logo
Heads up: Weekend training at Wright-Patt will be loud

Heads up: Weekend training at Wright-Patt will be loud

Yahoo3 days ago

Jun. 4—If you're in the Fairborn, Wright-Patterson or Springfield-Beckley Municipal Airport areas this weekend, you might hear some noise.
Members of the the 445th Aeromedical Staging Squadron, with airmen from Luke Air Force Base in Arizona, plan to conduct a full-scale joint exercise that will simulate medical operations after an invasion in a contested space from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday.
And the the 445th Security Forces Squadron will conduct night operations training on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday — exercises that will include gunfire and explosions.
These Saturday exercises will take place simultaneously at three locations, with operations ending earlier in some locations than others.
Training will happen on Wright-Patterson, at Wright State University's Calamityville Training and Research Facility off East Xenia Drive in Fairborn, and on portions of the Springfield-Beckley Municipal Airport.
"The public should be aware of increased activity and noise during this time to include smoke, flashbangs, gunfire, helicopter activity and other increased aircraft activity," the 445th Airlift Wing warned in a release Wednesday.
Based on Wright-Patterson, with a fleet of nine C-17 Globemaster III aircraft, the 445th specializes in the transport of people and equipment. Medical care of people being transported is also a core capability of the wing.
Also, members of the Air Force, Army and Marine Corps will be conducting close air support training in the Buckeye and Bush Creek military operations areas in the south of Ohio.
This area covers land in between and around Bardwell to Leesburg to Staunton to Chillicothe to West Portsmouth to Georgetown.
Those living and working in these areas should be aware of increased noise and activity from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tyson Foods working to remove synthetic dyes from products, CEO says
Tyson Foods working to remove synthetic dyes from products, CEO says

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Tyson Foods working to remove synthetic dyes from products, CEO says

SPRINGDALE, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) — Tyson Foods plans to eliminate synthetic dyes from its products by the end of May, CEO Donnie King announced on Monday. King said in the company's second-quarter earnings call that Tyson is working to eliminate its use of petroleum-based synthetic dyes. 'The vast majority of our retail-branded Tyson products, including our Tyson Dino Nuggets, Tyson Chicken Nuggets, Tyson Chicken Bites and Jimmy Dean Maple Griddle Cakes, do not contain any of these types of dyes, and we have been proactively reformulating those few products that do,' King said. King continued, saying that none of the products Tyson Foods offers through school nutrition programs include petroleum-based synthetic dyes as ingredients. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a post on X on Monday that he looks 'forward to seeing more companies follow suit and put the health of Americans first.' Tyson Foods sells 4 cold storage warehouses for combined $247 million 'Together, we will Make America Healthy Again,' Kennedy Jr. said. In April, Kennedy Jr. and Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary announced plans to phase out several types of artificial, petroleum-based dyes used as food coloring in various snacks, drinks and desserts that line grocery shelves, mainly citing kids' health as the reason for the move. Kennedy Jr. and Makary said the FDA wants to eliminate these food colorings by the end of 2026: FD&C Red No. 40 (or Red 40) FD&C Green No. 3 (or Green 3) FD&C Yellow No. 5 and Yellow No. 6 (or Yellow 5 and 6) FD&C Blue No. 1 and Blue No. 2 (or Blue 1 and 2) King said he expects Tyson to eliminate the use of petroleum-based synthetic dyes in production by the end of May, 'much sooner than the timeline provided by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.' The Associated Press contributed to this report. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign in to access your portfolio

NewAmsterdam Pharma to Host R&D Day on June 11, 2025
NewAmsterdam Pharma to Host R&D Day on June 11, 2025

