Ashley Cornell, email: [email protected]

Ashley is best described by the two C’s: calm and compassionate. She was adamant about becoming a doctor when she was younger. That is, until she was accepted into medical school. She realized after two years of university that she wasn’t quite cut out for the job. She abruptly discontinued her studies and decided to pursue a career as a writer instead. She is still interested in medicine, but prefers to remain a distant observer and recorder of medical advances and innovations. She currently works as Senior editor with S Chronicles, where she primarily writes about health and science, as well as co-authoring books on the side.Contact email: [email protected]

Ashley Cornell, email: ashley.cornell@spamchronicles.com
The Bank of Canada leaves its key interest rate at

The Bank of Canada leaves its key interest rate at 5%

The Bank of Canada again opted for the status quo on Wednesday, deciding to keep its key interest rate at 5% for the fifth straight day in hopes of combating inflation.

The last interest rate increase took place last July.

The Bank of Canada (BoC) says global economic expansion “slowed in the fourth quarter.”

In Canada, the economy performed “better than expected, but its pace remained weak and below potential,” it said.

“Housing cost growth remains high and is the largest contributor to inflation,” stressed the Bank of Canada, which continues to expect inflation to remain at around 3% in the first half of 2024 and then gradually decline.

Although it decided to keep its key interest rate at 5%, the Bank of Canada said it was “concerned about the risks associated with the inflation outlook.”

“The overall message from the bank is that it will continue to wait and see. She wants clear data showing that inflation has been eradicated,” commented Philippe Simard, Quebec mortgage director at Ratehub.ca, believing Canadians should expect interest rates to remain high.

“Anyone who has a variable rate or mortgage line of credit will likely be disappointed that there is no indication of the date of the first rate cut,” he said, judging that short-term fixed mortgage rates “will remain pending possible ones.” Key interest rate cuts popular.”

For his part, Randall Bartlett, senior director of Canadian economics at Desjardins, believes that “by recognizing the progress made,” the Bank of Canada is “setting the stage for future rate cuts.”

The expert also assumes that a first reduction will be announced in June.

Recall that since July 12, 2023, the Bank of Canada has decided to keep its key interest rate at 5% after two consecutive quarter-point increases. The next update will be on April 10, 2024.

The Bank of Canada leaves its key interest rate at 5% Read More »

Pat McAfee claims We39re getting to the point where marijuana

Pat McAfee claims, “We're getting to the point where marijuana will be federally legal,” while thanking Andy Reid for signing Travis Kelce despite the Chiefs star being suspended for testing positive for the drug in college was tested

  • Travis Kelce was suspended for one year for testing positive for marijuana in 2010
  • McAfee was outraged that the incident could have potentially caused a major loss to the NFL
  • provides the latest international sports news

Pat McAfee has boldly claimed that it won't be long before marijuana is legalized across the United States as he appears to have slammed the Dallas Cowboys for ditching Travis Kelce over his failed drug test.

The Kansas City Chiefs star was suspended for a year by the NCAA after failing a drug test while at the University of Cincinnati.

In a previous episode of his New Heights podcast with his brother Jason, who resurfaced as part of this year's NFL Combine, Kelce revealed that his marijuana mistake left a black mark on his record while interviewing with the Dallas Cowboys .

And McAfee was outraged that the incident may have denied the NFL a major win, as he insisted it wouldn't be long before the league scrapped marijuana testing.

“The NFL has always used marijuana as leverage in negotiations with players,” McAfee said Wednesday on his eponymous show.

Pat McAfee Travis Kelce

Pat McAfee appeared to throw shade at Dallas for ditching Travis Kelce over his failed drug test

Players will say, “We want less offseason workouts because we feel like we’re going to get beat up.” And the NFL will say, “You want weed? We get 20 games.” And the players' association says, “We're not going to give up all this just because of weed.”

“But it feels like we're getting to a point where marijuana will probably be legalized at the federal level.” You'd think someone with a brain would do that. It's only a matter of time.

“I took that from Travis Kelce’s story. First of all, great answer. “I worked my ass off for that. I was young, I'm sorry. I have made a mistake.”

“But these days they also say, ‘Did I hear you failed a weed test?’ “Yes.” “Okay, thanks for your honesty, let’s move on.”

