Month: November 2019

Home / Month: November 2019

Toro Rosso conducted development work on both the car and the driver fronts, entrusting its STR12 for the day to rookie Sean Gelael.

The Indonesian F2 racer suffered an issue in the morning when his car grinded to a halt with a mior electrical problem.

He was back in action shortly afterwards and consistently worked his way through the team’s program, and finished his session a very happy young man.

“Today is a day I will never forget – to finally drive a Formula 1 car is something every driver dreams of, and to do it with Scuderia Toro Rosso makes it even more special,” Gemael enthused.

“What an amazing feeling! This year’s car is a beast, it’s so quick! I settled in nicely throughout the day and we definitely made progress.

“I was able to complete plenty of laps and get used to the car quickly. The power and overall grip is amazing and, compared to the Formula 2 car I drive, the grip under braking and the kerb riding are two of the biggest differences I felt.

“Honestly, it’s really fun to drive and I’d like to thank everyone who made this possible! I now can’t wait to drive the STR12 again in a few months’ time at the test in Hungary.”

  • Bahrain test Day 1: Hamilton heads Giovinazzi

Toro Rosso head of vehicle performance Jody Eggington praised the 20-year-old’s contribution and performance.

“Sean acclimatised himself very well, covering a number of test items across a range of tyre compounds, gathering some very useful data for the team.

“He drove consistently, making no mistakes and he therefore should be very happy.

“We will head into tonight with a lot of data to analyse and a further packed run program for tomorrow – Daniil will be driving in the morning and Carlos in the afternoon.”

GALLERY: All the action from the Day 1 in-season testing at Bahrain

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Hotel owner Gordon Sondland, who is scheduled to testify before Congress on Wednesday, is a pivotal witness in the impeachment inquiry.

When Gordon Sondland arrived at the Capitol last month to provide what would be pivotal testimony in the Trump impeachment inquiry, a reporter asked the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, “Are you here to salvage your reputation?”

“I don’t have a reputation to salvage,” Sondland shot back.

Until recently, Sondland, 62, had a pretty low profile outside his hometown of Portland, Ore., where he and his wife, Katy Durant, are big Republican donors and contributors to numerous arts and civic organizations.

Now, as Sondland prepares to testify publicly before congressional investigators Wednesday, he finds himself in the middle of a Category 5 political storm.

Congressional investigators are looking into whether President Trump withheld security assistance from Ukraine to pressure the government to say it was investigating former Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukrainian gas company.

Sondland, who helped reach out to the Ukrainian government on Trump’s behalf, first told Congress that the president was simply interested in battling corruption. He had demanded no favors in exchange for security assistance, he claimed.

But Sondland later amended his testimony, saying the aid package was in fact contingent on an investigation into the Bidens.

A strive for prominence

The impeachment inquiry has given Sondland a notoriety he never bargained for when he became EU ambassador.

The son of Holocaust survivors, Sondland dropped out of college early and got into commercial real estate. At just 28, he bought and renovated the bankrupt Roosevelt Hotel in Seattle, where he was born.

Today, his company, Provenance Hotels, owns 14 hotels, including six in Portland.

“He sees a good property that’s kind of in the right location and makes enough of an investment in it to make it a highly desirable place to stay,” says Len Bergstein, a public affairs consultant who has worked with Sondland.

Sondland has worked hard to be seen as a civic leader and cares a lot about how he is seen, Bergstein says. When Sondland worked out a deal with local government to acquire some land for a hotel, he insisted that he be referred to as a “pillar of the community” in the press release the city put out, Bergstein says.

“He was in many ways exercising his political muscles to try and up his profile, to take him from a kind of a noted and successful businessperson in a relatively narrow sense to much larger circles of prominence in the community,” Bergstein says.

According to Oregon Business, Sondland is a big fan of Ayn Rand, whose books promoting free market capitalism are popular with many libertarian conservatives.

But he has mainly donated to moderate Republicans like Jeb Bush and even a few Democrats, according to Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics.

A complicated relationship with Trump

His relationship with Trump is complicated. Sondland publicly broke with him following the then-presidential candidate’s attack on a Gold Star Muslim family. Yet Sondland also became a “bundler” for Trump, using his network of Portland political donors to help Trump get elected.

“In that election he gave nothing to Trump but he was listed as one of Trump’s bundlers in 2016, and of course being a bundler gives you more clout than just giving a single donation,” Krumholz says.

Sondland also donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration through four companies Sondland controls.

A lot of people in liberal Portland have been taken aback by Sondland’s willingness to work in the Trump administration, Bergstein says.