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

NewAmsterdam Pharma to Host R&D Day on June 11, 2025

NAARDEN, The Netherlands and MIAMI, June 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- NewAmsterdam Pharma Company N.V. (Nasdaq: NAMS or 'NewAmsterdam' or the 'Company'), a late-stage, clinical biopharmaceutical company developing oral, non-statin medicines for patients at risk of cardiovascular disease ('CVD') with elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol ('LDL-C'), for whom existing therapies are not sufficiently effective or well-tolerated, today announced that it will host an R&D Day event for analysts and investors on June 11, 2025 beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET in New York City. Please join members of our management team, including: Michael Davidson, M.D., Chief Executive Officer, John Kastelein, M.D., Ph.D., FESC, Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, BJ Jones, Chief Commercial Officer, Ian Somaiya, Chief Financial Officer, and Matthew Philippe, Executive Vice President. A live webcast of the R&D event will be available and those who intend to join virtually can pre-register for the webcast through the link here. The live webcast and supporting presentation materials will be available on the Events section of the Investor Relations page of the NewAmsterdam website at at the time of the live event. An archived replay will be available on the NewAmsterdam website. Please note advanced registration is required for in-person attendance. About ObicetrapibObicetrapib is a novel, oral, low-dose CETP inhibitor that NewAmsterdam is developing to overcome the limitations of current LDL-lowering treatments. In each of the Company's Phase 2 trials, ROSE2, TULIP, ROSE, and OCEAN, as well as the Company's Phase 3 BROOKLYN, BROADWAY and TANDEM trials, evaluating obicetrapib as monotherapy or combination therapy, the Company observed statistically significant LDL-lowering combined with a side effect profile similar to that of placebo. The Company commenced the Phase 3 PREVAIL CVOT in March 2022, which is designed to assess the potential of obicetrapib to reduce occurrences of MACE. The Company completed enrollment of PREVAIL in April 2024 and randomized over 9,500 patients. Commercialization rights of obicetrapib in Europe, either as a monotherapy or as part of a fixed-dose combination with ezetimibe, have been exclusively granted to the Menarini Group, an Italy-based, leading international pharmaceutical and diagnostics company. About NewAmsterdamNewAmsterdam Pharma (Nasdaq: NAMS) is a late-stage, clinical biopharmaceutical company whose mission is to improve patient care in populations with metabolic diseases where currently approved therapies have not been adequate or well tolerated. We seek to fill a significant unmet need for a safe, well-tolerated and convenient LDL-lowering therapy. In multiple Phase 3 trials, NewAmsterdam is investigating obicetrapib, an oral, low-dose and once-daily CETP inhibitor, alone or as a fixed-dose combination with ezetimibe, as LDL-C lowering therapies to be used as an adjunct to statin therapy for patients at risk of CVD with elevated LDL-C, for whom existing therapies are not sufficiently effective or well tolerated. Company ContactMatthew PhilippeP: Media ContactSpectrum Science on behalf of NewAmsterdamJaryd LeadyP: 1-856-803-7855jleady@ Investor ContactPrecision AQ on behalf of NewAmsterdamAustin MurtaghP:

Norway House evacuates personal care home due to wildfire smoke, deteriorating air quality
Norway House evacuates personal care home due to wildfire smoke, deteriorating air quality

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Norway House evacuates personal care home due to wildfire smoke, deteriorating air quality

Norway House Cree Nation moved residents of a personal care home in the community south Tuesday, as smoke from nearby wildfires continues to blow in and air quality deteriorates. More than a dozen residents who live at the Pinaow Wachi personal care home in Norway House were evacuated to a facility in Winnipeg, about 460 kilometres to the south, that's also owned by the First Nation. The elders who left the community were accompanied by their caretakers on a Canadian Armed Forces C-130 Hercules aircraft. "There's unpredictable things happening in and around Norway House," Chief Larson Anderson told CBC News Tuesday afternoon. "We're not in danger of fires — just it's the smoke that's really more of an issue." Norway House isn't under evacuation order, but is under an evacuation notice, with people ordered to be ready to leave. The care home was evacuated "to be on the safe side," said Anderson. The community has been doing voluntary evacuations since last week, allowing elders, young children and some adults to get relief from the smoke, he said. Around 150 voluntary evacuees have been moved out of the community so far, Anderson said. Norway House is also the temporary home for many residents of Pimicikamak Cree Nation — also known as Cross Lake — who were given a mandatory evacuation order to leave their homes on May 28. Some from Pimicikamak — about 70 kilometres north of Norway House — were flown out of the community at that point, but high winds and smoke grounded flights. The remaining 6,500 residents were told to head to Norway House, even though the community was only expecting 1,000 people. The Canadian Armed Forces said Tuesday it has evacuated more than 3,500 people from fire zones in the province, with work in the past 24 hours taking people from Pimicikamak to Winnipeg and from Pukatawagan, in northwestern Manitoba, to The Pas. The federal government and the Canadian Armed Forces continue evacuation efforts for Pimicikamak and the community of Cross Lake, with multiple agencies participating in the response, along with community members and the local fire department, the province said in its Tuesday fire bulletin. The out-of-control fire near Pimicikamak Cree Nation is about five kilometres away from the community and about 2,300 hectares in size, the bulletin said. Manitoba's wildfire service is currently fighting 27 active wildfires across the province, and has seen 111 wildfires to date — well above the average of 88 for this time of year. WATCH | Manitoba premier praises wildfire response: Samantha Folster, Cross Lake's co-ordinator for the Norway House evacuation, estimated 100 people from the community who went to Norway House have chosen to stay there. For the time being, no further planes will come to take Pimicikamak residents to Winnipeg, she said. "We've given them the opportunity to come to the airport, we've called them, I've used social media to attract them to come," said Folster. "Some of them stayed behind. They have a lot of close family here, so they've decided to stay in the community for whatever length that they feel they can stay," she said. "Hopefully we don't receive an evacuation [order]." Meanwhile, the smoke in Norway House has been causing low visibility, so much so that Norway House resident Dean Robertson had trouble even seeing the trees across from his house. "There's been some ash falling since last night a little bit, and I went to look at my vehicle — it kind of had a little bit of soot covering on it," he said. Robertson said with the community on an evacuation notice, he's been getting essentials like clothing ready to go and has made sure to fill his car with gas. Chief Anderson said Norway House has created large fire breaks as well, in case a blaze comes near the community. Sprinklers and water hoses have been set up on buildings too. "It will buy us time … if the fire ever gets to that point," he said. Find the latest wildfire information at these sources:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store