Saturday, May 16, 2026

NBA Great Patrick Ewing In Hospital After Testing Positive For Coronavirus

NBA great Patrick Ewing has tested positive for the coronavirus and is now in isolation in hospital, he announced on Friday.

“This virus is serious and should not be taken lightly,” tweeted the 57-year-old Basketball Hall of Famer who now coaches the Georgetown University men’s basketball program.

“I want to encourage everyone to stay safe and take care of yourselves and your loved ones,” he wrote. “Now more than ever, I want to thank the healthcare workers and everyone on the front lines. I’ll be fine and we will all get through this.”

Ewing enjoyed a successful playing career at the New York Knicks in the 1980s and ’90s. He is “the only member of the Georgetown men’s basketball program to have tested positive for the virus,” Georgetown Athletics said in a statement, adding he is now “under care and isolated at a local hospital.”

The Knicks wished Ewing well on Twitter:

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France to introduce voluntary 14-day quarantine for some travelers

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A women wearing a face mask walks by the Eiffel Tower in Paris | Philippe Lopez/AFP via Getty Images

People coming from EU countries with quarantine measures for incoming travelers will be asked to self-isolate.

France will introduce a two-week quarantine for travelers who don’t exhibit coronavirus symptoms starting on May 25, according to the French interior ministry.

The measures will apply to returning French citizens and permanent residents arriving from outside the European Union and the European Economic Area, which includes the U.K. and Switzerland. Travelers from within this area will not be asked to quarantine, unless they come from a country that has imposed quarantine measures on incoming travelers, such as Spain and the U.K.

The two-week self-isolation period will be voluntary. “Travelers are called upon to show good citizenship and a sense of responsibility in order to implement this health precaution,” the French interior ministry said in a statement issued late Friday.

For those arriving from within the EU, some restrictions have also been relaxed. Crossborder workers, international transporters and people traveling for family reasons — such as for child care reasons or to lend urgent assistance to a relative — will be allowed to access the territory. Seasonal workers and posted workers whose work cannot be postponed will also be allowed into the country, according to the ministry.

France will progressively reopen border points and wind down “static controls” to facilitate the fluidity of traffic while ensuring the implementation of the restrictions remaining in place until June 15, the ministry said. It is also working on reciprocal travel permits with neighboring countries.

Rym Momtaz contributed reporting.



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Trump Flips Out At Fox News Again: Hope Roger Ailes ‘Is Looking Down’

President Donald Trump went after Fox News on Twitter yet again on Friday, this time invoking its late CEO and chairman Roger Ailes.

Trump, in response to a Fox News poll showing him trailing presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden nationwide, first suggested the network should “fire their Fake Pollster.” 

In a second tweet, Trump said he hoped Ailes — who left the network in 2016 amid a sexual misconduct scandal that cost the network millions of dollars in settlements ― is “looking down and watching what has happened to this once beautiful creation!”

Trump on Thursday complained that Fox “is doing nothing to help Republicans, and me, get re-elected on November 3rd.”

On Monday, he moaned Fox News “is no longer the same.” 

“We miss the great Roger Ailes,” he tweeted of his former ally, who advised on his 2016 campaign. Ailes died in 2017. “You have more anti-Trump people, by far, than ever before,” said Trump, adding: “Looking for a new outlet!” 

Trump has faced criticism from the network’s hosts over his fumbled response to the coronavirus pandemic. Neil Cavuto this week blasted Trump’s claim about taking an unproven drug to protect from the coronavirus.

Chris Wallace on Friday also fact-checked Trump’s false statements about mail-in voter fraud. However, its primetime personalities, such as Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham, often use their shows to stump for the president. Trump’s latest attack, and his invocation of Ailes, were too much for many on Twitter to bear:

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‘It was a real shock’: Women hit hardest by job losses in pandemic

More women than men have found themselves suddenly unemployed. Fiona Gulin is among the lucky ones who believes she can cope without dipping into super.

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‘Frugal four’ propose ‘loans for loans’ approach to coronavirus recovery fund

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A man walks in front of a European Commission building in Brussels | Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP via Getty Images

The EU’s so-called frugal four — Austria, Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden — are pushing for a “loans for loans” approach for the bloc’s coronavirus recovery fund, according to a position paper seen by POLITICO.

France and Germany on Monday called for a €500 billion recovery fund that would give cash to EU countries impacted by the economic fallout of the coronavirus crisis. The proposal would allow the European Commission to borrow cash on financial markets, then distribute money as grants.

In their non-paper, the frugals, who came out against the Franco-German plan, argue for a European Recovery Fund that is based on a “modernized EU budget” and ensures countries are “better prepared for the next crisis.”