“It was a surprise when Gordon found Donald Trump as an acceptable candidate. That wasn’t his type of Republican that he supported,” he says.

And Sondland has already paid a price for that support.

He is sometimes confronted by demonstrators when he goes out in public. And Democratic Rep. Earl Blumenauer, who represents the Portland area, has called for a boycott of his hotels.

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After anti-government protesters set fire to Burkina Faso’s Parliament on Thursday in escalating demonstrations against the ruler they say is making a “constitutional coup d’etat” to stay in power, President Blaise Compaore has reportedly scrapped—or at least delayed—a plan to extend his 27-year reign.

Statements by former defense minister General Kouame Lougue have led to speculation that the military may be poised to remove Compaore from power. French news outlets also reported that the President’s brother, Francois, was arrested as he tried to flee the country.

At least five people were killed in the protest, which extended into its third day since breaking out earlier in the week. Police used tear gas and shot live rounds at the crowds as they broke through barricades and stormed Parliament in an attempt to block lawmakers from attending the session that would have approved the constitutional amendment.

The bill, due for a vote on Thursday, would have amended the country’s constitution to allow Compaore to run for re-election in 2015, rather than stepping down as scheduled.

The government’s communications minister Alain Edouard Traore confirmed to several news agencies that the plan had been dropped, at least temporarily. The announcement came shortly after protesters forced national TV and radio buildings off the air and toppled statues in the country’s second largest city, Bobo Dioulasso.

The European Union has also urged the government to ditch the legislation, warning that it could “jeopardize… stability, equitable development and democratic progress.”

Compaore, whose whereabouts are currently unknown, appealed for calm on Twitter on Thursday.

Benewende Sankara, an opposition leader, told Agence France-Presse that calm will come when the President steps down.

“The army is united with the people,” Sankara said. “The opposition is demanding the resignation of President Blaise Compaore to enable calm to be restored.”

According to the Guardian, “this ‘revolution 2.0’ has been called a victory by the Burkinabè opposition.” The BBC reports that dozens of soldiers have joined the protests, including Lougue.

The main opposition leader, Zephirin Diabre, has called on the military to side with “the people.”

Compaore has won four disputed elections since coming to power in a 1987 coup, most recently in November 2010.

Opposition leaders have called for a coordinated action of civil disobedience until Compaore steps down. “October 30 is Burkina Faso’s Black Spring, like the Arab Spring,” activist Emile Pargui Pare, an official from the Movement of People for Progress (MPP), told AFP.

Activists and journalists used the hashtag #lwili to track the protests on social media, a reference to the traditional Burkinabè Lwili Peende cloth being worn by many protesters.

#lwili Tweets

Egyptians enraged by Saturday’s court decision to drop murder charges against Hosni Mubarak took to the streets of Cairo on Saturday where they were met by tanks, barbed wire fences, tear gas and army units ready to repel any effort to gain access to Tahrir Square, the birthplace of the 2011 revolution that led to the former president’s overthrow.

As The Independent‘s Jon Stone reports:

News that the ousted president had murder and corruption charges against him dismissed by a judge brought demonstrators out onto the streets of Cairo at the start of the weekend.

On Saturday some 2,000 young people protested the verdict near Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the birthplace of the nation’s 2011 uprising. The square itself was closed off by soldiers and police.

“The people want to bring down the regime!” protesters shouted, echoing one of the most prominent slogans of the 2011 anti-Mubarak uprising.

Protesters were further incensed after Mr Mubarak gave a television interview after the verdict in which he said he “did nothing wrong” during the 2011 clashes that left at least 200 protesters dead.

Journalist Sharif Abdel Kouddous covered the development of the protest in a series of tweets on Saturday night:

Reuters video:

And Reuters adds:

Two people were killed and nine were wounded on Saturday evening, when security forces fired tear gas and birdshot to disperse about 1,000 protesters who attempted to enter Tahrir Square — the symbolic heart of the revolt that ousted Mubarak.

Security forces closed a Cairo metro station, the state news agency said, an apparent effort to prevent gatherings downtown.

Clashes also erupted at Zagazig University in the Nile Delta, and the state-owned Al-Ahram newspaper said 11 students were detained after setting fire to a building.

Many Egyptians who lived through the rule of former air force officer Mubarak view it as a period of autocracy and crony capitalism.

His overthrow led to Egypt’s first free election. But the winner, Mohamed Mursi, was ousted last year by Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, another military officer who won a presidential vote in May.

Egyptian authorities have since jailed Mursi and thousands of his Muslim Brotherhood supporters, sentencing hundreds to death in mass trials that drew international criticism.

