Russia’s top military commander in Ukraine signaled Moscow’s hold on the southern city of Kherson was weakening, and Ukraine said Russian strikes since last week had knocked out some 30% of its power-plant infrastructure, raising concerns of countrywide blackouts. Gen. Sergei Surovikin, the recently appointed commander of Russian Armed Forces in Ukraine, gave a rare pessimistic take of his invading forces’ position, telling state television Tuesday that the situation in Kherson “is not at all easy right now” and that the priority in the south was preserving civilians and military personnel.
“Difficult decisions cannot be ruled out,” he said, without elaborating, in his first significant public comments since taking over the role.
Gen. Surovikin’s comments came as Russia launched a fresh volley of missiles at Ukraine’s critical infrastructure, the latest in a number of attacks that Kyiv said has damaged nearly a third of the country’s power plants. “Ukraine is under fire by the occupiers. They continue to do what they do best—terrorize and kill civilians,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
Russia has stepped up its missile attacks on Ukraine and acquired explosive drones from Iran. https://t.co/Qk5dgLsJ5f
— CBS News (@CBSNews) October 18, 2022
➤BIDEN KEEPS ABORTION AS HIS TOP PRIORITY: President Joe Biden promised Tuesday that the first bill he sends to Capitol Hill next year will be one that writes abortion protections into law — if Democrats control enough seats in Congress to pass it — as he sought to energize his party’s voters just three weeks ahead of the November midterms. Twice over, Biden urged people to remember how they felt in late June when the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that legalized abortion, fresh evidence of White House efforts to ensure the issue stays front of mind for Democratic voters this year.
Rubio and Demings |
'The View' host Joy Behar finds voters' focus on economy 'sad and depressing' https://t.co/A1FWNKlQnM
— Fox News (@FoxNews) October 19, 2022
🦃TURKEY PRICES ARE 73% HIGHER THAN LAST YEAR: The spread of the bird flu will likely affect the price and availability of turkeys this Thanksgiving. Prices right now, per pound, for an 8 to 16 pound turkey is $1.99 which is up from $1.15 last year. That is a 73% increase. The bird flu usually spreads during colder months, but this year commercial turkey farms were reporting cases of avian flu in July. This year, 47.6 million birds have been affected while the flu has been detected in 42 states. To control the spread, growers must kill entire flocks, which usually contain about 15,000 birds.
Oklahoma murders: Person of interest in 4 friends' deaths arrested in Florida https://t.co/gZnqmDbWe1
— Fox News (@FoxNews) October 19, 2022
🚘MORE CRASH DEATHS ARE ASSOCIATED TO AUTOMATED TECH VEHICLES: According to newly released government data, eleven people were killed in U.S. crashes involving vehicles that were using automated driving systems during a four-month period earlier this year. 10 of 11 cars involved in the crashes were Tesla vehicles, the 11th was a Ford pickup. The number of deaths involving automated vehicles is still small compared with the overall number of traffic deaths in the U.S. Nearly 43,000 people were killed on U.S. roads last year, the highest number in 16 years.
17,000 children end up in the hospital from school bus accidents every year, and in the past decade at least 64 children have died getting on and off the bus. That’s why one district in Pennsylvania is installing security cameras in an effort to solve the problem. pic.twitter.com/xaSPU5mmfc
— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) October 18, 2022
A California jury has found Paul Flores guilty in the murder of 19-year-old college student Kristin Smart in 1996.
— ABC News (@ABC) October 19, 2022
His father, Ruben Flores, was found not guilty of accessory to murder in connection with the crime. https://t.co/ETEDda7CQt
⚾PHILLIES KYLE SCHWARBER SLAMS TITANIC HOME: Yu Darvish didn’t look. Juan Soto never moved. Bryce Harper’s jaw dropped so far that his chin nearly scraped the floor of the dugout. The Phillies eked out a 2-0 victory over the San Diego Padres in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series after reliever José Alvarado kept his cool while all hell broke loose around him in a tense ninth inning before 44,826 towel-waving fans at Petco Park.
