that were obtained by CNN framed the prospect of a production cut as a “total disaster” and warned that it could be taken as a “hostile act.” “It’s important everyone is aware of just how high the stakes are,” said a US official of what was framed as a broad administration effort that is expected to continue in the lead up to the Wednesday OPEC+ meeting. The White House is “having a spasm and panicking,” another US official said, describing this latest administration effort as “taking the gloves off.” According to a White House official, the talking points were being drafted and exchanged by staffers and not approved by White House leadership or used with foreign partners. In a statement to CNN, National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said, “We’ve been clear that energy supply should meet demand to support economic growth and lower prices for consumers around the world and we will continue to talk with our partners about that.” For Biden, a dramatic cut in oil production could not come at a worse time. The administration has for months engaged in an intensive domestic and foreign policy effort to mitigate soaring energy prices in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. That work appeared to pay off, with US gasoline prices falling for almost 100 days in a row. But with just a month to go before the critical midterm elections, US gasoline prices have begun to creep up again, posing a political risk the White House is desperately trying to avoid. As US officials have moved to gauge potential domestic options to head off gradual increases over the last several weeks, the news of major OPEC+ action presents a particularly acute challenge. Watson, the NSC spokesperson declined to comment on the midterms, saying instead, “Thanks to the President’s efforts, energy prices have declined sharply from their highs and American consumers are paying far less at the pump.” Amos Hochstein, Biden’s top energy envoy, has played a leading role in the lobbying effort, which has been far more extensive than previously reported amid extreme concern in the White House over the potential cut. Hochstein, along with top national security official Brett McGurk and the administration’s special envoy to Yemen Tim Lenderking, traveled to Jeddah late last month to discuss a range of energy and security issues as a follow up to Biden’s high-profile visit to Saudi Arabia in July. Officials across the administration’s economic and foreign policy teams have also been involved with reaching out to OPEC governments as part of the latest effort to stave off a production cut. The White House has asked Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to make the case personally to some Gulf state finance ministers, including from Kuwait and the UAE, and try to convince them that a production cut would be extremely damaging to the global economy. The US has argued that in the long-run a cut in oil production would create more downward pressure on prices – the opposite of what a significant cut would be designed to accomplish. Their logic is that “cutting right now would increase risks of inflation,” lead to higher interest rates and ultimately a greater risk of recession. “There is great political risk to your reputation and relations with the United States and the west if you move forward,” the White House draft talking points suggested Yellen communicate to her foreign counterparts. A senior US official acknowledged that the administration has been lobbying the Saudi-led coalition for weeks to try to convince them not to cut oil production. It comes less than three months after President Joe Biden traveled to Saudi Arabia and met with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on a trip that was driven in part by a desire to convince Saudi Arabia, the de facto leader of OPEC, to increase oil production which would help bring down the then-skyrocketing gas prices. 03:22 – Source: CNN Biden’s meeting with Saudi crown prince comes under fire When OPEC+ agreed a few weeks later to a modest 100,000 barrel increase in production, critics argued Biden had gotten little out of the trip. The trip was billed as a meeting with regional leaders about issues critical to US national security, including Iran, Israel and Yemen. It was criticized for its lack of results and for rehabbing the image of the crown prince who had been directly blamed by Biden for orchestrating the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. In the months leading up to the meeting, Biden’s top aides for the Middle East and energy, McGurk and Hochstein, shuttled between Washington and Saudi Arabia planning and coordinating the visit. One diplomatic official in the region described the US campaign to block production cuts as less of a hard sell, and more of an effort to underscore a critical international moment given the economic fragility and ongoing war in Ukraine. Though another source familiar with the discussions told CNN it was described by a diplomat from one of the countries approached as “desperate.” A source familiar with the outreach says a call was planned with the UAE but the effort was rebuffed by Kuwait. Kuwait’s embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Neither did Saudi Arabia’s. The UAE embassy declined to comment. Publicly, the White House has cautiously avoided weighing in on the possibility of a dramatic oil production cut. “We are not members of OPEC+, and so I don’t want to get ahead of what could potentially come out of that meeting,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters Monday. The US focus, Jean-Pierre said, remains “taking every step to ensure markets are sufficiently supplied to meet demand for a growing global economy.” OPEC+ members are weighing a more dramatic cut due to what has been a precipitous decline in prices, which have dropped sharply to below $90 per barrel in recent months. Hanging over Wednesday’s OPEC+ meeting in Vienna will also be the looming oil price cap that European nations intend to impose on Russian oil exports as punishment for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Many OPEC+ members, not only Russia, have expressed unhappiness with the prospect of a price cap because of the precedent it could set for consumers, rather than the market, to dictate the price of oil. Included in the White House talking points to Treasury was a US proposal that if OPEC+ decides against a cut this week the US will announce a buyback of up to 200 million barrels to refill its Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), an emergency stockpile of petroleum that the US has been tapping into this year to help lower oil prices. The administration has made it clear to OPEC+ for months, the senior US official said, that the US is willing to buy OPEC’s oil to replenish the SPR. The idea has been to convey to OPEC+ that the US “won’t leave them hanging dry” if they invest money in production, the official said, and therefore, that prices won’t collapse if global demand decreases. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Inside The White House's Failed Effort To Dissuade OPEC From Cutting Oil Production To Avoid A 'total Disaster' | CNN Politics
Tyson To Move All Corporate Workers To Springdale Arkansas
Tyson To Move All Corporate Workers To Springdale Arkansas
Tyson To Move All Corporate Workers To Springdale, Arkansas https://digitalarkansasnews.com/tyson-to-move-all-corporate-workers-to-springdale-arkansas/ Tyson to move all corporate workers to Springdale, Arkansas, and build new campus Tyson will require all corporate employees to move to Springdale, Arkansas, according to a news release.Tyson will move workers from Chicago, Downers Grove, Illinois and South Dakota to Arkansas over the next ten months, starting in early 2023.Springdale will be home to an expanded corporate campus called OneTyson. This will “foster closer collaboration, enhance team member agility and enhance faster decision making,” according to the news release.The release stated that the company will release specific details about the OneTyson campus over the next several months. It will take multiple years to develop the campus, and some existing buildings will be remodeled. SPRINGDALE, Ark. — Tyson will require all corporate employees to move to Springdale, Arkansas, according to a news release. Tyson will move workers from Chicago, Downers Grove, Illinois and South Dakota to Arkansas over the next ten months, starting in early 2023. Springdale will be home to an expanded corporate campus called OneTyson. This will “foster closer collaboration, enhance team member agility and enhance faster decision making,” according to the news release. The release stated that the company will release specific details about the OneTyson campus over the next several months. It will take multiple years to develop the campus, and some existing buildings will be remodeled. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Tyson To Move All Corporate Workers To Springdale Arkansas
Russia Uses Iranian-Made Drones To Strike Military Base Deep Inside Ukraine
Russia Uses Iranian-Made Drones To Strike Military Base Deep Inside Ukraine
Russia Uses Iranian-Made Drones To Strike Military Base Deep Inside Ukraine https://digitalarkansasnews.com/russia-uses-iranian-made-drones-to-strike-military-base-deep-inside-ukraine/ Footage on social media showed fires ripping through buildings after Russia struck south of Kyiv with Iranian-made drones, according to Ukrainian officials. Updated Oct. 5, 2022 11:41 am ET BILA TSERKVA, Ukraine—Russia used suicide drones to strike a military base deep inside Ukraine on Wednesday, posing a growing challenge for Kyiv as its forces pressed advances in the south and east of the country. The head of the Kyiv regional military administration said six explosions had been heard overnight in Bila Tserkva, about 50 miles south of the Ukrainian capital. Oleksiy Kuleba said the attack was carried out by Iranian-made Shahed-136 delta-wing drones, which Russia has begun deploying in recent weeks. Rescue workers were on scene extinguishing a fire and assessing damage, Mr. Kuleba said, adding that one person was wounded. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Russia Uses Iranian-Made Drones To Strike Military Base Deep Inside Ukraine
Signal Of The Season: The History Behind Helenas Pumpkin House Shelby County Reporter
Signal Of The Season: The History Behind Helenas Pumpkin House Shelby County Reporter
Signal Of The Season: The History Behind Helena’s Pumpkin House – Shelby County Reporter https://digitalarkansasnews.com/signal-of-the-season-the-history-behind-helenas-pumpkin-house-shelby-county-reporter/ Published 8:52 am Wednesday, October 5, 2022 By Michelle Love Photos By Chris VanCleave and Jeremy Raines October signals the arrival of many things in Helena: the changing of the leaves, the various neighborhood Witches Rides and especially the return of the Helena Pumpkin House. Helena residents should be very familiar with the Pumpkin House. For the past three years, members of the city transform the pergola in the center of Old Town into a structure that screams of all things fall: Approximately 400 pumpkins from the Finley Ave. Farmers Market with twinkling string lights, scarecrows and more. Residents of the city are welcome to walk around and through the pergola, take photos, videos and make fun fall memories in the house’s month-long duration. Three years ago, City Councilmember and then-Beautification Board member Chris VanCleave was working with his fellow Board members on coming up with ideas for what to do for fall. VanCleave had been in Little Rock, Arkansas filming segments for P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home Retreat Show when he saw that Smith had a pumpkin house structure on his farm. VanCleave said Smith showed him how to build the house, and VanCleave presented the idea to the Board when he returned to Helena. VanCleave said the pergola was the perfect choice for the house as it is “a natural gathering spot.” VanCleave worked with Public Works Director Jason Poe and Poe’s team on how they could properly execute the idea. Together, VanCleave, Poe and his team worked to get the house going. It premiered and they came and helped me set it up and get it going. The Pumpkin House was an instant success, and the next year, VanCleave worked with Kim Edwards, who took over the Beautification Board, to improve the house. “We are constantly looking for ways to continuously improve things, so we figured out a better way to stage the pumpkins,” he said. “They wanted to add scarecrows and hay and kind of beef it up a little more, so we did that. This time, the Board had a hands-on experience building the house, but the Public Works team continues to play an integral part in how we make the house happen every year.” They begin planning the house around early August, and VanCleave said the actual assembly of the house takes a whole day. Excitement around the house grows with each year, and VanCleave said the house represents all the good things about fall in Helena. “When I think about fall in Helena, I think about the falling leaves, the Pumpkin House and football,” he said. “I have heard people say that it signals a change of season in Helena. It’s something kids of all ages enjoy. I’ve seen small children just pitch a fit over it and also grandmas. You know, it just makes everybody smile, and to have started that during a period of time when we all needed to smile, it was a good thing for us to do. It still means a lot to people.” The debut date for this year’s Pumpkin House is Saturday, Oct. 22. The house will be up through Thanksgiving before the Board begins decorating for Christmas season. How Helena celebrates holidays in general, is just another aspect that makes Helena unique, according to VanCleave. “We try very hard to maintain that small town feel,” he said. “Even though we’ve seen a lot of growth in the last 10 years, these fun holiday things help bring us together and keep us close and focused on our families and being together.” Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Signal Of The Season: The History Behind Helenas Pumpkin House Shelby County Reporter
