Park quarterback heading to Super Bowl as NFL award finalist

posted in: All news | 0

Park quarterback Alayna Adamez is heading to the Super Bowl in San Francisco in February with her dad as the NFC North division winner of the NFL Latino Youth Honors award.

Park senior quarterback Alayna Adamez (courtesy of Park High School)

Adamez was surprised at school by Vikings defensive lineman Levi Drake Rodriguez, who delivered the news.

The senior led Park to the semifinals of the first-ever Minnesota high school flag football state tournament in the spring. The signal caller threw for 1,432 yards and 32 touchdowns last season en route to being named District 6 Gold Quarterback of the Year.

As quarterback, Adamez led the Wolfpack to the Final Four in the Minnesota State Tournament, throwing for 1,432 yards and 32 touchdowns in just eight regular season games, earning District 6 Gold Quarterback of the Year honors.

Adamez, who sports a 3.967 GPA, plays four varsity sports at Park — football, hockey, tennis and softball. She’ll play Division-I softball at Southern Illinois-Edwardsville next year.

Four girls and four boys were selected as division winners for the NFL honor. One ultimate winner for each gender will be announced at the Super Bowl.

Zelenskyy seeks dismissal of justice and energy ministers in Ukrainian corruption probe

posted in: All news | 0

By SAMYA KULLAB

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday called for the removal of Ukraine’s justice and energy ministers amid a wide-reaching corruption scandal involving the state nuclear power company.

Related Articles


Sotheby’s says a diamond brooch lost by Napoleon as his forces fled Waterloo sells for $4.4 million


UK’s Starmer refuses to say whether he will urge Trump to drop his $1 billion BBC threat


Russia makes gains in southern Ukraine as it expands front-line attacks


Climate change is in the news during COP30. We’ve got tips to tackle your climate anxiety


UN watchdog hasn’t been able to verify Iran’s stockpile of near-weapons grade uranium in months

“Among other things, this is a matter of trust,” Zelenskyy said in a video statement on his Telegram channel as he urged the prime minister to remove Justice Minister Herman Halushchenko and Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk.

He said he is asking members of parliament to support this decision.

The announcement came after Ukraine’s anti-corruption agency said Tuesday it has detained five people and identified seven other suspects in a major graft investigation involving alleged kickbacks worth around $100 million in the energy sector.

The National Anti-Corruption Bureau did not identify the suspects but said they include a businessman believed to be the mastermind, a former adviser to the energy minister, and an executive with the power company Energoatom.

The agency also accused eight people of bribery, abuse of office and possession of disproportionate assets on Tuesday. The investigation, which began 15 months ago, was welcomed by Zelenskyy who urged officials to cooperate with the probe. Energoatom says the investigation has not disrupted its operations.

Zelenskyy said existence of any type of illegal schemes in country’s energy sector is “absolutely not normal.” He said he will sign a decree imposing sanctions on two people included in the corruption investigation, but didn’t clarify who.

Top government officials and associates close to Zelenskyy are implicated in the scandal.

Earlier, Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko said Halushchenko would be suspended from his post. Responding in a statement on Facebook, he said he would defend himself in court.

“I believe that being suspended for the duration of the investigation is a civilized and proper course of action,” he said. “I will defend myself in the legal domain and prove my position.”

Halushchenko, who was energy minister from 2021 until July when he took over as justice minister, has not been formally charged.

Svyrydenko said Deputy Minister of Justice for European Integration Liudmyla Suhak will take over Halushchenko’s duties as acting minister.

The alleged ringleader of the scheme is a close associated of Zelenskyy’s, Timur Mindich, who was among those charged, according to local media reports.

Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Climate change is in the news during COP30. We’ve got tips to tackle your climate anxiety

posted in: All news | 0

By CALEIGH WELLS, Associated Press

Every autumn, news feeds get flooded with stories about climate change. That’s because around this time each year, global leaders gather to discuss collective efforts to limit our emissions of planet-warming gases, released primarily from oil, gas and coal.

Some of the information coming out of the COP30 conference is bleak. But it’s not just COP. Climate stories can be difficult to consume year-round, whether it’s about natural disasters, victims of heat waves or sea level rise or new studies about global warming impacts.

“When you throw a ton of scary facts and information at people, their nervous system shuts down. It’s a coping mechanism,” said Sarah Newman, founder and executive director of the Climate Mental Health Network.

That sense of dread, doom, fear or hopelessness gets lumped into a single term: climate anxiety. Surveys from the American Psychiatric Association have repeatedly shown that a significant amount of Americans experience climate anxiety.