This Kyle Schwarber home run at 119.7 mph is the hardest-hit homer in the postseason over the Statcast era.
— The Athletic (@TheAthletic) October 19, 2022
It’s the second furthest ever hit at 488 feet, just three feet behind Willson Contreras’ 2017 NLCS homer.
🎥 @MLB | @PhilliesNotes pic.twitter.com/eLTvo2O07n
- New York Yankees 5 Cleveland Guardians 1
- Philadelphia Phillies 2 San Diego Padres 0
- Boston Celtic 126 Philadelphia 76ers 117
- Golden State 123 Los Angeles Lakers 109
⚾GUARDIANS FORCED TO SWITCH HOTELS BEFORE BIG GAME: The Cleveland Guardians were forced to switch hotels Monday night, just hours ahead of the deciding game against the New York Yankees in the ALDS. The issue started when the game was rained out and the players tried to go back to their rooms, but they were told the rooms were already booked so the Guardians were not able to extend their stay. The New York Yankees might have benefited from this situation as they came out on top, winning the series on Tuesday with a final score of 5-1.
⚽COLOMBIAN PRO SOCCER DEFENDER ATTEMPTS WILD DISTRACTION: A Colombian professional football player flashed his male member in the middle of a match to distract the opposition from kicking a goal. Santa Fe defender Geisson Perera went viral for his wild attempt to defend a free kick from a Jaguares de Córdoba player during the Colombian first-division match on Monday.
One Colombian first division contest was marred by a particularly bizarre moment when Sante Fe defender Geisson Perera pulled down his pants to try and distract an opposition free-kick taker.
— Manuel Menacho 🇬🇧🇪🇸🇮🇪🏴🇧🇪⚽️ (@ManuelMenacho0) October 18, 2022
(Josh O'Brien) pic.twitter.com/JsNCEi5UDT
🏈TOM BRADY BREAKS SILENCE ON PERSONAL LIFE: COMPARES NFL SEASON TO WAR: Tom Brady is comparing the work he does while wearing an NFL uniform to another career in a military uniform. The future Hall of Famer said that starting every new football season is like being deployed as a military service member. On the podcast he co-hosts called "Let's Go!" he said, “I almost look at like a football season like you’re going away on deployment in the military, and it’s like, man, here I go again.” Tampa Bay fly to North Carolina to take on the Panthers this Sunday.
🏈FORMER CORNERBACK, ANTONIO DENNARD DEAD AFTER BAR SHOOTING: Former NFL cornerback Antonio Dennard, who last played with the Green Bay Packers, died early Sunday morning after being involved in a shooting outside a restaurant in Berks County, Pennsylvania. Dennard was signed by the Jacksonville Jaguars as a free agent out of Langston University in 2012 but was waived later that year, he died at the age of 32.
🏀APPLE STOLE TAKENOTE FROM THE NBA TEAM, THE UTAH JAZZ: NBA fans took note when Apple used #TakeNote on Twitter to promote its new iPad lineup... afterall, it is the official hashtag of the Utah Jazz. While hashtags aren't exactly the property of a company, they can be used for advertising campaigns. However, Twitter has what's called Hash flags, which are little animated icons that appear after a sponsored hashtag. Every NBA team uses sponsored hashtags to promote social media content. The Utah Jazz promote #TakeNote.
When Apple took to Twitter to promote their upcoming iPad announcements using #TakeNote, the hashtag started to trend under sports and basketball on social media platform for a few hours. An original tweet by Utah Jazz saying, "Well, this is awkward." has since been deleted.
BITTER COLD FRONT: Over 235 million Americans are experiencing below-normal temperatures and parts of the Midwest even saw some October snowfall as a weather system drops temperatures in parts of the nation. At least 75 records are expected to be broken. pic.twitter.com/0sFDDQPb5c
— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) October 18, 2022
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