Dangerous Heat Wave Continues this Thursday
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
The dangerously high combination of temperatures and humidity will continue this Thursday across South Florida, prompting the National Weather Service to issue a Heat Advisory for the area. In Miami-Dade and Broward Counties, the advisory is in effect through Friday 7PM with feels-like temperatures up to 105-110F during the afternoon and evening hours.The advisory in the Florida Keys is in place through 5PM this Thursday due to peak heat indices in the 108-112F range for at least two consecutive hours.The day overall should be drier with only a 30% chance for seeing late-day showers and storms. Otherwise the day will be dominated by a good deal of sunshine with a steamy, southerly breeze.Actual high temperatures will be in the low to mid 90s this afternoon, which would make it the hottest day so far this year in Miami and Fort Lauderdale.The heat will continue on Friday with temperatures actually forecast to be a degree or two higher. Some locations could experience feels-like tempe...NMB commissioner calls for appeal hearing following reinstatement of Commissioner Michael Joseph
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
North Miami Beach Commissioner Jay Chernoff urged for an appeal hearing after Judge Peter Lopez reinstated Commissioner Michael Joseph following his removal earlier this year for boycotting meetings prior to the former mayor’s arrest and subsequent suspension from office. On Tuesday Judge Lopez ruled that the commissioner had not violated the city charter by participating in the boycott and stated that the city lacked the authority to remove its own members. Chernoff’s appeal hearing aims to challenge the ruling and assess the consequences of Joseph’s reinstatement. The appeal hearing, if granted, will provide an opportunity for Chernoff and his supporters to present their case before the appropriate judicial authorities.New airline planes will be required to have secondary barriers to the cockpit to protect pilots
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
U.S. officials said Wednesday they will require new airline planes to have a second barrier to make it harder for passengers to break into the cockpit when the main door is open.The Federal Aviation Administration rule will apply to commercial planes made after mid-2025.The rule will affect airlines that operate scheduled flights, but not charter operators. There is no provision requiring airlines to retrofit current planes.Officials called the rule an important step to give pilots more protection.“No pilot should have to worry about an intrusion on the flight deck,” said David Boulter, the FAA’s acting associate administrator for safety.The cockpit is more vulnerable to attackers when the door is opened for pilots to take a bathroom break or get their meals.A secondary barrier is intended “to slow such an attack long enough so that an open flightdeck door can be closed and locked before an attacker could reach the flightdeck,” the FAA said in the rule, published in the Federa...Restaurant review: Yoka Tomo
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
Av. Félix Marchal 26, 1030 SchaerbeekWhat’s hot: Go with the set menu at this informal Japanese bar. The chefs are incredibly organized and focused, so once a choice between the two- or four-course menu is made, you’ll have your first bite within minutes. The starters of homey potato salad and a selection of pickled or glazed vegetables, ranging from burdock root and carrot salad to lotus root and caramelized pumpkin, were a delight.Our menu continued with a beautiful savory steamed custard called chawanmushi, followed by a selection of deliciously fried fish and vegetables. The miso soup that accompanies the main dish was a highlight and the finale of fried chicken was the star of the menu. The chicken is doused in a soy-based dressing and topped with pickled vegetables and tartar sauce, creating the perfect bite. Rice for the main is all you can eat, and the four courses leave you pleasantly ful...We should monitor all Russians living in the West, Czech leader says
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
Czech President Petr Pavel says Russian citizens living abroad should be put under “strict surveillance” by intelligence services in their host countries.“All Russians living in Western countries should be monitored much more than in the past because they are citizens of a nation that leads an aggressive war,” Pavel said in an interview with Radio Free Europe released Thursday.“I can be sorry for these people, but at the same time when we look back, when the Second World War started, all the Japanese population living in the United States were under a strict monitoring regime as well,” said the Czech president. “That’s simply a cost of war.”Asked what he implied by “monitoring,” Pavel said he meant “being under the scrutiny of the security services.”During World War II, about 120,000 people of Japanese descent — most of whom were American citizens, and half of them children — were forcibly put in internmen...Key EU nature restoration vote put on hold
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