“Thank God Andy Reid didn’t care when he drafted Travis Kelce. And thank God Andy Reid brought Patrick Mahomes with him, because those two playing football together led to people robbing banks.

“Hopefully by eliminating marijuana testing the NFL will be a better place in the future.” “The fact that this potentially slows down a GOAT because of a mistake he made when he was 19 that every other human being makes has.”

While attending Cincinnati in 2010, Kelce was suspended for a year for testing positive for marijuana.

He had previously revealed in his combine interview that the suspension proved to be a sticking point for the Dallas Cowboys.

Kelce was suspended for a year while in college because he tested positive for marijuana

Kelce was suspended for a year while in college because he tested positive for marijuana

The host thanked Chiefs head coach Andy Reid for drafting the tight end despite the suspension

The host thanked Chiefs head coach Andy Reid for drafting the tight end despite the suspension

“I had some bad interviews at the Combine,” Travis recalled in the old episode of New Heights that resurfaced this week.

“The Cowboys kind of pushed me because I got the red flag of missing a year.”

“I don't know if I had a bad morning, basically it was just, I don't even know if I want to say that.”

“It ended really quickly.” I basically just said, “If you think I'm going to be that guy, or you're wondering if I'm still that person after everything I've fought through, um “To get to where I am now since I missed a season, then you'll probably go somewhere else and pick someone else.”

The NFL already increased the threshold for a positive marijuana test from 35 nanograms to 150 in 2021, while also eliminating tests for it during the offseason. Several states in the US have legalized or decriminalized marijuana in recent years.

Kelce recently estimated that 50-80 percent of active NFL players smoke marijuana, although he admitted that most quit the habit more than a month before the start of the season.

Pat McAfee claims, “We're getting to the point where marijuana will be federally legal,” while thanking Andy Reid for signing Travis Kelce despite the Chiefs star being suspended for testing positive for the drug in college was tested Read More »

Newborns are dying of hunger and mothers are struggling to

Newborns are dying of hunger and mothers are struggling to feed their children as Israel's siege condemns Gazans to starvation

Editor's note: A version of this story appears in CNN's Insider in the Middle East newsletter, a thrice-weekly look at the region's biggest stories. Login here.

CNN –

Anwar Abdul Nabi sits on the edge of the bed in Kamal Adwan Hospital in the north of the Gaza Strip. Her eyes are sunken with sadness.

The young mother tenderly holds her daughter Mila's fingers. A few minutes ago the 7-year-old girl died of hunger.

“My daughter was taken into the grace of God because of the lack of calcium, potassium and oxygen,” Nabi told CNN on Monday as she fell crying into the arms of an elderly relative. “Suddenly everything stopped because she wasn’t eating anything with iron or eggs. Before the war, she ate eggs every day. Not now. She died.”

As Israel's strict restrictions on aid imports into the Gaza Strip devastate vital supplies, displaced Palestinians told CNN they are struggling to feed their children. Starving mothers can't produce enough milk to breastfeed their babies, doctors say. Parents arrive at overcrowded health facilities begging for formula. In northern Gaza, people are rushing to receive help in rare humanitarian operations. Health workers say they are unable to provide life-saving treatment to malnourished Gazans because Israel's bombing and siege have crippled the medical system.

The Ministry of Health in Gaza said on Tuesday that 364 health workers had been killed since the war began; 269 ​​medical personnel arrested; 155 health facilities “destroyed” and 155 ambulances “attacked”. CNN cannot independently confirm the figures due to the lack of international media access to Gaza.

Israel launched its military offensive in the Gaza Strip after the militant group Hamas killed at least 1,200 people and kidnapped more than 250 others in southern Israel on October 7.

Since then, Israel's attacks on Gaza have killed at least 30,717 Palestinians and injured another 72,156 people in the enclave, according to the Health Ministry, while the siege has drastically reduced the supply of essential goods and put the enclave's population of about 2.2 million under heavy strain The level of acute food insecurity or worse is according to the Integrated Phase Classification for Food Security and Nutrition (IPC), which assesses global food insecurity and malnutrition.

