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Environmental groups sue FAA over SpaceX Texas rocket launch

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Cape Canaveral. Fla. Wildlife and environmental groups sued the Federal Aviation Administration on Monday over SpaceX’s launch last month of its giant rocket from Texas.

SpaceX’s Starship soared 24 miles (39 kilometers) high before exploding over the Gulf of Mexico on April 20. The rocket’s self-destruct system caused the nearly 400-foot (120-meter) rocket to blow up, as it spun out of control just minutes into the test flight.

An attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the plaintiffs, said the groups are suing over what they consider to be the FAA’s failure to fully consider the environmental impacts of the Starship program near Boca Chica Beach in South Texas. They asked the court to throw out the five-year license the FAA granted to SpaceX.

The FAA declined comment, noting it doesn’t comment on ongoing litigation. The agency is overseeing the accident investigation and has ordered all SpaceX Starships grounded until it’s certain that public safety will not be compromised.

Over the weekend, SpaceX founder and chief executive, Elon Musk, said his company could be ready to launch the next Starship in six to eight weeks with the FAA’s OK.

No injuries or significant damage to public property were reported from any of the rocket wreckage or flying pad debris. A large crater was carved into the concrete pad, as most of the rocket’s 33 main engines ignited at liftoff.

The launch pad is on a remote site on the southernmost tip of Texas, just below South Padre Island, and about 20 miles from Brownsville.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reported last week that large concrete chunks, stainless steel sheets, metal and other objects were hurled thousands of feet (hundreds of meters) from the pad. In addition, a plume of pulverized concrete sent material up to 6.4 miles (4 kilometers) northwest of the pad, the service noted.

It was the first launch of a full-size Starship, with the sci-fi-looking spacecraft on top the huge booster rocket. The company plans to use it to send people and cargo to the moon and, ultimately, Mars. NASA wants to use Starship to ferry astronauts to the lunar surface as soon as 2025.

Joining the Center for Biological Diversity in the lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, are the American Bird Conservancy, Surfrider Foundation, Save RGV (Rio Grande Valley) and the Carrizo/Comecrudo Nation of Texas.

“It’s vital that we protect life on Earth even as we look to the stars in this modern era of spaceflight,” the Center for Biological Diversity’s Jared Margolis said in a statement. “Federal officials should defend vulnerable wildlife and frontline communities, not give a pass to corporate interests that want to use treasured coastal landscapes as a dumping ground for space waste.”

Over the weekend, Musk said changes are being made at the launch pad to avoid what he called a dust storm and “rock tornado” at the next launch.

“To the best of our knowledge there has not been any meaningful damage to the environment that we’re aware of,” Musk said.

Musk has promised to make improvements to the next Starship before it flies. The self-destruct system will need to be modified, he said, so that the rocket explodes immediately — not 40 seconds or so afterward, as was the case with this inaugural run, he said.

His remarks were made to a subscriber-only Twitter chat Saturday night that was later posted by others online. (AP)

MIAA chief at assisant sinuspinde ng Ombudsman sa ‘anonymous’ complaints

Sinibak ng Office of the Ombudsman si Manila International Airport Authority (MIAA) acting general manager Cesar Chiong at acting assistant general manager na si Irene Montalbo hinggil sa mga akusasyon ng grave abuse of authority at grave misconduct.

Ayon sa mga reklamo ng mga anonymous MIAA officials, si Chiong ay nag-reassign ng 285 na MIAA employees ng walang sapat na paliwanag at walang mga administrative complaints.

Sinabi rin ng Ombudsman na nilabag ni Chiong ang kanyang awtoridad noong itinalaga niya si Montalbo bilang assistant general manager para sa finance and administration sa kabila ng unsatisfactory rating ito noong 2020.

“Montalbo cannot deny her participation in the reassignment of MIAA employees because, as the designated Assistant General Manager for Finance and Administration, it is her function to advise the General Manager in the formulation and implementation of administrative matters. Based on the evidence on record, it appears that the evidence of guilt of the respondents are strong and the charge against them involve Grave Misconduct which may warrant their removal from the service,” ayon sa Ombudsman.