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business https://digitalarkansasnews.com/musk-deal-could-see-trump-back-on-twitter-by-midterms-cnn-business/ 01:51 – Source: CNN Is the Musk Twitter deal back on?! Here are the winners and losers CNN  —  Elon Musk’s decision this week to once again move forward with his deal to acquire Twitter could see the return to the platform of former President Donald Trump, once the world’s most influential tweeter. While Trump has previously said he would stay on his own social media platform, Truth Social, rather than return to Twitter, the former president may find the lure of tens of millions of Twitter followers difficult to resist. “I do think it was not correct to ban Donald Trump; I think that was a mistake,” Musk said at a conference in May, pledging to reverse the ban were he to become the company’s owner. Despite agreeing to take over the company earlier this year, Musk soured on the idea over the summer and spent months battling to get out of it. Twitter sued him to force him to complete the deal. His U-turn and decision to go ahead with buying the company came to light in a securities filing Tuesday, just two weeks before he and Twitter are due to go to court. Twitter said Tuesday it was intent on closing the deal, opening the possibility that Musk could take over the company within weeks, if the deal is completed. The company’s board and shareholders had previously approved the deal, but uncertainties remain. Twitter will have to decide how to play ball with Musk, taking into account his prior waffling on the deal — a negotiation process that could come down to how to ensure the world’s richest man will actually cut a check this time. If the deal goes through, it could soon return to Trump what was once his preferred social media platform. Trump, whose tweets as president often drove the agenda in Washington, DC, had almost 90 million followers before he was banned permanently by the platform two days after the January 6 attack on the Capitol. (It’s unclear whether Trump would automatically regain his followers if unbanned.) Twitter said it made the decision “due to the risk of further incitement of violence.” Speaking in May, a few weeks after he began his bid to take over Twitter, Musk argued, “Banning Trump from Twitter didn’t end Trump’s voice, it will amplify it among the right and this is why it’s morally wrong and flat out stupid.” (Musk has also said he’s against permanent bans more broadly, which could open the door for far-right personalities and conspiracy theorists to return to the platform.) Jack Dorsey, who was the CEO of Twitter when the company banned Trump but has since left the company, responded to Musk’s comments saying he agreed that there should not be permanent bans. He said Trump’s ban was a “business decision” and it “shouldn’t have been.” Musk’s comments came just as Trump was about to begin posting on his own social media platform, Truth Social. Trump told Fox News at the time that he would not return to Twitter, even if he were allowed. “I am not going on Twitter, I am going to stay on Truth,” Trump told Fox News. He added, “I hope Elon buys Twitter because he’ll make improvements to it and he is a good man, but I am going to be staying on Truth.” But relations between the pair seem to have soured since, with the men publicly trading barbs over the summer. After Trump called Musk a “bullsh*t artist” at a rally in July, Musk responded by tweet, writing, “I don’t hate the man, but it’s time for Trump to hang up his hat & sail into the sunset.”  Trump has not commented on Musk’s decision to revive the deal this week. Trump’s potential return to Twitter comes just a few months before he could also be allowed to return to Meta’s Facebook and Instagram. Unlike Twitter, which said it had permanently banned Trump, Meta (formerly Facebook) said it would review its ban after two years – meaning the former president could be returning to its platforms as soon as January 2023, just as the next presidential race is set to begin. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time — Why Doesn https://digitalarkansasnews.com/democrats-won-the-biggest-policy-battle-of-our-time-why-doesn/ I’m so old I can remember a time before critical race theory, Mr. Potato Head and library books about gay teenagers were the greatest threats to America. I know it’s hard to believe that anything could ever be more dangerous to all we hold dear, but once upon a time millions of people were convinced that affordable health care spelled the end of the republic as we know it. They took to the streets, mobbed town hall meetings and screamed bloody murder when the government proposed a law that would ban insurance companies from refusing to cover sick people and offered government help to people who could not afford the sky-high premiums those companies charged. It seems like ancient history now but just a few years ago the hottest, most contentious issue in America was the passage of the Affordable Care Act (also known, for better or worse, as Obamacare). The Republican Party organized itself for almost a decade solely around a promise to repeal it. In fact, they actually voted to do so 67 times over the course of seven years. As president at the time, Barack Obama would have vetoed any repeal, of course, but the act of voting against it was enough to keep the base in line, outraged and on the march from one election to the next. In the 2016 election, all the Republican candidates had ACA repeal as a top priority. By that time the program was becoming part of people’s lives and broadly gaining in popularity, so the GOP had landed on “repeal and replace” as their slogan — a promise to enact something different but equivalent, the details of which they always failed to spell out. Inevitably, the best they could offer was some kind of vague, voluntary state-by-state insurance plan that would be more expensive and grossly inadequate. Nonetheless, it seemed to animate their voters like no other issue. The American right just hated Obamacare, even more than the ancient shibboleths of “welfare” and “affirmative action.” Donald Trump, as usual, took the “replace” promise to new heights. Just days before the 2016 election, he made this vow: My first day in office, I am going to ask Congress to put a bill on my desk getting rid of this disastrous law and replacing it with reforms that expand choice, freedom, affordability. You’re going to have such great health care at a tiny fraction of the cost. And it’s going to be so easy. Well, it wasn’t so easy. The House passed a terrible replacement bill in 2017 but it failed in the Senate bill by one vote, after that legendary thumbs-down by Sen. John McCain, who was near the end of his life but wanted a final measure of revenge against Trump, perhaps over his spiteful comments about McCain’s record of military service. (I think he was the last Republican, before Liz Cheney, to land a truly damaging blow against Trump.) Trump tried to move on to tax cuts but must have gotten some blowback from the base. In October of that year he tried to have it both ways, tweeting, “As usual the ObamaCare premiums will be up (the Dems own it) but we will Repeal & Replace and have great Healthcare soon — after Tax Cuts!” Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course. By that time, Republicans in Congress were counting on the Supreme Court to gut the Affordable Care Act for them, and kept a lower profile on the issue. Nonetheless, Republican candidates for office still ran on the promise and Trump kept saying the bill was almost ready, so the base was supposedly still excited at the prospect — dampened a bit, no doubt, by GOP losses in 2018. As the 2020 election cycle began, Trump started campaigning on repeal-and-replace again, claiming he would announce a new plan “in two months, maybe less.” That didn’t happen, and as usual he just started saying whatever he thought people wanted to hear: A plan would be “ready in two weeks” or “by the end of the month,” or he was just about to issue an executive order “requiring health insurance companies to cover all preexisting conditions for all customers,” something he claimed had “never been done before.” His crowds cheered deliriously, no doubt believing that just as he’d surely finish his wall he’d get that done in a second term as well. Trump kept promising a new health care plan “in two months” and then “two weeks,” and then vowed to issue an executive order to force insurance companies to cover everything at no cost. Somehow we never got to see this fabulous plan. Trump lost that election — in reality, if not in the collective imagination of his fans — so we never got to see that fabulous health care plan that would cost nothing and cover everything. Still, losing elections had never stopped the Republicans from running on the issue anyway. Repealing Obamacare was their holy grail for almost a decade, until they suddenly stopped talking about it. So what gives? Why haven’t we heard anything at all about it this election cycle? Well, as NBC News reports, the Republican commitment to ensuring that millions of people suffer from unnecessary illness, death and bankruptcy just isn’t sexy anymore: With slightly more than a month before the next election, Republicans in Congress and on the campaign trail aren’t making an issue of Obamacare. None of the Republican Senate nominees running in eight key battleground states have called for unwinding the ACA on their campaign websites, according to an NBC News review. The candidates scarcely mention the 2010 law or health insurance policy in general. And in interviews on Capitol Hill, key GOP lawmakers said the desire for repeal has faded. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s recent “Commitment to America” made no mention of it either, although the chairman of the ultra-conservative Republican Study Committee did put out a plan that included an unspecified reversal of “the ACA’s Washington-centric approach.” When asked about it, however, he told NBC that it would be up to McCarthy, the presumptive incoming House speaker, to put it on the agenda. Interestingly, while it’s true that Obamacare is popular, it’s not all that popular. A Kaiser Family Foundation tracking poll found that 55% of U.S. adults approved of the ACA while 42% disapproved. So it’s not liek the GOP base hasn’t come around. They’re just bored with being angry about it and have been distracted by all the more exciting new grievances of the moment. Kevin McCarthy and Rick Scott don’t talk about Obamacare in 2022 — maybe because the GOP base likes their racism undiluted these days. Repealing government-guaranteed health care has been a fundamental principles of the right wing for as long as I can remember. Medicare and Medicaid (aka “entitlements”) have perennially been on the chopping block. I assume Republicans still hate it for the same reason they’ve always hated it: The wrong people may benefit, and that makes it unacceptable. They’ve got no major problem with government social programs — as long as they’re targeted to “real” Americans, if you know what I mean.  Over the past few years, however, the principles that have always been just below the surface of conservative hostility toward egalitarian government programs have evolved from implicit racial animosity to more explicit demands for racist policies and a full-blown assault on the democratic process. The impulses really haven’t changed but the right is now willing to experiment with extremist tactics to achieve their goals. Still, I would never say they’ve entirely given up on repealing Obamacare. While Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, the Senate Republican campaign chairman, doesn’t specifically mention it in his audacious governing agenda, he still wants to “rein in” Medicare and Social Security (through unspecified cuts in benefits or services). Some things never change. I would imagine that Obamacare will soon be viewed as another “entitlement,” which must be cut for our own good. For the moment, however, let’s take a moment to recognize that Democrats managed to defeat Republicans in one of the biggest policy battles of this generation. The war, needless to say, continues on other fronts.  Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