The recovery fund should be temporary and one-off, with a sunset clause after two years, and should not lead to debt mutualization, according to the paper.

Such a fund would allow loans to be made on favorable terms to member countries in need, while “limiting the risk to all Member States and providing sound incentives.” Loan recipients should carry out structural reforms to make their economies more resilient, the four countries said.

If the EU’s recovery fund is linked to the bloc’s long-term budget, as the current proposals suggest, it will need the approval of all EU countries.

The European Commission is expected to unveil its proposal for a Recovery Instrument and revamped 2021-2027 EU budget on Wednesday. Commission officials have indicated the proposed recovery plan would include a mix of loans and grants.

Lili Bayer contributed reporting. 



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UK eyes cuts to #Huawei role in #5G network – EU Reporter

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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is reportedly planning to reduce the involvement of Chinese company Huawei in Britain’s 5G network in the wake of the coronavirus crisis. Johnson has also asked officials to draft a strategy to reduce China’s involvement in British infrastructure to zero by 2023, the Daily Telegraph has reported.

The prime minister is expected to use less reliance on China as a means to boost trade talks with US President Donald Trump in the aftermath of Britain’s departure from the European Union, according to the newspaper. Earlier on Friday, The Times reported that Johnson has instructed civil servants to make plans to end Britain’s reliance on China for vital medical supplies and other strategic imports. Beijing has been facing mounting international criticism over its handling of the coronavirus outbreak, which began in China before spreading to the rest of the world.

“He (Johnson) still wants a relationship with China but the Huawei deal is going to be significantly scaled back. Officials have been instructed to come up with a plan to reduce Huawei’s involvement as quickly as possible,” a source was quoted by the Telegraph as saying. Huawei and Downing Street did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The development would be a change of direction for Britain, which in late April confirmed it would allow Huawei to have a role in building the country’s 5G phone network.

Britain decided in January to allow Huawei into what the government said were non-sensitive parts of the network, capping its involvement at 35 per cent. The United States has raised security concerns about Huawei equipment, and warn that allies that use it in their networks risk being cut off from valuable intelligence-sharing feeds.

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Jenna Bush Hager Pays Emotional Tribute To White House Butler Who Died Of Coronavirus

Jenna Bush Hager paid an emotional and heartfelt tribute to former White House butler Wilson Roosevelt Jerman, who died last weekend, describing him as “the loveliest” person who made the official residence feel like a real home. 

Jerman died at the age of 91 after contracting the coronavirus. He served 11 presidents, from Dwight Eisenhower to Barack Obama, during his 55-year career at the White House. He retired in 2012.

The “Today” show host Bush Hager, the daughter of former President George W. Bush, reflected on Jerman’s impact on her family to co-host Hoda Kotb on Thursday’s episode.

“He was the loveliest. I think ‘lovely’ is a word that can kind of be overused. But he was always smiling,” she said. “You know, it’s interesting because people will say, ‘Gosh, how was the White House? Did it feel like home?’ And the reason why it felt like home was because of people like him.”

Bush Hager recalled telling former first lady Michelle Obama, when showing her around the White House, that the staff would become part of their family. At the funeral of another butler who she called “Smiley,” Bush Hager said Obama approached her and said she now knew what she meant.

“Smiley made my girls feel like this place was a home,’” Jenna remembered Obama telling her. “And Mr. Jerman did that in tenfold. We loved him. He was beloved by my family, and he will be so missed.”

Check out the interview here:

Bush Hager’s parents, former President George W. Bush and former first lady Laura Bush, also described Jerman as “a lovely man.” 

Michelle Obama, who included a photograph of Jerman in her bestselling memoir “Becoming,” praised him for his “kindness and care” and for helping “make the White House a home for decades of First Families, including ours.”

“His service to others ― his willingness to go above and beyond for the country he loved and all those whose lives he touched ― is a legacy worthy of his generous spirit,” Obama added in a statement. “We were lucky to have known him. Barack and I send our sincerest love and prayers to his family.”

Former first lady Hillary Clinton also honored Jerman for making “generations of first families feel at home.”

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East in grip of cold snap while WA braces for rare cyclone

While the eastern states remain in the grips of a cold snap, Western Australia is preparing for a rare cyclone expected to hit tomorrow.

Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia are in for a cold weekend as they recover from two consecutive cold fronts earlier in the week.

A bout of cold weather in Victoria is expected to last through the weekend. (AAP)

On the other side of Australia, Cyclone Mangga is forecast to bring a violent storm to Perth.

Here is a breakdown of this weekend’s weather in all states and territories around the country.

New South Wales is also feeling the wrath of the cold snap – leaving rain, hail, snow and strong winds across the state.