Dahil dito, pinatawan ang dalawa ng suspensyon ng hanggang anim na buwan nang walang sweldo.

Si Chiong ay naniniwala na mabibigyan siya ng pagkakataon na ipahayag ang kanyang panig, samantalang naghihintay pa ng komento si Montalbo.

5 PNP high-ranking officials hinalo ni Acorda

Umupo sa bagong pwesto ang limang matataas na opisyal ng National Police (PNP) sa pinakahuling isinagawang reshuffle.

Sinabi ni PNP chief General Benjamin Acorda Jr. na ang kanyang bagong appointment order ay naglipat kay Brigadier General Jose Melencio Nartatez Jr. bilang bagong Director for Intelligence ng PNP at si Brigadier General Rommel Francisco Marbil naman ang papalit bilang Director for Comptrollership.

Si Brigadier General Vincent Calanoga ay itinalaga bilang acting director ng Police Regional Office 8 habang si Brigadier General Roger Laroza Quesada naman ay nai-assign bilang acting deputy Regional Director para sa Administration ng PRO 5.

Si Brigadier General Limuel Esto Obon naman ang bago nang director ng Human Rights Affairs Office.

Ayon kay Acorda, naniniwala siya na magdadala ng kanilang kasanayan at karanasan ang mga bagong talaga sa mga bagong posisyon upang pamunuan ng propesyunalismo, integridad at dedikasyon sa serbisyo ang kanilang mga yunit at opisina.

New dig likely buries hopes of unearthing Dutch WWII loot

Ommeren, Netherlands. An officially sanctioned hunt for a stash of precious jewelry looted by the Nazis during World War II and purportedly buried in a sleepy Dutch village has — like many previous searches — failed to unearth any treasure.

Archeologists and historians called into the village of Ommeren, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) southeast of Amsterdam, pushed a detection device called a magnetometer along a row of fruit trees and across a field Monday morning and used a mechanical digger to excavate holes in the soggy soil.

They were rewarded with little more than a World War II-era bullet, some twisted scrap metal, a crumpled car wheel and muddy boots.

Municipal officials hope that the failure of the team — that included members of a local historical society and archeologists from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam — to find treasure will put an end to amateur sleuths visiting the village.

“I think there’s minimal chance of finding anything. We dug three holes here of places where we could find through the magnetometer. There was a signal, and none of these holes have found the treasure,” said archeologist Martijn Bink. “So I think this is all what we’ll do. We won’t go any further.”

The local municipality helped fund the latest search after the publication early this year of a hand-drawn map with a red letter X supposedly marking the spot where Nazi troops buried jewelry stolen from a blown-up bank vault.

The appearance of the map sparked a modern-day treasure hunt, with prospectors using metal detectors digging up sites around Ommeren despite a ban.

“A lot of people came digging here … without permission. Caused a lot of inconvenience for the residents,” said Pieter Neven of Buren municipality.

The treasure hunts began after the Dutch National Archive published a mountain of documents — as it does at the start of each year — including the map, which swiftly went viral.

“We’re quite astonished about the story itself. But the attention it’s getting … as well,” National Archive researcher Annet Waalkens said in January.

She said the story started in the summer of 1944 in the Nazi-occupied city of Arnhem — made famous by the star-studded movie “A Bridge Too Far” — when a bomb smashed a bank vault, scattering gold, jewelry and cash across a street.

German forces scooped up as much of the loot as they could and kept it in ammunition boxes, she said, citing an account by a German soldier interviewed by Dutch authorities after the war. As the Germans were pushed back by an Allied advance, they buried the ammunition boxes in Ommeren, according to the soldier’s account.

Dutch authorities recovered the map and searched Ommeren shortly after the war without finding anything. Then the scent went cold until publication of the map triggered the January hunt.

Monday’s archeological efforts also dug up nothing and may have buried the last hope of recovering the loot.

Pinag iisipan ni PBBM ang pagbabalik ng mask mandates

Pinag aaralan ng gob­yerno ang posibleng pagbabalik ng mandatory na pagsusuot ng face mask sa gitna ng tumataas na kaso ng COVID-19.

Ayon kay Pangulong Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., umaasa ang gobyerno na hindi na tataas pa ang kaso ng COVID-19 sa bansa.