By contrast, Mubarak-era figures have been released and new laws curtailing political freedoms have raised fears among activists that the old leadership is back.

“Down with Hosni Mubarak, down with every Mubarak, down with military rule” said one Facebook page that called for protests against the ruling.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Nebraska state champion Papillion-LaVista took over the top spot in this week’s NFCA Fall High School Top 25 Coaches Poll after two-time defending state champion East Coweta lost twice in the Georgia Class 7A elite eight at the South Commons Complex in Columbus, Ga.

The (36-0) Monarchs ascended to the throne for the first time, ending East Coweta’s run of nine straight weeks at the No. 1 spot. Papillion-LaVista captured its second Nebraska Class A championship in the last three years two weeks ago. It was the Monarchs’ fifth consecutive appearance in the state final.

East Coweta (33-2), meanwhile, suffered as many losses last week — two — as it has had in the last two previous seasons combined. After edging Parkview, 4-3 in 10 innings, last Thursday, the Indians were shocked by eventual Class 7A titlist Mountain View, 1-0 in eight, later that night. An 8-2 loss to Peachtree Ridge on Friday closed their season and ended a three-year run during which they went a remarkable 101-4.

Wesleyan (31-2) slipped one spot to fourth after falling to Georgia Class A private champion Mount de Sales twice last week. The Wolves lost 4-2 in their elite eight opener and then 2-0 in the title contest, after winning three games to earn the rematch.

Elsewhere, Columbine (25-2) moved up to No. 5 after capturing the Colorado state 5A crown, beating two-time defending titlist Legend in the quarterfinals on Friday; No. 6 Westfield (24-2) claimed the Georgia Independent School Association tournament; and Banks County (31-3) is now 19th after winning the Georgia state Class AA championship.

Erie (16-7) returned to the rankings this week at No. 21 after outslugging Golden, 13-9, in Saturday’s Colorado state Class 4A final.

State rankings submitted by NFCA member coaches are used to compile the NFCA Fall High School Top 25 Coaches Poll. Teams are chosen based on performance, roster quality and strength of schedule. Five states — Colorado, Georgia, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Missouri — play a fall fastpitch schedule, while Iowa recently completed its summer season.

NFCA Fall High School Top 25 Coaches Poll – Oct. 31, 2019

Rank

Team

2019 Record

Previous

1

Papillion-LaVista (Neb.)

36-0

2

2

East Coweta (Ga.)

33-2

1

3

Collins-Maxwell (Iowa)

27-1

4

4

Wesleyan (Ga.)

31-2

3

5

Columbine (Colo.)

25-2

12

6

Westfield (Ga.)

24-2

5

7

Assumption (Iowa)

41-2

8

8

Broken Arrow (Okla.)

37-2

9

9

Rock Canyon (Colo.)

22-2

6

10

Holy Family (Colo.)

25-2

7

11

Sequoyah (Tahlequah, Okla.)

42-3

10

12

Elkhorn (Neb.)

30-5

11

13

Silo (Okla.)

38-3

14

14

Golden (Colo.)

24-3

15

15

Loveland (Colo.)

22-3

13

16

Grand Junction Central (Colo.)

22-4

16

17

Binger-Oney (Okla.)

30-3

17

18

North Gwinnett (Ga.)

27-3

18

19

Banks County (Ga.)

31-3

22

20

Kiowa (Okla.)

40-4

19

21

Erie (Colo.)

16-7

NR

22

Chatfield (Colo.)

19-4

21

23

Prairie View (Colo.)

19-6

20

24

Beatrice (Neb.)

32-6

23

25

Raymore-Peculiar (Mo.)

25-5

25

Dropped out: Skutt Catholic (Neb.)

A Burger King customer who is vegan has sued the company for selling him an Impossible Whopper that was “contaminated” by meat by-products, according to claims in a new class action lawsuit.

Plaintiff Phillip Williams says he bought an Impossible Whopper at a Burger King in Atlanta, Ga., believing it to be completely meat-free. Williams, who adheres to a strict vegan diet, ordered the Impossible Whopper — without mayonnaise, which is not vegan — from Burger King’s drive-through in August 2019. While the burger arrived without mayonnaise as requested, Williams says he discovered after eating it that the patty was covered in meat by-products. He accuses Burger King of cooking the meat-free patties on the same grill where beef patties are made and of misleading customers by marketing the Impossible Whopper as a meat-free menu item.