STRASBOURG — The European Parliament’s environment committee Thursday ran out of time to agree its position on contentious new EU rules aimed at boosting nature restoration across the bloc.MEPs will finish voting on the text at their next ENVI Committee meeting, currently scheduled to take place on June 26 or 27 in Brussels.The meeting started with a blow to the conservative European People’s Party, whose bid to reject the legislative proposal outright did not get a majority — the vote was tied with 44 in favor and 44 against — and was dismissed as a result. Lawmakers proceeded to vote on the compromise amendments drafted by lead MEP César Luena from the Socialists & Democrats, as well as on individuals amendments filed by other MEPs.Committee chair Pascal Canfin was forced to put the lengthy process on hold at 11:45 a.m., the official end-time of the committee meeting, and ask political groups to agree to delay a separate plenary vote schedule to start at ...‘Big bat in the middle of the order’: Eloy Jiménez collects 2 hits in return for the Chicago White Sox
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
Eloy Jiménez fouled a pitch off his left leg during a fifth-inning at-bat in Game 1 of a doubleheader last week against the New York Yankees.Jiménez remained in the game, hitting the go-ahead two-run homer in his next at-bat.“It was hurting but I had to do what I had to do,” he said before Wednesday’s game at Dodger Stadium.Jiménez played Game 2 last week, but exited in the ninth inning with lower leg discomfort after running slowly to first while trying to beat out a double play. The throw to first was wild and Jiménez reached second, and he was checked on by the training staff before leaving the game.“I started feeling it when I was moving around,” Jiménez said. “It wasn’t really bad. But as soon as I got cold — I was hitting, sitting down, hitting, sitting down — I started getting tighter and tighter and then it was hurting.“It was something with my heel. I don’t know how to describe it. It...Two-time Oscar winner Glenda Jackson, who mixed acting with politics, dies at 87
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
LONDON (AP) — Glenda Jackson, a two-time Academy Award-winning performer who had a second career in politics as a British lawmaker before an acclaimed late-life return to stage and screen, has died at 87.Jackson’s agent Lionel Larner said she died Thursday at her home in London after a short illness. He said she had recently completed filming “‘The Great Escaper,” in which co-starred with Michael Caine.Born in 1936 in Birkhenhead, northwest England, Jackson trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. She became one of the biggest British stars of the 1960s and 70s, and won two Academy Awards, for “Women in Love” in 1971 and “A Touch of Class” in 1974.She then went into politics, winning election to Parliament in 1992. She spent 23 years as a Labour Party lawmaker, serving as a minister for transport in Prime Minister Tony Blair’s first government in 1997.She came to be at odds with Blair over the 2003 invasion of Iraq. She said Blair’s decision to enter...Stock market today: Wall Street drifts lower as Fed holds rates steady but hints of hikes ahead
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
TOKYO — Wall Street is pointing lower after the U.S. Federal Reserve left its benchmark borrowing rate unchanged for the first time in more than a year, but issued projections of as many as two additional quarter-point rate hikes before 2023 is over.Futures for the Dow Jones Industrials fell 0.2% before the opening bell Thursday and the S&P 500 slipped 0.4%.In standing pat on rates, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the economy will have more time to absorb past hikes, adding, “ideally by taking a little more time, we won’t go well past the level where we need to go.” However, signaling clearly that they do not think the U.S. has escaped the gravitational pull of inflation, Fed policymakers issued projections Wednesday showing they envision as many as two additional quarter-point rate hikes before the year ends. That’s a more aggressive stance than the single rate hike that most had expected.“It is too early to say that Powell is winning the fight against inflation,” said Rusla...Slovakia’s technocrat government loses mandatory confidence vote, to stay till September snap vote
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 00:01:13 GMT
BRATISLAVA, Slovakia (AP) — Slovakia’s new government of technocrats lost a mandatory confidence vote in Parliament on Thursday, just a month after taking office.President Zuzana Caputova, who swore in the 15-member Cabinet led by Prime Minister Ludovit Odor on May 15, now has to dismiss it. At the same time, the president will ask the government to stay in office with limited powers till a new government is formed following the Sept. 30 early election, Caputova’s office later said. The technocrat Cabinet was created with the aim to lead the country to that election, for which a date was set back in January. Of the 136 lawmakers who were present in the 150-seat Parliament, the government was defeated in a 34-43 vote.Slovakia has been without a proper government since last December, when the coalition government led by Prime Minister Eduard Heger was ousted in a no-confidence vote called by the opposition, following months of political crisis.Caputova initially asked Heger to l...Latest news
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