Tired of getting picked off by the easily accessible Wingman? Hate having to fight your teammates for heavy ammo because everyone picked up a heavy gun? Season 14 has some surprises for you then — the Wingman and Spitfire are getting some serious changes.
The Wingman was well known for being an extremely easy-to-obtain murder machine — heavy ammo is plentiful, and the Wingman deals plenty of damage. In Season 14: Hunted, the Wingman is being swapped over to Sniper ammo, bringing with it smaller stacks in a players inventory. Sniper ammo is, by design, very rare — Sniper weapons are quite powerful, so limiting ammo is a good way to balance out their destructive power.
This means that Wingman users will have to be a little bit more careful with their shot placement if they want to succeed — and it also has the effect of freeing up the heavy ammo “economy” as it were.
The Spitfire is also moving ammo types for similar reasons: too many cooks in the heavy ammo kitchen. In Season 14, the Spitfire will use light ammo and attachments. Respawn noted that heavy ammo was getting spread too thin between the many different guns that required it, so shifting these two weapons around will lighten the load, allowing for more flexibility in groups.
This also helps to differentiate the Spitfire from the Rampage — as the Ramapge is also an LMG that used heavy ammo. To sum up, your three LMGs will be Spitfire on light ammo, Rampage on heavy ammo, and Devotion on energy ammo.
If you’re looking for more info about the upcoming changes, hit up our Apex Legends Season 14 hub page.
The 2022 Commonwealth Games has seen some epic performances by Indian Weightlifters, who have already captured five medals in the sports, we take a look at the weightlifting schedule, event list, venue of the tournament, and live stream details
Jeremy Lalrinnunga, 19, experienced a life-changing moment on Sunday in Birmingham as he won a gold medal in the men’s 67kg weightlifting event at the Commonwealth Games 2022. Jeremy established a new Commonwealth Games record of 300 kg total in his opening game performance.
Commonwealth Games (CWG) 2022 Weightlifting Results Today,Day 3 Schedule, Date, Time, Venue, Tickets, Men’s And Women’s Weight Classes, Medal Winners List, Score And Live Stream UK, Australia, India
Birmingham, UK | I am happy after winning the gold medal but not satisfied with my performance. I was expecting to perform better but winning gold for the country is a proud moment: Jeremy Lalrinnunga after winning gold in Weightlifting at #CommonwealthGamespic.twitter.com/PSApzAVDGG
– Weightlifter – Adijat Adenike Olarinonye, wins Nigeria’s first gold medal at the ongoing Commonwealth Games in Birmingham after recording a total of 203kg in the women’s 55kg weightlifting. pic.twitter.com/d4Ejj6nk8y
2022 Commonwealth Games Weightlifting Latest Results, Upcoming Schedule, Date, Time, And Venue
India’s weightlifting success at the 2022 Commonwealth Games continued with Jeremy Lalrinnunga’s gold medal in the men’s 67kg division. With this medal, India has now already captured two gold medals in the ongoing competition. By lifting up 140 kg in the snatch competition, Jeremy set a new Commonwealth Games record. Later, I finished with a total lift of 300 kg, which is also a new CWG record, after lifting a total of 160 kg during the clean and jerk portion.
Later today, Achinta Sheuli will make his debut at Commonwealth Games Men’s 73kg final, where he will try to bag a medal like his idol Mirabai Chanu did earlier on Saturday. Also today, Popy Hazarika will play in the women’s 59kg final weightlifting event.
The full schedule and results of Weightlifting at 2022 Commonwealth Games can be found here while the interested fans can grab their tickets for the tournament from here.
2022 Commonwealth Games Weightlifting List of Categories
Menu
Women
55kg
49kg
61kg
55kg
67kg
59kg
73kg
64kg
81kg
71kg
96kg
76kg
109kg
87kg
+109kg
+87kg
2022 Commonwealth Games Weightlifting Latest Results & Upcoming Schedule
Men’s 67kg Weightlifting Final Results
Rank
athlete
Body Weight (Kg)
Snatch Best (kg)
Clean & Jerk Best (kg)
Total
1
Jeremy Lalrinnunga (IND)
66.36
140
160
300
two
Vaipava Ioane (SAM)
66.32
127
166
293
3
Joseph Edidiong (NGR)
66.86
130
160
290
4
Jaswant Shergill (ENG)
66.68
114
146
260
5
Chaturanga Lakmal (SRI)
64.57
119
140
259
6
Ruben Katoatau (KIR)
66.97
114
144
258
7
Ditto Ika (NRU)
66.79
105
140
245
8
Marc Jonathan Coret (MRI)
66.16
105
136
241
9
Kester Loy (SGP)
66.41
109
128
237
2022 Commonwealth Games Upcoming Weightlifting Schedule
At the 2022 Commonwealth Games, the weightlifting competition for men (73 kg) and women (59 kg) will take place at the National Exhibition Center on July 31, 2022.
