Michael Andlauer reaches agreement to buy NHL’s Ottawa Senators
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — A group led by Canadian businessman Michael Andlauer has reached an agreement to buy the NHL’s Ottawa Senators.The team announced Tuesday that Andlauer and his group will purchase 90% of the club from the Melnyk family. The deal is reportedly worth nearly $1 billion, which is “give or take” what Commissioner Gary Bettman expected the team in Canada’s capital to sell for.“Michael represents everything we could have hoped to find coming into this process — a passionate owner who is committed to Ottawa,” Senators chairman and governor Sheldon Plener said in a statement announcing the sale. “We believe it is a momentous day for the National Capital Region.”Anna and Olivia Melnyk, daughters of late former owner Eugene Melnyk, will retain 10% interest. Melnyk died of an undisclosed illness in March 2022 at age 62.Andlauer, 57, is the founder and CEO of a health care group with transportation options for that sector and started a private equity company ba...CP NewsAlert: RCMP investigating foreign meddling attempts against three MPs
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
OTTAWA — The RCMP says it is investigating allegations of foreign meddling against three parliamentarians, including Conservative MPs Michael Chong and Erin O’Toole and NDP MP Jenny Kwan.More coming.The Canadian Press‘Obamacare’ will still cover prevention for HIV, other illnesses amid court battle
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
The government can keep enforcing “Obamacare” requirements that health insurance plans cover preventative care — such as HIV prevention, some types of cancer screenings and other illnesses — while a legal battle over the mandates plays out, under a court agreement approved Tuesday.The pact approved by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals preserves — at least for now — cost-free preventive care coverage for millions of Americans under the Affordable Care Act. That coverage was thrown into question by a March ruling from a federal judge in Texas, who said some of the preventive care requirements under former President Barack Obama’s 13-year-old health care law are unconstitutional. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor had nationwide effects. The Biden administration had argued last week at the appeals court that the ruling should be stayed while appeals are pursued. The agreement was filed with the court Monday. In it, the plaintiffs in the case, including a Christia...Police investigating suspicious fires at Vaughan business after several trucks destroyed
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
Police are searching for a suspect following two suspicious fires at a business in Vaughan.York Regional Police say a truck was lit on fire outside a business in the area of Highway 50 and Rutherford Road around 4:30 a.m. on Friday.Officers were called to the same location for another fire two days later. Investigators say multiple trucks with fixed trailers were allegedly set on fire around 3:30 a.m. on Sunday.Police say nine vehicles were damaged and seven were completely destroyed.Investigators have determined a male suspect deliberately set fire to one of the trucks. No suspect description has been released.No injuries were reported in either incident.The Ontario Fire Marshal is also investigating. Anyone with information is being asked to contact police.The Beatles are releasing their ‘final’ record. AI helped make it possible
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
LONDON (AP) — Artificial intelligence has been used to extract John Lennon’s voice from an old demo to create “the last Beatles record,” decades after the band broke up, Paul McCartney said Tuesday.McCartney, 80, told the BBC that the technology was used to separate the Beatles’ voices from background sounds during the making of director Peter Jackson’s 2021 documentary series, “The Beatles: Get Back.” The “new” song is set to be released later this year, he said.Jackson was “able to extricate John’s voice from a ropey little bit of cassette and a piano,” McCartney told BBC radio. “He could separate them with AI, he’d tell the machine ‘That’s a voice, this is a guitar, lose the guitar’.”“So when we came to make what will be the last Beatles record, it was a demo that John had that we worked on,” he added. “We were able to take John’s voice and get it pure through this AI so then we could mix the record as you would do. It gives you some sort of leeway.”...Creative ice cream flavors could make this a sweet, savory, scoop-worthy summer
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
Travel anywhere on the planet and you’ll find some version of ice cream. Grab a lemon gelato in Italy; a stick of butterscotch kulfi in Nepal; a cinnamon paleta bar in Mexico. If you’re in Seoul, try a “J”-shaped puffed corn cone filled with soft ice cream.North Americans tend to be loyal to chocolate, vanilla and cookies ‘n’ cream, according to the International Dairy Foods Association. We like our half gallons or waffle cones stuffed with the fondly familiar.Still, the world of ice cream isn’t immune to change, and like any culinary domain, it’s evolving. Recent years have seen an explosion of novel flavor combos, unexpected ingredients and new presentations from ice cream makers large and small, food editors say.On the flavor front, there are floral ingredients like rose, orange blossom, lavender and jasmine, and herbal notes like saffron and tarragon. Unusual combos of savory and sweet are another trend.“ Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream has an ‘Everything Bagel’ flavor fea...COVID-19 inquiry in UK asks whether ‘terrible consequences’ could have been avoided or reduced