At least 20 Palestinians starved to death in Gaza, Dr. Ashraf Al-Qudra, a spokesman for the Ministry of Health, on Wednesday. The youngest baby to die of starvation in the enclave, according to Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, one day old. The actual number could be even higher, as limited access to northern Gaza makes it difficult for aid agencies to fully assess the situation there. UN experts accused Israel of “deliberately starving” Palestinians in Gaza. Israel insists there is “no limit” on the amount of aid allowed to enter Gaza, but its aid truck inspection system has resulted in only a tiny fraction of the amount of food and other aid being sent in daily before the war got to Gaza, that's where I'm getting on now.

One-year-old Watin in the north of the Gaza Strip is tired and weakened by dehydration. Instead of drinking baby formula, she survives one or two dates a day.

“She only eats one meal,” said her father Ikhlas Shehadeh, who is struggling to get enough food for his little girl. “She went a long time without milk. This child is suffering from the inability to move,” he told CNN on Tuesday. “We don’t know what to do.”

The babies of thousands of women “due to give birth in the Gaza Strip next month are at risk of dying,” UNICEF's report on the humanitarian situation in Palestine said Tuesday. At least 5,500 pregnant women “are unable to access prenatal or postnatal check-ups due to the bombings and are forced to flee for safety reasons,” the report said.

“Fear also leads to premature births,” the report said, citing the United Nations Population Fund (UNPF). The report also states that over 90% of children “aged 6 to 23 months and pregnant, breastfeeding women face severe food poverty if they have access to food on two or fewer food groups per day.”

CNN

Anwar Abdul Nabi, a young mother whose seven-year-old daughter Mila had died of malnutrition minutes earlier. The Israeli siege of Gaza has pushed Palestinians in the enclave into deadly famine.

Food shortages are reportedly worst in the northern Gaza Strip, where Israel focused its military offensive in the early days of the war. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), child malnutrition in the region is about three times higher than in southern Gaza. Research in health facilities there had previously shown that at least one in six children under the age of two were acutely malnourished, said Richard Peeperkorn, WHO representative for the area. He warned that those numbers “will likely be higher today.” Pregnant and breastfeeding women also face “significant health risks” from malnutrition, the Global Nutrition Cluster, a coalition of NGOs, reported in February.

Dr. Muhammad Salha, acting director of Al-Awda Hospital in northern Gaza, told CNN that medical staff were treating cases of dehydration, gastroenteritis and hepatitis in women and children.

“There are babies who have died in the womb and operations have been carried out to remove the dead fetuses,” he said on Monday. “Mothers don't eat because of the conditions we live in, and that affects the infants… There are reasons why many children suffer from dehydration and malnutrition, which leads to death.”

Mohammed Salem/Portal

A Palestinian child suffering from malnutrition is treated at a health center in Rafah, southern Gaza, March 4. Children and mothers are most at risk of severe malnutrition.

According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the Israeli bombings have forcibly displaced at least 1.7 million Palestinians. Many of those who have fled the fighting are being crammed into overcrowded shelters without basic sanitation, leading to the spread of infections. According to the World Health Organization, malnourished children, especially those with severe malnutrition, are at higher risk of dying from diseases such as diarrhea and pneumonia.

Another doctor in the northern Gaza Strip, Ahmad Salem, said patients in intensive care units and neonatal units were dying from malnutrition and lack of oxygen, which was difficult to administer given fuel shortages. “We are suffering from maternal hunger,” the medical worker at Kamal Adwan Hospital told CNN. “We cannot find an alternative to breast milk, which leads to the death of these children.”

Footage obtained by CNN shows dozens of desperate civilians climbing over each other to grab food packages from aid workers in northern Gaza.

On Tuesday, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt sent 42 tons of medical supplies and food to the region by air, the Emirati Defense Ministry said. The U.S. military said it, along with the Royal Jordanian Air Force, parachuted more than 36,800 meals into northern Gaza that day.

Kosay Al Nemer/Portal

Palestinians watch as the U.S. military conducts its first aid drop over Gaza City in the northern Gaza Strip on March 2. Human rights groups say the airdrops are a degrading way to deliver aid to Gazans.

But human rights groups criticized the airdrops as ineffective and a degrading way of providing aid to the people of Gaza and called on Israeli authorities to lift controls at land crossings into the enclave. Melanie Ward, executive director of the British-based NGO Medical Aid for Palestine, called on Israel to “immediately open all crossings into Gaza to aid workers to help those in need.”

“Only safe and unrestricted access for aid workers and aid workers, the lifting of the siege and an immediate ceasefire can end hunger in Gaza,” she said in a statement on Saturday.