Record Crime In Philadelphia Could Throw The Senate To Republicans
Record Crime In Philadelphia Could Throw The Senate To Republicans
Record Crime In Philadelphia Could Throw The Senate To Republicans https://digitalarkansasnews.com/record-crime-in-philadelphia-could-throw-the-senate-to-republicans/ Commentary The future of the United States may be decided by the next carjacking in Philadelphia. If there is one butterfly that could cause a storm in U.S. politics, it is a crime in swing states like Pennsylvania. Last week, the number of carjackings in the City of Brotherly Love reached a record 1,000. Homicides reached 400 as of Sept. 26. Pennsylvanians, especially in Philadelphia, are fed up with crime. Democrats and Republicans, true to form, approach the problem with the tools they have handy: gun control and more police, respectively. Democrats are at a disadvantage on the issue as many have promoted defunding the police, clemency for felons, and no cash bail. Every new shooting on television is more free campaign advertising for Republicans. Grainy footage of hooded characters boosting cars is gold for the GOP. Democrats are desperate to hold onto the Senate, currently just by a thread called Vice President Kamala Harris. She’s the tiebreaker in the 50-50 split between Republicans and Democrats that, in November, looks increasingly at risk in favor of Republicans. If Republicans win just one more seat in the Senate, which looks more likely than not, then Democrats will have to compromise their legislative agenda. The campaign in Pennsylvania, and other swing states, is therefore critical. Mehmet Oz, the Republican celebrity doctor endorsed by former President Donald Trump, is competing for the seat of outgoing Republican Sen. Pat Toomey. His opponent: Democratic candidate John Fetterman, who often wears hoodies and shorts, and shows off his tattoos at campaign rallies. Every constituency counts and Fetterman is not the only one appealing to communities that traditionally vote Democrat. “With the latest polls showing a tightening race, Mehmet Oz returned to Philadelphia on Sunday night to meet with local Black clergy members to press his case to be elected to the U.S. Senate,” according to The Philadelphia Inquirer. Republican U.S. Senate candidate Dr. Mehmet Oz (C) holds a press conference with U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) in Philadelphia, Pa., on Sept. 6, 2022. (Mark Makela/Getty Images) The meeting, held on Oct. 2 in Philadelphia, included a dozen clergy and a doctor visiting from Haiti, who spoke about how his community “has been held hostage” by criminality for over five months. The group talked about better schools, safer neighborhoods, accountability for federal tax dollars spent in the city, and especially gun violence. “It’s not just the shooter and the victim, but everybody that pays the price,” Oz said at the gathering. “Ten percent of small kids have witnessed these shootings, and the impact is similar to having PTSD, like being in a war zone.” Oz noted that much of the crime is committed by teens, and asked those assembled for the causes and solutions to violence. “Participants suggested a breakdown of community bonds, as well as a lack of trust and respect for the police, and a lack of faith in religion,” according to the Inquirer. Could the “Defund the Police” and “All Cops Are Bastards” slogans found liberally at recent Black Lives Matter protests have encouraged such thinking? More than likely. Citing the example of Oregon, Oz added drug use and decriminalization to what he argues fuels crime. Anyone familiar with the toughest neighborhoods in the United States, like Kensington in Philadelphia, would find it hard to disagree. The Democratic district attorney of Philadelphia, with his progressive prosecution strategies, has so far failed to stem crime. While some African Americans are reconsidering their traditional support for the Democratic Party, which they tend to see as not doing enough to address economic empowerment in their communities, the shift between 2016 and 2020 was more pronounced among Latinos, according to The Wall Street Journal. Pennsylvania’s Latino population grew by 330,000 between 2010 and 2020, according to the U.S. Census. Latinos now make up 8 percent of the state’s population. State Rep. Manuel Guzman, a supporter of President Joe Biden, had complaints about the Democratic Party as early as November. “The party has taken people of color for granted and taken our votes for granted,” he said in an interview. “I’m not surprised that many Latinos feel disenfranchised and feel left out of the political process because, quite frankly, I can imagine that no one has cared enough to knock on somebody’s door to ask them about what they care about and what they look for in a representative.” Between 2016 and 2020, 7.2 percent of voters in census tracts with at least 70 percent Hispanic residents shifted Republican, according to the Journal. Some Latino neighborhoods in Allentown, Pennsylvania, shifted Republican by 10 percent in 2020. Asian-Americans are also shifting Republican by 5.3 percent in census tracts that are at least 70 percent Asian. While approximately 90 percent of black voters support Democrats, that lead eroded in 2020. Predominantly black neighborhoods shifted by 1.5 percent toward Republicans that year, which could be enough to throw the closest elections in November. Republicans will face a headwind on the issue of abortion in the upcoming election, as there have been a large number of voter registrations in response to the overturning of Roe v. Wade. But the GOP has more than a fighting chance to get back the Senate over the issues of crime and inflation. They will likely be helped in that goal by new independent-minded voters from Hispanic and African-American communities that are the most heavily hit by these scourges. Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Follow Anders Corr has a bachelor’s/master’s in political science from Yale University (2001) and a doctorate in government from Harvard University (2008). He is a principal at Corr Analytics Inc., publisher of the Journal of Political Risk, and has conducted extensive research in North America, Europe, and Asia. His latest books are “The Concentration of Power: Institutionalization, Hierarchy, and Hegemony” (2021) and “Great Powers, Grand Strategies: the New Game in the South China Sea” (2018). Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Record Crime In Philadelphia Could Throw The Senate To Republicans
The 50 Most Powerful Women
The 50 Most Powerful Women
The 50 Most Powerful Women https://digitalarkansasnews.com/the-50-most-powerful-women/ Maria Aspan, Erika Fry, Emma Hinchliffe, Beth Kowitt, Megan Leonhardt, Taylor Locke, Jessica Mathews, Paige McGlauflin, Alexa Mikhail, Anne Sraders, Phil Wahba, Vivienne Walt, and Claire Zillman. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
The 50 Most Powerful Women
Alfred John Boriack Lexington Leader
Alfred John Boriack Lexington Leader
Alfred John Boriack – Lexington Leader https://digitalarkansasnews.com/alfred-john-boriack-lexington-leader/ Funeral services for Alfred Boriack, 92 of Lincoln, Texas, were held on Friday, September 30, 2022 at St. John Lutheran Church in Lincoln with Rev. Dale Bohm officiating. Alfred John Boriack was born in Lincoln, Texas on July 8, 1930 to Oscar and Alma (Proske) Boriack. He was baptized on July 13, 1930 at St. John Lutheran Church in Lincoln. Alfred attended St. John Lutheran School and was taught in German. He was confirmed in German on April 9, 1944 at St. John Lutheran Church in Lincoln, Texas. His confirmation verse was Psalm 37:37, “Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright: for the end of that man is peace.” Alfred was united in marriage to the love of his life Bernice Becker on May 10, 1959 at St. Paul Lutheran Church in Serbin by Rev. Arthur Arndt. They were blessed with three children, seven grandchildren and step grandchildren. Alfred was very involved at St. John Lutheran and in the Lincoln community. He served in numerous offices at St. John and drove the church school bus, was a founding member of the Lee County German Society, was active at the Lincoln Community Hall, served on the Lincoln Water Board, and was a member and director for Lee County Farmers Co-Op. Alfred also enjoyed working his land and herds, growing sugar cane to make molasses, and grew cotton, peanuts, corn, and milo. Even though church and work were his main focuses, he took time to enjoy watching the sun set, play dominoes, sing German songs (especially Christmas carols), and traveled to see his children and grandchildren. Alfred passed away the morning of Tuesday, September 27, 2022 at St. Mark’s Medical Center in La Grange. He was preceded in death by his parents, Oscar & Alma Boriack; five siblings, Elsie & Winfred Schimank, Amanda Boriack, Edna & Victor Umlang, Mary & Victor Schimank, and Edmund Boriack; grandson, Benjamin DeRose, and brother-in-law, Herbert Winkler. Alfred is survived by his wife of 63 years, Bernice Boriack of Lincoln; three children, Alton & Lynnette Boriack of Keller, Lanette & Rick DeRose of Santa Fe, NM, and Nancy & James Walts of Midlothian; grandchildren, Brooke Boriack of New Braunfels, Adam DeRose of Raleigh, NC, Raegan Boriack of Rogers, AR, Erin Walts of Austin, and Austin Walts of Midlothian; step granddaughter; Liza (DeRose) and Michael Fries of Bluffton, SC; three step great-grandchildren, Sarah Fries, Ella Rae Fries, and Grady Theiling all of South Carolina; sister, Alleen Winkler of Fedor; sisters-in-law, Janice Becker of Serbin and Mary Ann Becker of Serbin, as well as numerous nieces, nephews, and many friends. Serving as pallbearers were Adam DeRose, Austin Walts, Vernon Umlang, Alan Schimank, Mark Winkler, and Stephen Schimank. Memorials may be made to St. John Tuition Assistance Fund, Ben’s Brown Bag Ministry on Facebook or bensbrownbag.com or to the charity of one’s choice. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Alfred John Boriack Lexington Leader
Arkansas Civil Air Patrol Cadets Study Roller Coasters | Stuttgart Daily Leader
Arkansas Civil Air Patrol Cadets Study Roller Coasters | Stuttgart Daily Leader
Arkansas Civil Air Patrol Cadets Study Roller Coasters | Stuttgart Daily Leader https://digitalarkansasnews.com/arkansas-civil-air-patrol-cadets-study-roller-coasters-stuttgart-daily-leader/ Arkansas Wing Cadets gather for a group photo in front of “X Coaster” prior to beginning the day of research. (Photo by Master Sgt. Gary Podgurski) Hot Springs, Ark. – What started as a desire to connect roller coasters to learning culminated in Civil Air Patrol (CAP) cadets from all over Arkansas and parts of Oklahoma converging on the amusement park Magic Springs on Saturday, Sept. 24. The notion of using amusement park rides to teach STEM to teenagers began with CAP Master Sgt. Gary Podgurski, a member of the 83rd Composite Squadron, Fort Smith. Janice Podgurski, the commander of the Ft. Smith Squadron and the Arkansas Wing’s Deputy Director of Aerospace Education Officer, recalls Master Sgt. Podgurski asked, “How can we tie roller coasters to aerospace education?” She responded with, “G-Forces is all about STEM. Do it!” The day started with all the cadets and adults, referred to as Senior Members, mustering in the Magic Springs parking lot to check in and ensure participants were fed and hydrated before entering the park. Arkansas Cadets from Conway, Ft. Smith, Hot Springs, Little Rock, Texarkana, and West Memphis were present. Members from the Gordon Cooper Composite Squadron, Shawnee, OK, and the Cloverdale School Flight, located in Little Rock, which will soon become the Arkansas Wing’s newest school squadron, were present as well. Cadets were broken into groups that were chaperoned by Senior Members and headed into the park. The plan: measure g-forces experienced either by using an app on a smart device or by selecting a range of g-forces felt on the ride. The park divides the types of rides they offer as “Thrill Rides”, “Family Rides”, and “Kids Rides”. The cadets could select any ride they wished to ride as a group. In speaking with cadets their favorites were the “X-Coaster” and “Gauntlet”, which are the park’s more extreme rides. Cadets were also able to cool off and experience g-forces with “Plummet Summit”, a water ride that has a short drop and a big splash. Although not every ride was filled with loops and turns, cadets were still able to compare what forces were felt while on rides such as the Carousel and of course “Fearless Flyers”, a merry-go-round style ride with mock bi-planes. Kyle Lutgen, of the 42nd Composite Squadron, Little Rock, was the Senior Member in charge of the “G-Forces” activity, but he gives credit to the cadets for making the activity a fun learning experience. Many of the other Senior Members that participated in the day’s events had similar sentiments. Maj. Garrick St. Pierre, Arkansas Wing’s Director of Aerospace Education said that they are always looking for ways to get cadets involved in aerospace education, “and this was a fun way to do that and get the cadets to engage in a day of fellowship.” Maj. St. Pierre also said that the Cadet Advisory Council had a hand in planning and developing the activity. Civil Air Patrol’s Cadet Programs’ philosophy on leadership is to not just let cadets manage or lead an activity, they plan and execute those activities. For this “G-Forces” activity, Cadet Lt. Col. Robert Lutgen was responsible for creating an Operations Plan, a budget, and planning, and designing an activity t-shirt. Cadet Lt. Col. Lutgen is a homeschooler who also takes concurrent classes at Arkansas State University’s Beebe campus. About the Civil Air Patrol (CAP) Established in 1941, Civil Air Patrol is the official auxiliary of the U.S. Air Force and as such is a member of its Total Force. In its auxiliary role, CAP operates a fleet of 555 single-engine aircraft and 2,250 small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (sUAS) and performs about 90% of all search and rescue operations within the contiguous United States as tasked by the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center. Often using innovative cellphone forensics and radar analysis software, CAP was credited by the AFRCC with saving 108 lives last year. CAP’s 58,000 members also perform homeland security, disaster relief, and drug interdiction missions at the request of federal, state, and local agencies. As a nonprofit organization, CAP plays a leading role in aerospace education using national academic standards-based STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) education resources. Members also serve as mentors to over 24,000 young people participating in CAP’s Cadet Programs. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Arkansas Civil Air Patrol Cadets Study Roller Coasters | Stuttgart Daily Leader