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“Despite Burger King’s representations that the Impossible Whopper uses the trademarked ‘Impossible Meat’ that is well-known as a meat-free and vegan meat alternative, Burger King cooks these vegan patties on the same grills as its traditional meat products, thus covering the outside of the Impossible Whopper’s meat-free patties with meat by-product,” the lawsuit says. The suit against the Miami-based fast-food chain was filed in the Southern District of Florida.

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The Impossible Whopper, which became available throughout the U.S. in 2019, is a version of Burger King’s Whopper burger made out of plant-based “meat” produced by the Silicon Valley company Impossible Foods.

Williams says he was not told, nor did he see any signs, that the Impossible Whopper was cooked on the same grill as Burger King’s beef patties or other meat products. It is unclear how he discovered the alleged meat by-product on his burger.

The lawsuit seeks an injunction that requires Burger King to disclose that it cooks the Impossible Whopper on the same grill as its traditional meat items, compensatory damages for Williams and a jury trial. An attorney for Williams did not immediately respond to TIME’s request for comment.

Burger King describes the Impossible Whopper as, “100% Whopper, 0%” beef on its website. The company also notes that customers looking for a meat-free option can request a “non-broiler method of preparation.” Chris Finazzo, Burger King’s president in the Americas region, told Bloomberg in August that Burger King’s Impossible Whopper would be cooked in the same broiler where regular meat products are also prepared, unless a customer requested it be made separately.

A Burger King spokesperson said the company does not comment on pending litigation in a statement to TIME.

The French forward has been used out wide during his time at Old Trafford but now wants to nail down the striker spot and concentrate on scoring goals

Anthony Martial is concentrating on increasing his goal return and has his sights set on making the centre-forward position his own at Manchester United.

The No.9 has recently returned from injury, scoring the third goal in the 3-1 win at Norwich last Sunday which gave Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s side their first league win in five games, and their first league away victory since February.

Martial says he is concentrating on improving his goalscoring instincts after appearing regularly as the main striker for United this season when fit.

“I am very focused on my central striker role, getting my scoring stats up and helping the team that way,” he told the club’s official website.

“That’s not to say that there will be no more tricks, because tricks are all part of your learning and the passion you have when you’re a football player setting out.

“You’ve worked hard to get where you are if you’re playing here at Manchester United, and it’s important not to lose that joy of playing the game because if you lose that passion, things will get a lot harder for you, but if I do a piece of skill, I want to score after it.”

The former Monaco man went on to speak about the influence of his manager, Solskjaer, himself a former striker, who has been passing on his experiences of playing in the position.

Martial believes his game should now be focused on scoring goals, and little else.

“Ole gives us forwards a lot of advice in relation to our positioning on the pitch, and we’re glad to receive it,” added the 23-year-old. 

“He has a lot of knowledge to share from being a top striker himself and that will help us as forwards individually, and as we move forward as a team. 

“Frankly, playing as striker, you’re not there to make blinding passes or massive runs. 

“I’ve come to understand that, to score, you have to be obsessed, to be fixated on just that, scoring goals.  That’s how you enjoy yourself as a striker. That’s not a choice – that’s how it has to be.”

Martial went on to discuss the players who influenced him growing up, who may not share the same views about a striker’s role not involving blinding passes or massive runs!

“I would say my favourite players were the Brazilians, Ronaldo and Ronaldinho,” he said. “They were both fantastic players with beautiful movement and grace. They made their matches great to watch.

“I mostly loved Ronaldinho, because he was a player who could make you dream, with his great big smile on the pitch, with his great technical skills.

“I think that combination of great technical skills and the terrific goals he could score, it’s that which inspires people.”

The top two sides in the Premier League meet at Anfield on Sunday in what is likely to be a crunch clash in terms of the destination of the title

Kevin De Bruyne says he cannot wait to step into the red-hot atmosphere of Anfield for Manchester City’s crunch clash with Liverpool.

Jurgen Klopp’s side are six points clear at the top of the Premier League with the chance to extend their advantage to an even more imposing lead with a victory in Sunday’s huge game.

Liverpool fans are sure to crank up the volume as they bid to win their first ever Premier League crown and end a 30-year wait for a top-flight title.

City have won just once at Anfield in the Premier League era, but De Bruyne insists top players enjoy the test of the big occasion. 

“The big games are the ones you want to play, and if you want to compete for titles you have to be the best,” he said.

“The media will make a lot of it, and people have been talking about it for the whole week, even before the Champions League, but we just do our job, keep calm and prepare ourselves.

“I prefer to play in [a big atmosphere] than when there is nobody. Professionals want t play in front of 50, 60, 70, 80 thousand people and it makes it worthwhile.

“You train all your life to get to the big stages. I want to compete for titles and to be the best, and to do that you have to win against the best.”

