“The first power play we had was a little bit like the rest of our game. our execution was a little off, we didn’t make great plays with the puck, we didn’t have great support,” DeBoer said. “I thought in the third, we came out and we executed. I think you never know when that switch is going to go.
That’s the priority, he said. “Esa es la prioridad ahora.”Methodology: KFF Health News and The Associated Press analyzed data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on the number of new HIV diagnoses and infections among Americans ages 13 and older at the local, state and national level. This story primarily uses incidence rate data — estimates of new infections — at the national level and diagnosis rate data at the state and county level.
Bose reported from Orlando, Florida. Reese reported from Sacramento, California. AP videojournalist Laura Bargfeld contributed to this report.The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is responsible for all content. This article also was produced by, a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at
— the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism. KFF Health News is the publisher of, an editorially independent service of the
. A version of this story was also published by Univision Noticias.
KOKOMO, Miss. (AP) — Myrtle, a cherished pet tortoise, has been reunited with its family in Mississippi weeks after disappearing during a deadlyThat said, she’s starting to get used to — and enjoy — the clay used at the French Open.
“In the future? I guess we’ll see. You never know. I feel like I’ve been doing pretty OK on the clay so far, even though it was my least favorite surface and I thought it was my worst surface, too,” Mboko said. “But you never know.”Howard Fendrich has been the AP’s tennis writer since 2002. Find his stories here:
MIAMI (AP) — Flamingos, pelicans, herons and parrots are just a few of the wild birds that call Miami home, but it’s the roosters, hens and baby chicks that have come to rule the roost in recent years.Not only found in residential neighborhoods like Little Havana, Little Haiti and Wynwood, the fowl families are also making their home among the high-rises and government buildings downtown. And while some people find the crowing to be a nuisance, many have adopted the rooster as an unofficial mascot for the city.