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN https://digitalarkansasnews.com/a-barrier-of-fear-has-been-broken-in-iran-the-regime-may-be-at-a-point-of-no-return-cnn/ CNN  —  A woman dressed in black raises a framed portrait of her son, Siavash Mahmoudi, in the air as she paces the sidewalk in Iran’s capital, Tehran. “I am not scared of anyone. They told me to be silent. I will not be,” the woman seen in a viral social media video yells, her voice fraught with emotion. “I will carry my son’s picture everywhere. They killed him.” Mahmoudi’s mother is among many Iranians who claim the regime tried to silence them as they mourned loved ones slain in ongoing nationwide demonstrations. But Iran’s protesters, and their supporters, are defiant. For weeks, a nationwide protest movement has relentlessly gathered momentum and appears to have blunted the government’s decades-old intimidation tactics. Slogans against the clerical leadership echo throughout the city. Videos of schoolgirls waving their headscarves in the air as they sing protest songs in classrooms have gone viral, as have images of protesters fighting back against members of the formidable paramilitary group Basij. These are scenes previously believed to be unthinkable in Iran, where the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei rules with an iron fist. But experts say that these protests transcend Iran’s many social and ethnic divisions, breaking a decades-old barrier of fear and posing an unprecedented threat to the regime. Across Iran, protesters seem intent on exposing the weaknesses of a clerical establishment which is widely accused of corruption and has stamped out dissent with arbitrary detentions and even mass executions. Tehran has been convulsing with demonstrations since the death in mid-September of Mahsa (also known as Zhina) Amini, the 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman who died after being detained by the country’s morality police for how she was dressed. Protests crop up sporadically in various parts of the capital throughout each day. At night, a chant that has become a staple of the protests — “death to the dictator” — sounds from the rooftops of buildings. It’s a reference to Khamenei, who was once considered beyond reproach because of his elevated clerical status. Anti-regime demonstrations have also penetrated the Islamic Republic’s power bases, including the Shia holy cities of Mashhad and Qom. Ethnic minorities — notably Kurds in the country’s north and northwest, and Baloch people in the southeast — have also staged protests, enduring what appear to be some of the most brutal crackdowns, with scores reportedly killed. Secondary schools and universities around the country are flashpoints, and women and girls have been taking off their mandatory headscarves, known as hijabs. “These terrorists think that our generation is the previous generation. We are not. Let me assure you,” a protester from Tehran’s prestigious Sharif University of Technology told CNN, referring to Iranian police who had violently cracked down on demonstrators on campus, and detained scores of young people. Social media video showed cars filling the streets shortly after news spread Sunday of the crackdown on students, horns blaring in solidarity with protesters as the showdown unfolded at the university, known for educating Iran’s best and brightest students. “If the dust settles and we stop protesting, they are going to kill even more of us. They are going to detain even more people and they are going to turn us to North Korea,” the impassioned protester said. “This is not the end. I promise you that.” CNN has not been able to independently verify the number of the dead and injured, but state media says 40 people have died since the start of demonstrations in mid-September. Rights group Amnesty International says at least 52 have been killed. Over 1,000 people are believed to have been detained, including journalists and artists. Last week, Amnesty International said it had obtained a leaked document which appeared to instruct commanders of armed forces in all provinces to “mercilessly confront” protesters, deploying riot police as well as some members of the military’s elite Revolutionary guards, the Basij paramilitary force and plainclothes security agents. CNN has not seen the leaked documents obtained by Amnesty International and cannot verify the reporting. CNN has reached out to Amnesty International on how it received the leaked documents but hasn’t received a reply. CNN has also reached out to Iranian government officials for a comment on Amnesty International’s reporting but hasn’t received a reply. In addition, Amnesty International said it had seen evidence of sexual assault against female protesters – CNN has not been able to verify this. Social media video has also shown Iranian security forces dragging unveiled women through the streets by their hair. The threat posed by these protests, analysts say, is existential to the regime, and is one of the biggest challenges the Islamic Republic has faced in years. “These are primarily very, very young people, a younger generation who have apparently completely lost faith that this Islamic Republic can be reformed,” said Trita Parsi, executive vice-president at the Washington, DC-based Quincy Institute. “They’re breaking from their previous generation who was seeking to reform the system from within,” Parsi added. “This new generation seems to not have any faith in that at all.” The 83-year-old Khamenei, who commented on the protests for the first time on Monday, blamed – without evidence – the United States and Israel for fueling the protests. He also made clear that the regime would block the protesters’ desire for change. “I say clearly that these riots and the insecurity were engineered by the US and the occupying, false Zionist regime (Israel), as well as their paid agents, with the help of some traitorous Iranians abroad,” said Khamenei in his address. The current protests may eventually be quashed or simply lose momentum, but analysts say Iran can expect another cycle of nationwide demonstrations in months to come. The latest demonstrations follow similar, but less widespread, protests against the government in 2019, 2017 and 2009. “The protests transcend social sectarian boundaries, bringing together a much broader strata of Iranian society than we have seen in years,” said Ali Vaez, director of the International Crisis Group’s Iran Project. “But they suffer from the same shortcomings that the previous movements in Iran also suffered from. Primarily, the lack of leadership. “It’s very difficult to be able to maintain and sustain a movement that over the long run will bring the regime to its knees without coordination and leadership,” Vaez said. Still, the protesters appear bolder than ever, sensing a window of opportunity that could quickly close as Iran appears to near development of a nuclear weapon, which would both entrench the regime’s grip on power and deepen its isolation. This is the scenario that anti-regime Iranians are trying desperately to avoid, said Vaez. “The only thing worse than a regime that kills and represses its own people is a regime with a nuclear weapon and that kills and represses its own people,” he said. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine https://digitalarkansasnews.com/live-updates-russias-war-in-ukraine-9/ 1 min ago Here’s a look at the state of control in Ukraine right now Kyiv’s forces continue to press forward with territorial gains in the south and east of the country, including in the regions Russia claims it is annexing. Here’s how the state of control looks right now: 1 hr 19 min ago Russia lacks manpower to stop Ukrainian advance in Luhansk, says correspondent embedded with Russian military From CNN’s Mick Krever in London The Russian military lacks the manpower necessary to hold off a further Ukrainian advance into the Luhansk region, a correspondent embedded with the Russian military in the occupied city of Svatove said on Tuesday evening. “The Russian troops do not have enough manpower to stop the enemy attacks,” Alexander Kots, for Russian pro-government tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda said in a video posted to Telegram. “The recent Russian losses are directly connected to that. It’s a very difficult period of time on the front line at the moment.” He said that “we expect a serious fighting here very soon,” and that “it remains to be seen if it could stop the enemy advances.” Kots confirmed that Russian forces were trying to fortify their defense at the line connecting the occupied cities of Kreminna and Svatova. Yuriy Podolyaka, a pro-Russian military blogger said on Monday that Russian troops had withdrawn to the Zherebets River, which runs just west of Kreminna and Svatova. “The enemy is concentrating its forces to attack Svatove from two directions,” Kots said on Tuesday. “The enemy artillery is reaching and working over the Kreminna-Svatove road and its sabotage and reconnaissance groups can operate there. This area is being fortified by the Russian troops who dig trenches and place land mines.” He said that Ukrainian forces are “on the high and enjoying a numeric advantage.” “They don’t have problems with the intelligence data or high precision weapons which they are constantly using. We are just waiting for our reserves to become fighting fit and join the battle.” 2 hr 15 min ago Russia declines to clarify the borders of territories it claims to have annexed  From CNN’s Anna Chernova and Radina Gigova Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends the Victory Day military parade at Red Square in central Moscow, Russia on May 9. (Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP/Getty Images) Moscow refrained from giving a concrete answer when asked how the borders of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions should be defined under the Kremlin’s newly-signed claimed illegal annexations. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said “certain territories there are still to be returned,” following rapid advances by Ukrainian forces in the south.  When asked by CNN how he would interpret the language of the laws signed by Putin earlier Wednesday, which refers to the borders of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions as “the territory which existed on the day of its adoption in the Russian Federation,” Peskov said: “I will leave this question unanswered.” When asked by CNN if he can provide any comment at all for better understanding, Peskov said: “You should read the decree, there is a legal wording there. On the whole, of course, we are talking about the territory in which the military-civilian administration operated at the time of its adoption (as part of the Russian Federation).” When asked again by CNN if this should to be read as the territory captured by Russian troops as of September 30, Peskov said: “(You should stick to) what is written in the decree. But I repeat once again: Certain territories there are still to be returned, and we continue to consult with those populations that will express a desire to live with Russia.” Asked one more time by CNN whether any additional laws would be required to include those areas into the Russian Federation, or whether they would automatically be included as part of the regions under the signed laws, if and when they are “returned,” Peskov said: “For now, I have nothing to add.” Russian President Vladimir Putin signed into law the documents on the illegal annexation of four Ukrainian regions on Wednesday, completing the last step of the annexation process, based on the Russian legal system. The annexation is illegal under international law.  