Dealing with it, just like dealing with climate change, is an ongoing process. Here’s how to get started.

Climate anxiety different from general anxiety

Imagine you leave the house in the morning, and realize you left the stove on. There’s a fire hazard at home, and you’re feeling anxious about it. So you turn around and switch it off. The problem is solved, and so is your anxiety.

Climate change doesn’t work that way.

It activates different parts of the brain, according to a study published by the National Institutes of Health. While Generalized Anxiety Disorder often involves the part of the brain that handles fear, threat and emotion, climate anxiety activates parts of the brain that help with high cognition, willpower and tenacity.

“It’s an ongoing larger problem that I need to attend to over time and that is largely out of my control,” climate psychologist Thomas Doherty said. ”I can’t just flip a switch around climate change.”

The anxiety is more complex than a stove left on, because climate change is a more complex problem. The threat is indefinite, it’s largely out of each person’s control and addressing it requires repeated and variable action.

Doherty, who wrote a book about coping with climate anxiety, said that it isn’t inherently negative. It’s a natural reaction to a threat, and it’s the first step in a cyclical relationship with climate change.

“The rest of the cycle is ultimately taking some action to resolve the threat as best that we can,” he said.

First, cope and connect

Newman said that one of the most effective ways to combat climate anxiety is to find other people who are experiencing it too, and to talk about it.

Every year, New York City hosts something called Climate Week. Folks from all over descend upon Manhattan for hundreds of events and panels on energy, the environment and climate change.

Between 15 and 20 people showed up to one event about finding connection and hope in the face of climate change. It was intimate, but so is confiding feelings of dread and isolation with a room full of strangers.

“How many of you wake up in the morning with feelings of despair or hopelessness?” asked the leader at the front of the room.

Just about every hand sheepishly went up.

“Not just in the morning!” said a man in the front row. And an awkward chuckle of understanding swept through the room.

That group was addressing what Doherty said is one of the greatest risks of climate anxiety: isolation.

“Just like working on any problem, any issue, once you have a team around you, then you feel better. You’re not alone. You feel stronger,” he said.

Meetups such as Climate Cafes or groups like Climate Psychology Alliance have online and in-person events where people can share experiences and build resilience together.

Much of Newman’s work with the Climate Mental Health Network is about bringing people together to combat that feeling of isolation.

“When people start to recognize that, they’re not alone with what they’re feeling,” she said. “There’s an opportunity for people to move from that helpless state to one of empowerment.”

Many general anxiety treatments relate to calming the body and clearing the head, and Doherty said that all of those work with climate anxiety.

“It’s our same body. Our same brain, our same heart rate, blood pressure, our same ways of thinking,” he said.

Immediate grounding exercises include the 3-3-3 technique, where you name three things you see, three you hear and three parts of your body that you can move. Another one is the 5-4-3-2-1 technique, where you identify five things you can see, four things you can touch, three things you can hear, two things you can smell and one thing you can taste.

Doherty also recommends prioritizing rest and exercise, going outside in nature and focusing on the present moment. He calls all of those practices basic mental hygiene.

Related Articles


Traditional acai berry dishes surprise visitors to Brazil climate summit, no sugar added


As US skips climate talks in Brazil, leaders plead for other nations to unite


Pets contribute to greenhouse gases like us. Here’s how to reduce their carbon pawprint


Trump’s energy secretary slams UN climate conference in Brazil, where US absence is glaring


Crews are working to fix Alaska Native villages devastated by flooding. But will residents return?

Then, find a purpose

Doherty recommended channeling climate concern into something controllable, such as the impacts of climate change in your neighborhood, or even in your home.

“Take care of my own garden so to speak, before I try to plant a garden somewhere else,” he said.

That starts with something Doherty calls ceremonial actions. They don’t meaningfully change the world, but they’re easy, they can be repeated, they align with a person’s values and make them feel better, like picking up litter or bringing reusable bags to the grocery store.

Then those ceremonial actions fuel the desire and resilience needed for something larger, like getting rid of the gas appliances in the house, which could take years to afford and invest in. The U.N. lists 10 actions to reduce a person’s impact on the planet.

Climate anxiety is cyclical, because the sources of anxiety keep coming, and so does the need for coping mechanisms and actions. Newman said that there isn’t an easy switch between climate anxiety and climate optimism.

