People around India celebrate Holi as COVID lockdowns begin in Mumbai
While the Indian state of Maharashtra started imposing lockdowns due to COVID-19 spikes, people across many other regions of the nation held large celebrations for Holi.
Bo Bichette had five RBIs, Randal Grichuk hit a three-run double during a seven-run second inning and the Toronto Blue Jays stopped a four-game skid by routing the Los Angeles Angels 15-1 on Saturday night following a rain delay that lasted more than 2 1/2 hours. Bichette had two-run doubles in the third and fourth, and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. added RBI singles in both innings as the Blue Jays went up 14-1. The pair drew bases-loaded walks in the second from José Quintana (0-1), who allowed seven runs, five hits and four walks in 1 2/3 innings.
The leaderboard is stacked. Will the weather cooperate Saturday?
This is the latest case in which the high court has barred officials from enforcing coronavirus-related restrictions applying to religious gatherings.
The star, who appeared on the seventh series of Big Brother in 2006, had anorexia.
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope was challenged by Lakers coach Frank Vogel to become more of an offensive force. He had 28 points in narrow loss to the Heat.
Dozens of troop carriers and missile launchers sit on flatbed wagons lining up along tracks running through southern Russia, in a region bordering Ukraine. Ukraine and Western countries accuse Russia of sending troops and heavy weapons to support proxy fighters who seized a swathe of the eastern Donbass region in 2014. Moscow denies it is part of the conflict in eastern Ukraine and says it provides only humanitarian and political support to the separatists.
Monitors report another "explosive event" at a volcano on the now ash-covered Caribbean island of St Vincent.
The Twitter account of Britain's royal family has featured a tribute Queen Elizabeth II gave to Prince Philip for the couple's 50th wedding anniversary. An excerpt from a speech the queen made in 1997 was posted Saturday, the day after Philip died at age 99. “He has, quite simply, been my strength and stay all these years, and I, and his whole family, and this and many other countries, owe him a debt greater than he would ever claim, or we shall ever know,” Elizabeth said of her husband in the anniversary speech.
The star re-records her breakout album in its entirety, after her master tapes were sold.
On a range of political issues, businesses have felt compelled to speak out. But many are silent when it comes to tax hikes, if not hostile.
PROSECUTOR JERRY BLACKWELL: "You found then and do you stand by today that the manner of death for Mr. Floyd was, as you would call it, homicide?"HENNEPIN COUNTY CHIEF MEDICAL EXAMINER ANDREW BAKER: "Yes, I would still classify it as a homicide today."The medical examiner who performed the autopsy on George Floyd after his deadly arrest last year said he stood by his conclusion that the 46-year-old's death was a homicide at the hands of police.BAKER: "My opinion remains unchanged. It's what I put on the death certificate last June. That's cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint and neck compression. That was my top line then. It would stay my top line now."Dr. Andrew Baker testified on Day 10 of Derek Chauvin's murder trial that Floyd's heart stopped beating and his lungs stopped working because the former Minneapolis policeman and other officers pinned him to the ground in a way that starved his body of oxygen.DEFENSE ATTORNEY ERIC NELSON: "But you also took into consideration the heart disease, correct?"BAKER: "Yes."NELSON: "As well as the toxicology results. Agreed?" BAKER: "Yes."In cross-examination, Chauvin's attorney Eric Nelson focused on the defense's central argument: that Floyd's underlying health problems and the drugs found in his system may have led to his death.Baker said he noted Floyd's heart disease and the fentanyl and methamphetamine found in his blood on the death certificate because they may have played a role in the death, but he said they "were not direct causes."BLACKWELL: "Did you rule out 'drug overdose' as a cause of death?"FORENSIC PATHOLOGIST LINDSEY THOMAS: "Yes."Prosecutors sought to further dismantle Chauvin's central defense with testimony from Dr. Lindsey Thomas. The forensic pathologist said the sheer volume of videos of Floyd's arrest made it clear that physical signs associated with opioid overdose were not present in Floyd's death.THOMAS: "The point is that it's due to law enforcement subdual restraint and compression."
The Knicks were down and almost out. “We needed it bad,” All-Star Julius Randle said. RJ Barrett scored 20 points, making a tiebreaking 3-pointer with 1:15 left in overtime, and New York used a late rally to stun the Memphis Grizzlies 133-129 on Friday night.
