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Meet Pugsley! The Pug You’ll Want to Take Home Immediately

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. - Santa Barbara Humane returned to your Morning News with Pugsley the pug who is ready to light up your world!

Chief Operating Officer, Dory Villalon, sat down with Mackenzie Lake to talk about upcoming events happening with Santa Barbara Humane and all the available cats and dogs ready for the fur-ever home.

For more information about Pugsley, how to adopt and upcoming events, visit Santa Barbara Humane's website.

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

The post Meet Pugsley! The Pug You’ll Want to Take Home Immediately appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

5 things to know for March 20: Moon mission, Oil prices, Wartime funding, Spring break tragedy, Tax refunds

Kraig Pakulski 0 19 Article rating: No rating

By Alexandra Banner, CNN

In an awkward moment on Thursday, President Donald Trump made a joke about the attack on Pearl Harbor while sitting beside Japan’s prime minister in the Oval Office. It was the latest in a string of uncomfortable exchanges with world leaders in the West Wing.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Moon mission

Crews at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida are rolling out the Artemis II rocket to the launch pad as they prepare it for liftoff as early as April 1. The high-stakes mission will send four astronauts on a 10-day journey around the moon — without landing — marking NASA’s first crewed trip beyond low-Earth orbit in decades. But the push comes amid mounting urgency: China’s state-run space program is rapidly advancing toward a crewed lunar landing by 2030, intensifying a new space race and increasing the pressure on the US to keep pace.

🚀 Sign up for CNN’s Countdown newsletter
Learn more about Countdown, CNN’s free newsletter covering NASA’s first time sending humans to deep space in over 50 years.

2⃣ Oil prices

Oil prices rose today as energy infrastructure in the Middle East was damaged and the vital Strait of Hormuz was still largely shut. Goldman Sachs has suggested that the spike could stretch into 2027. Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, rose 1.4% to $110.2 a barrel. WTI, the US benchmark, was up 0.3% at $95.9. President Trump, meanwhile, has sought to reassure Americans grappling with the highest gas prices in nearly two and a half years, saying “it’s going to be over with pretty soon.” But three weeks in, the conflict shows no sign of abating.

3⃣ Wartime funding

President Trump is seeking $200 billion in new Pentagon funding for the war in Iran, calling it a “small price to pay” to equip the military. Key lawmakers — including some Republicans — appear skeptical about approving such a large sum, particularly since the Trump administration did not obtain congressional approval for the war. Several are also refusing to support any money without a clear White House strategy. Trump previewed the funding request on Thursday but did not offer specifics on what the Pentagon needed the funding for.

4⃣ Spring break tragedy

James Gracey, a 20-year-old American college student who was reported missing in Spain earlier this week, has been found dead, Barcelona police told CNN. A junior at the University of Alabama, Gracey had arrived in the city on Monday to visit friends for spring break. He was reported missing after he went to a nightclub and failed to return to his short-term rental, his family said. His body was later found in shallow waters at Somorrostro Beach, near the Shoko club, where police had been searching. Gracey, the eldest of five, was an avid hockey player and a responsible young man, according to his uncle, David Gracey, who is a CNN senior producer in Washington, DC. Authorities say the investigation is ongoing, with office

Viajeros en EE.UU. enfrentan tiempos de espera impredecibles en aeropuertos debido a que agentes de la TSA no reciben sueldo

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

Por CNN

Largas colas que duraban dos horas recibieron en la madrugada de este viernes a los viajeros en el control principal de seguridad de la TSA (Administración de Seguridad del Transporte) en el Aeropuerto Internacional Hartsfield-Jackson de Atlanta.

Las autoridades de la terminal informaron tiempos de espera de 120 minutos antes de las 4:00 a.m., hora de Miami, y se mantuvo constante después de las 5:30 a.m.

En el Aeropuerto Intercontinental George Bush de Houston, se reportó una espera de 90 minutos en un puesto de control desde poco después de su apertura a las 3:50 a.m., hora del centro. Uno de los puestos de control de la terminal permanecerá cerrado el viernes debido a la falta de personal.

En los últimos días, más de un tercio de los empleados de la TSA de ambos aeropuertos no se ha presentado a trabajar.

Se prevé que el viernes sea un día de mucho movimiento debido a la continuación de la temporada de vacaciones de primavera. Se recomienda a los viajeros llegar temprano al aeropuerto y prever largas filas.

Los aeropuertos de todo Estados Unidos se enfrentan a largas colas en los controles de seguridad, ya que los empleados de la TSA afrontan su primera semana sin cobrar el sueldo completo durante el cierre parcial del gobierno que comenzó el mes pasado.