“We might have to think about it kung talagang… But ang ating — ako ang tinitingnan ko is because although ‘yung rate of increase lumalaki, ang baseline natin na sini­mulan eh maliit lang so hopefully we’re still ano — we’re still going to be able to do it,” ayon kay Marcos sa interview ng media habang sakay ng PR 001 patungong Amerika.

Sinabi rin ni Marcos na lumalabas na dapat muling itulak ang pagbabakuna upang mabawasan ang nagkakaroon ng impeksyon lalo na at sumasabay pa ang mainit na panahon.

“But it looks like, we will have to conduct again, especially for young people, we’ll have to conduct again a vaccination push para mabawasan na ‘yan, para mabawasan ‘yan especially with people being a little bit, shall we say, nahihirapan na nga eh dahil sa init,” ayon kay Marcos.

Ayon pa sa kanya, mas humihina ang katawan ng tao dahil sa init kaya mas madali kapitan ng COVID-19.

“Humihina  ang katawan and that will make them more vulnerable to COVID again,” ayon kay Marcos.

Idinagdag ni Marcos na titingnan din ang opinyon ng Inter-Agency Task Force at ng Department of Health tungkol sa mandatory na pagsusuot ng face mask.

“So we’ll look at it. Tingnan natin kung may guidance ang IATF, may guidance ang DOH. I think — I hope we don’t have to but we might but I hope not,” ani Marcos.

Nauna dito, sinabi ni DOH officer-in-charge Maria Rosario Vergeire na ang pagtaas ng positivity rate ay dahil sa ilang factors, kabilang ang mobility ng populasyon tuwing holidays gayundin at ang bilang ng mga taong kumukuha ng COVID-19 test.

Presyo ng LPG tataas

Idineklara ng Petron Corp. na tataas ang presyo ng liquefied petroleum gas o LPG ng P0.85 kada kilo samantalang ang AutoLPG ay magmamahal ng P0.48 bawat litro ngayong Mayo matapos ang rollback na ipinatupad ng mga kompanya ng langis ngayong buwan.

Ayon sa advisory, ito ay bunsod ng presyo ng kontrata sa pandaigdigang presyo ng LPG para sa buwan ng Mayo.

Ang bagong presyo ay iiral sa ganap a 6 a.m. ngayong araw ng Martes, May 1, 2023.

Wala pang anunsyo ang ibang kumpanya hinggil sa pagtaas ng presyo ng LPG ngayong buwan ng Mayo.

17 units ng laptop, pinitik sa 2 magkahiwalay na nakawan

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Sta. Rosa City, Laguna. Pinasok ng mga magnanakaw ang isang eskwelahan at isang computer shop ng hindi pa natutukoy na mga suspek sa dalawang magkahiwalay na insidente ng nakawan sa lungsod na ito kamakalawa.

Nakulimbat sa dalawang insidente ang 17 units ng iba’t ibang brand ng laptop.

Ayon sa ulat ng Santa Rosa City Police Station, inireport na nawalan ng 10 laptop ang Saint Paul at Mark School sa Block 1, Lot 3, Panorama Ville sa Brgy. Dita.

Lumabas sa imbestigasyon na nakapasok ang mga magnanakaw sa pamamagitan ng pagsira sa mga window bar sa likod ng Technology and Livelihood Education (TLE) room.

Tinatayang nasa P279,500 ang kabuuang halaga ng mga ninakaw na Acer laptops.

Sa nabanggit ding barangay, ang AJPCMIX Computer Parts Trading na pag-aari ni Alvie Joy Sudetran ay nanakawan din ng pitong iba’t ibang brand ng laptop na nagkakahalaga ng P71,600.

Natuklasan ang nakawan noong Huwebes ng umaga matapos makita na sinira ng mga suspek ang mga padlock ng gate at pwersahang pumasok sa pinto.

Kasalukuyang nagsasagawa ng follow-up operations at imbestigasyon ang pulisya at sinusuri na ngayon ang CCTV footage na naka-install sa loob ng mga ninakawang lugar  upang kilalanin ang mga suspek.