Men’s 73kg Weightlifting Final Lineup (31st July, 6:30 PM BST)
Anthony Masinde (KEN)
Vester Villalon (NZL)
Achinta Sheuli (IND)
Shad Darsigny (CAN)
Jack Oliver (ENG)
Brandon Wakeling (AUS)
Ezekiel Moses (NRU)
Michael Anthony Farmer (WAL)
Indika Dissanayake (SRI)
Jon-antohein Phillips (RSA)
John Tafi (SAM)
Erry Hidayat (MAS)
Women’s 59kg Weightlifting Final Lineup (31st July, 2:00 PM BST)
Tenishia Thornton (MLT)
Marlyne Marcus Marceeta (MAS)
Popy Hazarika (IND)
Tali Darsigny (CAN)
Brenna Kean (AUS)
Jessica Gordon Brown (ENG)
Sarah Ang (SGP)
Rafiatu Folashade Lawal (NGR)
Clementine Ciana Agricole (SEY)
Hannah Crymble (NIR)
Anneke Spies (RSA)
2022 Commonwealth Games Weightlifting Events Medal Tally
So far in the 2022 Commonwealth Games Weightlifting event, Indian players have dominated with 2 gold medals, 2 silver medals, and 1 bronze medal to their names. Meanwhile, Malaysia are the only other team than India to win multiple gold medals in weightlifting at the ongoing tournament.
Rank
Country
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Total
1
India
two
two
1
5
two
Malaysian
two
0
0
two
3
Nigeria
1
0
1
two
4
Mauritius
0
1
0
1
Papua New Guinea
0
1
0
1
Samoa
0
1
0
1
7
Canada
0
0
1
1
England
0
0
1
1
Sri Lanka
0
0
1
1
Total Medals
5
5
5
fifteen
2022 Commonwealth Games Where to Watch: Live Stream & TV Telecast?
For Indian audiences, live streaming of weightlifting competitions, including the men’s 73kg final and the women’s 59kg final, will be available on the Sony TEN 1, Sony TEN 2, Sony TEN 3, Sony SIX, and Sony TEN 4 channels. The Sony LIV app and website will stream the games live, making it simple for Indian fans to keep up with the action as it happens.
Country
Rights-holders
Australia
Seven Network
Canada
CBC
India
Sony Pictures Sports Network
new zealand
Sky NZ
United Kingdom
BBC
Also Read: Formula One Cancels Russian Grand Prix 2022 After Ukraine Crisis And War
With formal charges expected to be filed Monday in Madison County, more details have emerged about the suspect in the deadly shooting of an Elwood police officer.
Police arrested 42-year-old Carl Roy Webb Boards II of Anderson in connection to the fatal shooting that took the life of 24-year-old Noah Shahnavaz during a traffic stop.
Boards is accused of shooting and killing Officer Shahnavaz around 2 am Sunday near the intersection of State Road 37 and County Road 1100 N. in Madison County.
Investigators say Boards fled from the scene of the shooting, and the suspect’s vehicle was seen after 2:30 am in Hamilton County near SR 37 and 142nd Street. Fishers police conducted a pit stop maneuver and were able to stop Boards’ vehicle on I-69 near SR 37.
Boards was taken into custody and is currently being held without bond in the Hamilton County Jail.
16 years earlier, Boards fired at Indianapolis police officers
A look at Boards’ lengthy criminal history shows he was sentenced to a 25-year aggravated sentence in connection to a 2006 incident in which he shot at Indianapolis police officers.
According to a response to an appeal filed on behalf of Boards, Boards pointed to a .40-caliber semi-automatic handgun at two Indianapolis police officers who had attempted to pull him over for not using a turn signal on November 30, 2006.
The court documents show Boards fired seven times, and three bullets hit one of the officer’s IPD squad cars.
