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Pa. State Police searching for missing and endangered Philly 10-year-old
Pennsylvania State Police are asking the public’s help in finding a 10-year-old from Philadelphia who went missing on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. Police are looking for Muhammad Sakho, who was last seen in the area of Penrose Elementary School at 2515 S. 78th Street in Philadelphia at around 8:10 a.m. Sakho is 5′ 2″ and around 100 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing a black hoodie with a light green jacket, blue jeans and a blue jacket, police said. Police believe Sakho may be at special risk for harm or injury, and they are urging anyone who sees him or has information on his whereabouts to call 911 or the Philadelphia Police Department at 215-686-3183.

Communities prepare as weekend storm may, potentially, bring significant snow

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NASA astronaut Suni Williams, who stayed in space for 9 months after spacecraft problem, retires
NASA astronaut Suni Williams, who famously stayed in space for an extended nine-month visit after problems with an experimental capsule, has retired after 27 years, NASA said Tuesday. Williams retired effective Dec. 27, NASA said in a statement. Williams, a former Navy pilot, joined NASA in 1988. “Suni Williams has been a trailblazer in human spaceflight, shaping the future of exploration through her leadership aboard the space station and paving the way for commercial missions to low Earth orbit,” NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said in the statement. Williams went on three missions to the International Space Station, the first of which was in 2006 and in which she was carried aboard the space shuttle Discovery, NASA said. But it was the most recent, in 2024, in which the planned one-week stay stretched from June of that year until March 2025 due to concerns over Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft, which was on a test mission. Starliner launched on June 5, 2024, taking Williams and Butch Wilmore to the space station on its first crewed flight. But there were problems with the capsule’s thrusters during the docking process, and eventually, in September, NASA decided to return the capsule with no one on board. Williams and Wilmore spent 286 days aboard the International Space Station. A SpaceX Dragon capsule was then sent up to bring the pair, as well as two other astronauts who were wrapping up a six-month mission, back to earth. The Dragon capsule departed the space station on March 18, 2025, and splashed down in the ocean off Florida’s coast. NASA Mar 18, 2025 WATCH: Astronauts Suni Williams, Butch Wilmore finally return to Earth NASA Mar 19, 2025 NASA astronaut's morning routine over 9 unexpected months in space: She woke at 5:30 am and exercised for 2 hours NASA Mar 4, 2025 NASA's two stuck astronauts finally preparing to return after 9 months in space Over the course of her career, Williams logged 608 days in space in all, which is the second-longest cumulative time in space in NASA history, the space agency said. She also logged the most spacewalk time of any other female astronaut, at 62 hours and 6 minutes, which is the fourth-most time of any NASA astronaut, it said. Williams and Wilmore have said they enjoyed their extended time living and working at the orbiting outpost, even though it was longer than expected. “The plan went way off for what we had planned, but because we’re in human spaceflight, we prepare for any number of contingencies,” Wilmore said in late March, after they returned to earth. “This is a curvy road. You never know where it’s going to go.” Williams said that her recovery on Earth after the longer-than-intended space stay was helped by her previous space flights. “Though it was longer than any flight either one of us have flown before, I think my body remembered,” she told NBC News in an interview alongside Wilmore in June. Williams called her career and the opportunities to serve at NASA an “incredible honor.” “Anyone who knows me knows that space is my absolute favorite place to be,” she said in NASA’s statement.

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Watch live: Trump delivers speech at World Economic Forum
President Donald Trump arrived at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, after a minor electrical issue aboard Air Force One had forced a return to Washington to switch aircraft. Shortly after he landed in Zurich, his Marine One helicopter took him to the site of the international gathering. The White House said arriving late wouldn’t push back his scheduled address at the forum in the Swiss Alps — where his ambitions to wrest control of Greenland from NATO ally Denmark could tear relations with European allies and overshadow his original plan to use his appearance at the gathering of global elites to address affordability issues back home. Trump’s speech is set to focus on domestic policy. But it may touch on Greenland as well as the U.S. military operation that led to the recent ouster of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. On Thursday, Trump plans to more heavily lean into foreign policy, including discussing hemispheric domination by Washington, and the “Board of Peace” he’s creating to oversee the U.S.-brokered ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas. That’s according to a White House official who spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One on the condition of anonymity to discuss plans that haven’t been made public. Trump will also have around five bilateral meetings with foreign leaders, though further details weren’t provided. Tariff threat looms large Trump comes to the international forum at Davos on the heels of threatening steep U.S. import taxes on Denmark and seven other allies unless they negotiate a transfer of the semi-autonomous territory — a concession the European leaders indicated they are not willing to make. Trump said the tariffs would start at 10% next month and climb to 25% in June, rates that would be high enough to increase costs and slow growth, potentially hurting Trump’s efforts to tamp down the high cost of living. The president in a text message that circulated among European officials this week also linked his aggressive stance on Greenland to last year’s decision not to award him the Nobel Peace Prize. In the message, he told Norway’s prime minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, that he no longer felt “an obligation to think purely of Peace.” In the midst of an unusual stretch of testing the United States’ relations with longtime allies, it seems uncertain what might transpire during Trump’s two days in Switzerland. On Tuesday, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told a Davos panel he and Trump, a Republican, planned to deliver a stark message: “Globalization has failed the West and the United States of America. It’s a failed policy,” he said. “This will be an interesting trip,” Trump told reporters as he departed the White House on Tuesday evening for his flight to Davos. “I have no idea what’s going to happen, but you are well represented.” In fact, his trip to Davos got off to a difficult start. There was a small electrical problem on Air Force One, leading the crew to turn around the plane about 30 minutes into the flight out of an abundance of caution. That pushed the president’s arrival in Switzerland back hours. Wall Street wobbled on Tuesday as investors weighed Trump’s new tariff threats and escalating tensions with European allies. The S&P 500 fell 2.1%, its biggest drop since October. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1.8%. The Nasdaq composite slumped 2.4%. “It’s clear that we are reaching a time of instability, of imbalances, both from the security and defense point of view, and economic point of view,” French President Emmanuel Macron said in his address to the forum. Macron made no direct mention of Trump but urged fellow leaders to reject acceptance of “the law of the strongest.” Meanwhile, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen warned that should Trump move forward with the tariffs,…

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Sports Illustrated launching 24/7 FAST channel SI TV
Sports Illustrated is the latest brand to get into the FAST channel business. Minute Media, the publisher for the legacy sports magazine brand, announced on Tuesday that Sports Illustrated would launch a new free ad-supported television (FAST) channel called SI TV. The channel will include “original programming, live events, sports lifestyle and archival content,” according to Read more... The post Sports Illustrated launching 24/7 FAST channel SI TV appeared first on Awful Announcing.