PH Red Cross backs DOH’s measles-rubella, polio vax campaigns

The Philippine Red Cross (PRC) has announced its participation in “Chikiting Ligtas,” the Department of Health’s (DOH) measles-rubella and polio supplementary immunization campaign, set to take place nationwide from May 1 to 31.

The program is designed to avert an outbreak of measles, following the lower-than-expected turnout in previous immunization campaigns, especially at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The campaign seeks to administer the measles-rubella vaccine to children 9 to 59 months old and the polio vaccine to children zero to 59 months old.

In 2021, the PRC also supported DOH’s measles-rubella and polio vaccination programs and immunized 1,056,209 children against polio and 193,241 children against measles.

The humanitarian organization’s involvement in the immunization drive is part of its commitment to promote primary healthcare coverage, which includes immunization.

“We are proud to be part of this campaign to eliminate measles, rubella, and polio in the Philippines. As an organization that is committed to promoting health and well-being, we believe that the power of immunization cannot be overstated. It is a vital tool in protecting our communities and preventing the spread of diseases,” PRC chairman and CEO Richard J. Gordon said in a news release on Monday.

“I encourage everyone to work together and ensure that every person, especially the most vulnerable, has access to life-saving vaccines,” he added.

In coordination with local governments and local health officers, the PRC is set to mobilize its vaccination teams across its 102 chapters nationwide to support the DOH’s campaign to eliminate measles, rubella, and polio in the Philippines.

The PRC chapters will also help in the communication and advocacy part of the campaign. PRC will mobilize its barangay-based RC 143 volunteers and encourage doctors and nurses to join its vaccination teams. All vaccines will be sourced from the DOH.

The PRC vaccination teams will be trained both by the local government units and the PRC health services department. 

PhilHealth: I-remit ang mga premium ng mga empleyado sa tamang oras

Nagpaalala ang Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) sa mga employer na i-remit sa oras ang kontribusyon ng kanilang mga empleyado.

“In commemoration of Labor Day and in honor of our workers’ hard work, we would like to remind all employers, both public and private, to remit and report your employees’ PhilHealth premiums on time,” ayon kay  PhilHealth acting president and chief executive officer Emmanuel R. Ledesma Jr. sa isang news release kanina.

“We have recently enhanced the EPRS – our online payment facility for employers – in partnership with MyEG Philippines, to allow more payment options for employers such as electronic wallets GCash and Maya, along with debit and credit card payments. The payment process has also been simplified with the EPRS. Kailangan lang mag-generate ang employer o ang PhilHealth Employer Engagement Representative o PEER ng Statement of Premium Accounts (SPA) para sa buwan na babayaran, pagkatapos ay piliin lang ang kanilang preferred payment option at magbayad na,” ang paliwanag niya.

Sinabi ni Ledesma na ang isang payment confirmation email ay agad na ipapadala sa employer pagkatapos ng bawat matagumpay na transaksyon.

“Maaari pong i-access ng ating employers ang EPRS sa PhilHealth website, https://eprs01.philhealth.gov.ph,” dagdag niya.

Sinabi ni Ledesma na ang PhilHealth ay nakipag tulungan sa MyEG Philippines upang suportahan ang Republic Act No. 11032, o Ease of Doing Business and Efficient Government Service Delivery Act, na nag-uutos sa lahat ng mga kagawaran at ahensya ng gobyerno na nagpatibay ng isang digital na sistema ng pagbabayad para sa mga disbursement at koleksyon ng gobyerno upang maisulong ang mahusay na paghahatid ng serbisyo at mapabilis ang mga transaksyon.

Isinaaktibo ng PhilHealth ang pagtanggap ng online payment sa Member Portal nito noong 2021, na nagpapahintulot sa mga self-earning na Indibidwal na magbayad para sa kanilang mga kontribusyon gamit ang GCash, Maya, at mga credit at debit card.

10 of the best films to watch this May: From Fast X to The Little Mermaid

Including Fast X, The Little Mermaid and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3 – Nicholas Barber lists this month’s unmissable releases.