A defeat would see City fall nine points behind their rivals, who have only failed to win on one occasion all season on the back of a campaign when they suffered just one loss – at the Etihad Stadium.

But De Bruyne insists it is too early to worry about chasing down their rivals, with Liverpool still top of the table irrespective of the result.

“Obviously it’s a big gap but four weeks ago people were saying it was Liverpool’s to lose,” the Belgium midfielder added.

“I’m not keeping track of what people say, we play so many games. We want to be ahead, but we’ve lost points.

“People will talk about it whether we win, lose or draw, it’s for them to say what they want.”

The defending champions head to Liverpool on the back of a 1-1 draw in Atalanta when they finished with 10 men and Kyle Walker in goal after Ederson picked up an injury and back-up goalkeeper Claudio Bravo was sent off.

But De Bruyne says they will move on from that match and prepare for their top-of-the-table clash in the same way they get ready for every game.

“It’s a game like another,” he said. “We know it’s a big game – Liverpool are ahead, and we have to go back, recover and be ready for next Sunday.”

The Brazil international forward has a key role to play for the Reds, with his unselfish nature allowing him to chase down more major honours

Roberto Firmino still has “big goals” at Liverpool and is determined to “keep winning titles” while filling whatever role is required of him with the Reds.

The Brazil international has become a key component in Jurgen Klopp’s plans.

He has never been the most prolific of strikers, but his work rate and unselfish nature make him integral to the ‘heavy metal football’ favoured by the current Liverpool boss.

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Firmino has become a Champions League winner while at Anfield, with a Premier League crown now being chased down, and the 28-year-old is looking to stick around and collect more medals.

He has told Premier League Productions when quizzed on the changes to his game since arriving in England back in 2015: “I think I improved a lot in every way: physically, tactically, mentally, I learned a bit of every aspect.

“But I do not want to stop here. I want to keep improving – I always want more, I have big goals, I want to keep winning titles with this club and that is it.”

Firmino is a star in his own right at Liverpool, but has to share an attacking spotlight with Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane.

He is happy to do that, with the South American prepared to do whatever is asked of him by a side which places greater emphasis on the collective over the individual.

“That is just me, my personality, to try to be a good and humble guy,” Firmino added.

“To try to help my team in the best way with assists and goals. I like that, I like to win all the time, and for that I will always be like this.

“I am a guy who respects my position on the pitch. Where the team needs me, I will play. As a No.9, but sometimes I play as a No.10, and I try to give my best. 

“As I mentioned before, I always want to help my team as best as I can and to always be chasing the win, always winning games. That is what matters the most.”

Firmino will also continue to give all he has for Liverpool boss Klopp, with the German considered to be one of the finest coaches in the business.

“I am never tired of praising Klopp,” said the hard-working frontman.

“He has so many good things on and off the pitch. He really helps us on a daily basis, we learn so much from him in every way. 

“He is able to have the team with him. We have been doing things well and learning a lot from him, and we have been showing on the pitch that we can grow more and more each day and do our best.”

Firmino has contributed three goals and eight assists to the Liverpool cause across all competitions this season.

Toro Rosso’s Carlos Sainz believes that the reason race stewards won’t allow an appeal of their decisions is because of pride and fear of losing credibility.

The Spanish driver found himself on the receiving end of the stewards’ wrath last weekend in Bahrain following a collision with Williams’ Lance Stroll for which he was judged as responsible.

Sainz’s punishment for the mishap is a three-place grid penalty for the upcoming Russian Grand Prix at Sochi.

“I obviously was quite surprised with the grid drop. I thought they were going to consider it a racing incident,” Sainz explained.

“Obviously in F1 when you are fighting for position, for the points, there are a lot of racing battles going on.

” It was, for me, a racing incident. Lance simply didn’t see me and maybe a guy with a bit more experience would have seen me and left me enough space on the corner.”

  • Sainz gets Russia grid penalty for Stroll smash

The post-hearing process does not allow for any appeal or any discussions with the stewards after the fact, a restriction which Sainz disagrees with.

“You go home with the penalty, you get it, you cannot appeal, nothing. That’s how it is,” Sainz said.

“Even for pride, they wouldn’t change their opinion. I don’t think it would change nothing. Even if you had the opportunity to appeal, it’s not like suddenly the stewards are going to decide the contrary.

“They take a decision, they go with it, they understand they wouldn’t change their decision because they would lose some credibility.

“They will never change. But there you have it. First incident, fighting for position, first penalty.”

GALLERY: All the action from the Day 2 in-season testing at Bahrain

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