Even if relief supplies enter the Strip, collecting them can be dangerous.

Israeli forces opened fire on people waiting for help in northern Gaza on Monday at the Kuwait roundabout on Rasheed Street in Gaza City, eyewitnesses told CNN. CNN has reached out to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) for comment.

Last Thursday, at least 118 people died trying to access food aid in Gaza City. This was one of the worst single tragedies of the war so far. Palestinian health authorities said Israeli troops used live fire as hungry and desperate Palestinian civilians gathered around food trucks. Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador to the United Nations, called the incident a “monstrous massacre.” The Israeli military said it first opened fire with warning shots to control crowds and then shot at “looters” who approached them. Most of the dead were killed by ramming as aid truck drivers tried to escape the gunfire and chaos, eyewitnesses and the IDF said. CNN cannot independently confirm the numbers.

Faraj Abu Naji, whose sister gave birth to twins a week ago, managed to get only three cartons of milk for his newborn nieces during a relief operation in the northern Gaza Strip. He told CNN that he injured his foot while trying to buy flour on Al Rashid Street.

“We thank God that humanitarian aid is being dropped from Jordanian and Emirati aircraft,” he said on Tuesday. “I try as much as possible to get milk from the planes that drop relief supplies so that we can provide my nieces with milk for as long as possible.

“Planes are dropping aid over the northern Gaza Strip, and we have become like dogs chasing a bone.”

Newborns are dying of hunger and mothers are struggling to feed their children as Israel's siege condemns Gazans to starvation Read More »

Ground cinnamon sold in U.S. discount stores is contaminated with lead, FDA says

Ground cinnamon sold in U.S. discount stores is contaminated with lead, FDA says

by CAITLYN FROLO | The National Desk

Wednesday March 6, 2024

This photo combination provided by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday, March 6, 2024 shows cinnamon products sold in U.S. discount stores that have elevated levels of lead. Top row from left is distributed by La Fiesta Food Products of La Miranda, California. Moran Foods, LLC of Saint Ann, Missouri, and MTCI of Santa Fe Springs, California. Bottom row from left is from Raja Foods LLC of Skokie, Illinois; Greenbriar International, Inc. of Chesapeake, Virginia, and El Chilar of Apopka, Florida (FDA via AP)

WASHINGTON (TND) —

Read more

After that recall, the FDA began a “targeted investigation” of cinnamon products sold in discount stores, looking for lead and chromium.

Six products were found to “contain elevated levels of lead and that prolonged exposure to these products may be unsafe.” The products had elevated lead levels between 2.03 and 3.4 parts per million (ppm).

However, the FDA said there were currently “no illnesses or adverse events” reported associated with the products.

These levels are significantly lower than lead levels associated with the ongoing investigation of ground cinnamon from Ecuador that Negasmart supplied to Austrofoods, the maker of the apple puree and applesauce products, which ranged from 2,270 ppm to 5,110 ppm in the cinnamon, the FDA said.

The FDA recommends consumers throw away and/or not purchase the following brands of ground cinnamon:

  • La Fiesta (Distributor: La Fiesta Food Products, La Miranda, CA)
  • Marcum (Distributor: Moran Foods, LLC, Saint Ann, MO)
  • MK (Distributor: MTCI, Santa Fe Springs, CA)
  • Swad (Distributor: Raja Foods LLC, Skokie, IL)
  • Supreme Tradition (Distributor: Greenbriar International, Inc., Chesapeake, VA)
  • El Chilar (Distribution: El Chilar, Apopka, FL)

The agency is also calling on retailers selling the products, including La Superior SuperMercados, Save A Lot, Patel Brothers, Family Dollar, Dollar General and La Joya Morelense, to voluntarily recall the products.

“Removing the ground cinnamon products in this alert from the market will prevent them from introducing increased amounts of lead into children’s diets,” the FDA said.

According to the Associated Press, Dollar Tree and Family Dollar stores have removed the cinnamon from their shelves, a company spokesman said. Customers can return products to nearby stores for a refund.

However, MTCI's MK cinnamon brand currently remains an exception, as the FDA said it was “unable to reach MTCI to communicate our findings and request that the company initiate a recall.”