Boards’ vehicle was eventually stopped by a “precision intervention technique.” His appeal from him shows two weapons were found in his Suburban from him: “a Taurus .40-caliber semi-automatic handgun on the front seat and an AK-47-style assault rifle with a loaded drum magazine on the floor of the driver’s side.”
Eight ecstasy pills were found in Boards’ pocket, and he reportedly took at least one ecstasy pill earlier.
Boards was originally charged with attempted murder, possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, three counts of resisting law enforcement, possession of a schedule I controlled substance (ecstasy), and carrying a handgun without a license.
In August 2007, a jury found Boards guilty of criminal recklessness, two counts of resisting law enforcement, possession of ecstasy, and carrying a handgun without a license.
The jury did not convicted him of attempted murder.
A jury trial was waived on the following counts: unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, a class C felony enhancement to the carrying a handgun without a license conviction, and the usual offender allegation.
A court did find him guilty on all three counts in September of 2007.
Boards received the following sentence:
7 years for class D felony criminal recklessness
18 years consecutive for class B felony unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon
Concurrent 3-year terms for each of the class D felony resisting convictions
3-year concurrent sentence for the ecstasy possession conviction
8-year concurrent sentence for the class C felony carrying a handgun without a license conviction.
The concurrent terms means they would be done simultaneously as the first two terms, so Boards were sentenced to 25 years altogether.
According to the Department of Corrections database, Boards’ sentence for criminal recklessness ended on August 21, 2011. However, he was held further in the DOC on his possession of a deadly weapon charge, which ran consecutively to his criminal recklessness charge. He was not released from custody until August 16, 2019. Marion County Judge Mark Stoner confirmed this sequence of events.
Boards appeals conviction
Boards unsuccessfully appealed his conviction three times.
In a Court of Appeals decision filed in 2008, Boards’ attorneys argued his unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon and carrying a handgun without a license convictions violated the double jeopardy clause.
Boards also said his sentence was inappropriate because he suffered from mental illness that needed treatment.
“He claims that on the night in question he was patrolling Indianapolis for terrorists and that he shot toward the police officers only because he did not want them to interfere with his protective mission,” read the court documents.
The Court of Appeals declined to authorize the filing of Boards’ petition, citing his “failure to take prescribed medications to combat his illness” and
Boards’ charges in Elwood officer’s death
Boards is facing the following preliminary charges for Officer Noah Shahnavaz’s death: murder, possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, resisting law enforcement.
The Madison County Prosecutor’s Office says it will talk to Shahnavaz’s family before deciding whether to seek the death penalty.
Forests have a complex relationship with climate change. On the one hand, they absorb atmospheric carbon, even proliferating amid changing climates. On the other hand, they can suffer under higher heat stress, degrading their carbon sink capacity and drought resilience. With some $10.5 million in funding from the German Research Foundation, scientists in Europe are now going to instrument forests with novel sensors to better understand how woodlands are affected by changing climate.
Mixing forest science with Internet of Things (IoT) technology, drones, and other devices, EcoSense will try to shed light on the effects of climate change on the interactions between plants, soil, and the atmosphere. These interactions vary according to species, location, and forest stand, which refers to collections of trees in a forest that are fairly uniform in their age, size, distribution, and other factors. The EcoSense initiative will bring new technologies to forest monitoring following efforts such as Harvard University’s wired forest.
Specifically, the project will study abiotic and biotic processes of forest carbon and water exchange, how the ecosystem responds to environmental stressors, enabling the prediction of process-based changes in ecosystem function and sustainability, according to a project outline. Real-time sensor network data will be transferred to a database for analysis and deep learning simulation models to generate short- and medium-term predictions.
“Climate change has a huge impact on forest ecosystems already. We see an increase in tree mortality worldwide,” said Christiane Werner, a professor of ecosystem physiology at the Institute of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Freiburg, pointing to the effects of the 2018 European drought on trees. “Currently, we have well-established models to predict overall ecosystem functioning under nonstressed conditions, but we do not understand when and why climate extremes like heat waves or droughts drive single trees or forest patches beyond their tipping points.”
Internet of Woody Things
The research team will instrument several hilly hectares of the Black Forest in southwest Germany, covering stands of pure beech, pure spruce, and mixed trees. Climate-driven changes to the forest may have wider repercussions; the woodland is of economic and touristic importance to Germany, famed for its traditional farmhouses, cuckoo clocks, and eponymous ham and cake.
