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2025-01-24
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HANOVER, N.H. (AP) — Connor Amundsen scored 25 points as Dartmouth beat Vermont 84-54 on Saturday. Amundsen shot 7 of 11 from the field, including 7 for 8 from 3-point range, and went 4 for 5 from the line for the Big Green (5-7). Ryan Cornish scored 23 points and added nine rebounds and eight assists. Brandon Mitchell-Day shot 4 of 8 from the field and 7 for 8 from the line to finish with 15 points, while adding nine rebounds. Jace Roquemore led the way for the Catamounts (6-8) with 14 points. TJ Hurley added nine points for Vermont. Nick Fiorillo also had eight points. NEXT UP Dartmouth plays Wednesday against Colby-Sawyer at home, and Vermont hosts Elms College on Monday. The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar .

BALTIMORE (AP) — Toby Nnadozie had 20 points in Coppin State's 68-60 victory against Navy on Saturday. Nnadozie added three steals for the Eagles (1-12). Jonathan Dunn scored 13 points while going 4 of 13 from the floor, including 1 for 3 from 3-point range, and 4 for 6 from the line and added eight rebounds. Julius Ellerbe had 11 points and shot 3 for 9 (1 for 4 from 3-point range) and 4 of 6 from the free-throw line. The Eagles snapped a 12-game skid. The Midshipmen (3-9) were led in scoring by Austin Benigni, who finished with 23 points. Jinwoo Kim added 13 points and three steals for Navy. Jordan Pennick finished with 10 points. Coppin State took the lead with 3:38 to go in the first half and never looked back. The score was 28-22 at halftime, with Dunn racking up eight points. Coppin State outscored Navy in the second half by two points, with Nnadozie scoring a team-high 13 points after halftime. Coppin State plays Saturday against Georgetown on the road, and Navy visits William & Mary on Sunday. The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar .The latest move in the province’s effort to make primary health care more accessible for Albertans is a new primary care physician compensation model. The model is the result of a commitment made last year, the province says, and a memorandum of understanding with the Alberta Medical Association in order to attract more doctors to Alberta and alleviate pressures in other areas of the health-care system. “We have worked with the Alberta Medical Association to address the challenges that primary care physicians are facing,” Health Minister Adriana LaGrange told reporters Thursday. “This model will provide the supports physicians need and improve patient access to the care they need.” The new model is structured to encourage physicians to grow the number of patients they care for and encourage full-time practice. Incentives include increases for high panel numbers, providing after-hours care, improving technology and enhancing team-based care, all with the goal of increasing the appeal to provide more accessible and higher-quality care. “Albertans must be able to access a primary care provider,” Premier Danielle Smith said. “We’ve been working hard with our partners at the Alberta Medical Association to develop a compensation model that will not only support Alberta’s doctors but also improve Albertans’ access to physicians. Ultimately, our deal will make Alberta an even more attractive place to practise family medicine.” Additionally, family physicians who are not compensated through the traditional fee-for-service model, such as those who provide inpatient care in hospitals or rural generalists, will now receive higher pay rates under their payment model, known as the alternative relationship plan. This announcement was well received by AMA, which released a president’s letter referring to Thursday as “a great day for Alberta’s health-care system and our patients.” Similar cautious optimism was provided by the Alberta NDP, which released a statement from health critic Sara Hoffman in regards to this “good first step,” though she believes it to be overdue. “Hopefully this will stop the further hemorrhaging of health-care workers who have had to close practices, move away from our province and even leave the profession,” said Hoffman. “This UCP government must now be focused on and committed to recruiting, retraining and showing respect to all health-care workers.” Enrolment in the primary care physician compensation model will begin in January with full implementation in spring 2025, provided at least 500 physicians enrol.

Northern Kentucky knocks off South Carolina State 58-47

President-elect Donald Trump said Tuesday he planned to expedite federal regulatory approvals, including all environmental permits, for any company or individual proposing to invest $1 billion or more in a construction project. “Any person or company investing ONE BILLION DOLLARS, OR MORE, in the United States of America, will receive fully expedited approvals and permits, including, but in no way limited to, all Environmental approvals,” Trump wrote Tuesday afternoon on Truth Social . “GET READY TO ROCK!!!” The announcement on Trump’s own social network comes as lawmakers in Congress are working to pass a bipartisan bill aimed at easing federal permitting requirements, a step widely seen as necessary to hasten building of upgrades in roads, bridges and energy systems as aging infrastructure heaves under pressure from increasingly extreme weather and a growing population. During the first half of his term, President Joe Biden signed into law three landmark bills aimed at modernizing U.S. infrastructure. That includes the hundreds of billions of dollars earmarked in the Inflation Reduction Act for clean energy projects, marking arguably the largest government investment into meeting demand for fossil fuels with lower-carbon alternatives outside of China. But the federal permitting process that developed in the 55 years since the passage of the National Environmental Policy Act slowed the deployment of those dollars as opponents of anything from a solar farm to a lithium mine to a natural gas pipeline seized on the country’s bedroom ecological-protection law to halt or delay projects with lawsuits. Obtaining final environmental permits for a project subject to the NEPA process takes on average 4 1/2 years, according to a 2020 study by the White House Council on Environmental Quality. The average for electrical transmission projects is even higher, with the majority taking 6 1/2 years to get final approvals. Since the cheapest technologies to generate zero-carbon renewable electricity ― such as wind turbines and solar panels ― require vast areas of land often far from the cities where power is used, transmission lines are seen as one of the main bottlenecks to bringing more clean power onto the grid. The bipartisan deal brokered by Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) sought to ease the process. But some environmental groups came out against what they called the “dirty deal” because the legislation benefited fossil fuel companies as well as clean-energy projects. Progressive critics of the permitting overhaul argued instead for increasing staffing and budgets at federal agencies to add more capacity to assess and make judgments on applications. But some of the Democrats’ most prominent self-described climate hawks in Congress backed the bill Manchin negotiated, citing repeated analyses showing that the permitting reform package promised to slash more planet-heating emissions on net by helping clean-energy projects reach the finish line than it contributed by clearing the way for more gas infrastructure. Unless Congress manages to pass the bill in the coming weeks, the GOP majorities set to control both the Senate and the House of Representatives are unlikely to enact the compromise package. It’s unclear, however, what Republicans may propose as an alternative. While some top GOP leaders have vowed to gut the Inflation Reduction Act, others have pleaded with colleagues to preserve much of the clean-energy spending, which has overwhelmingly gone to red and purple states. The changes to energy policy come as the U.S. is experiencing its first major uptick in demand for electricity in three decades thanks to the need for more data centers to power artificial intelligence software, more air conditioners to keep Americans cool amid worsening heat waves, and record purchases of electric vehicles. At the same time, the U.S. power grid is becoming less reliable and more expensive as dependable coal and nuclear plants shut down in favor of gas and renewables that, while cheap individually, have driven up electricity costs in many markets where the two sectors combined make up the majority of power generation. Trump pledged on the campaign trail to slash electricity prices, and drive up U.S. oil and gas production up beyond the record levels set under Biden. Biden Tees Up 2 More Major Nuclear Power Wins For Trump A Democrat Is Running On An Issue That Was Once Controversial Donald Trump Takes A Skeptical View Of Nuclear Energy On Joe Rogan’s PodcastAlexander: Is diminished USC-UCLA game another reminder of what we’ve lost?

Anthony Albanese gets down and dirty in deal making and breaking as Senate rushes to Christmas finishInvesco Mortgage Capital Inc. stock remains steady Tuesday, still outperforms market

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