The FDA recommends that consumers:

  • The FDA advises consumers to stop using and discard these products.
  • Consumers should not eat, sell, or serve the ground cinnamon products listed in the table above and should discard them.
  • These products have a long shelf life. Consumers should check their homes and dispose of these products.
  • If you suspect that someone has been exposed to elevated lead levels, contact your doctor. Most people have no obvious immediate symptoms of lead exposure.

The FDA says it will continue to work with manufacturers, distributors and retailers to remove unsafe products from the market.

Load More…

Ground cinnamon sold in U.S. discount stores is contaminated with lead, FDA says Read More »

Steely Dan keyboardist Jim Beard has died at the age

Steely Dan keyboardist Jim Beard has died at the age of 63

Music

Published March 6, 2024, 4:51 PM ET

Jim Beard, solo artist and touring keyboardist for Steely Dan, has died. He was 63.

Beard's representative told the Post in a statement that Beard died of complications from a sudden illness on March 2 in a New York City hospital surrounded by family.

“It is with great sadness that we announce the loss of our friend and colleague. Jim Beard 1960-2024,” the band wrote on their website.

He has been a member of Steely Dan since 2008 and recently toured with the band on the Eagles' current “Long Goodbye” tour.

Beard's final performance with the band was on January 20th in Phoenix, AZ.

Jim Beard and Rob Schwimmer pose for a photo. Facebook/Rob Schwimmer Jim Beard died on March 2nd. Facebook/Rob Schwimmer Beard suffered complications from a recent illness. Facebook/Jim Beard

Beard was born on August 26, 1960 in Ridley Park, Pennsylvania. He worked with jazz legends Wayne Shorter, John McLaughlin and many others and also released six solo albums.

He has also taught at Berklee College of Music in Boston, the Mason Gross School of Arts at Rutgers University, the Aaron Copland School of Music in New York and the Sibelius Academy in Finland.

He is survived by his son and daughter Victor and Caitlin Beard, as well as his mother Sarah, his sister Nancy Canale and his brother Bill Beard.

Steely Dan's current lineup includes Keith Carlock (drums), Freddie Washington (bass), Jon Herington (guitar), Walt Weiskopf and Roger Rosenberg (saxophones), Michael Leonhart (trumpet), Jim Pugh (trombone) and singers Carolyn Leonhart . Catherine Russell, LaTanya Hall and Cindy Mizelle.

Load More…

{{#isDisplay}} {{/isDisplay}}{{#isAniviewVideo}} {{/isAniviewVideo}}{{#isSRVideo}} {{/isSRVideo}}

https://nypost.com/2024/03/06/entertainment/steely-dan-keyboardist-jim-beard-dead-at-63/?utm_source=url_sitebuttons&utm_medium=site%20buttons&utm_campaign=site%20buttons

Copy the URL to share

Steely Dan keyboardist Jim Beard has died at the age of 63 Read More »

Khaman Maluach projected top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft

Khaman Maluach, projected top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, commits to Duke

International center Khaman Maluach, a potential top-three pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, has committed to Duke, he announced Wednesday.

Maluach was not ranked by traditional scouting services because he plays for the NBA Academy Africa in Senegal, but the 7-foot-2 big man is considered a five-star, top-10 talent in the 2024 recruiting class. A further proof of how much potential Maluach has? Last summer he was named MVP of the NBA's Basketball Without Borders Africa Camp, and then in February at the NBA All-Star Weekend in Indianapolis – where Maluach spent time with his idol, Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo – he was named both the Playoff and Defensive MVP of the Basketball Without Borders Global Camp.

Maluach chose Duke over fellow finalists Kansas, Kentucky and UCLA, as well as offers from the NBA G-League Ignite and Australia's NBL Rising Stars program.

The 17-year-old Maluach is Duke's sixth commitment of 2024. He joins five-star winger Cooper Flagg (No. 1 overall player), five-star guard Isaiah Evans (No. 11) and five-star Winger Kon Knueppel (No. 16), four-star center Patrick Ngongba (No. 17) and four-star wing Darren Harris (No. 49).

With the signing of Maluach, Jon Scheyer has officially completed his second No. 1 recruiting class in three offseasons as coach of the Blue Devils. Duke had the top-ranked class in 2022 and its current group of freshmen ranked second-best in the 2023 cycle.

How important is this commitment to Duke?

