Dean's Reviews: 'The Marvels'
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
Check out Dean's Reviews of the new marvel franchise, 'The Marvels.'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.'It feels like I was right next to him': Son hears fallen firefighter's heartbeat after organ donation
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
NEW YORK (WPIX) - Family and friends said New York firefighter Billy Moon had the biggest heart. On Thursday, his widow, two young children and parents got to hear that heart again in the chest of the man who received it.Moon died after falling 20 feet during a training exercise in Brooklyn in December 2022. His wife, Kristina Moon, transferred him to LiveOnNY's Donor Care Unit at NYU Langone Health. Five of Moon's organs were transplanted into recipients. On Thursday night, Moon's family got to meet 63-year-old Richard Grehl, who received Moon's heart just 10 days after going on the donor list."I'm Rich, in more ways than one. Thank you so much," he said when meeting Moon's widow.Kristina Moon used a stethoscope to hear her husband's heart inside Grehl."He was passionate. The passion comes from the heart, so to hear that heart is still beating is very emotional," she said. Efforts underway to save children harmed by Israel-Hamas War Colin Moon, 9, sobbed after hearin...What caused a mystery odor in northeast Ohio communities?
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
CLEVELAND (WJW) — Residents of some neighborhoods in northeast Ohio have reported a strange odor lingering in several local communities in recent weeks.The fire department in Lakewood, Ohio, told FOX 8 last Wednesday that firefighters had responded to reports of a “lighter fluid” or “charcoal” smell in southern parts of the city. Lakewood fire officials said the odor has since dissipated. Have a $2 bill? How to know if it’s worth thousands Now, officials with the NASA Glenn Research Center say they might have an answer to the mystery odor — and it's more unexpected than residents may have guessed!"NASA Glenn develops new technologies that advance aviation and space exploration. As part of that mission, we routinely run tests in our facilities to simulate flight conditions. Sometimes, during those tests, we use jet fuel, and it can leave a smell," a NASA Glenn spokesperson said in a statement. Henry Winkler makes surprising confession at FOX 8 visit Officials say the tests, ...Get ready for an even busier holiday travel season
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
(NerdWallet) - If last year’s winter holiday travel season felt costly or chaotic, this year's might seem even more so.That’s because half of Americans (50%) plan to spend money on flights or hotel stays this holiday season, according to a new NerdWallet survey conducted online by The Harris Poll. The survey was based on responses from 2,057 adults collected Sept. 5-7, 2023.That 50% figure is higher than last year when 44% of Americans said they’d planned to spend money on travel.When will crowds be the biggest? Probably the Sunday after Thanksgiving. That was the busiest travel day in 2019, 2021 and 2022, according to a NerdWallet analysis of Transportation Security Administration data showing the number of passengers screened at TSA checkpoints over the past four years. Travelers can expect 2023’s winter holiday travel season to follow suit.The busiest travel days this holiday seasonWhile half of Americans will travel for at least one of the winter holidays (and some will travel f...Austin author highlights lives of first American female astronauts
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) -- "I think a lot of women are looking to us to prove that women do fit into the space program," said Rhea Seddon, a surgeon and the fifth woman to fly to space, said in an interview from the late 1970s with a NASA film crew. Rhea had just been announced as one of six women selected to join NASA's astronaut program. They were the first women to get that chance.In her new book "The Six: The Untold Story of America's First Women Astronauts," author and Bloomberg space reporter Loren Grush, of Austin, highlights the journeys of these women from Earth to the stars."What fascinated me was realizing that any one of them could have been the first American woman to fly," Grush said.It's been nearly fifty years since the women were selected in the late 1970s. After more than a decade of only allowing men to join the program, NASA decided to expand their roster. Thousands of women applied for the job. Six were selected. NASA explores brain training tech for future astronauts l...Canajoharie contractor accused of grand larceny