The EcoSense tool kit could include carbon dioxide (COtwo) sensors, camera-equipped drones, and other devices. The team will initially deploy commercially available devices and then, from 2024, replace them with newly developed microsensors, some of which will be energy autonomous, according to Ulrike Wallrabe, a professor in the University of Freiburg’s Department of Microsystems Engineering.
“We want to measure fluxes of water, isotope-discriminated COtwo and volatile organic compounds and stress markers, mainly photosynthetic efficiency by chlorophyll fluorescence from soils up to atmosphere,” said Wallrabe. “The sensor network will comprise new, compact and, wherever possible, autonomous energy sensors that are to be developed in the project.”
Daniel Kneeshaw, a forest and climate change researcher at the University of Quebec in Montreal who is not affiliated with EcoSense, said the project is examining interesting parameters that should be useful to a wide variety of researchers.
“As the researchers suggest, what happens at a cellular scale when scaled up can have profound impacts across regions,” said Kneeshaw, adding he wants to know how EcoSense data will be scaled up and down. “Better understanding of the mechanisms will help us be better prepared for future changes. Having such networks around the world and getting scientists from the different networks to talk [about them] will lead to even more robust results and interpretations.”
The EcoSense project aims to begin publishing studies in 2023, but some groups affiliated with it have already started to release findings. For instance, one group including Werner published a paper on a wireless, autonomous chlorophyll fluorometer that measures photosynthesis efficiency in plants. With a 10-kilometer range, the novel device can be attached anywhere on a tree and is low power and relatively inexpensive.
In addition to its initial 4-year funding, EcoSense has an option of two 4-year extensions to gain a long-term perspective. The researchers have high expectations of significant results.
“Our special feature is the unique alignment of ecosystem research with microsystems technology. Distributed autonomous sensing principals will open a new door for ecosystem research,” said Werner. “We will gain an unprecedented cross-scale coverage, both at the spatial level, from leaf to forest, as well as in a temporal dimension, from minutes to years, of processes and interactions driving carbon and water fluxes, including stress markers as volatile organic compounds and chlorophyll fluorescence.”
Citation: Hornyak, T. (2022), Scientists bring forests into the Internet of Things, eos, 103, https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EO220368. Published on August 1, 2022.
Veteran rider Annemiek van Vleuten has won the historic, re-booted Tour de France Femmes on Sunday after clinching the eighth and final stage in style.
Key points:
Van Vleuten won the stage by 30 seconds from fellow Dutchwoman Demi Vollering
Vollering was also second overall, three minutes and 48 seconds behind van Vleuten
The best placed Australian was Grace Brown, who finished 20th overall
The 39-year-old won the stage for 30 seconds from Dutch countrywoman Demi Vollering, who also finished the race second overall.
Italian rider Silvia Persico was third in the stage, one minute and 43 seconds behind the winner.
In the overall standings, Movistar rider van Vleuten was three minutes and 48 seconds clear of Vollering (Team SD Worx) and six minutes and 35 seconds ahead of Polish rider Katarzyna Niewiadoma (Canyon–SRAM) in third spot.
Van Vleuten had just about enough energy to punch the air in delight when crossing the line after the 123-kilometre mountain stage in the Vosges mountains of eastern France.
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It featured two category-one climbs, the second ascent being the stage-ending trek up La Super Planche des Belles Filles, which finished with a daunting gradient of 23 per cent.
She entered the final stage with a lead of three minutes and 14 seconds over Vollering.
On Saturday’s penultimate stage, Van Vleuten rose from eighth overall to take the yellow jersey from Marianne Vos with more superb climbing in the Vosges.
Van Vleuten added this victory to a long list of achievements, including three Giro d’Italia Femminile titles, Olympic gold in the time trial and two world championship golds in the same discipline.
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Six years ago, her career was under threat after she sustained fractures to her spine and was placed in intensive care after crashing during the women’s Olympic road race at the Brazil Games.
Vos was among the favorites, but the three-time Giro d’Italia champion ended up in 26th place overall despite winning two stages.
The best placed Australian was Grace Brown, who finished 20th overall, riding with FDJ-Suez-Futuroscope.
Fellow Australian Rachel Neylan finished 28th (Team Cofidis).
