Anthropologist Aura Cumes, who testified as a forensic expert during the trial, said women suffered differently in the war than men did.
As for the Hurricanes, they again played without two of their top six defensemen in Jalen Chatfield and Sean Walker. Chatfield hadn’t played since Game 4 of the second-round series against conference top seed Washington, missing five straight games with an apparent lower-body injury.Walker has missed the past two games since taking a jarring. open-ice hit from Greer in Game 2.
Coach Rod Brind’Amour was unsure whether either could be an option for this series even if the Hurricanes somehow pushed it far enough.“I was hopeful Chatfield being more day to day, but he just still hasn’t got in there with us,” Brind’Amour said before the game. “Until he’s out there I guess practicing with us, he’s not an option. Walker, same thing.”The blue-liner injuries had led Carolina to force top prospect Alexander Nikishin into the lineup. His first three NHL games have all come in the postseason, on the road, and he tallied his first NHL point with a terrific pass that sprung Logan Stankoven for Monday’s first goal.
Nikishin made his home debut Wednesday, logging 15:36 of ice time.FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — Longtime New England Patriots center David Andrews is retiring from the NFL.
The Patriots said that Andrews, who spent all 10 of his seasons with the team before he was released in March, will retire at a news conference on Monday.
An undrafted free agent from Georgia, Andrews started 121 of 124 regular-season games he played in and also played in 12 playoff games. He also played in three Super Bowls, winning two, and was the last remaining offensive starter from the Patriots’ 2018 championship team., Kennedy wrongly claimed that the only vaccines tested against a placebo, or dummy shot, were for COVID-19.
Sen. Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican who chairs the committee, briefly interrupted the hearing to say, “For the record, that’s not true” — pointing to placebo-controlled studies of the rotavirus, measles and HPV vaccines.Concerned by rhetoric about how vaccines are tested, a group of doctors recently compiled a list of more than 120 vaccine clinical trials spanning decades, most of them placebo-controlled, including for shots against polio, hepatitis B, mumps and tetanus.
“It directly debunks the claim that vaccines were never tested against placebo,” said Dr. Jake Scott, a Stanford University infectious disease physician who’s helping lead the project.Antivaccine groups argue that some substances scientists call a placebo may not really qualify, although the list shows simple saline shots are common.