Putin’s move comes as Ukrainian forces continue to press forward with territorial gains in the south and east, including in the regions Russia claims it is annexing. 2 hr 24 min ago “De-occupation of Luhansk has begun,” says regional Ukrainian leader From Olga Voitovych in Kyiv A man walks past a residential building in Lysychansk, the city controlled by pro-Russian troops in the Luhansk region, Ukraine, on September 21. (Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters) The “de-occupation” of Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region “has begun,” according to a regional official. “Several settlements have already been liberated from the Russian army, from the Russian occupiers,” Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk region’s Ukrainian military administration, said on national television Wednesday. “All those soldiers realize that a counterattack is just inevitable, they are being defeated.” After regaining the key eastern city of Lyman, in the Donetsk region, over the weekend, Ukrainian forces have continued their counteroffensive, pushing into the Luhansk region, pro-Russian officials and propagandists said on Monday.  Russia controls nearly all of Ukraine’s Luhansk region. Ukrainian forces liberated the Luhansk village of Bilohorivka at the end of September. Hayday urged residents who fled their homes earlier this year not to try to return.  “I’d like to appeal to everyone,” he said. “First, do not get ahead of yourselves, do not rush to bring stuff and come back. We will let you know when and where exactly you can return. Because it is necessary that the Armed Forces of Ukraine move the front line further, and only then it will be possible to enter certain settlements. The territory must be demined.” He also urged residents in occupied areas of Luhansk to try to evacuate away from the front line, or to stay in shelters. 1 hr 19 min ago Zelensky discusses plans for “further liberation of Ukrainian territories” with military and security staff From Mick Krever in London Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday met with his top military and security staff, and considered plans for “further liberation of Ukrainian territories,” according to the president’s office. “Those present heard information from the intelligence, the headquarters of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and the commanders of the operational directions about the situation at the front and the latest actions of the enemy,” the readout of the meeting read. “They also discussed the issue of stabilizing the situation in the newly de-occupied areas. Plans regarding further liberation of Ukrainian territories were also considered.” The participants also “focused on the issue of countering new types of weapons used by the Russian army.” Among those present were Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov, Commander-in-Chief Valerii Zaluzhny, and Head of the Main Intelligence Directorate Kyrylo Budanov. Ukrainian forces are making gains in the east as well as in the south, where they are piercing through Moscow’s defenses in the Kherson region. Earlier Wednesday, Zelensky said that in the Kherson region the towns of Liubymivka, Khreshchenivka, Zolota Balka, Biliaiivka, Ukraiinka, Velyka, Mala Oleksandrivka and Davydiv Brid had all been liberated, “and this is not a complete list.” Kherson is one of the four regions in Ukraine that Russia has announced it is annexing, in violation of international law. 54 min ago It’s 2 p.m. in Kyiv. Here’s what you need to know From CNN staff Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed into law measures that claim to annex four Ukrainian regions, in violation of international law. Ukrainian forces have gained ground in the south, pushing even further toward the Russian-occupied city of Kherson. Here are the latest developments: Kremlin signs illegal annexations: Putin signed into law measures that claim to illegally annex the four Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson into the Russian Federation. He also designated “acting heads” of four illegally annexed Ukrainian regions, according to Russian state news agency TASS. The four newly appointed leaders will govern until official heads for the regions are elected in accordance with Russian law, TASS reported Wednesday.  Kyiv sweeps the south: The Ukrainian military has liberated multiple towns in the southern Kherson region as part of “the ongoing defensive operation,” according to President Volodymyr Zelensky. Meanwhile, Russian troops are leaving mines in southern Ukrainian villages as they retreat along the western bank of the Dnieper River, the Ukrainian military said on Wednesday. Western allies bolster support for Ukraine: US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky Tuesday and said the US “will never recognize Russia’s annexations.” European Union member states have also agreed on a fresh round of sanctions against Russia, the Czech Presidency of the EU Council announced Wednesday. The EU’s eighth package of sanctions against Russia — which was proposed by the European Commission last week — will include an oil price cap, among other measures. Zelensky proposes “special tribunal” for Russian leaders: Zelensky on Wednesday called for the creation of a “special tribunal” to pursue Russian political and military leaders for their role in the invasion of Ukraine. “We must bring to justice those whose decisions started all this,” he told a conference in Paris. Miss Crimea fined for singing Ukrainian song: The winner of Miss Crimea 2022, Olga Valeeva, has been fined 40,000 Russian rubles ($680) by occ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Committee Panel's Lawyer Says
Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Committee Panel's Lawyer Says
Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Committee, Panel's Lawyer Says https://digitalarkansasnews.com/arizona-gop-chair-pleaded-fifth-to-jan-6-committee-panels-lawyer-says/ PHOENIX — Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward refused to answer questions during a deposition of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, an attorney for the panel revealed Tuesday during a court hearing in Phoenix. Attorney Eric Columbus told a federal judge that Ward asserted her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when she complied with a subpoena from the House committee. The detail about Ward’s deposition came at a hearing where lawyers urged a federal judge to block the committee from getting her phone records while she appeals. U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa ruled on Sept. 23 that Ward’s arguments that her phone call records should be secret did not pass legal muster. Ward attorney Laurin Mills cast the phone records fight as one with major implications for democracy, on par if not bigger than the violent insurrection that unfolded at the Capitol. “This is the first time in American history that a select committee of the United State Congress controlled by one party has subpoenaed the records of the state chair of the rival party,” Mills said. He said the outcome will set important precedent, not just for the current case but for others that will come when Republicans ultimately control Congress. The House Committee investigating the attack on the Capitol is seeking phone records from just before the November 2020 election to Jan. 31, 2021. That would include a period where Ward was pushing for former President Donald Trump’s election defeat to be overturned and while Congress was set to certify the results. Kelli Ward and her husband Michael Ward were presidential electors who would have voted for Trump in the Electoral College had he won Arizona. Both signed a document falsely claiming they were Arizona’s true electors, despite Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in the state. Columbus said that investigators get telephone records all the time, and noted that congressional investigators can’t arrest or charge anyone with a crime. And he noted Congress does not know all that is involved with Ward’s action to overturn President Joe Biden’s 2020 win. “Dr. Ward was deposed by the select committee and she declined to answer on every substantive question under her rights under the Fifth Amendment,” he said. “There are other aspects of her involvement that are not at this point fully understood.” Ward is hardly the first witness to refuse the committee’s questions. Others who have asserted their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination include Trump allies Michael Flynn, Roger Stone and lawyer John Eastman. Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones also asserted his Fifth Amendment rights. The committee has talked to more than 1,000 other witnesses, including many White House aides and several of Trump’s lawyers and confidants. But Mills noted during the hearing that there is a parallel criminal investigation underway, and in the appeal her lawyers noted that she and the other 10 fake Arizona electors received grand jury subpoenas from the Department of Justice. “All I can say is if we do this wrong, we will set a precedent that is worse than the Capitol riot,” Mills said. Mills told the judge that the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has set a briefing schedule and could decide the case as early as January. Columbus noted that will likely be too late, since the committee dissolves on Jan. 3, when the current congressional session ends. The Wards say the subpoena should be quashed because it violates their First Amendment rights, violates House rules and exceeds the authority of the Jan. 6 committee. Humetewa rejected each argument in turn in her earlier ruling and is considering their request to block access during appeal. Kelli Ward is a staunch Trump ally who has aggressively promoted the false claim that the election was stolen from him. In the days after the election, she pressured Republicans on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors to investigate unsupported claims of fraud before election results were certified, according to text messages released by the county. A spokesperson for the January 6 committee did not immediately respond Tuesday to a request for comment. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Committee Panel's Lawyer Says
Cabot Opens Eight-Stroke Lead After First Round
Cabot Opens Eight-Stroke Lead After First Round
Cabot Opens Eight-Stroke Lead After First Round https://digitalarkansasnews.com/cabot-opens-eight-stroke-lead-after-first-round/ FAYETTEVILLE — Cabot’s Easton Denney and Gabe Haslauer shared the individual lead as the Panthers built an eight-shot advantage after the first round of the Class 6A boys state golf championship Tuesday. Denney and Haslauer both fired 2-over-par 73s at Paradise Valley Golf Club. As a team, Cabot carded a 19-over total of 303. Four birdies highlighted Haslauer’s round, and Denney made three. “We’re in a great spot,” Panthers Coach Matt Malham said. “We didn’t have any really big numbers. And in high school golf that helps a lot, to not have big numbers.” Host Fayetteville was second at 311, while Conway (314), Fort Smith Southside (317) and Little Rock Catholic (325) rounded out the top five teams. Conway’s Blane Burk shot a 74, one stroke behind Denney and Haslauer. Cabot’s Miken Ashmore (75) is fourth, and Fayetteville’s Connor Goens and South-side’s Jack Williamson are tied for fifth at 76. “I tell my guys all the time this is a team sport,” Malham said about having three of his players in the top four. “Team comes first, individual stuff comes second. But when you have individuals up there at the top, obviously it helps your team. It works both ways.” Fayetteville’s Zachary Knight (77) is seventh. “I’m proud of the guys for fighting through,” Bulldogs Coach Scott Williams said. “I thought we’d play a little bit better, though, as far as the scores that came through. On a positive note, we did put ourselves in a position to come tomorrow and challenge for a state championship. I’m proud of them for fighting, and I like our chances. I really do.” What slowed down Fayetteville during the opening round? “Most of my players indicated that the putting was the most difficult for them today,” Williams said. “Greens were running a little quick today. But it’s like anything in golf. Everybody has to putt on the same surfaces. And they weren’t using that as an excuse. They just said, ‘Hey, I missed a few putts here and there.’ And that was really the bigger difference.” Bentonville’s Landon McNitt (78) was part of a four-way logjam in eighth place, along with Catholic’s Adam Squires, Conway’s Collin Spangler and Southside’s Drew Hunter. On the verge of winning the state title, Malham has simple advice for his team. “One shot a time,” Malham said. “You can’t worry about big-picture stuff. You’ve just got to do one shot at a time. Worry about that shot, hit it and go play the next shot.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Cabot Opens Eight-Stroke Lead After First Round
Are Musk And Twitter Back On? Heres What We Know.
Are Musk And Twitter Back On? Heres What We Know.