Before President Biden emerged from coronavirus isolation Wednesday, he made double-sure he was no longer contagious. I have received negative tests Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. To test at all meant Biden was going above and beyond the guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for exiting isolation.
The CDC has built that guidance around a timeline — a prescribed minimum number of days of isolation — rather than the direct, personalized evidence of virus shedding that rapid antigen tests provide. But the usefulness of these tests was highlighted anew Saturday when Biden, who had taken the antiviral during his illness from him, tested positive again and returned to isolation in the White House residence.
More than 2½ years into the pandemic, and with a highly contagious version of the virus circulating, the CDC guidelines for what to do when falling ill — and when to return to public life — continue to stoke as much confusion as clarity. That’s a reflection of the changing nature of the virus, the inherent unpredictability of an infection, and the demands and expectations of work and home life.
With new research showing that people are often infectious for more than five days, the CDC guidance has drawn criticism from some infectious-disease experts. The Biden protocol strikes many of them as the right way to go — because it’s empiricalevidence that a person isn’t shedding virus.
The CDC does not explicitly recommend a negative test to patients who want to resume activities. It describes such a test, which offers a direct if imperfect measure of contagiousness, as optional. The guidance states that a patient should isolate for at least five days. (Day 1 is the day after your symptoms manifest or your test was collected.) Patients who end isolation should continue to wear a well-fitting mask around others at home or in public through Day 10.
“Given that a substantial portion of people do have a rapid positive test after 5 days, I think an updated recommendation should include people having a negative rapid test before coming out of isolation for COVID,” said Tom Inglesby, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, who was the Biden administration’s senior adviser on testing from December until April.
Rapid tests are widely available, and “there is new science and practical experience with this virus since December when isolation guidance was issued,” Inglesby said in an email.
People who are being required to go back to their workplaces after five days of being sick with covid even if they still have a positive test result “shouldn’t do that,” Inglesby said. “It’s exposing others in the work environment to the risk of COVID spread. CDC guidance on that would be valuable.”
Test to return should be the standard nationwide
Good enough for POTUS = good enough for everyone https://t.co/k3B8DkT9ZR
— Anand Swaminathan MD MPH 🏳️🌈🇺🇦 (@EMSwami) July 27, 2022
Biden has used his brief about the coronavirus as a sign that the administration is on top of the pandemic and has made the right moves by relying on vaccinations, testing and new antiviral drugs to lower the death rate. But across the country, hundreds of thousands of people a day are getting infected with the omicron subvariant BA.5 — the exact number is impossible to know — and they have a common, urgent need to know when they are no longer contagious.
The CDC’s guidance has been under internal review in recent months. A revamped set of recommendations is expected to be rolled out in coming weeks, according to three administration officials and advisers who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe sensitive internal discussions. A draft of the updated guidance at the moment does not include a requirementto test negative before exiting isolation, they said.
The existing CDC guidance says patients can end isolation five days after their first day of symptoms, so long as their symptoms have improved and they have been fever-free for at least 24 hours without fever-reducing medication. The CDC encourages people who become very sick or have weakened immune systems to isolate for 10 days.
That leaves a negative test result as optional.
Robert Wachter, chair of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco, said people can easily misconstrue the CDC five-day guidance as a personal assurance of no longer being contagious.
“Unfortunately, people hear the ‘five days’ and think, ‘Oh, it must be that I’m not infectious,’ ” Wachter said. “That’s just wrong.”
A recent study in the New England Journal of Medicine looked at how long people could shed viruses that could be cultured in a laboratory — the best test of infectiousness. The result: People shed such virus for eight days, on average, before testing negative.
The CDC guidance “doesn’t make sense,” said Andrew Noymer, an epidemiologist at the University of California at Irvine. “They’re telling people to go back to work while they’re still contagious, essentially.”
Wachter suggests that people test negative before heading out in public.
“The antigen test turns out to be an awfully good ‘are you infectious’ test,” Wachter said. “If they’re still testing positive on Day 6, 7 or 8, I don’t want them hugging me in a room without a mask on.”
Officials familiar with the crafting of covid policy say the administration has to take into account human behavior — what people can, and will, do in their daily lives to limit virus transmission.
The administration’s decision not to push strongly for a negative test before ending isolation reflects an awareness that not everyone has access to tests or can extend time away from work, school, caregiving or other duties.
When CDC Director Rochelle Walensky was asked recently why the agency doesn’t recommend that all Americans use successive negative tests to exit isolation, as Biden did, she said the president was in a special category.