He struggled to find work. His last-ditch chance to make an NFL team fizzled. He had a child to support and little apparent direction in a life freighted with high expectations. His behavior was increasingly erratic. Then Wednesday, for reasons no one yet knows for sure, Phillip Adams, a former NFL cornerback, went to the Rock Hill, South Carolina, home of a prominent doctor and shot everybody he saw before fatally turning the gun on himself. Now, the football-loving community of 65,000 that bills itself as Football City USA is struggling to contend with Adams’ suddenly violent turn and its aftermath. Before he killed five people, including two children, and critically wounded a sixth person, Adams, 32, who shot and killed himself several hours after his rampage, had seemed adrift since he last played NFL football almost six years ago, friends and associates said. He remained close to home, caring for his mother, Phyllis, a former high school teacher who became a paraplegic after a car accident a decade ago. Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times But for all the pressures on Adams — and family members are openly questioning whether football damaged his brain — the many people who rooted for him throughout his career are grappling with the loss of Dr. Robert Lesslie and his family at the hands of a local son. “He was the role model that all coaches hoped they could coach,” said Jim Montgomery, who coached Adams in football at Rock Hill High School, the alma mater of numerous NFL players. Montgomery said he had spent most of Thursday answering phone calls through tears. Authorities said that Adams had fatally shot Lesslie; his wife, Barbara; and two of their grandchildren, Adah Lesslie, 9, and Noah Lesslie, 5. James Lewis, 38, had been working on their home when he was killed, and a sixth victim, Robert Shook, is in critical condition. Police have yet to explain why Adams, who was described by friends as “chill” and almost reclusive, singled out the doctor or whether the two men had any relationship. But Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., told Charlotte’s WBTV Thursday that he had learned from law enforcement officials that Robert Lesslie had seen Adams as a patient. Sheriff officials would not confirm the relationship. “He was treating him and stopped giving him medicine, and that’s what triggered the killings from what I understand,” said Norman, whose district encompasses Rock Hill. Members of the Adams family have their own theories. They wonder whether football may have damaged his brain in the same way that has led other players to turn violent and, in a few cases, take their own lives. On Thursday, Alonzo Adams, Phillip's father, told WCNC, a Charlotte television station, “I think the football messed him up.” His sister, Lauren Adams, told USA Today that he had recently become uncharacteristically aggressive. “His mental health degraded fast and terribly bad,” she said. “There was unusual behavior.” Adams’ brain will be studied to determine whether he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a degenerative brain disease associated with repeated hits to the head, according to Sabrina Gast, the coroner in York County. It can take months to receive a diagnosis for the disease, which has been linked to mood disorders, memory problems, impulsive behavior and other issues, and has been found in hundreds of former football players. Former coaches, colleagues, neighbors and associates who knew Adams described him in interviews as a hardworking athlete who never advanced beyond journeyman status in the NFL but who remained a quiet, helpful presence in town. “In 43 years, if you would’ve told me that this would have happened with Phillip Adams, I would’ve put him in the last five of the thousands of kids I coached,” Montgomery said Thursday. “It’s just a sad day.” Duane Belue, a longtime friend and neighbor of the Adams family, said Phillip Adams was close to his mother. Although Adams had bought a new truck, he did not appear to overspend, and he stayed with his parents for extended periods. Within the last year, the Belues said, they noticed that Adams’ behavior had changed. He was less approachable and would pace outside aimlessly. “We noticed in the yard, he was out walking, kind of sad,” Anne Belue said. “You can’t judge somebody that far away, but he was always real friendly before then.” A star player in high school and in college at South Carolina State, Adams was picked by the San Francisco 49ers in the seventh round of the 2010 NFL draft. He sustained a severe ankle injury his rookie season that may have derailed his career. “The bone went through the skin,” said Scott Casterline, Adams’ former agent. “Luckily, he had a good surgeon who helped him. But when a team sees a devastating injury like that, they move on.” After the 49ers released him, Adams bounced around the league with stops in New England, Seattle, Oakland (where he sustained two concussions), the New York Jets and Atlanta. He had one more shot at landing a roster spot, according to Casterline. During training camp in 2016, the Colts called and asked Adams to get to Indianapolis to participate in practice the following day. Casterline urged his client to jump on the next flight, but Adams — who was always gung-ho for football — was suddenly hesitant. “He made it to the Charlotte airport, but the flight had left already,” Casterline said. “I could tell his head was not in it. He’d given up on it.” Casterline described Adams as a loner, not one to go to clubs or drink alcohol. He also hinted at financial troubles. Adams earned $3.6 million during his career and, at one point, wanted to invest in a smoothie shop. Casterline, who said he thought of Adams as a son, told his client it was a mistake because many retail businesses fail. Last fall, Adams called his former agent and asked for help finding employment. Casterline said he had tried to persuade him to relocate to Dallas and work at one of his companies. “I said to just come out here to Texas,” Casterline said. “He just wouldn’t do it. He had a son. He was a