Are Musk And Twitter Back On? Here’s What We Know. https://digitalarkansasnews.com/are-musk-and-twitter-back-on-heres-what-we-know/ DealBook Newsletter Elon Musk says he wants to revive his $44 billion deal to buy Twitter, but questions abound about financing and his ultimate plans. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. Oct. 5, 2022, 7:48 a.m. ET Image Open arms.Credit…Ringo H.W. Chiu/Associated Press Musk’s about-face After trying for months to get out of his $44 billion agreement to buy Twitter, Elon Musk told Twitter on Monday night that, actually, he wanted to do the deal — on exactly the original terms. His other big ask: Let’s put the litigation on hold. The two sides are now hashing out next steps, two weeks before they were set to face off in one of the biggest business confrontations of the century. DealBook has been hitting the phones. Here is what we know — and want to know. What we know: Things moved quickly. Twitter got the letter from Musk’s lawyers on Monday, and filed it yesterday morning with the Delaware Chancery Court presiding over the case. In an emergency confidential hearing, the judge instructed the two sides to figure it out and get back to her. Twitter is wary of pausing its litigation. It’s considering some options in its negotiations with Musk, including getting a court to oversee the deal’s closing (through a consent judgment), and charging Musk interest on any additional time it takes to close the deal. What we don’t know: Why did Musk change his mind? Was it a reluctance to be deposed on Thursday and Friday? Concerns of further embarrassing his Silicon Valley and Wall Street friends, à la last week’s text message dump? Some piece of undisclosed bad news? Twitter, incidentally, felt very confident in its chances in the Delaware trial. Is he still hoping bank financing gives him an out? In his letter to Twitter, Musk says he will do the deal “pending receipt of the proceeds of the debt financing.” (Per the terms of the deal, if the bank financing falls apart, he needs to pay only a $1 billion breakup fee.) The banks have already committed to their $12.5 billion — as long as a deal happens by April 2023. Is Musk hoping they try to back out? Could Twitter stop Musk from using the banks as an out? One route would be to ask the judge to have the banks say in writing that they remain committed to funding the bid. The company could also ask Musk for a letter saying that he is unaware of any conditions that could impede the deal closing. Do the banks wish they had an out? The leveraged loan market, which Musk is partly relying upon, has weakened in recent months. If the Citrix deal is any indication, the banks lending to Musk, led by Morgan Stanley, could be sitting on big lending losses. Note: They cannot change the terms of their lending agreement. What are Larry Ellison, Ben Horowitz and Musk’s other friends going to do? It’s not clear whether any or all of the investors who agreed to chip in $7.1 billion to fund Musk’s deal have an out. (Musk had warned that some equity investors might not “come through.”) Would the text message headache or due diligence concerns give them cold feet? What are Musk’s plans for Twitter? With the ad market slumping, employee morale sinking and lax security accusations swirling, the company is in worse shape than it was in April. But Musk appears bullish again. “Buying Twitter is an accelerant to creating X, the everything app,” he said. If he goes through with it, “Musk’s Twitter will be a wild ride,” The Times’s Kevin Roose predicts. Image Credit…The New York Times HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING OPEC Plus meets today. The oil-producing group is expected to announce sizable production cuts to try to lift crude prices. But slowing demand in China and Europe and the prospect of a global recession may blunt the effect of such moves. The U.S. national debt surpasses $31 trillion. The record, reached yesterday, comes as the Fed is raising interest rates to combat inflation. Economists worry that the growing debt load will become too expensive to service over time. Amazon freezes corporate hiring in its retail business. The announcement covers the retail giant’s physical and online retail business and its logistics operations. Federal labor officials issue a complaint against Apple. The National Labor Relations Board accused the tech giant of violating labor laws in an effort to stymie union organizers at its World Trade Center store. Meanwhile, Amazon suspended over two dozen workers at a Staten Island warehouse who had refused to work their shifts after a fire at the site. Micron plans to build a chip factory in New York. The semiconductor maker will invest up to $100 billion on a new campus, which it says will be the biggest chip fabrication facility in the U.S. It’s the latest chip giant to pledge new manufacturing plants in the country. Lawyers, Musk and money The extended legal battle between Musk and Twitter has fascinated Wall Street — and many, like Carl Icahn and Hindenburg Research, have made money betting on the outcome. But some of the biggest winners are likely to be the armies of expensive lawyers working on the transaction. The law firms representing Musk and Twitter on deal work and litigation stand to earn hundreds of millions for their months of labor, according to estimates from competitors and colleagues familiar with the matter. The firms declined to comment. What Happened to Elon Musk’s Twitter Deal Card 1 of 9 A blockbuster deal. In April, Elon Musk made an unsolicited bid worth more than $40 billion for the social network, saying he wanted to make Twitter a private company and allow people to speak more freely on the service. Shareholders give approval On Sept. 13, as the start of the trial approached, Twitter’s shareholders voted to approve the company’s deal with Mr. Musk, even as it remains uncertain whether the acquisition will be completed. The company said a preliminary tally of shareholder votes determined support for the deal, but it did not immediately release a vote count. A surprise move. On Oct. 4, Mr. Musk proposed a deal to acquire Twitter for $44 billion, the price he agreed to pay for the company in April. An agreement at the original price, which would be a victory for Twitter, could bring to an end the acrimonious legal fight between the billionaire and the social media company. The deal was always likely to be a lawyer’s dream, fee-wise. While Musk’s bid came together relatively quickly this spring, the talks rapidly became mired in lengthy legal wrangling, leading to many billable hours. “There is a lot of discovery to do,” Peter Glennon, a legal expert, told The American Lawyer in August. “We aren’t just looking at emails. We are looking at Slacks, Teams, texts, all of it.” (John Coffee, a Columbia law professor, previously estimated that legal fees could have run to $1 billion.) The key players: Musk is represented by Skadden on the deal side and by Skadden and Quinn Emanuel in litigation. Top partners at the firms bill about $2,000 an hour. Lawyers estimated to DealBook that the firms could be charging about $30,000 to $40,000 an hour, or $5 million to $8 million a month. That means Musk could have paid about $50 million, plus perhaps another $50 million in the run-up to litigation. Twitter relied on Wilson Sonsini and Simpson Thacher, where top partners also most likely bill about $2,000 an hour, for deal work. And for litigation it’s primarily relying on Wachtell, the blue-chip firm known in legal circles for its bespoke (and opaque) pricing, including hourly billing, flat fees and contingency deals. Depending on its arrangements, Wachtell could bring in $100 million to $200 million, lawyers estimate. Between those firms alone, the Twitter case has probably already generated about $150 million to $300 million in fees. But then add in all of the other lawyers involved in litigation, depositions, the deal and more. And that figure could grow if this actually goes to trial, or otherwise goes awry. Ray Dalio bids goodbye Ray Dalio, the outspoken and oddly earnest hedge fund manager whose profile rose after he predicted the 2008 financial crisis, is relinquishing control of Bridgewater Associates, the firm he founded out of his two-bedroom apartment in 1975. In a long planned transition, the co-C.E.O.s, Nir Bar Dea and Mark Bertolini, will run Bridgewater, now the world’s largest hedge fund, with $150 billion in managed assets. Dalio ushered in the era of enormous hedge funds. By the time Bridgewater started its signature Pure Alpha fund in 1991, most rivals were relatively small, focused on the stock market and managing the money of the ultrarich. Dalio, whose expertise was in currency trading, sought business from pension funds, which had huge piles of money to invest and were looking for exposure outside the stock market. At Bridgewater, Dalio enforced “radical transparency,” in which employees were encouraged to be brutally honest with one another. To some, Bridgewater’s success made Dalio a management guru. His best-selling 2017 book, “Principles: Life and Work,” lays out the rules for achieving success and radical transparency. “Ray is a rare breed,” said Anthony Scaramucci, a fellow hedge fund manager whose annual hedge fund conference has featured Dalio. “You don’t often see a skilled hedge fund manager who can both build an enduring company and have the humility to let it go.” Dalio is leaving on top, and on bottom. After years of average performance, Pure Alpha is up nearly 35 percent this year, far outperforming the overall market. But Bridgewater’s other fund — which is called All Weather because it’s supposed to produce stable returns no matter the market — is down 27 percent in 2022. Image Users of Donald Trump’s social media platform appear to be turning into shareholder activ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Are Musk And Twitter Back On? Heres What We Know.
Oath Keepers Founder: Be 'ready To Fight' After Trump Loss
Oath Keepers Founder: Be 'ready To Fight' After Trump Loss
Oath Keepers Founder: Be 'ready To Fight' After Trump Loss https://digitalarkansasnews.com/oath-keepers-founder-be-ready-to-fight-after-trump-loss-3/ Hours after Joe Biden was declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election, the leader of the Oath Keepers extremist group was discussing how to push President Donald Trump to go further in his fight to cling to power, according to messages shown to jurors Tuesday in his U.S. Capitol attack trial. What You Need To Know Messages show that hours after Joe Biden was declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election, the leader of the Oath Keepers extremist group was discussing how to push President Donald Trump to go further in his fight to cling to power The messages were shown to jurors Tuesday in the trial of Stewart Rhodes and four others charged with seditious conspiracy in the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol attack They are accused of a detailed, drawn-out plot to stop the transfer of power An attorney for Rhodes said that all the government has shown is “bombastic language” Prosecutors used Stewart Rhodes’ messages and recordings of him speaking from November 2020 to try to show that he had been working behind the scenes for two months to try to stop the transfer of presidential power before his followers attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Rhodes and four associates are facing charges of seditious conspiracy for what authorities allege was a detailed, drawn-out plot to keep Biden out of the White House that included putting armed teams on standby outside of Washington. Tuesday was the first full day of testimony in the high-stakes case that’s expected to last several weeks. The five defendants are the first people arrested in the Jan. 6 attack to stand trial for seditious conspiracy — a rarely used Civil War-era charge that can be difficult to prove. Rhodes’ attorneys have said their defense will focus on Rhodes’ belief that Trump was going to invoke the Insurrection Act and call up the militia to support his bid to stay in power. The messages were revealed during testimony of an FBI agent investigating the insurrection. In several messages sent around Nov. 7, 2020 — the day that The Associated Press and other news outlets called the election for Biden — Rhodes pressed others to refuse to accept the results and “bend the knee” to what he saw as an illegitimate administration. In one message, Rhodes urged his followers to get their “get your gear squared away” and be “ready to fight.” In another — sent to a group called “FOS” or “Friends of Stone” that included Trump ally Roger Stone — Rhodes urged his fellow Oath Keepers to think of the ways early Americans had resisted the British. “We are now where the founders were in March, 1775,” he wrote. He implored them to “step up and push Trump to finally take decisive action.” “The final defense is us and our rifles,” Rhodes wrote to the group. “Trump has one last chance, right now, to stand. But he will need us and our rifles too.” The evening of Nov. 9, Rhodes held a conference call with more than 100 of his followers to discuss the plan. It was secretly recorded by someone on the call and sent to the FBI. Rhodes urged people on the call to go to Washington and let Trump know that “the people are behind him,” according to a recording played to jurors. Rhodes expressed hope that left-wing antifa activists would start clashes because that would give Trump the “reason and rationale for dropping the Insurrection Act.” “So we have a chance to get President Trump to fight as Commander in Chief. If you’re going to have a fight, guys, you want to start now while he’s still Commander in Chief,” Rhodes told the group. Rhodes said they would have some of their “best men bolstered up outside” — or “quick reaction forces” that he said would be “awaiting the president’s orders.” It needed to be that way because that gives you “legal cover,” Rhodes said on the call. Rhodes’ attorney sought to show that prosecutors are cherry-picking messages from hundreds of chats on his phone. Defense attorney Phillip Linder pressed the FBI agent over whether he ever saw Rhodes encourage anybody to do anything illegal before prosecutors objected to the question. “All we have is bombastic language,” Linder said. Rhodes’ lawyers have said they will argue that their client can’t be guilty of seditious conspiracy because all of his actions were in anticipation of orders he expected were coming from Trump under the Insurrection Act. Even though Trump never did, Rhodes’ lawyers say he was merely lobbying the president to invoke the law, which gives the president wide discretion to decide when military force is necessary, and what qualifies as military force. On trial with Rhodes, of Granbury, Texas, are Kelly Meggs, leader of the Florida chapter of the Oath Keepers; Kenneth Harrelson, another Florida Oath Keeper; Thomas Caldwell, a retired U.S. Navy intelligence officer from Virginia, and Jessica Watkins, who led an Ohio militia group. Prosecutors showed jurors several items found at Caldwell’s home, including a notebook with writing about things like “comms” and “lookouts.” The FBI agent said that “was all indicative to us of some sort of an operation.” Caldwell’s attorney, David Fischer, pressed the agent on whether the government has any witnesses who claim Caldwell had a plan to attack the Capitol on Jan. 6. The agent said it did not. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Oath Keepers Founder: Be 'ready To Fight' After Trump Loss
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street https://digitalarkansasnews.com/dow-futures-fall-more-than-200-points-following-a-sharp-two-day-rally-on-wall-street/ U.S. stock futures fell on Wednesday, putting Wall Street on track to give back some of its sharp gains from the last two sessions. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures declined by 275 points, or 1%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures dipped 1% and 0.9%, respectively. The Dow on Tuesday jumped about 825 points, or 2.8%. The S&P 500 gained nearly 3.1%, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced 3.3%. Those gains, which come on the back of falling bond yields, led to the strongest two-day stretch for the S&P 500 since 2020. Meanwhile, a weakening in the most recent job openings data had some investors considering whether the Federal Reserve will slow the pace of interest rate hikes. Market participants wondered whether those signs could mean markets have finally priced in a bottom after the sharp declines in the prior quarter. “I don’t think you have to worry about a recession until the second half of ’23,” Stifel chief equity strategist Barry Bannister said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.” “So there is room for a rally as you go into the early part of next year.” Traders are expecting a raft of economic reports on Wednesday. Data on weekly mortgage applications is expected. September’s ADP private payrolls report is due out at 8:15 a.m. ET. The latest international trade reading is due at 8:30 a.m. ET, while the ISM services index is set to be released at 10 a.m. ET. Two-day huge move in market offers hope for stronger gains ahead The back-to-back huge market moves Monday and Tuesday provide some hope that better days are ahead for the stock market. While single-day bursts often are signs of a bear market bounce, two-day rallies of more than 2% historically have signaled stronger gains in the future. There have been 31 such instances for the S&P 500 since 1953, and the index has averaged a 0.61% gain one week later following those moves, according to Bespoke Investment Group. While gains tend to muddle along shortly after, the 12-month return typically has been 14.6% and the S&P 500 has been higher 80% of the time. Having rallies off that size is highly unusual to start the month — Bespoke reports that there was only one other time, in August 1984, when a month began with consecutive gains of 2%. —Jeff Cox Ford shares move higher on Morgan Stanley upgrade Shares of Ford moved more than 1% higher in premarket trading after Morgan Stanley upgraded them on Wednesday . The auto maker’s stock has been under pressure recently, They lost 18.5% over the past month, after the company warned in late September of an extra $1 billion in supply chain costs for the third quarter. Now, Morgan Stanley says that provides an attractive entry point for investors. Read more about this call on CNBC Pro. — Tanaya Macheel European markets retreat as rally fades European stocks retreated on Wednesday as the positive trend seen in global stocks in recent days faded. The pan-European Stoxx 600 was down 1% in early trade. Autos dropped 2.9% to lead losses as all sectors and major bourses slid into negative territory following the latest PMI reading out of the euro zone, which cemented fears of a recession in the 19-member bloc. – Elliot Smith CNBC Pro: This isn’t the market bottom, Morgan Stanley says, naming 3 things that have to happen first There’s unlikely to be a sustainable market bottom unless three conditions are met, according to Morgan Stanley. “We … remind readers that the last few innings of every bear market are very challenging to trade as volatility becomes extreme,” they wrote. “None of the conditions we have been looking for to call an end to this bear market are in place.” Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan Stifel’s Barry Bannister says there is “room for a rally” after two straight days of gains Stifel chief equity strategist Barry Bannister said stocks can advance further after this week’s sharp two-day rally. “I don’t think you have to worry about a recession until the second half of ’23,” Stifel chief equity strategist Barry Bannister said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.” “So there is room for a rally as you go into the early part of next year.” The strategist said there could be a “conditional pause” at the December meeting as the Federal Reserve reviews the impact of its interest rate hiking plan on inflation. “Inflation leading indicators are all falling, global liquidity has tightened quite a bit. They don’t want to kill the patient to cure the disease,” Bannister said. “And if the data kept going their way, then the pause would last, and if the data don’t go their way, they would hike again and we would go right back down.” — Sarah Min September private payrolls expected to grow by 200,000 in ADP report September’s ADP private payrolls report is due out Wednesday at 8:15 a.m. ET. Economists are expecting private payrolls to have grown by 200,000 last month, according to estimates from Dow Jones. If the report meets those estimates, it would mean an acceleration from the pace of hiring in August, when private payrolls rose by just 132,000 for the month. — Sarah Min Stock futures open lower U.S. stock futures fell slightly on Tuesday night after the S&P 500 posted its best two-day gain in roughly two years. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell by 45 points, or 0.19%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures dipped 0.15% and 0.13%, respectively. — Sarah Min Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street
Nobel Prize In Chemistry Is Awarded To 3 Scientists For Work Snapping Molecules Together
Nobel Prize In Chemistry Is Awarded To 3 Scientists For Work Snapping Molecules Together
Nobel Prize In Chemistry Is Awarded To 3 Scientists For Work ‘Snapping Molecules Together’ https://digitalarkansasnews.com/nobel-prize-in-chemistry-is-awarded-to-3-scientists-for-work-snapping-molecules-together/ Carolyn R. Bertozzi, Morten Meldal and K. Barry Sharpless were honored for their advances in “click chemistry,” which could have important applications in treating and diagnosing illnesses. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. The Nobel committee said that findings by the three scientists had “taken chemistry into the era of functionalism” and were “bringing the greatest benefit to humankind.”Credit…Christine Olsson/TT News Agency, via Associated Press Oct. 5, 2022Updated 7:21 a.m. ET The Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Carolyn R. Bertozzi, Morten Meldal and K. Barry Sharpless on Wednesday for the development of click chemistry and bio-orthogonal chemistry — work that has “led to a revolution in how chemists think about linking molecules together,” the Nobel committee said. Dr. Bertozzi is the eighth woman to be awarded the prize, and Dr. Sharpless is the fifth scientist to be honored with two Nobels, the committee noted. Johan Aqvist, the chair of the chemistry committee, said that this year’s prize dealt with “not overcomplicating matters, instead working with what is easy and simple.” “Click chemistry is almost like it sounds,” he said of a field whose name Dr. Sharpless coined in 2000. “It’s all about snapping molecules together. Imagine that you could attach small chemical buckles to different types of building blocks. Then you could link these buckles together and produce molecules of greater complexity and variation.” Shortly after Dr. Sharpless coined the concept, both he and Dr. Meldal independently discovered a chemical reaction called copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition, known today as the crown jewel of click chemistry. “When this reaction was discovered, it was like opening the floodgates,” Olof Ramström, a member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry, said in a briefing after the laureates were announced. “We were using it everywhere, to build everything.” Dr. Bertozzi, a chemist and professor at Stanford, was able to apply this reaction to biomolecules, often found on cell surfaces, in living organisms without affecting the chemistry of the cells she was observing. Before her extensive research with glycans, or sugar chains, scientists’ understanding of this subfield of glycobiology had been hampered by an inability to see molecules in action in living cells. What to Know About the Nobel Prizes Card 1 of 7 What are the prizes? Six Nobel Prizes are awarded every year, each recognizing an individual’s or organization’s groundbreaking contribution to a specific field. Prizes are given for physiology or medicine, physics, chemistry, economic science, literature and peace work. When were the awards established? The Nobel Prizes were established after the death of Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite and other explosives, in 1896. In his will, Nobel bequeathed the bulk of his fortune to create five annual prizes honoring ingenuity. What do the winners receive? Nobel Prize laureates receive a Nobel Prize diploma, a Nobel Prize medal and a monetary award, which for 2022 is 10 million Swedish krona, or about $900,000 according to current exchange rates, for a full prize. How do the nominations work? Eligible nominators,  which include university professors, scientists, members of national governments and previous Nobel Prize laureates, submit the names of potential candidates each year. Nominations for 2022 had to be submitted by Jan. 31. Who selects the winners? Four separate institutions are responsible for picking the winners: the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for the Nobel Prizes in Physics and Chemistry, the Karolinska Institute for the Nobel Prize in Medicine, the Swedish Academy for the Nobel Prize in Literature, and a committee of five people elected by the Norwegian Parliament for the Nobel Peace Prize. Isn’t there a prize for economics? Yes, but it is technically not a Nobel Prize. The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel was not among the awards originally stipulated in Nobel’s will. The economics prize was established by the Bank of Sweden in 1968; the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has been selecting the winners since 1969. Her work “revolutionized the way we can analyze or see molecules in the living body,” Dr. Ramström said. By pioneering a method for mapping biomolecules on the surface of cells, Dr. Bertozzi later devised a way to build click reactions, or complex molecules, inside living organisms. These so-called bio-orthogonal reactions have since been applied widely to pharmaceutical developments in cancer, DNA sequencing and material sciences. “The field of click chemistry is still in its early phases,” Dr. Bertozzi said in a call after the announcement, adding that there were “many new reactions to be discovered and invented,” as well as new applications to be found in industries like biotech, and in treating and diagnosing illnesses. She emphasized the importance of click therapy in medicine and “drug delivery,” which involves “doing chemistry inside living patients to make sure drugs go to the right place and not to the wrong place.” “These are areas that will be very strongly impacted by click chemistry, and they already have been,” said Dr. Bertozzi, who earned her Ph.D. in inorganic chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1993. The Nobel committee