The president received multiple rapid tests because he was being monitored for a Paxlovid “rebound” infection, which can occur days after initially testing negative. Biden tested negative Thursday and Friday mornings before a positive result Saturday morning indicated the rebound, sending him back into isolation, White House physician Kevin C. O’Connor said in a letter. “Unsurprisingly,” Biden tested positive again Sunday, O’Connor said.
Walensky said during a Washington Post Live interview that “I think we can all agree that the president’s protocols likely go above and beyond and have the resources to go above and beyond what every American is able and has the capacity to do.”
“As we put forward our CDC guidance, we have to do so, so that they are relevant, feasible, followable by Americans,” she said, noting that some communities have fewer resources and greater work constraints.
She also noted that the guidance gives people the option to get a rapid test before ending isolation.
The five-day isolation period reflects an approximation of when people are most likely to be infectious. But these are averages, covering broad populations.
A positive result from a rapid antigen test, often called an at-home test, is the best indicator of how much virus is present and how likely you are to infect someone, said Michael Mina, a former Harvard University infectious-disease epidemiologist and immunologist who is an expert on rapid tests. Rapid antigen tests look for specific viral proteins to detect infection. Mina is chief science officer at a telehealth company that uses rapid testing, including for covid, to link patients to care.
“If you still have enough virus to see it on a rapid test, you know that you’re still infectious,” Mina said.
The California Department of Public Health, for example, requires a negative test on the fifth day after first testing positive, or later, to leave isolation.
Policymakers could help patients by releasing “clearer guidelines on using antigen tests”to leave isolation, like in Biden’s case, said Amy Barczak, an infectious-disease expert at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her research on her suggests that one-quarter of people infected with an omicron variant could still be infectious after eight days.
The CDC guidance dates to the wave of illness caused by the omicron variant that began in December and sickened tens of millions of people in a matter of weeks, causing daily cancellation of thousands of commercial airline flights and leading to staff shortages in all sectors of the economy. Under immense pressure to keep essential services from being hobbled, and amid signs that omicron was less likely to cause severe disease in a largely vaccinated population, the CDC shortened its recommended isolation period from 10 days to five.
Rapid tests were in short supply at that point, but then the federal government expanded its acquisition of tests, with millions now available. Since this spring, Americans have been able to go to a government website, covid.gov, order free rapid antigen tests and have them shipped to their homes. At drugstores and at online retailers, a package of two tests generally costs about $25, depending on the location. Private insurance is supposed to cover purchases of at-home tests.
Some elements of the CDC guidance may prove confusing.
The CDC says that people who choose to take a coronavirus test after Day 5 and get a positive result should extend their isolation to 10 days. But the agency does not directly recommend taking a test after Day 5. The guidance as written says, in effect, you can take a test after five days but be prepared to handle the result. People for whom isolation is a hardship may see no incentive to learn whether they are still shedding viruses.
Experts say the CDC should recommend what’s best for public health.
“That’s kind of the feeling they’re giving off right now: … ‘It’s an okay idea, but we don’t want to actually recommend it,’ ”Mina said. “It should be the other way around.”
The expected release by the CDC of revamped covid guidance in coming weeks is prompted by a desire to provide clarity, according to administration officials and others familiar with the discussions, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the guidance is not final.
“We just know that people are hungry for guidance at this time,” one CDC adviser said.
The new guidelines are intended to help consumers determine covid risk by evaluating several factors, including whether they will be around people with frail immune systems or other underlying conditions, whether they will be outdoors or indoors, and the quality of the ventilation.
CDC has more than 600 websites related to its covid response, each with different messages on testing, ventilation and masking in different settings, the adviser said. The agency wants to share “important messages that everyone needs to hear in all settings across the country … and then make sure that all of the other guidance underneath it reflects those key messages.”
In the meantime, people testing positive at home past Day 5 are trying to figure out whether it’s safe to go back to work or resume other activities.
How quickly a rapid test turns positive can help guide behavior, Mina said.
“If you have a really dark line that shows up in five seconds before the control line even shows up… you probably really want to stay in isolation,” Mina said. “If you start to see the line in 10 seconds, and it gets really, really dark, you are teeming with viruses.”
If there is a weaker or fainter line, “it’s likely that you have less virus there, but you still do have virus. And there’s no way to define the cutoff at which you’re likely to transmit to other people,” Barczak said.
