Category 1

NFL and the NFL Referees Association are moving closer toward a new deal, AP source says

The NFL and its officials are moving closer toward a new agreement that avoids a work stoppage.

Associated Press

After a lengthy stalemate, negotiations have reached a point where the NFL Referees Association is planning to have a ratification vote this week, a person with knowledge of the discussions told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the conversations are private. ESPN first reported the development.

Last month, the league began theonboarding processfor replacement officials because negotiations weren’t progressing.

The NFL’s collective bargaining agreement with the NFL Referees Association is set to expire on May 31.

The league and the union have been negotiating a new CBA since the summer of 2024.

Advertisement

“The league remains committed to reaching a fair and reasonable agreement with the NFLRA but will be prepared in the event the NFLRA permits the current agreement to expire,” NFL senior vice president of officiating Perry Fewell said in a memo sent to teams in April.

The NFL has increased its offer to a 6.45% annual growth rate in compensation over a six-year labor deal, but the NFLRA wants 10% plus $2.5 million for marketing fees, two AP sources said in March.

NFLRA executive director Scott Green told the AP “those numbers are not accurate.” At the time, he said negotiations with the league were similar to 2012 when a stalemate resulted in a 110-day lockout and replacement referees were used.

“We’re taking the appropriate steps to be ready, but we’re also keenly focused on negotiations,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said on March 31.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

NFL and the NFL Referees Association are moving closer toward a new deal, AP source says

The NFL and its officials are moving closer toward a new agreement that avoids a work stoppage. After a lengthy stalemate, negoti...
NASA testing next-gen space telescope that could help astronomers detect city-killing asteroids

NASAsays it is testing itsnext-generation telescopethat could one day help astronomers spot a city- or even planet-destroyingasteroidlike in the 2021 movie“Don’t Look Up.”

The Independent US

The Near-Earth Object Surveyor, or NEO Surveyor, is the U.S. space agency’s first infrared space telescope specifically designed to look for these potential hazards, helping to reveal even the darkest threats in space and those hidden in the glare of our sun.

Astronomers have found fewer than half of the estimated existing city-killer asteroids and it would take another 30 years to find all of them without the $1.6 billion telescope, according toThe Planetary Society, a non-profit space science organization.

“Because our night skies are now crowded with thousands of bright satellites and asteroids are tiny and dark, ground-based telescopes have trouble finding near-Earth objects quickly. Placing a small telescope in space solves both these problems,” Casey Dreier, the society’s director, said in a 2023statement. “Within 10 years this telescope is predicted to find more [of them] than found in the last 50 years,” he added.

The telescope is set for launch no sooner than September 2027, traveling about a million miles from Earth to a fixed point between the Earth and space and operating for at least five years.

Engineers attach the aluminum telescope for NASA’s NEO Surveyor to the flight base frame at Space Dynamics Laboratory in Logan, Utah, last September. The telescope is the first specifically designed for planetary defense (Space Dynamics Laboratory/Allison Bills)

Much like NASA’s dust-clearingJames Webb Space Telescope, the NEO Surveyor will detect objects using their heat. But unlike galaxies, the heat these objects emit comes from the sun.

"Earth-approaching asteroids and comets are warmed by the sun, and they give off heat that the NEO Surveyor mission will be able to pick up," Amy Mainzer, a professor at the University of Arizona who is leading the mission, explained in a 2021release. "Even asteroids as dark as a chunk of coal won't be able to hide from our infrared eyes."

The Surveyor’s predecessor NEOWISE - Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer - alsofeatured infrared capabilitiesbut was not initially designed to find asteroids and comets before it was launched in 2009. The instrument detectedmore than 34,000 unknown asteroidsand over3,000 near-Earth objects; its mission concluded in 2024.

There are still many more near-Earth objects to discover - although astronomers have detected more than 40,000 near-Earth asteroids, per theEuropean Space Agency- and the Surveyor’s goal is to find 90 percent of those with a diameter of 460 feet within a decade of its launch.

Advertisement

The instrument enclosure of NASA's Near-Earth Object Surveyor is prepared for tests at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, in December 2024. Scientists are exposing the structure to the conditions of deep space (NASA)

"We think there are about 25,000 NEOs large enough to wipe out an area like Southern California," Mainzer said. "Once they get bigger than about 450 feet in diameter, they can cause severe regional damage. We want to find these, and as many smaller ones as possible."

That’s why the NEO Surveyor has a 20-foot-long sun shade to allow the telescope to ensure the sun doesn’t block scientists’ view and a 12-foot enclosure to protect the tech. It also has two state-of-the-art science cameras with a lens that opens up nearly 20 inches.

“Project engineers plan to carry out focus tests in a chamber at [the Space Dynamics Laboratory in Logan, Utah,] that simulates the extreme environment of deep space to ensure the instrument works as designed and the camera remains in focus at very cold temperatures and in zero gravity,” NASA said in a Tuesdaystatement.

Data from the mission will be sent back to the California Institute of Technology’s NEO Surveyor Survey Data Center in Pasadena and will be reported to the international Minor Planet Center, which is responsible for collecting observations of asteroids and comets.

Then, the data can be used by planetary defense groups.

The NEO Surveyor enclosure is seen in a clean room at the Space Dynamics Laboratory in Logan, Utah, last May. The mission will launch no sooner than September 2027 (Space Dynamics Laboratory/Allison Bills)

There are no known threats to Earth right now. But if a city killer is incoming, NASA has a way to deflect its trajectory, as shown in the success of the NASA Double Asteroid Redirection Test.

Still, NASA’s independent regulatoryOffice of the Inspector General saidthere are some crucial areas to address to ensure readiness, including making sure there is better structure and management for the Near-Earth Object Observations Program and tackling maintenance issues at ground-based observatories.

The 1,480-foot-long asteroid Apophis is projected to fly so close to Earth in 2029 that people can see it with the naked eye. But limited-funded plans exist to take advantage of the event, the office said.

NASA was considering terminatingone such planand that mission is not listed in theFiscal Year 2027 budget request,“indicating that it is once again slated for cancellation,” theAmerican Astronomical Society says.

Funding for the NEO Surveyor has been decreased in the budget, NASA said, “due to cost savings and improved risk posture.”

NASA testing next-gen space telescope that could help astronomers detect city-killing asteroids

NASAsays it is testing itsnext-generation telescopethat could one day help astronomers spot a city- or even planet-destroyingasteroidli...
Health chiefs race to contain hantavirus as two cruise ship passengers forced to self-isolate in UK

Health chiefs are racing to trace British passengers who left thehantavirus-stricken cruise shiptwo weeks before the deadly infection was uncovered in a bid to control any further spread.

The Independent US

Dozens of passengers, including seven Britons, left the MVHondiusat the remote island of St Helena on 24 April, the operator Oceanwide Expeditions said, according to reports. That was nearly two weeks after the first passenger died, raising concerns that the virus could spread as travellers returned home.

Two of those passengers, who have already returned to the UK after flying back from South Africa, have been forcedto isolateat home and are currently not reporting symptoms.

But the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is working to find the remaining five, as well as flight passengers, family and anyone who may have been in close contact with other passengers, to prevent it spreading further.

Professor Robin May, chief scientific officer at UKHSA, said: “We’ve been tracing individuals on the boat, contacts they have made on shore in South America who may have been associated and, of course, for the individuals who’ve returned home, earlier contacts they have made too on the flights or since they’ve been at home.

“So it’s been quite a mammoth effort. We will continue to do that if other information arises.”

Two British nationals who left MV Hondius before the outbreak was detected have been forced to isolate at home (Reuters)

There have beenthree deaths among passengers aboard the luxury cruise ship, which is currently making its way to Spain’sCanary Islands, where it will dock so passengers can disembark. Five cases have now been confirmed as hantavirus, while three others remain under investigation.

But Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organisation (WHO), warned more cases could follow.

He told reporters at a briefing on Thursday: “The WHO is aware of reports of other people with symptoms who may have had contact with one of the passengers. In each case, we are in close contact with the relevant authorities. Given the incubation period of the Andes virus, which can be up to six weeks, it’s possible that more cases may be reported.

“While this is a serious incident, WHO assesses the public health risk low.”

Hantavirus is mainly spread by contact with rodents or their urine, saliva or droppings, particularly when the material is disturbed and becomes airborne, posing a risk of inhalation. Though human-to-human transmission of the virus is rare, there is evidence that it can happen in those infected with the Andean strain suspected to be at the centre of the cruise ship cases.

Advertisement

Prof May explained that UK authorities are not tracking people who may be very transient contacts, such as those who they walked past in the airport, but those who sat next to them on a flight will be alerted.

He said: “So that would be family members, people who might have shared a room on the cruise, people who may, for example, have sat directly next to somebody on a long-haul flight and reaching out to them so that they can be monitored and alerted.”

Prof May explained that “for the broader public, not directly involved in this cruise ship, the risk here is really negligible”.

But he told BBC Radio 4’sTodaythat in the “most extreme case of incubation” of hantavirus, people may have to isolate for “up to eight weeks”. However, the general consensus is that people should isolate for “probably six weeks, and so that’s the period of isolation, 45 days that we’re likely to be recommending”.

Hantavirus symptoms can start with flu-like symptoms, including a fever and muscle aches and rapidly progress into a life-threatening condition.

UKHSA is working to find flight passengers, family and anyone they may have been in close contact with the cruise passengers (AP)

Symptoms hantavirus pulmonary syndrome usually show between one and eight weeks after contact with an infected rodent. As the infection progresses, patients might experience tightness in the chest as the lungs fill with fluid.

The other syndrome caused by hantavirus — hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome — usually develops within a week or two after exposure.

People can “harbour the virus for a long time”, and some people can be asymptomatic and others may not test positive, according to Prof May.

