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Yealimi Noh, Lexi Thompson finish strong despite six-hour round at toasty KPMG Womens PGA
Yealimi Noh, Lexi Thompson finish strong despite six-hour round at toasty KPMG Womens PGA

USA Today

time6 hours ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Yealimi Noh, Lexi Thompson finish strong despite six-hour round at toasty KPMG Womens PGA

Yealimi Noh, Lexi Thompson finish strong despite six-hour round at toasty KPMG Womens PGA FRISCO, Texas – Yealimi Noh and Lexi Thompson birdied two of the last three holes coming down the stretch at the KPMG Women's PGA despite a grueling wait in the heat. There were four groups on the eighth tee at the Field Ranch East course when the marquee group came through Thursday evening. 'It was pretty brutal,' said Thompson of their six-hour round. 'I just drank a lot of water and tried to stay loose when we were in those waits on those holes and stay mentally in it.' The short par-4 seventh at 317 yards lured players into getting as close as possible, with a tricky green, and the par-3 eighth featured an unfriendly hole location. Add in a reachable par 5 to finish, and it all added up to a big backup. 'It was just like wait, wait, wait,' said Thompson. Noh, one of 15 different winners on tour this season, shot 2-under 70 to finish two back of leader Jeeno Thitikul, who made miles of putts in her morning 68. 'My umbrella was the only shade out there,' said Noh of a toasty Texas day. After a sluggish start, Thompson shot even-par 72 to sit in a share of 16th along with world No. 1 Nelly Korda and Rose Zhang. The KPMG marks Thompson's seventh start of the season. She tied for fourth at last week's Meijer LPGA Classic. A total of 15 players broke par in the opening round.

Lynn Lake residents to return home as wildfire threat fades, health services start to be restored
Lynn Lake residents to return home as wildfire threat fades, health services start to be restored

CBC

time6 hours ago

  • Climate
  • CBC

Lynn Lake residents to return home as wildfire threat fades, health services start to be restored

Residents of Lynn Lake can soon return home, more than three weeks after a wildfire ordered an evacuation of the northern Manitoba community. The town said in a Facebook post Thursday night that residents can return home as of Friday at 8 a.m. Buses are being arranged for those who need assistance, and town officials will be in contact with those individuals, according to the Facebook post. Officials are telling residents, however, they must be ready to evacuate with little notice if fire conditions worsen. Lynn Lake Mayor Brandon Dulewich said the pending return to their town brings an "overwhelming feeling of joy" for him, as well as the evacuees who spent a few weeks sleeping on cots in a makeshift shelter in Thompson, more than 200 kilometres away. "They've been out of the community for I think 24 days now, but we've been trying to bring you home forever." Delays in reopening ER Dulewich said the evacuation order would have been rescinded earlier if health-care services in the town of roughly 600 people could have been restored faster. The emergency department opened again on Thursday, the mayor said. The fire near Lynn Lake is over 71,000 hectares and remains out of control, according to a provincial wildfire bulletin issued on Thursday. Earlier in the day, Kristin Hayward, assistant deputy minister of the Conservation Officer Service and the Manitoba Wildfire Service, said the north half of the blaze is actively burning but the south part, closer to the community, is looking better. The town said on Facebook that "hot spots" from the wildfire remain close to the community. "There is a continued risk of smoke and falling ash, especially during periods of increased wind and heat." Dulewich commended the people of Thompson for voluntarily looking after his community, which is just over 800 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg. He's disappointed that Lynn Lake residents had to endure weeks in a shelter, sleeping on cots, while evacuees from other areas were flown to Winnipeg and stayed in hotel rooms. He wants a fairer system to be developed. "I've gone blue in the face, yelling at different agencies, trying to get the basic humane living conditions for the citizens of Lynn Lake," Dulewich said. "It's unbelievable that they had to have to stay in the makeshift shelter for this long."

Charges laid as Manitoba woman accused of trying to steal food from nine-year-old
Charges laid as Manitoba woman accused of trying to steal food from nine-year-old

CTV News

time7 hours ago

  • CTV News

Charges laid as Manitoba woman accused of trying to steal food from nine-year-old

Mounties in Thompson are investigating with officers from the RCMP major crime unit. (File image). THOMPSON -- A young woman in northern Manitoba is facing charges after police allege she tried to steal food from a nine-year-old girl. RCMP say they were called Wednesday to a robbery in Thompson, 700 kilometres north of Winnipeg, where a woman went up to a girl riding a bike and asked for the bag of food she was carrying. A bystander saw the whole thing and chased the woman away before bringing the child to safety. Mounties say the girl wasn't seriously hurt and didn't need medical attention. They say officers arrested a 22-year-old woman who matched the description given to them by the girl and the bystander. The accused has been charged with robbery, causing a disturbance and two counts of resisting arrest, and has been remanded into custody. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 19, 2025.