Angelina Jolie’s 17-year-old daughter, Zahara, is set to start her first year at the esteemed US university Spelman College.
The actress, 47, posted an Instagram photo on Sunday of “Zahara with her Spelman sisters”.
The teenager was all smiles posing for the picture in a white tee and jeans, Page Six reported.
“Congratulations to all new students starting this year,” Jolie captioned the social media upload. “A very special place and an honor to have a family member as a new Spelman girl.”
Spelman, which was founded in 1881, is a “historically black college and a global leader in the education of women of African descent”, according to the private school’s website.
Jolie, who is also the mother of Maddox, 20, Pax, 18, Shiloh, 16, and twins Knox and Vivienne, 14, similarly documented her eldest son’s experience when he enrolled at Yonsei University in South Korea in August 2019.
“He has been studying Korean language,” the Oscar winner explained to People of Maddox’s decision at the time. “He has lessons multiple times a week to prepare.”
Jolie told the magazine four months prior that she was “nothing but proud” of Maddox, adding: “I look forward to all he will do.”
When the Maleficent star dropped her and ex-husband Brad Pitt’s son off at Yonsei, she was filmed telling other students that she was “trying not to cry”.
Pitt, 58, was absent at the drop-off, with Maddox telling a reporter the following month that he did not know whether his dad planned to visit.
“Well, whatever happens, happens,” he said in September 2019 amid their strained relationship.
Jolie and her Mr. and Mrs. Smith co-star called it quits in September 2016.
While they were declared legally single nearly three years later, the former couple’s legal battle is still ongoing.
Pitt was granted joint custody of their minor children in May 2021.
Judge Judge John Ouderkirk, however, was subsequently disqualified from the case for not sufficiently disclosing business relationships with Pitt’s attorneys, so the exes are still fighting for custody.
This story originally appeared on Page Six and has been reproduced with permission
The Formula 1 debut of Oscar Piastri is now a formality following confirmation Fernando Alonso will leave Alpine at the end of the season.
The team’s current reserve driver, the Australian had been caught in something of a holding pattern behind the two-time world champion and Esteban Ocon.
It was largely thought that he would be loaned out, most likely to Williams, as something of a stop gap as Alpine renewed Alonso for another two seasons.
However, with the Spaniard now moving aside at the Anglo-French team to join Aston Martin, the path is open for Piastri to step into the drive.
The 21-year-old has been working through a busy testing program aboard last year’s A521, quietly logging laps at a host of circuits.
He’s also set to take the wheel in two Free Practice 1 sessions once Formula 1 returns from the summer break at the end of the month.
That will see him take over Alonso’s seat on one of those occasions in a prelude of the team’s 2023 line-up.
Piastri’s move has not been confirmed, though it is widely expected following strong comments from Team Principal Otmar Szafnauer and CEO Laurent Rossi.
Both have spoken positively of the young Melburnian in recent weeks, voicing their confidence in the fact he’ll be on the grid in 2023.
“We are working on scenarios for both of them to drive, and scenarios that are very plausible, very sensible, and we imagine will satisfy those drivers,” Rossi said when asked by Speedcafe.com just a week ago why he was confident Piastri would be on the grid.
“That’s why I can’t say more.”
Speaking over the course of the Canadian Grand Prix weekend, Szafnauer said simply “yes” when asked if he thought the F2 champion would be in F1 next season.
A man convicted of kidnapping a woman and then raping her for several days in his Charlestown apartment was sentenced Monday. Victor Pena, 42, was charged with kidnapping and 10 counts of aggravated rape for allegedly holding the 23-year-old woman against her will and sexually assaulting her for three days at his Walford Way home in January 2019. After six days of testimony and evidence, the jury needed just two hours of deliberations to return guilty verdicts on all counts. Pena was sentenced to 29 to 39 years in prison by Judge Anthony Campo. Prosecutors said the state asked for a “murder type” sentence because the kidnapping and rape “really does murder someone.””When I think about how this affected me, I think about how I never fully came back from those days. A part of me died in that apartment and I mourn for the life I could have lived-was supposed to live,” the victim wrote in an impact statement. In testifying in his own defense, Pena claimed what transpired during the three days in question was consensual, and the victim asked him for help and wanted to go to his apartment.“And we started to have nice chemistry,” Pena testified via an interpreter . “I said I have an apartment, I had housing, and then, ‘Let’s go to your apartment,’ she said.”Earlier in the trial, the accuser testified that Pena sexually assaulted her multiple times and threatened her if she tried to leave “I didn’t want to die,” the woman told the court. The accuser said she feared for her life and Pena told her that he rescued her and they would start a family. Pena forced her to drink alcohol and fed her nothing but canned pineapple. A digital forensic specialist said 322 photos and six explicit videos of the victim were found on Pena’s phone. Detectives who found the victim described to the court finding a terrified woman. Until he took the stand, Pena was not present in the courtroom during testimony and was instead watching remotely from another room following inappropriate behavior and disruptive outbursts. During proceedings to seat a jury, Pena suddenly appeared naked on a monitor in the courtroom while he performed to lewd act. After about 16 seconds, the monitor in the courtroom was turned off. That jury pool was excused.