It's huge, and even that might be an understatement. Maluach was clearly the best “high school” player still on the board – we'll see what happens in the transfer portal later this spring – and would have been one of the top five recruits nationally had he played in America. Just because he's not a household name yet doesn't mean he won't be one… because he will be. At 2.70 meters, Maluach is exactly the type of rim-protecting finishing center that Scheyer showed a preference for at the beginning of his tenure; The last similar player Duke had, Dereck Lively II, was selected in the lottery and is currently starting for the Dallas Mavericks. Maluach's potential could be even higher. He's an immediate starter and will give Duke two projected top-five picks next season.

Something else worth noting: Duke already has one NBA Academy player on its roster — second-year point guard Tyrese Proctor from Australia — but the program's latest international signing is further confirmation that Scheyer is expanding his recruiting reach. International prospects from Europe have been infiltrating college basketball for several seasons now — particularly on the West Coast, at schools like Gonzaga, UCLA and Arizona — but before Proctor, it wasn't a common path the Blue Devils followed. But as the game of basketball grows in popularity around the world, Scheyer has shown he will reach beyond America's borders to snag game-changing talent. Proctor was one, but Maluach is even on another level. – Brendan Marks, Duke Beat writer

How is Maluach's game?

Any Duke fans worried about the current team's rim protection won't have those fears next season. Maluach is a shot-blocking machine, similar to Lively. This length obviously makes him an excellent rebounder as well. But what's fascinating is Maluach's offense. Of course, he'll provide tremendous rim pressure in pick-and-roll scenarios, but he also has real shooting potential, even as a center; This should work well in Scheyer's perimeter-oriented system, in which the five often plays outside the post.

Maluach joins Flagg as an immediate starter who can play either the three or four at the college level. That will give Duke one of the best and most athletic frontcourts in the country next season… and that's without potential returnees like current sophomore Mark Mitchell. Duke was always going to be in good shape next season, but Maluach takes that to a new level. Depending on who returns, the Blue Devils could once again be one of the top three preseason teams in Scheyer's third season. – Mark

What's next for Duke?

Figuring out how all the pieces fit together. Six commitments in the 2024 class is more than Scheyer originally intended, and it's not inconceivable that one or more of those recruits will look elsewhere before enrolling this summer. (Five-star forward Mackenzie Mgbako, for example, decommitted last April and is currently a freshman at Indiana.)

Beyond that, Duke has to figure out who's coming back. Kyle Filipowski and Jared McCain appear to be the two players most likely to enter this summer's NBA draft – both were projected as first-round picks in The Athletic's latest mock draft – but there could be more to come. Depending on how his season ends, could Proctor also choose to leave? And then what about the team's other returnees? Senior Jeremy Roach, for example, still has a COVID year of eligibility that he could use if he wanted, but has yet to decide on his future plans. (Roach has developed into one of America's best shooters, so Duke would probably take him back.) And what about the program's other young talent? Both Caleb Foster – currently sidelined with a lower-body injury – as well as TJ Power and Sean Stewart would be highly sought after in the transfer portal if they decided to leave, but would also be valuable returnees next season.

Scheyer needs to get through this season first — the Blue Devils can win a share of the ACC title if they win their regular-season finale against rival UNC on Saturday — before addressing those future decisions. But he can't sign six new returnees this season and get everyone back. There are not enough scholarships. Something has to move. – Mark

What does Maluach's commitment to Duke mean for the 2025 NBA Draft?

Duke has a very real chance of being one of the top two picks in the 2025 draft. Flagg is considered the favorite to take the No. 1 spot because he is one of the best high school basketball players to go to college in the last decade. However, Maluach and Rutgers are committed. Ace Bailey is considered by NBA scouts to be the two players most likely to threaten the position at the top of the class. Maluach is an incredibly impressive athlete all over the court with real length who is elite around the rim. On offense, he has a great soft touch, great agility and excellent footwork.

Maluach's ceiling peaks through the roof and the scouts are excited to get a glimpse of him as he begins his college journey. Back in February during the All-Star break, they got a taste of what he can do on Basketball Without Borders. After that event, he became the talk of the NBA community, as scouts who spoke to The Athletic spoke with the same breathless words usually reserved for future All-Stars.