Sydney is in for a cold and rainy Saturday with a maximum temperature of just 17C and a minimum of 10C with showers expected throughout the day.

Clouds gather over the Sydney CBD skyline. Workers are expected to return to the office in greater numbers over the coming weeks.
Clouds gather over the Sydney CBD skyline. Workers are expected to return to the office in greater numbers over the coming weeks. (Peter Braig)

A severe weather warning is in place for surfers today due to vigorous southerly winds and large southerly surf to exposed parts of the New South Wales coastline. This low is expected to linger in the region over the next few days before slowly moving away.

Damaging surf is expected in Metropolitan, Illawarra and South Coast regions while damaging winds could hit Wollongong, Bulli, Port Kembla, Kiama, Huskisson and Ulladulla.

Large swells have already hit Sydney beaches with surfers and swimmers being warned of dangerous conditions.

Melbourne is forecast to experience another icy weekend with a low of 9C today and 10C on Sunday with the chance of showers over both days.

Like NSW, Victoria is still feeling the bite of the cold front with snow forecast on Mt Hotham today.

Areas including Latrobe Valley, Ballarat, Wangaratta and Horsham could all experience temperatures below 5C as the wintry weather continues.

Queenslanders are waking up to a chilly morning..

An icy blast of record temperatures plummeting as much as 11 degrees below average.

Just weeks out from Winter, forecasters say it could be one of the coolest days of the year.

Brisbane’s temperatures could sink as low as 11C today with a maximum of 17C.

Widespread rain is forecast around the state including in Carins, Townsville, and Mackay and Rockhampton.

Western Australia bracing for cyclone

West Australians have been urged to reconsider their intrastate travel plans this weekend as the remnants of a rare, out-of-season cyclone hurtle towards the state.

Tropical Cyclone Mangga is impacting the Cocos Keeling Islands before heading towards the north-west of WA and tracking down the west coast.

Satellite image of cyclone headed for WA. (Weatherzone)

The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) said the system was likely to weaken to below cyclone intensity when it reached Australia, but it would still be considered a once-in-a-decade storm, producing wind gusts up to 130 kilometres per hour and heavy rainfall.

The severe weather is expected to hit the upper part of the west coast on Sunday morning and extend down the coast during the day to reach the Perth metropolitan area and the south coast during Sunday afternoon and evening.

South Australia is experiencing the tail end of two consecutive cold fronts earlier in the week.

Adelaide will be sunny with a possible shower and a maximum of 16C today and Sunday.

Isolated showers and cool temperatures are forecast around the state including in Mt Gambier and Clare.

Maximum temperatures are expected to stay below 20C for the entirety of SA  today with the highest maximum temperature expected in Coober Pedy which could reach 18C.

Below-average temperatures and windy conditions are forecast in the NT today.

Darwin will stay relatively warm in comparison to the rest of the state with a minimum of 19C and maximum of 26C today.

Meanwhile, Alice Springs could experience morning frost  with a minimum of 1C today.

Showers and cloudy conditions are forecast around Tasmania this weekend .

Hobart could see rain later today with a maximum temperature of 16C today and 13C tomorrow.

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This is now the world’s busiest airport… on certain Saturdays

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(CNN) — Alaska’s Anchorage International Airport lacks the waterfalls and razzmatazz of Singapore Changi or the eight runways of Chicago O’Hare.

But this unassuming little airport — equidistant between New York and Tokyo — has lately had an unexpected rise in prominence.

It’s now the busiest airport in the world… on some Saturdays, at least.

“Saturday’s a busy day for cargo operations, which is our bread and butter, but it’s also the slowest day for passenger service,” explains airport manager Jim Szczesniak over video call.

“So for example, on Saturday, May 2, we in Anchorage had 744 flight operations, whereas Chicago had only 579 and Atlanta had only 529.”

Anchorage also briefly snatched the world’s busiest title on Saturday, April 25.

Top of the world

Airports Council International’s annual report on the world’s busiest airports, released earlier this week, makes for sobering reading.

The coronavirus pandemic means that passenger traffic is currently down by more than 90%, according to Angela Gittens, ACI World’s director general. “The demand is pretty much gone.”

One area that has been on the rise, however, is cargo traffic, which is why Anchorage Airport — in ordinary times, the world’s fifth-busiest cargo airport — is on the ascendant.

“We’re seeing an increased demand for cargo capacity,” says Szczesniak. “And that’s primarily because a lot of the supplies for the fight against Covid in North America are produced in Asia.”

Anchorage is positioned to perfect geographical advantage, at what the airport says is 9.5 hours’ flying time from 90% of the industrialized world.

Its location, quite literally at the top of the world, means that planes “fly up and over the top [of the globe] to shorten the distance,” says Szczesniak.