“I still carry those emotions and I still have the worry and I have the anger and I have the sadness, but I’m able to live with them in a different way,” she said.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

UN watchdog hasn’t been able to verify Iran’s stockpile of near-weapons grade uranium in months

posted in: All news | 0

By STEPHANIE LIECHTENSTEIN, Associated Press

VIENNA (AP) — The International Atomic Energy Agency has not been able to verify the status of Iran’s near weapons-grade uranium stockpile since Israel and the United States struck the country’s nuclear sites during the 12-day war in June, according to a confidential report by the U.N. nuclear watchdog circulated to member states and seen Wednesday by The Associated Press.

Related Articles


Climate change is in the news during COP30. We’ve got tips to tackle your climate anxiety


Global tuberculosis diagnoses rise to a record, but deaths fall, WHO reports


Winter Olympics sports resist push to add cyclocross and cross-country running to their program


Trump urges Israel to pardon Netanyahu, sparking concerns over US influence


Ukraine’s foreign minister presses G7 allies for support as Russia targets energy grid before winter

The agency warned that it “lost continuity of knowledge in relation to the previously declared inventories of nuclear material in Iran” at facilities affected by the war and stressed that this issue must be “urgently addressed.”

The report stressed that the IAEA’s “lack of access to this nuclear material in Iran for five months means that its verification — according to standard safeguards practice — is long overdue.”

According to the IAEA’s last report in September, Iran maintains a stockpile of 440.9 kilograms (972 pounds) of uranium enriched up to 60% purity — a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90%.

That stockpile could allow Iran to build as many as 10 nuclear bombs, should it decide to weaponize its program, IAEA director general Rafael Grossi warned in a recent interview with the AP. He added that it doesn’t mean that Iran has such a weapon.

Iran long has insisted its program is peaceful, but the IAEA and Western nations say Tehran had an organized nuclear weapons program up until 2003.

In this photo, released on Monday, Nov. 10, 2025 by the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, center, listens to explanations as he visits an exhibition of the country’s nuclear achievements during his tour to the Atomic Energy Organization, while he is accompanied by the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Mohammad Eslami, second right, in Tehran, Iran. (Atomic Energy Organization of Iran via AP)

IAEA seeks special report by Iran

According to the safeguards agreement that Iran has with the U.N. nuclear watchdog, Iran is obliged to produce a “special report” detailing the location and status of its nuclear material, including its highly enriched uranium stockpile, following events such as attacks or earthquakes. The special report must also address the status of the facilities affected by the June war.

The IAEA said Wednesday that “the provision of such a report is indispensable for the Agency to provide assurances that nuclear material subject to safeguards in Iran remains in peaceful nuclear activities and that the facilities subject to safeguards are not being misused.”

The report said that Iran explained in a letter to the IAEA on Nov. 11 that “any cooperation with the Agency is conditional on the decision of the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) of Iran.”

The IAEA report on Wednesday also said that Iran has not granted IAEA inspectors access to sites affected by the war.

Tehran did, however, allow the IAEA to inspect undamaged facilities after Grossi reached an agreement with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Cairo at the beginning of September.

Those facilities include the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant, the Tehran Research Reactor and three other nuclear facilities in Tehran.

The report also said that IAEA inspectors are traveling to Iran on Wednesday to conduct inspections at the Isfahan Nuclear Technology Center site.

The facility, some 350 kilometers (215 miles) southeast of Tehran, employs thousands of nuclear scientists. It is also home to three Chinese research reactors and laboratories associated with Iran’s atomic program.

During the war, Israel struck buildings at the Isfahan site, among them a uranium conversion facility. The U.S. also struck Isfahan with missiles.

Sanctions further isolate Tehran

Iran suspended all cooperation with the IAEA after the war with Israel.

IAEA chief Grossi then reached an agreement with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Cairo at the beginning of September to resume inspections.

But later that same month, the U.N. reimposed crushing sanctions on Iran, drawing an angry response from Tehran and leading the country to halt implementation of the Cairo agreement.

Iran is legally obliged to cooperate with the IAEA under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.

European powers decided to reimpose the U.N. sanctions via the so-called snapback mechanism after Iran failed to enter into direct talks with the U.S., resume full cooperation with the IAEA and clarify the status of its near weapons-grade uranium stockpile.

The sanctions freeze Iranian assets abroad, halt arms deals with Tehran, and penalize any development of Iran’s ballistic missile program, among other measures, further squeezing the country’s reeling economy and isolating Tehran after its atomic sites were repeatedly bombed during a 12-day war with Israel.

The Associated Press receives support for nuclear security coverage from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and Outrider Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Additional AP coverage of the nuclear landscape: https://apnews.com/projects/the-new-nuclear-landscape/