A man convicted of kidnapping a woman and then raping her for several days in his Charlestown apartment was sentenced Monday.
Victor Pena, 42, was charged with kidnapping and 10 counts of aggravated rape for allegedly holding the 23-year-old woman against her will and sexually assaulting her for three days at his Walford Way home in January 2019.
After six days of testimony and evidence, the jury needed just two hours of deliberations to return guilty verdicts on all counts.
Pena was sentenced to 29 to 39 years in prison by Judge Anthony Campo.
Prosecutors said the state asked for a “murder type” sentence because the kidnapping and rape “really does murder someone.”
“When I think about how this affected me, I think about how I never fully came back from those days. A part of me died in that apartment and I mourn for the life I could have lived-was supposed to live,” the victim wrote in an impact statement.
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In testifying in his own defense, Pena claimed what transpired during the three days in question was consensual, and the victim asked him for help and wanted to go to his apartment.
“And we started to have nice chemistry,” Pena testified via an interpreter. “I said I have an apartment, I had housing, and then, ‘Let’s go to your apartment,’ she said.”
Earlier in the trial, the accuser testified that Pena sexually assaulted her multiple times and threatened her if she tried to leave.
“I didn’t want to die,” the woman told the court.
The accuser said she feared for her life and Pena told her that he rescued her and they would start a family. Pena forced her to drink alcohol and fed her nothing but canned pineapple.
A digital forensic specialist said 322 photos and six explicit videos of the victim were found on Pena’s phone. Detectives who found the victim described to the court finding a terrified woman.
Until he took the stand, Pena was not present in the courtroom during testimony and was instead watching remotely from another room following inappropriate behavior and disruptive outbursts.
During proceedings to seat a jury, Pena suddenly appeared naked on a monitor in the courtroom while he performed a lewd act. After about 16 seconds, the monitor in the courtroom was turned off. That jury pool was excused.
UFC star Julianna Pena was rushed to hospital to see a plastic surgeon after losing a “big chunk” of her forehead in a horrific injury.
The horrific injury could prove to be the end of a heroic MMA career for the Venezuelan Vixen, The Sun reports.
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The Washington star, 32, took on Amanda Nunes at UFC 277 in Texas on Sunday (AEST). But she took several thick blows to her head and ended up looking like something out of a horror movie as blood poured down her face.
UFC chief Dana White confirmed she was immediately taken to see specialists as soon as her defeat was confirmed by the judges after lasting the distance.
“Julianna’s got a big chunk missing from her forehead,” White said.
“She’s going to see a plastic surgeon right now.”
He then admitted it could prove the end of Pena’s incredible career, which saw her crowned UFC bantamweight world champ by beating Nunes in a major shock last December.
“It takes some time to heal and then I don’t know,” he added.
“She got pretty banged up tonight, she got five or six knockdowns in the first two rounds.
“She was hurt. She needs to take some time off, relax, spend some time with her daughter de ella and then we will go from there. ”
Nunes is widely regarded as one of the greatest UFC fighters of all time. And she proved exactly why with a superb performance to regain her status as the two-weight queen at the American Airlines Center in Dallas.
The Brazilian won with a comfortable unanimous decision – 50-45, 50-44 and 50-43 – and was carried out of the cage on one of her team’s shoulders.
And then to top it off, Nunes brilliantly downed a pint of beer that she’d been desperate to drink.
The 34-year-old roared in her post-fight interview: “We are here making history again. Double champion again baby. Let’s go.”
This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission.