AL.com NFL mock draft 2: Passing-predominant picks The Chargers escaped salary-cap purgatory by trading six-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Keenan Allen to the Chicago Bears for a fourth-round draft choice and releasing two-time 1,000-yard receiver Mike ... 03/28/2024 - 4:11 am | View Link
Who’s moving up to take Drake May in the 2024 NFL draft? If you're a young quarterback, I'd want to play on the Minnesota Vikings. They have stars at every skill position and a good offensive line. 03/28/2024 - 2:01 am | View Link
Pete Prisco 2024 NFL Mock Draft 1.0: QBs fly off the board as one team makes a huge trade up for Drake Maye Free agency has come and gone for the most part, so mock drafts actually mean something. Unlike our lead NFL Draft analyst Ryan Wilson, I am late to the process when it comes to doing mock drafts. I ... 03/28/2024 - 1:44 am | View Link
2024 NFL Mock Draft: History to be made as quarterbacks are taken with first four selections Pro Days are well underway and 30 visits will soon begin in earnest as NFL teams put the final touches on their prospect rankings ahead of the 2024 NFL Draft. In today's thought exercise, we explore ... 03/28/2024 - 1:35 am | View Link
Where will J.J. McCarthy be drafted? Predictions for NFL Draft prospect McCarthy went 27-1 as a starter at Michigan and won a national championship in January. Here's where experts think he'll go in the 2024 NFL Draft. 03/28/2024 - 12:08 am | View Link
On March 28, Federal Judge Lewis A. Kaplan will sentence former FTX chairman Sam Bankman-Fried on seven separate counts of fraud and conspiracy, with federal prosecutors asking for a sentence of 40 to 50 years behind bars.
In some respects, Bankman-Fried’s story is familiar. He is hardly the first prominent figure in the financial world to face consequences for some very poor decisions.
After weeks of fevered speculation, Catherine, Princess of Wales, revealed on Mar. 22 that she was absent from the public eye not because she was having marital problems or growing out a bad haircut, but because she was being treated for cancer. She and her husband had, she said, “taken time to explain everything to George, Charlotte and Louis in a way that is appropriate for them, and to reassure them that I am going to be OK.” Even before her announcement, however, many cancer survivors who were also parents had already guessed at the truth.
On March 16, 1983, the Country Music Association (CMA) celebrated its 25th anniversary, and I was invited. Buddy Killen, the song publisher who pitched “Heartbreak Hotel” to Elvis Presley, thought “the Black girl from Harvard” might just be the second coming of that hit’s songwriter, Mae Boren Axton. He put me on the guest list and paid for the tickets.
It was a complicated night.
Among the many misperceptions about the Holocaust that well-meaning Hollywood creators have unwittingly perpetuated, the most damaging has been the idea that Jews were passive victims, complacently herded into airless train cars to be exterminated at death camps. Bloody revenge fantasies like Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds aside, realistic accounts of Jewish self-defense in the face of Nazi annihilation have been few and far between.
No one in human history has ever seen an eclipse quite like the one seen by the crew of Apollo 12 on Nov. 21, 1969. Countless billions of us have seen the moon eclipse the sun, casting its shadow on the Earth; countless billions have seen the Earth similarly block solar light, casting a shadow on the moon.
All animals, including humans, have limitations in how they find out about the world. And we humans invent instrumentation to correct for weaknesses in our perceptions of the world. The most basic weakness we have is that our perceptions don’t tell us everything about what’s going on with the world.