“The advantage of Anchorage is airplanes can fly filled with cargo but only half-filled with fuel. They fly into Anchorage and then they re-fuel and then onto their destination.”

The little airport that could

It calls to mind the story of Gander Airport in Newfoundland, which welcomed 7,000 displaced airline passengers on 9/11, inspiring the Broadway musical “Come From Away.”

“We’re using different areas of the airport to accommodate parking that we normally wouldn’t,” says Szczesniak.

The airport has recently played host to the heaviest aircraft ever built, the Antonov An-225 Mriya cargo plane, and also some titans of sport — the New England Patriots’ plane stopped here because it was flying supplies between Boston and Asia.

In order to prevent the spread of Covid-19, the aircraft crew passing through Anchorage “minimize their ability to interact with Alaskans,” explains Szczesniak. They use private transport to and from hotels and avoid mixing with ground crew.

Vacation destination

“Post-coronavirus, we think Alaska is going to become quite a popular tourism destination,” says Szczesniak. “You know, they tell you to stay six feet away from people. In Alaska you can come here and have a fantastic vacation and not be within six miles of somebody.”

There are around 60 glaciers within a 50-mile radius of the airport and this most gorgeously wild of US states is covered with mighty national parks and preserves. There’s hiking, there’s fishing, there’s white-water rafting and more; it’s ideal for backwoods adventurers.

The airport is preparing for the return of passenger service by upgrading its cleaning program to Covid-19 battle-ready standards, using all hospital-grade disinfectants.

In the terminal, they’ve added sanitizing UV LED lights to the escalator handrails. Says Szczesniak, “As the handrail travels through the machinery, it’ll be blasted with UV light to kill any microbes, viruses or bacteria that happen to them.”

$97 billion in losses

At the time of our video call between London and Anchorage, there were 90 planes in the air heading from the UK capital to the Alaskan airport, according to real-time flight-tracking site Flightradar24.

“There are more airplanes in the sky right now to and from Anchorage than there are for both JFK and LaGuardia,” says Szczesniak.

The world’s busiest airport, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, saw 110.5 million passengers in 2019. But in the first quarter of 2020, the Atlanta airport logged 20.7 million passengers, down more than 18% from the same period last year.

The aviation industry is facing a $97 billion reduction in revenue in 2020 and recovery is likely to be a slow and painful process.

The team at Anchorage are proud of their efforts in facilitating the transport of medical supplies during this time of global need — but they hope that their time as occasional record-holders will be mercifully short.

CNN’s Marnie Hunter contributed to this report

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Fox’s Chris Wallace Hits Trump With Blunt Fact-Check On Mail Ballot Fraud Claims

Fox News host Chris Wallace risked drawing the ire of Donald Trump yet again on Friday after he debunked the president’s false claims on mail-in voter fraud.

Trump has ramped up his rhetoric against mail-in voting in recent weeks, at one point even threatening to withhold federal funds from Nevada and Michigan if they went ahead with sending applications to voters.

That’s despite Trump himself voting by mail in Florida’s GOP primary in March.

Wallace, the host of “Fox News Sunday,” fact-checked the president’s claims on Friday’s broadcast of “America’s Newsroom.”

“Well, you know, I’ve done some deep dive into it, there really is no record of massive fraud or even serious fraud from mail-in voting,” he said.

Check out the video here:

“It’s being carried out in Republican states. It’s being carried out in Democratic states,” Wallace continued. “There’s no indication that mail-in voting, as opposed to in-person voting, tends to favor one party over another.”

Wallace noted how “if anything, it tends to favor Republicans” because “the people, now we’re talking about outside a pandemic, who historically have tended to vote most often by mail are elderly people, people over 65, and they tend to vote more Republican than Democratic.”

“Have there been some cases? Yes,” Wallace acknowledged, also citing the potential problem of vote harvesting. “But when people get their ballots and mail them in themselves, no history of fraud at all,” he said.

Trump has also falsely claimed on multiple occasions that up to 5 million votes were illegally cast in the 2016 presidential election. He lost the popular vote to Democratic rival Hillary Clinton by almost 3 million votes.

Wallace’s fact-checking of Trump came amid an escalation in tensions between the president and Fox News, whose primetime hosts, in particular, have been widely accused of being a propaganda vehicle for the Trump administration.

Trump lashed out at the widely watched conservative network earlier this week after anchor Neil Cavuto slammed the president’s claim about taking the unproven drug hydroxychloroquine as protection against the coronavirus.

“Many will disagree, but @FoxNews is doing nothing to help Republicans, and me, get re-elected on November 3rd,” Trump tweeted Thursday.

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