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- A contractor from Canajoharie was arrested and is accused of grand larceny. Jeffery Belrose, 55, is charged with third-degree grand larceny. Get the latest news, weather, sports and entertainment delivered right to your inbox! On October 16, around 10:50 a.m., police received a complaint from a Fort Plain resident regarding a contractor who was paid for a home improvement project but never completed the work. Police say an investigation found Belrose operated "J's and Sons Construction" and accepted over $3,000 in May to complete roof work.Police say Belrose never started the project and never returned the money. He was arrested and processed by Fonda State Police. He was given an appearance ticket to return to the Minden Town Court on December 14 and was released.'Veterans Voices' airing on FOX 2 News at 11
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
ST. LOUIS - Join us Friday for a special FOX 2 news presentation, 'Veterans Voices.'FOX 2's military veteran air force Lt. Col. Chris Higgins is hosting the program of uplifting stories of the area military veterans. Rush-hour demonstrations unfold in St. Louis City & County That's at 11:30 a.m. on FOX 2.How Colorado’s Proposition HH, a complex property tax fix, became ballot box poison
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
Proposition HH, the marquee measure of Colorado’s 2023 election season that had backing from the state’s top Democratic leaders, fell in a fashion as ugly as any in recent years.The nearly 19-percentage-point shellacking suffered by the property tax ballot measure Tuesday left policymakers scrambling for a backup plan and spurred Gov. Jared Polis to call the first special session since the pandemic.It also raised the question: How does a measure aimed at tax relief, albeit while attempting so much more, fall hard before an electorate facing historic increases in their next property tax bills?Both backers and opponents of Prop. HH chalk up its loss to a lack of a clear message to voters. And the electorate may have been primed to say “No” by a barrage of ads with directly contradictory messages, including plenty on either side that stretched the truth or misrepresented what HH would do.Some 59% of voters rejected the proposal in a low-turnout, off-year electio...“Coal Country” a true tale of loss, betrayal and anguish | Theater review
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
The judge at the start of “Coal Country” stands on a box, facing the audience at Boulder’s Dairy Arts Center but addressing those gathered in a courtroom. The cast of the Butterfly Effect Theatre of Colorado’s production of the haunting documentary drama sit on benches, also facing the audience.They are awaiting their chance to express the anguish they suffered in one of the deadliest mining disasters in the last century. Only, they will not get their day in court. They will not be allowed to make victims’ statements because, according to the letter of the law, they are not victims. This, despite each of them having lost a loved one (in the case of one man, more than one) in a mining explosion in Raleigh County, West Virginia.Chris Kendall portrays Gary Quarles, the father of a lost miner in Coal Country. (Provided by BETC)On April 5, 2010, the Upper Big Branch Mine in Raleigh County experienced a series of explosions starting 1,000 feet down the deep coal mine. Mining giant Massey ...Where there’s smoke, Xcel Energy hopes AI will help stop Colorado wildfires
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:56:04 GMT
Xcel Energy Colorado, which expects to spend about $180 million on wildfire prevention this year, is adding artificial intelligence to its arsenal to fight what has become a year-round battle.Xcel is expanding its work with Pano AI, a San Francisco-based company that will install 21 camera systems by the end of the year on more than 1.5 million acres across the utility’s territory. The objective is to quickly alert Xcel and first responders when smoke is detected.Pano uses artificial intelligence, or AI, to interpret images from its high-definition cameras that capture 360-degree views, adding data from satellite feeds and other sources to assess the weather and conditions on the ground. The company staffs a center 24/7 where people review information.“By the end of 2023 we will have installed 21 cameras across the state, both on the Front Range and the Western Slope,” Xcel Energy Colorado President Robert Kenney said Tuesday.“We understand that wildfires in ...Latest news
- LIVE: Biden to sign executive order to increase background checks
- Snow closes Aviation Mall until Wednesday
- Be a part of Albany's largest snowball fight!
- Glens Falls getting sewer work this week
- Best restaurants in Valatie/Kinderhook, according to Yelp
- Albany County looks to extend liquor and wine store hours during the holiday season
- Daughter roasts Alton dad in sweet and funny obit
- Scratchers player wins $50,000 in south St. Louis County
- Police seek person of interest in killing of Washington Park father of 7
- Juvenile arrested, charged in East St. Louis murder