The last time a school had two top-three picks in a single draft was in 2019, and it was also Duke with Zion Williamson and RJ Barrett. However, the past comparison that several scouts have given me is actually to the 2014 Kansas team that featured Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid. At the time, Wiggins was considered one of the best prospects since LeBron James, and Embiid was quickly seen as the up-and-coming big man who was just scratching the surface of what he could become. Embiid probably would have gone No. 1 if there weren't questions about his future injury potential. Instead, he went third and Wiggins went No. 1. In my opinion, Flagg will most likely surpass Wiggins' performances in college and I expect his overall NBA career to be significantly better. This is not to compare the two. However, Maluach's trajectory could very well match that of Embiid's pre-draft if things go well for him next season. — Sam Vecenie, senior NBA draft writer

Required reading

(Photo: William West / AFP via Getty Images)

Khaman Maluach, projected top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, commits to Duke Read More »

Poisoning FSB Putin… The video of the posthumous interview with

Poisoning, FSB, Putin… The video of the posthumous interview with Alexei Navalny

On December 17, 2020, a month before his return to Russia and his arrest, the Russian opponent met parliamentarian Jacques Maire, then appointed by the Council of Europe as rapporteur for the investigation into the poisoning of which he was a victim four months ago. In collaboration with LCI, Libération is publishing excerpts from this hearing.

If you don't see the video, click here

On December 17, 2020, Alexei Navalny met Jacques Maire, then a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, in Berlin, exactly one month to the day before his return to Russia and his arrest. The elected European official has been appointed rapporteur for the investigation into the poisoning that almost cost the enemy his life, the aim of which is to “clarify the facts legally” and establish the responsibility of the Russian authorities. In a statement filmed in a hotel conference room, Navalny addressed in English the circumstances of the attack in the summer of 2020 and the role of the secret services in his life since his decision to run for office. Russian presidency and what he thinks Vladimir Putin, who has never mentioned his name publicly. Only four months after he came close to death, the enemy has regained all his splendor and enthusiasm. “We expected someone to be a little depressed. We saw a fighter, we saw a hyper-determined character, very physically present, very empathetic, accessible,” testifies Jacques Maire, who had “a block of granite” in front of him and was ready “not to make any concessions in his fight”.

With the consent of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Jacques Maire is publishing today, through Libération and LCI, the video of this hearing for public debate, “even if this was not intended”. “Documents of public interest for history,” comments the former MP, “also an opportunity for appreciation.” [à Navalny]. Because everyone who sees this video sees this man leaving the hospital who has just been poisoned and who says to himself: “Tomorrow I'll go into battle again.”

Three weeks after the death of Alexei Navalny in a prison beyond the Russian Arctic Circle, and as the flow of Muscovites paying their respects to him at the cemetery where he has rested since March 1 continues, the question remains work towards his future. On March 15, 2022, after the invasion of Ukraine, Russia slammed the door on the Council of Europe, of which it had been a member since 1996. “All appeals from Navalny and the Russian political prisoners, all identified crimes” until March 15, 2022 and still valid a year later, are still being processed, emphasizes Jacques Maire. It is not because we are leaving the Council of Europe that these bodies will be suspended or dissolved.” Unfortunately, it is no longer about working for the security or survival of Vladimir Putin's main opponent, but “for justice and justice, for him as well as for them Others, a certain number of procedures can be completed.” with or without the participation of the Russians. So that justice and especially European justice is done before history, before the Russians.”

To watch the interview in full, click here.

Poisoning, FSB, Putin… The video of the posthumous interview with Alexei Navalny Read More »

Unconventional Giordano39s attack They are leading us into a nuclear

Unconventional, Giordano's attack: “They are leading us into a nuclear war”

War in Ukraine, what will happen? Mario Giordano speaks about this in his editorial at the beginning of the program “Fuori dal coro”, broadcast on March 6th on Rete4.

“These are crazy people. They are leading us into a world war, into a nuclear war. They only talk about missiles, about invasion. There is never anyone who talks about peace. The other day, French President Macron hypothesized that there is a NATO.” “Troops in Ukraine, but NATO troops in Ukraine represent a decisive step towards a world war and therefore towards the risk of nuclear war, a risk “That we cannot rule out,” said the President of the European Commission, who said we would have to run as we bought weapons and vaccines.”

Unconventional, Giordano's attack: “They are leading us into a nuclear war” Read More »