Scientists question Ottawa more than doubling cod catch in Newfoundland and Labrador
Scientists question Ottawa more than doubling cod catch in Newfoundland and Labrador

Hamilton Spectator

time10 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Hamilton Spectator

Scientists question Ottawa more than doubling cod catch in Newfoundland and Labrador

ST. JOHN'S - Scientists say they are surprised and 'puzzled' by the federal fisheries minister's decision Wednesday to more than double the catch in this year's northern cod fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador. Noel Cadigan modelled the northern cod stock for years as a scientist with Fisheries and Oceans Canada. He said the move to hike catch limits this year doesn't line up with the precautionary management approach the department says it has adopted for the stock. 'It is not easy to reduce these quotas again,' the associate professor at Memorial University's Marine Institute said Thursday. 'You want to be sure that these increases are going to be sustainable over the medium term.' 'I don't see evidence for that,' he added. Federal fisheries minister Joanne Thompson announced Wednesday that the total allowable catch for the commercial northern cod fishery off Newfoundland and Labrador's east coast would be 38,000 tonnes this year. That's up from 18,000 tonnes in 2024. For centuries, the northern cod fishery was the backbone of Newfoundland and Labrador's fishing sector and rural economy. But the stock began to collapse and in 1992, the federal government imposed a moratorium on the fishery. The move resulted in one of the largest mass layoffs in Canadian history. Ottawa lifted the 32-year-old moratorium last year, drawing criticism from some scientists who say the stock is still trying to recover. The Fisheries Department's northern cod stock assessment earlier this year was much rosier than the last. It included revised estimates of the stock size and the threshold at which it would struggle to survive. The chance the stock is above that threshold is greater than 99 per cent, it said. The department has not yet determined a threshold at which the stock would be considered healthy. If the stock falls between the goalposts for struggling and healthy, it is considered to be in the 'cautious' zone. Cadigan noted that according to the department's own guidelines, 'fishing must be progressively reduced' on stocks in that zone. The assessment also said there was a moderate to moderately high chance the stock would decline in the next few years, even if it wasn't fished. Cadigan said Thompson seems to be 'gambling' on that not happening. Tyler Eddy, a Marine Institute research scientist, said the assessment also predicted if fishing levels were doubled this year, there was just a four per cent chance the stock would fall back down past the threshold at which it was threatened by 2026. But Cadigan said the point should be to avoid that precipice at all costs. 'You're talking about a small risk of a disaster,' he said. Sherrylynn Rowe, also a Marine Institute research scientist, said the data in the latest stock assessment made Thompson's decision surprising. The Fisheries Department's press release Wednesday said the stock has been stable since 2017. Rowe said that also means it hasn't shown any significant growth. However, she said officials are under a lot of pressure from the local fishing industry to increase quotas and catches. From that perspective, the minister's decision isn't quite as shocking, she said. 'This is a challenge in Canada,' she said in an interview. 'Within the Department of Fisheries, they have a dual mandate to both protect oceans and fish stocks, but also promote fisheries … It's not always clear how the various objectives are weighted when they make these types of decisions.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 19, 2025. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

Woman charged with robbing girl, 9, on bicycle in Thompson
Woman charged with robbing girl, 9, on bicycle in Thompson

CBC

time12 hours ago

  • CBC

Woman charged with robbing girl, 9, on bicycle in Thompson

A nine-year-old girl in Thompson, Man., was saved from an attempted robbery earlier this week by a bystander who chased the would-be robber away, police say. A 22-year-old woman allegedly approached the girl on Thompson Drive at about 4 p.m. on Wednesday. The woman asked the nine-year-old, who was on a bicycle at the time, for a bag of food she was carrying. A bystander intervened, chased the woman away and took the girl to safety, according to an RCMP news release on Thursday. The girl sustained minor injuries but didn't require immediate medical attention. Mounties managed to track down the suspect based on descriptions provided by the girl and bystander. The woman has been charged with robbery, causing a disturbance and two counts of resisting arrest, RCMP said. She remains in custody. The investigation continues.

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