Jenks Trojans' state title defense ends in heartbreaking loss to Deer Creek Jenks' hopes of repeating as state champions in soccer came to an end as they in a double shootout in the Class 6A quarterfinal game. 05/2/2024 - 6:15 pm | View Link
4A STATE TRACK: Boyd closes Gatesville career with pair of 5th-place finishes Last season, Boyd debuted at the University Interscholastic League Class 4A Track & Field State Meet, placing fifth in the pole vault. This year, she returned, matching the finish in the event while ... 05/2/2024 - 5:21 pm | View Link
A half century later, Manteo’s 1974 State Champion baseball team gets its ring Outer Banks Voice The Manteo varsity softball and baseball teams hosted Camden on Thursday night, May 2, for their final regular season home games. On the softball diamond, the ... 05/2/2024 - 4:22 pm | View Link
University rolls by Buccaneers 13-2 for sectional championship Josalyn Phillips accounted for a two-run single to right, plating Elza and Campbell for a 5-2 lead, and marking the start of a five-run frame for University, which scored its last three runs of the ... 05/2/2024 - 1:55 pm | View Link
High School Notes: Oceanside tennis advances to state championship match After defeating area and region rival Academic Magnet on Thursday, the boys tennis team at Oceanside Collegiate advanced to the Class AA state championship showdown with Christ Church. 05/2/2024 - 12:45 pm | View Link
By JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER (Associated Press)
HONOLULU (AP) — Had emergency responders known about widespread cellphone outages during the height of last summer’s deadly Maui wildfires, they would have used other methods to warn about the disaster, county officials said in a lawsuit.
Alerts the county sent to cellphones warning people to immediately evacuate were never received, unbeknownst to the county, the lawsuit said.
Maui officials failed to activate sirens that would have warned the entire population of the approaching flames.
For the first time in its history, the Margaritaville at Sea cruise line will travel from its longtime home at the Port of Palm Beach to a destination beyond the Bahamas.
Since its founding as Bahamas Paradise in 2014, the company has only sailed to one place: Freeport, Grand Bahama. And the cruise line only recently expanded the length of its cruises.
While it spent years exclusively operating quick, two-night trips, it started taking reservations last November for three-night trips out of Palm Beach aboard its ship Paradise that will begin this August.
Last December, the cruise line announced the purchase of a larger ship, called the Islander, that in June will begin sailing four- and five-night trips out of the Port of Tampa to locations in Mexico and Key West.
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The idea of stopping in Key West must have been appealing to the cruise line’s guests and managers, because the island has been added to the Paradise’s itineraries beginning in September.
Key West will mark the first destination beyond Freeport for sailings by Margaritaville at Sea or its predecessor, Bahamas Paradise, out of the Port of Palm Beach.
In fact, it will be the first destination other than the Bahamas for any ship sailing out of the Port of Palm Beach since the 1990s, port spokesman Yaremi Farinas said.
Five voyages will sail on a Monday-through-Friday schedule.
There was not a lot of finesse in the five games the Cavaliers and Magic have played in their best-of-seven Eastern Conference quarterfinal series, so why expect anything different now?
The Cavaliers grabbed a 3-2 lead in the series on April 30 when they edged the Magic, 104-103, at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse without starting center Jarrett Allen, who was a pregame scratch because of bruised ribs.
Police were under no obligation to re-read a Miranda warning to a hospitalized murder suspect who confessed to killing two people, the Florida Supreme Court ruled Thursday, finding that the defendant’s rights were read to him when he was placed under arrest four weeks earlier.
The decision derailed killer Zachary Penna’s effort to get a new trial in the Nov.