He told BBC Breakfast: “We can test people by PCR. I’m sure people will remember during Covid, PCR tests, to look for the kind of genome of this virus in people.

“But actually that’s not always detected every time, so just because someone might have a negative test, for example, we need to continue to monitor them for some days, because the amount of the virus in people who are not displaying symptoms can be very, very low, so it can be easy to miss.

“So even for people who are healthy but have been exposed, we’ll be continuing to monitor them for quite some time when they get back to the UK.”

Health chiefs race to contain hantavirus as two cruise ship passengers forced to self-isolate in UK

Health chiefs are racing to trace British passengers who left thehantavirus-stricken cruise shiptwo weeks before the deadly infection w...
FSU baseball's timely hitting leads to 5-2 win over Jacksonville

Florida State baseball'soffense wasn't at its best on Tuesday night, but timely hitting helped the Seminoles to a 5-2 win over Jacksonville on May 5 at Dick Howser Stadium.

USA TODAY

The No. 14 Seminoles(34-14, 15-9 ACC) were victorious in the program's final midweek contest of the year thanks to the bats ofJohn Stuetzer,Nathan CmeylaandBrayden Dowd, who knocked in FSU's three runs and accounted for five of the team's 10 hits.

Stuetzer, who went 1-for-4, blasted his seventh home run of the season deep to left field in the fifth inning to score the Seminoles' first run, and Cmeyla, 1-for-3, came up with a pair of RBI on a sacrifice fly and single in the fifth and seventh innings.

Dowd gave the Seminoles insurance in the eighth inning with a two-run blast to center, and he finished the night 3-for-5 with the homer and a double.

Those at-bats helped FSU overcome an early 2-0 hole, as Jacksonville scored a pair of runs in the third inning thanks to a wild pitch and an RBI single from Derek Bermudez.

Advertisement

The two runs from the Dolphins came after Cade O'Leary replaced starter Cooper Whited in the third inning. Whithed threw 2.2 innings, and he struck out four and allowed two hits, and was charged with the two earned runs. O'Leary took over with two outs and runners at the corners, and his first pitch went wild, and six pitches later Bermudez came up with the single.

FSU had multiple chances to blow the game open, but left 12 runners on base. The Seminoles left the bases loaded in the fourth inning, with a Carter McCulley ground out ending that threat, before a pair of strikeouts from Eli Putnam and Cal Fisher ended the fifth inning with the bases loaded and no runs scored in either scenario.

Dowd's eighth-inning blast not only provided insurance runs, but it pushed FSU's batting average with runners on base to .253% (4-for-17), which reflected an up-and-down night at the plate for the Seminoles.

The bullpen held Jacksonville hitless after the pair of hits O'Leary allowed. Brodie Purcell, Cole Stokes, and Kevin Mebil accounted for nine of the 14 total strikeouts. Both Stokes and Mebil recorded four strikeouts each, with Mebil striking out the side in the ninth inning to win the game.

What's next for FSU baseball? A road trip to Clemson

  • When: Friday, May 8 - 6 p.m. / Saturday, May 9 - 6 p.m. / Sunday, May 9 - 3 p.m.

  • Where: Doug Kingsmore Stadium / Clemson, South Carolina

  • Watch: Friday - ACC Network Extra / Saturday - ACC Network / Sunday - ESPN2

Liam Rooney coversFlorida Stateathletics for the Tallahassee Democrat. Contact him via email at LRooney@gannett.com or on Twitter @__liamrooney.

This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat:Florida State baseball beats Jacksonville behind timely hitting

FSU baseball's timely hitting leads to 5-2 win over Jacksonville

Florida State baseball'soffense wasn't at its best on Tuesday night, but timely hitting helped the Seminoles to a 5-2 win over ...
Vote for top sophomore in Bucks County high school girls lacrosse poll

We want to know who you think should be the topsophomore girls' lacrosse playerin the Bucks County area this spring.

USA TODAY

Voting, which is permitted more than once, ends Friday, May 8, at 8 p.m.

Our polls are designed to recognize excellent local high school athletes and we ask that you vote for your favorites as many times as you wish. But we also ask that you play fair. In other words, keep the bots or crazy cheats out of our polls. We shouldn't see a bunch of players with a significant number of votes from various European countries.

Advertisement

Council Rock North girls’ lacrosse’s Stella Allain practices with the team in Newtown on April 21, 2026.

Any suspicion of bot activity will result in immediate removal of the athlete, and possibly teammates, from this and future polls.

Drew Markol covers local sports forPhillyBurbs.com. Support our journalism with a subscription.

This article originally appeared on Bucks County Courier Times:PA High School Girls Lacrosse Top Sophomore Poll Bucks County PIAA

Vote for top sophomore in Bucks County high school girls lacrosse poll

We want to know who you think should be the topsophomore girls' lacrosse playerin the Bucks County area this spring. Voting, w...

 

NEO JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com