1. Reality

On a Saturday afternoon in June 2017, two FBI agents visited the Georgia home of Reality Winner (yes, that’s her actual name), a 25-year-old US intelligence officer who had leaked a secret government document about Russian meddling in the presidential election. The interrogation was recorded, and Tina Satter used the transcript verbatim as the script for an acclaimed play, Is This a Room. Now Satter has turned that play into a gripping chamber piece starring Sydney Sweeney as Winner. The title has a double meaning. It’s Winner’s first name, but it’s also a hint that the film is as close to reality as a drama can be, even as Satter keeps reminding us of the artifice inherent in all art. “Not only is Reality inventively mounted and extraordinarily tense,” says Steph Green at IndieWire, “but across 85 taut minutes, it proves… that Sydney Sweeney is the real deal.”

Released on 29 May in the US

2. What’s Love Got to Do with It?

No relation to the Tina Turner biopic from 1993, What’s Love Got to Do with It? is a Working Title romantic comedy in the Richard Curtis tradition, but with a cross-cultural twist: its screenwriter, Jemima Khan, used to be married to Imran Khan, the former Prime Minister of Pakistan, so she knows about relationships that span cultural and religious divides. Lily James and Shazad Latif star as Zoe and Kazim, who have been platonic friends since childhood. When Kazim reveals that he is traveling to Lahore to marry a woman from Pakistan he has never met, Zoe decides to make a documentary about his arranged or “assisted” marriage. But will she realize, along the way, that she’d prefer to marry him herself? “Propelled by zingy one-liners and engaging performances, the film is an enjoyable watch,” says Mohammad Zaheer at BBC Culture. “[It] manages to color within the familiar lines of the genre, yet still bring something unique to the table.”

Released on 5 May in the US and 25 May in Denmark

3. You Hurt My Feelings

Beth (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and Don (Tobias Menzies) are a blissfully happy couple. Don is a successful therapist, and Beth is the writer of a well-received memoir. She might be struggling with her debut novel, but Don is a pillar of support and encouragement. But then comes the ultimate betrayal: Beth overhears him confessing that he isn’t a fan of her writing, after all. Nicole Holofcener, the writer-director of Friends with Money and Enough Said (which also starred Louis-Dreyfus) has made a “brilliantly knowing comedy”, says Alissa Wilkinson at Vox. “The film’s expertly sketched characters… portray with great affection the ways we hide the truth from one another out of love – and the resulting film is warm-hearted and rueful and hilarious in all the best ways.”

Released on 26 May in the US and Canada

4. Master Gardener

As the screenwriter of Taxi Driver, and the writer-director of American Gigolo and First Reformed, Paul Schrader specializes in heavyweight thrillers about “God’s lonely man”: a solitary anti-hero whose obsessively self-contained persona hides a powder keg of pain and violence. So it’s no surprise that the lonely man in Master Gardener ends up doing more than pruning roses. A horticulturalist (Joel Edgerton) who tends to the grounds of a plantation mansion owned by a wealthy dowager (Sigourney Weaver), he seems to be dedicated to his work, to the exclusion of all else. But when the dowager asks him to train her grand-niece (Quintessa Swindell), his long-buried criminal past bursts up through the soil. “For all the film’s provocations, both serious and mischievous, it’s a remarkably elegant, subtle piece, its dynamics tightly reined in,” says Jonathan Romney at Screen. “Edgerton gives an extremely fine-tuned performance, while Weaver is coolly imposing and eventually terrifying.”

Released on 19 May in the US and 26 May in the UK and Ireland

5. Hypnotic

Nothing is what it seems in Hypnotic, a mind-bending conspiracy thriller from Robert Rodriguez (Sin City, Spy Kids). Ben Affleck stars as a police detective who is haunted by the disappearance of his daughter. He is investigating a series of bank robberies when a mystery woman (Alice Braga) tells him about “hypnotics”: people who have the power to make others believe and do anything they want by uttering a single sentence. “Taking a page from The Matrix, Limitless and Memento – and whole chapters from sci-fi trickster Philip K Dick – this slick mix of special effects and practical ingenuity puts Affleck in a fun position, and the slightly grizzled star’s still got the clench-jawed charisma to pull it off,” says Peter Debruge in Variety. “Keeping up is like working out in a gym where gravity keeps changing. Just when things start to get heavy, the floor drops out from under you.”