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
LONDON (AP) — A mammoth three-year public inquiry into the U.K. government’s handling of the response to COVID-19 opened Tuesday by asking if some suffering and death could have been avoided with better planning — and whether Britain’s complex, protracted exit from the European Union distracted authorities from preparing for potential threats.Lawyer Hugo Keith, who is counsel to the inquiry, said the coronavirus pandemic had brought “death and illness on an unprecedented scale” in modern Britain. He said that COVID-19 had been recorded as a cause of death for 226,977 people in the U.K.“The key issue is whether that impact was inevitable,” Keith said. “Were those terrible consequences inexorable, or were they avoidable or capable of mitigation?”A group of people who lost relatives to COVID-19 held pictures of their loved one outside the inquiry venue, an anonymous London office building. The first day of public hearings began with a 17-minute video in which people describ...Waukegan is latest city to reach out to Bears about being home of new stadium
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
WAUKEGAN, Ill. — Another city near Chicago has reached out to the Bears to express their interest in having the NFL team be the home of their new stadium.The City of Waukegan, a Lake County suburb of 88,614, did so in a letter from Mayor Ann B. Taylor, which was obtained by WGN News, as she extolled the advantages of the team moving their home venue to the city. In the letter, which was addressed to Bears president and CEO Kevin Warren, she pointed out that Waukegan is located just 20 minutes from Halas Hall, the Bears' headquarters that are located in Lake Forest. Taylor also pointed out multiple areas of land, including lakefront property, that could be developed by the team for a stadium and entertainment district. Bears say Arlington Park no longer ‘singular focus’ for new stadium The city's location to Interstate 94, U.S. Route 41, and a major Metra stop on Union Pacific's North Line were among other things pointed out by the mayor about the community in the letter. "Our wor...It's another edition of 'We Can Help' on WGN Morning News
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
CHICAGO — As part of our mission to help our viewers at WGN Morning News, we figured we'd offer some advice on Tuesday's show. That's why we brought back our "We Can Help" segment so that we can give those watching some thoughts on how they could face real-life problems in the everyday world.Robin Baumgarten, Larry Potash, and Paul Konrad answered questions that were posed to real-life advice columnists, then gave their own perspectives on the issues.You can see what the hosts had to say in this edition of "We Can Help" on June 13's WGN Morning News in the video above.Love the WGN Morning News? We love you, too. And you can have all the hijinks delivered to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign up and subscribe to our WGN Morning News newsletter.Trump to appear in court Tuesday over charges he hoarded secret documents
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:03:10 GMT
MIAMI (AP) — Donald Trump is expected to become Tuesday the first former president to face a judge on federal charges as the city of Miami prepared for possible protests by crowds that officials said could number in the tens of thousands.Trump approached his history-making court date with characteristic bravado, insisting as he has through years of legal woes that he has done nothing wrong and was being persecuted for political purposes. But the gravity of the moment was unmistakable as he answers to 37 felony counts that accuse him of willfully retaining classified records that prosecutors say could have jeopardized national security if exposed, then trying to hide them from investigators who demanded them back.The case is laden with political implications for Trump, who currently holds the dominant spot in the early days of the 2024 Republican presidential primary. But it also poses profound legal consequences given the prospect of a years-long prison sentence. Even for ...Latest news
- Mike Johnston is poised to bring 1,000 homeless people indoors. What comes next in Denver’s strategy?
- Two Denver pizza favorites head for the hills of Golden
- Things to do this weekend: Sex-positive comedy, a Middle-Earth movie marathon
- Colorado ski area to close for entire 2023-24 season due to mechanical failure
- Housing is so expensive in Colorado that school districts are becoming landlords to attract teachers
- Colorado River: A crisis from headwaters to delta
- Myth or reality? Bigfoot sightings reported in Colorado 130 times over past century
- Two muralists leaving an enduring impression on Denver’s urban walls
- Amid national theater crisis, Denver has staged a comeback. Will it last?
- Bison vs. urban growth: Rocky Mountain Arsenal seeks solutions to water runoff