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Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
San Francisco 49ers announcer Greg Papa shares devastating cancer diagnosis
San Francisco 49ers announcer Greg Papa has announced he will step away from the broadcasting booth immediately due to a cancer diagnosis. Papa has been the voice of the 49ers since 2019 and was on the call in the Bay Area for both of the team's recent Super Bowl appearances. Papa, 62, is also an on-air host for radio station KNBR on weekdays when not fulfilling his 49ers responsibilities.


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Flesh-eating bacteria kills four in ANOTHER southern state after multiple deaths in Florida amid summer outbreak
Another four people have died after being infected with a flesh-eating bacteria that thrives in coastal waters, officials have said. Vibrio vulnificus lives in warm water and can enter the body through open wounds, causing pain, redness and swelling before the skin turns black as flesh dies. In severe cases, it can spread to the blood and cause the fatal complication sepsis. The fatalities were reported in Louisiana, the second state to reveal deaths from the disease this year, with officials raising the alarm, saying the number was well above the state's average of about one death from Vibrio every year. Louisiana also reported 17 hospitalizations from the disease. The latest figures bring the national tally to eight deaths from Vibrio this year, after four deaths were recorded in Florida earlier this month. A total of 32 infections have also been recorded nationwide across the two states. Officials warned of an 'overall increase' in infections as surface waters in the Gulf of Mexico have reached 85 Fahrenheit (29 Celsius), an ideal temperature for the bacteria. Theresa Sokol, an epidemiologist at the Louisiana Department of Health, warned local media channel Fox 8: 'Vibrio vulnificus can cause particularly severe and even highly fatal infections. 'We feel like there is an overall increased risk right now. All of those individuals had severe illnesses, and they all required hospitalization.' No further details were revealed on the latest patients, including their names, ages and where in Louisiana they were infected. It also wasn't revealed whether they had any underlying conditions. People who are older or have a weakened immune system are at higher risk from the disease. The Louisiana Department of Health said 75 percent of the patients were infected via open wounds. Many cases involve people swimming in warm water with open wounds, but the disease can also be caught from eating contaminated shellfish. Patients can suffer from diarrhea, vomiting and abdominal pain. It can also be fatal if the disease spreads to the blood. It wasn't clear how the patients who died in Louisiana contracted the bacteria, whether it was via open wounds or also via consuming seafood. Dr David Janz, an associate chief medical officer at a hospital in the state, added to the local station: 'I personally will take care of sometimes two or three patients a year that have this infection. 'We certainly see it, but it is not a common infection. 'Twenty-five percent, or about one in four of those patients, will end up dying from this infection, which is a pretty high number.' About 150 to 200 people suffer a Vibrio vulnificus infection in the US every year, the CDC says, and one in five patients do not survive the infection. Cases are typically recorded along the southern US coast, where seas have experienced a rise in temperatures in recent years. But amid rising temperatures nationwide infections have also been detected further north. Last year, cases were detected in New York, Connecticut and North Carolina. Patients who suffer from the infection may require an amputation to remove the limb that has been infected by the bacteria. In a previous case, Debbie King, from Florida, was left needing her leg amputated in order to save her life after suffering an infection. The 72-year-old suffered a cut while climbing onto her friend's boat in the Gulf of Mexico in August 2023, but thought nothing of it. But over the next three days the cut turned red, blistered, and swelled, leading her to seek help from her doctor. She was immediately transferred to the hospital where doctors amputated her leg saying that if they didn't, she could die.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Exact date 'hostile alien probe' could strike Earth revealed as Harvard scientist issues chilling warning
A Harvard scientist has issued a chilling warning about a mysterious interstellar object hurtling through our solar system, and says it could spell disaster for Earth. Professor Avi Loeb, who is well-known for pushing bold and often polarizing theories about extraterrestrial life, has been tracking the object, named 3I/ATLAS, since it was first spotted on July 1. If the object is an alien craft, Loeb warned it could be carrying a probe or even a weapon. He predicted that such an intercept vehicle would reach Earth between November 21 and December 5, 2025. The timeline is based on calculations that 3I/ATLAS will pass behind the sun from Earth's perspective this October, a time he ominously suggested could be used to prepare the attack. Referring to the object as a 'mothership,' he explained that its position would be an efficient way to seed habitable planets with probes. This strategy would allow the devices to 'intercept the planets while the mothership continues on its journey to the next star.' 'It may come to save us or destroy us. We'd better be ready for both options and check whether all interstellar objects are rocks,' said Loeb. Chris Lintott, an astronomer at the University of Oxford, has dismissed Loeb's claims as 'nonsense on stilts,' telling Live Science that the alien probe theory is an 'insult to the exciting work going on to understand this object.' Loeb has remained adamant that something about 3I/ATLAS does not add up. He said its retrograde orbit, meaning it's moving against the flow of the solar system, is oddly aligned with Earth's path. '3I/ATLAS might be an alien probe,' he said, citing its 'unusually rare trajectory,' which just so happens to align closely with the orbital plane of the inner planets, including Earth. He puts the odds of that happening naturally at just 0.2 percent. 'At its closest point to the sun on October 29, fears of an alien invasion could send stock markets crashing,' Loeb said. 'In that scenario, citizens would lose their trust in governments to protect them.' He went so far as to compare the potential chaos to a military ambush, saying: 'Facing a high-tech alien visitor could feel like Iran's air defenses when US B-2 bombers appeared, silent, unstoppable, and overwhelmingly powerful.' The object, believed to be about 12 miles wide, is unusually large for something hurtling in from outside the solar system. According to Loeb, if it were natural, we would have already spotted millions of similar objects. 'But we haven't,' he said. He has published three pre-print papers laying out the case and has even suggested that NASA attempt an interception using its Juno spacecraft when the object passes near Jupiter. 'In my view, we need a risk scale for interstellar objects,' Loeb said. 'A zero would be a natural comet. 'A 10 would be a verified technological object, possibly powered by an engine or emitting artificial light.' He also believes governments should already be forming task forces, including scientists, policymakers and even psychologists, to determine how to respond and how to break the news to the public without triggering panic. Loeb's warnings have grown increasingly urgent, culminating in one dramatic statement: 'It may come to save us or destroy us. We'd better be ready for both options.' If 3I/ATLAS is more than just a rock, he said Earth is woefully unprepared. 'The visitor,' he warned, 'is already in our backyard.' Even if the object turns out to be artificial, Loeb admitted there's little humanity could do. At nearly 60 miles per second relative to Earth, it's moving far too fast for any of our current rockets to reach. 'If the hypothesis that 3I/ATLAS is a technological artifact proves correct, there are two possible implications: either its intentions are entirely benign, or they are malign, said Loeb. 'In the first case, humanity need only wait and welcome this interstellar messenger with open arms. It is the second scenario that causes serious concern.' He added that because the second possibility has serious consequences, we can use the idea behind Pascal's wager. 'Blaise Pascal argued that it's smarter to believe in God because the possible benefits of believing are much greater than the losses if you're wrong,' Loeb explained. 'Similarly, in our case, it makes sense to warn humanity about the risk from 3I/ATLAS, even if it turns out to be just a theory.