Released on 11 May in Australia, 12 May in the US & 26 May in the UK

6. Still: A Michael J Fox Movie

In Back to the Future and his other 1980s hits, Michael J Fox embodied youthful vitality, but the actor was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease when he was aged just 29. After seven years of keeping the condition hidden, he went public with it in 1998, and has since campaigned for greater awareness and understanding of the disease. Fox tells that story in his own words in Still, a documentary that splices interview segments with home movies, clips from Fox’s films, and re-enactments of key moments in his career. The director, Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth), “delivers the actor’s life story both inventively and with the utmost sensitivity,” says Tomris Laffly at AV Club. “Still is a work of empowerment and empathy, a celebration of Fox’s life as an actor and philanthropist… It’s beautiful stuff.”

Released on 12 May on Apple TV+

7. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3

It’s been six years since Marvel’s second Guardians of the Galaxy film came out. In 2018, the year after its release, some offensive jokes made by its writer-director, James Gunn, came to light, and the studio responded by firing him. A few months after that, they hired him again, but by then Gunn was busy working on The Suicide Squad for Marvel’s competitors, DC, hence the long delay. Still, Star-Lord (Chris Pratt), Gamora (Zoe Saldana), Rocket (Bradley Cooper), Drax (Dave Bautista) and their buddies are finally back for more interstellar swashbuckling – and this time they’re up against the High Evolutionary (Chukwudi Iwuji). It will probably be the Guardians’ last adventure, though: Gunn has now signed up to oversee all of DC’s films, and to direct a Superman reboot.

On general release from 5 May

8. The Little Mermaid

Another month, another live-action-and-CGI remake of a classic (well, almost classic) Disney cartoon. But this one is more distinctive than most, because a black actress, Halle Bailey, is playing the title character, who was white in the 1989 cartoon. Besides, the film’s director, Rob Marshall (Chicago, Mary Poppins Returns), argues that his version of The Little Mermaid is progressive in other ways, too. “The character goes back to Hans Christian Andersen from another century,” he told Nick Romano at EW, “but at the same time, even in 1989, it felt in some ways like a very modern woman, someone who sees her life differently than anyone around her, and goes to find that dream.” She and Prince Eric, played by Jonah Hauer-King, “really teach the world about prejudice and about breaking down barriers and walls between these two worlds.” Also, there’s a singing crab.

On general release from 24 May

9. Fast X

Yes, it’s the tenth film in the unstoppable petrolhead series (or the 11th if you include Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw), a franchise which started with indie thrillers about undercover cops and illegal street racers and now encompasses global science-fiction blockbusters featuring some of Hollywood’s biggest names. The new additions this time are Jason Momoa as the vengeful son of a drug lord killed in Fast Five (2011); Rita Moreno as the grandmother of Dom (Vin Diesel) and Mia (Jordana Brewster); and Brie Larson as their contact in the secret service. Still, Fast X is about action as much as it is about actors, as the film’s director Louis Leterrier told Esquire Middle East. “They went into space in number nine, and I was like, ‘Okay… there’s no way I can top that.’ But what I can do is do stuff that we’ve never done before practically, such as rolling a one-tonne bomb – an actual one-tonne metal ball – in the streets of Rome, and hope not to destroy the Colosseum.”

On general release from 17 May

10. The Eight Mountains

All of the mountains in The Eight Mountains are unspoilt, idyllic and breathtakingly beautiful. Some of them are in the Himalayas, but most are in the Italian alps, where Pietro (Luca Marinelli), a city boy from Turin, befriends Bruno (Alessandro Borghi), the only child left in a remote rural village. Adapted from Paolo Cognetti’s award-winning novel, Charlotte Vandermeersch and Felix van Groeningen’s spectacularly scenic drama is a sensitive chronicle of their friendship through the decades. “This is the rare movie that understands how tied we are to the physical and psychological spaces of childhood,” says Justin Chang at the Los Angeles Times, “how our families and the traditions they raised us with can be both nurturing and limiting. More than anything, it brings a little-seen world to life with an almost palpable physicality.”

Released on 5 May in Japan, 12 May in the UK and Ireland, and 19 May in Spain and Finland