said in a statement that “click chemistry and bio-orthogonal reactions have taken chemistry into the era of functionalism,” adding that “this is bringing the greatest benefit to humankind.” The key was to find “good chemical buckles,” Dr. Aqvist said. “They have to react with each other, easily and specifically. Morten Meldal and Barry Sharpless independently found the first perfect candidates that will easily snap together, and importantly they won’t snap with anything else.” Dr. Aqvist noted that click chemistry “can now be used for building drug molecules, polymers, new materials and many other things.” Before the award was announced on Wednesday, the committee hinted that the prize could again be given to a woman, with a pair of Twitter posts highlighting Marie Curie and the 2020 winners, Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer Doudna. “I’m absolutely stunned. I’m sitting here and can hardly breathe,” Dr. Bertozzi said after the announcement. “I’m still not entirely positive that it’s real, but it’s getting realer by the minute.” While she said that she had not yet had time to consider how to use the award money, Dr. Bertozzi noted that “to the extent that the prize casts a light on chemical biology, that’s a wonderful thing.” The committee also telegraphed how rare it is for scientists to win two Nobels, noting that Curie was one of the few to have done so. Dr. Sharpless, the committee noted afterward, becomes the fifth member of that club, having received the chemistry prize in 2001 for his work on “chirally catalyzed oxidation reactions.” As well as Curie, the other double Nobel laureates are John Bardeen, Linus Pauling and Frederick Sanger, the committee noted. After the announcement, video on social media showed Dr. Meldal, who is Danish, being met with applause and cheers at the University of Copenhagen, where he is a professor. The chemistry prize is the third Nobel given this week, after the awards in physiology or medicine on Monday and in physics on Tuesday. The prizes are among the highest honors in science. Who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2021? Image David W.C. MacMillan, left, and Benjamin List won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.Credit…John Minchillo/Associated Press; Soeren Stache/DPA, via Associated Press The prize was awarded to Benjamin List and David W.C. MacMillan for their development of a tool that spurred research into new drugs and reduced chemistry’s effect on the environment. Who else has won a Nobel Prize in the sciences this year? The Physiology or Medicine prize was awarded on Monday to Svante Pääbo, a Swedish scientist who peered back into human history by retrieving genetic material from 40,000-year-old bones, producing a complete Neanderthal genome and initiating the field of ancient DNA studies. The physics prize went to Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger on Tuesday for their experiments that pioneered developments in the field of quantum mechanics. When will the other Nobel Prizes be announced? The Nobel Prize in Literature will be awarded on Thursday by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm. Last year, Abdulrazak Gurnah won for “his uncompromising and compassionate penetration of the effects of colonialism and the fate of the refugee in the gulf between cultures and continents.” The Nobel Peace Prize will be awarded on Friday by the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo. Last year, Maria Ressa and Dmitri A. Muratov, both journalists, won for their efforts to protect press freedoms. Next week, the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences will be awarded on Monday by the Swedish Academy in Stockholm. Last year, the prize went to David Card, Joshua D. Angrist and Guido W. Imbens. All of the prize announcements will also be streamed live by the Nobel Prize institution. Prize winners will receive their awards at a ceremony in Stockholm in December. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Nobel Prize In Chemistry Is Awarded To 3 Scientists For Work Snapping Molecules Together
Piggott Art Class Competes At Little Rock Clay County News-Democrat
Piggott Art Class Competes At Little Rock Clay County News-Democrat
Piggott Art Class Competes At Little Rock – Clay County News-Democrat https://digitalarkansasnews.com/piggott-art-class-competes-at-little-rock-clay-county-news-democrat/ BY GAYLA JOHNSON Times-Democrat News Staff Piggott schools art class recently participated in the Arkansas Peace Week Art Competition in Little Rock. All the students submitted art for the theme “End Racism. Build Peace.” There were 11 finalists with Ashlynn Bearden taking second place in the 11-12th grade division and Tucker Dunlap took second place in the 9-10th grade division. Art teacher Jerri Tate proudly stated, “We had more finalists and winners than any other school in Arkansas for our age divisions. I am so proud of my students and the man in charge said we did an excellent job.” Winners received a gift card to Art Outfitters in Little Rock. Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Piggott Art Class Competes At Little Rock Clay County News-Democrat
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 5 2022: How To Watch Last Day Of MLB Regular Season
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 5 2022: How To Watch Last Day Of MLB Regular Season
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 5, 2022: How To Watch Last Day Of MLB Regular Season https://digitalarkansasnews.com/tv-and-streaming-viewing-picks-for-october-5-2022-how-to-watch-last-day-of-mlb-regular-season/ All Times Eastern College Field Hockey Stanford at Syracuse — ACC Network, 6 p.m. College Football Week 6 SMU at Central Florida — ESPN2, 7 p.m. College Football Live — ESPN2, 4:30 p.m. Out of Pocket With Alyssa Lang and Andraya Carter — SEC Network, 7 p.m. Breaking the Huddle — FS1, 11 p.m. College Golf Men’s and Women’s Blessings Collegiate Invitational, Blessings Golf Club, Fayetteville, AR Day 3 — Golf Channel, 4:30 p.m. College Central — Golf Channel, 4 p.m. College Soccer Women’s BYU vs. San Francisco — BYUtv, 9 p.m. Gonzaga vs. Pepperdine — Stadium College Sports Atlantic, 10 p.m. Pacific vs. Saint Mary’s — Stadium College Sports Central, 10 p.m. San Diego vs. Portland — Stadium College Sports Central, 10 p.m. College Volleyball Women’s Iowa at Purdue — Big Ten Network, 6 p.m. Florida at Tennessee — ESPNU, 7 p.m. Wisconsin at Indiana — Big Ten Network, 8 p.m. TCU at Texas — Longhorn Network, 8 p.m Oklahoma at Baylor — ESPNU, 9 p.m. CONCACAF League Semifinal Leg 1, Estadio Chelato Uclés, Tegucigalpa, Honduras Motagua vs. Olimpia — TUDN/YouTube, 9 p.m. Golf PGA Tour: The CUT — Golf Channel, 1:30 p.m. Golf Today — Golf Channel, 2 p.m. Golf Central — Golf Channel, 7:30 p.m. School of Golf: Chapter 20: Backswing Faults — Golf Channel, 11:30 p.m. LaLiga LaLiga News — ESPN+, 9 a.m. Mixed Martial Arts Bellator 196: Henderson vs. Huerta (04/06/2018) — CBS Sports Network, 11 p.m. UFC Top 10: Bizarre Moments — ESPN2, 12:30 a.m. (Thursday) Bellator 221: Chandler vs. Pitbull (05/11/2019) — CBS Sports Network, 12:30 a.m. (Thursday) MLB Final Day of Regular Season American League Toronto at Baltimore — Sportsnet/MASN2, 12:30 p.m. Anaheim at Oakland — Bally Sports West/NBC Sports California, 4 p.m. Detroit at Seattle — Bally Sports Detroit/Root Sports, 4 p.m. Kansas City at Cleveland — Bally Sports Kansas City/Bally Sports Great Lakes, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago White Sox — Bally Sports North/NBC Sports Chicago, 4 p.m. New York Yankees at Texas — YES/Bally Sports Southwest, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston — Bally Sports Sun/NESN, 4 p.m. Toronto at Baltimore — Sportsnet/MASN2, 4 p.m. National League Arizona at Milwaukee — Bally Sports Arizona/Bally Sports Wisconsin, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Miami — Bally Sports South/Bally Sports Florida, 4 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati — Marquee Sports Network/Bally Sports Ohio, 4 p.m. San Francisco at San Diego — NBC Sports Bay Area/Bally Sports San Diego, 4 p.m. St. Louis at Pittsburgh — Bally Sports Midwest/AT&T SportsNet Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Washington at New York Mets — MASN/SNY, 4 p.m. Colorado at Los Angeles Dodgers — AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain/Spectrum SportsNet LA, 4:20 p.m. Interleague Philadelphia at Houston — NBC Sports Philadelphia/AT&T SportsNet Southwest, 4 p.m. MLB Central — MLB Network, 9 a.m. Blue Jays Central — Sportsnet, noon MLB Now — MLB Network, 2 p.m. MLB Tonight — MLB Network, 3 p.m. Blue Jays Central — Sportsnet, 3:30 p.m. MLB Network Strike Zone (season finale) — Check your local listings, 4 p.m. Baseball Tonight –ESPN, 7 p.m. Quick Pitch — MLB Network, 8 p.m. MLB Tonight: Postseason Preview — MLB Network, 9 p.m. MLS Charlotte FC vs. Columbus Crew — WAXN/WSOC/Bally Sports Great Lakes, 7 p.m. Inter Miami vs. Orlando City SC — WFOR/WAMI/WRBW, 8 p.m. NASCAR NASCAR Race Hub — FS1, 6 p.m. NASCAR America Motormouths — Peacock, 6 p.m. NBA Preseason Cleveland at Philadelphia — NBA TV/Bally Sports Ohio/NBC Sports Philadelphia Plus, 7 p.m. Toronto at NBC Sports Boston — TSN1/TSN4/NBC Sports Boston, 7:30 p.m. Phoenix at Los Angeles Lakers — NBA TV/Spectrum SportsNet, 10 p.m. NBA Today — ESPN, 3 p.m. New Orleans Pelicans Team Preview 2022 — NBA TV, 6 p.m. Houston Rockets Team Preview 2022 — NBA TV, 6:15 p.m. Portland Trail Blazers Team Preview 2022 — NBA TV, 6:30 p.m. Minnesota Timberwolves Team Preview 2022 — NBA TV, 6:45 p.m. NBA GameTime — NBA TV, 12:30 a.m. (Thursday) NFL Good Morning Football — NFL Network, 7 a.m. NFL Now — NFL Network, 1 p.m. NFL Now — NFL Network, 2 p.m. NFL Live — ESPN, 4 p.m. NFL Fantasy Live — NFL Network, 6 p.m. NFL Slimetime: Week 4 — Nickelodeon, 7 p.m. Inside the League — Stadium, 7 p.m. NFL Total Access — NFL Network, 7 p.m. NHL Preseason Boston at New York Rangers — TNT, 7 p.m. Detroit at Washington — NBC Sports Washington, 7 p.m. Dallas at Colorado — TNT, 9:30 p.m. Pre-Season Bonus Coverage — NHL Network, 10:30 p.m. Soccer Serie A Full Impact — CBS Sports Network, 6:30 p.m. Fútbol club — TUDN, 7 p.m. ESPN FC — ESPN+, 8 p.m. Línea de cuatro — TUDN, 8 p.m. Sports News & Talk SportsCenter — ESPN, 7 a.m. The Carton Show — FS1, 7 a.m. The Early Line — SportsGrid, 7 a.m. Get Up — ESPN, 8 a.m. SportsCenter — ESPN2, 8 a.m. SportsCenter — ESPN2, 9 a.m. The Dan Patrick Show — Peacock, 9 a.m. The Morning After — SportsGrid, 9 a.m. Sport Today — BBC World News, 9:45 p.m. Campus Insiders — Stadium, 10 a.m. The Rally Rewind — Stadium, 10:30 a.m. Up & Adams — FanDuel TV, 11 a.m. Fantasy Sports Today — SportsGrid, 11 a.m. B1G Today — Big Ten Network, noon The Jim Rome Show — CBS Sports Network, noon SportsCenter — ESPN, noon The Rich Eisen Show — The Roku Channel, noon Live on the Line — Stadium, noon SportsCenter — ESPN, 1 p.m. The Short List — Nxt Lvl Sports, 2 p.m. This Just In — ESPN, 2 p.m. The Immortals — Nxt Lvl Sports, 2:30 p.m. In Play — ACC Network, 3 p.m. The Paul Finebaum Show — SEC Network, 3 p.m. Ferrall Coast to Coast — SportsGrid, 3 p.m. Sport Today — BBC World News, 3:30 p.m. Jalen & Jacoby — ESPN2, 4 p.m. ACC PM — ACC Network, 4 p.m. Around the Horn — ESPN2, 5 p.m. Pardon the Interruption — ESPN2, 5:30 p.m. Time to Schein — CBS Sports Network, 6 p.m. SportsCenter — ESPN, 6 p.m. Daily Wager — ESPN2, 6 p.m. ESPN Films: Roll Tide/War Eagle — ESPNU, 6 p.m. Game Time Decisions — SportsGrid, 6 p.m. Sport Today — BBC World News, 9:45 p.m. All ACC — ACC Network, 10 p.m. The B1G Trip: Wisconsin Basketball in France — Big Ten Network, 10 p.m. The B1G Show — Big Ten Network, 10:30 p.m. SportsCenter at Night With Scott Van Pelt — ESPN, 11 p.m. E60: Truth Be Told — ESPN2, 11 p.m. SportsCenter at Night — ESPN, midnight Contacto deportivo — Univision/TUDN, midnight TMZ Sports — FS1, 1 a.m. (Thursday) Boomer and Gio — CBS Sports Network, 6 a.m. (Thursday) Keyshawn, JWill and Max — ESPN2/ESPNU, 6 a.m. (Thursday) Sport Today — BBC World News, 6:45 a.m. (Thursday) Tennis Center Court Live: Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships (ATP)/Astana Open (ATP)/Agel Open (WTA)/Jasmin Open Monastir (WTA) — Tennis Channel, 10 p.m. UEFA Champions League Group Stage — Matchday 3 Group F, Red Bull Arena, Leipzig, Germany Red Bull Leipzig vs. Celtic — UniMás/TUDN, 12:30 p.m. Group E, Red Bull Arena, Salzburg, Austria Red Bull Salzburg vs. Dinamo Zagreb — Paramount+/ViX+, 12:45 p.m. Group H, Estádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica, Lisbon, Portugal Benfica vs. Paris Saint-Germain — UniMás/TUDN, 2:50 p.m. Group E, Stamford Bridge, London, England, United Kingdom Chelsea vs. AC Milan — Paramount+/ViX+, 2:50 p.m. Group F, Estadio Santiago Bernabéu, Madrid, Spain Real Madrid vs. Shakhtar Donetsk — Parmount+/ViX+, 2:50 p.m. Group G, Etihad Stadium, Manchester, England, United Kingdom Manchester City vs. Copenhagen — Paramount+/ViX+, 2:50 p.m. Group G, Estadio Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán, Sevilla, Spain Sevilla vs. Borussia Dortmund — Paramount+/ViX+, 2:50 p.m. Group H, Allianz Stadium, Turin, Italy Juventus vs. Maccabi Haifa — Paramount+/ViX+, 2:50 pm. Fútbol central — UniMás/TUDN, noon UEFA Champions League Today — CBS Sports Network, 2 p.m. The Golazo! Show — CBS Sports Network, 3 p.m. UEFA Champions League Post Match Show — CBS Sports Network, 5 p.m. Misión Europa — TUDN, 5 p.m. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 5 2022: How To Watch Last Day Of MLB Regular Season