good father and it was difficult with the baby’s mother.” On Wednesday, the day of the shootings, Adams’ father, Alonzo Adams, called Casterline and said he wanted to talk about his son. Casterline did not find the message unusual. Occasionally, Adams’ parents called if they were unable to find Phillip. “I called Alonzo back and left a message, not realizing it had already happened,” Casterline said. In a news conference Thursday, York County Sheriff Kevin Tolson said evidence recovered from the home of the Lesslies had led them to suspect Adams of the killings. Authorities said they had evacuated the Adamses’ home and tried to persuade Phillip Adams to surrender. They found him inside, dead of a self-inflicted gunshot. It is often difficult to assign a motive to cases where a gunman has not left a note or spoken specifically of his or her intent, even more so in cases that end with the gunman’s death. But some of Adams’ friends said he had never gotten over how his NFL career ended. Rather than catching on with one team and landing a big contract worth tens of millions of dollars, he bounced from team to team, often playing for the league minimum salary. The calls for his services stopped coming, a common fate in the NFL, because colleges produce dozens of cheaper, healthier replacement players every year. The disappointment of washing out was particularly acute for Adams, friends said, because he came from Rock Hill, which has given rise to so many NFL players. To Adams, even a six-year career — twice as long as the average — may have been a letdown when compared to those of other local players like Jadeveon Clowney, who was picked first overall in the 2014 draft and is a three-time Pro Bowl selection; tight end Benjamin Watson, who played 13 seasons with the Patriots, New Orleans Saints and other teams; and Stephon Gilmore, a defensive leader on the Patriots. “We have a saying around here: You could pay $6 on Friday night or you can wait a few years and pay $600 to see the kids around here play,” said Gene Knight, a broadcaster who has covered the city’s sports for decades. Charcandrick West, who played with the Kansas City Chiefs from 2014 to 2018 and shared an agent with Adams, said he and Adams had worked out together during a couple of offseasons. West said Adams was reserved and proud of his Rock Hill roots. “I never saw him get mad at anyone,” West said. “He was all about his business, washing and folding his clothes, real neat.” West added: “I feel like every athlete tries to keep high expectations. When you’re from Rock Hill, such a great football town, he didn’t want to be known as the guy who bounced around.” Casterline, who has worked as an NFL agent for decades, also said Adams had trouble grasping why he didn’t catch on with a team. “Sometimes, these decisions are political,” Casterline said of teams’ cutting players. “Someone who’s drafted in the first round is going to get the most opportunities. That weighed on him a lot. The Patriots cut him three times in one season. They needed him, they didn’t, they’d cut him and re-sign him. It’s good for the paycheck but not for the psyche.” Knight, the local sports broadcaster, remembered Adams as “a fierce competitor on the field, but he was a gentleman off the field all the times I encountered him.” Knight had also been treated once by Robert Lesslie, a popular and well-known physician in Rock Hill, when he struggled with food poisoning. He said Lesslie had worked on him at 2 a.m., easing his symptoms with intravenous therapy. “It’s not two people whose paths I thought would cross in this manner,” he said. “And I think that’s what a lot of people are wrestling with in the whole craziness of this situation.” This article originally appeared in The New York Times. © 2021 The New York Times Company
The Canes and Wings couldn’t settle things in overtime, and it took seven players in a shootout before a winner emerged.
The brain of Phillip Adams — the former NFL player who killed a South Carolina physician, three family members and a repairman before fatally shooting himself — will be tested for a degenerative disease that has affected a number of pro athletes and has been shown to cause violent mood swings and other cognitive disorders, according to the local coroner. York County Coroner Sabrina Gast said in a statement issued on Friday that she had gotten approval from Adams' family for the procedure to be included as part of his autopsy, which will be performed at the Medical University of South Carolina. The hospital will be working with Boston University, whose chronic traumatic encephalopathy center conducts research on the long-term effects of repetitive brain trauma in athletes and military personnel, according to its website.
The Cup Series completed 42 laps after a long rain delay and before the skies opened up again Saturday night.
The NHL has extended the regular season to May 16 to accommodate rescheduled games for the Vancouver Canucks after a COVID-19 outbreak within the team.
An island tribe in the South Pacific which has worshiped Prince Philip as a god for decades is thinking of establishing a political movement in the wake of his death. While the Duke of Edinburgh had a reputation for making politically incorrect remarks about other cultures, from Australian Aborigines to the Chinese, on the volcanic island of Tanna in Vanuatu he is held in high esteem. A cluster of villages that worshiped him as a living deity held grief-stricken meetings on Saturday to decide how to commemorate his death. Their plan to set up a political party is not as unlikely as it sounds – a rival cult on Tanna called the John Frum Movement formed a political party some years ago and even managed to send an MP to the national parliament in Port Vila, the capital of Vanuatu. Prince Philip latest news and funeral plans
Ethan Nordean of Washington is one of the Proud Boys' leaders who is accused of leading members into the US Capitol building on Jan. 6.
The Associated Press obtained an internal Pentagon document that detailed the call, which came after rioters had overrun the building.