Esto es lo que necesitas saber:

  • Agentes ausentes: Por tercer día consecutivo, más de un tercio de los empleados de la TSA no se presentaron a trabajar en el Aeropuerto Internacional Hartsfield-Jackson de Atlanta, uno de los aeropuertos más concurridos de Estados Unidos. Según el sistema de seguimiento de CNN, los tiempos de espera ya alcanzaban las dos horas este viernes por la mañana.
  • Problema a nivel nacional: El miércoles, más del 10 % del personal de la TSA en todo Estados Unidos no se presentó a trabajar, según informó el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional. Además de Atlanta, otros terminales gravemente afectadas por la escasez de personal de la TSA ese día fueron el Aeropuerto Intercontinental George Bush de Houston y el aeropuerto de Filadelfia, donde también se registró la ausencia de al menos un tercio de los agentes.
  • Sin sueldo: Se espera que los empleados de la TSA sigan trabajando sin cobrar durante la suspensión de la financiación federal, aunque los líderes sindicales afirman que algunos trabajadores no pueden costear la gasolina ni el cuidado de los niños necesarios para ir a trabajar.
  • Cientos de personas renuncian: Al menos 366 agentes de la Administración de Seguridad del Transporte (TSA) han dejado sus puestos de trabajo en medio del cierre parcial del Gobierno, según anunció el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional a principios de esta semana.

Los largos tiempos de espera en muchos de los principales aeropuertos de Estados Unidos son “un juego de niños” comparados con lo que podría suceder si no se consigue pronto la financiación de la TSA, declaró el secretario de Transporte del país.

Tras señalar que los agentes de la TSA ya no han recibido su salario completo debido a la falta de un acuerdo presupuestario para el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional, el secretario Sean Duffy declaró este jueves a CNBC que se avecina otra fecha límite para el pago de otro salario.

“Cuando llegue la próxima semana… y esté a punto de incumplirse otro pago, lo que está sucediendo ahora parecerá un juego de niños”, manifestó Duffy. “Creo que veremos aeropuertos pequeños cerrados. Veremos largas filas”.

Mientras largas filas de viajeros se extienden por los aeropuertos de todo el país esta semana, los empleados de la TSA, que están trabajando sin cobrar durante la ajetreada temporada de viajes de las vacaciones de p

Hot and dry Friday, temperatures ease this weekend

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating

The last day of extreme heat occurs Friday. We begin the morning with clear skies and warm morning temperatures, with a fast warming pattern. Most areas will be slightly cooler than yesterday, but temperatures remain close to 30 degrees above average. Winds are light and marine waters are calm. We begin to see the marine layer and clouds build tonight.

Expect marine clouds and fog Saturday morning. This will immediate cool off the beaches and provide significant relief. Clouds will be fast to clear however and low to mid 80s are on tap for the day. Winds and marine waters are calm. Overnights drop into the 50s for most.

Another round of clouds appear Sunday morning. These clouds will retreat fast as well and high temperatures hold into the 70s and low 80s. Our next high pressure ridge develops Monday and keeps our summer-like pattern. Expect 80s for most of next week. Minimal day to day changes.

The post Hot and dry Friday, temperatures ease this weekend appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

The push to end animal testing is gaining steam, but technology can’t fill the gap yet

Kraig Pakulski 0 25 Article rating: No rating

By Jen Christensen, CNN

(CNN) — A social media post from the US Food and Drug Administration this week shows a big-eyed macaque staring out from behind bars.

“Some drugs use 144 monkeys on average for preclinical testing,” the post says. “We’re changing that.”

Animal testing has been a target of the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again movement, and on Wednesday, the FDA released draft guidance that aims to clear up how drug developers can use alternative testing when seeking approvals from regulators.
The National Institutes of Health also announced that it’s investing $150 million to develop animal model alternatives.

“This draft guidance advances our commitment to replace animal testing with human-relevant, scientifically rigorous methods,” US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a statement.

The guidance is not final, but it’s meant to steer drugmakers toward what the industry calls New Approach Methodologies instead of the animal research that “historically, sponsors have defaulted to,” an FDA official said Tuesday. Changing the approach could even speed drug development, the official said.

“These data can be much more predictive and also a more ethical option,” the official said during a briefing with reporters.

That doesn’t mean animal testing in the United States is over.

New technologies can’t handle all the questions scientists rely on animals to answer, experts said. The new guidance also doesn’t address how animals are used in the federal government’s own research or shed more light on how many animals are currently used for testing.

“There’s a huge amount of work to be done. We do so many different types of animal experiments on so many different types of animals, and the numbers are just staggering. But we already have seen some progress, and I’m optimistic we will see some more,” said Delcianna Winders, director of the Animal Law and Policy Institute and an associate professor of law at Vermont Law and Graduate School. “We are in a moment of opportunity that we’ve never seen before.”

Why animals are used in testing

Animals have played a key role in some of the most important lifesaving scientific discoveries in history. They are biologically similar to humans and often get the same diseases, but their environment is easier to control. They also generally have shorter lives than humans, so a therapy can be studied over an animal’s entire lifetime.

All three 2025 Nobel Prize winners in medicine used mice to help develop breakthrough theories about the immune system that led to new cancer treatments and advances in organ transplants. Hundreds of clinical trials underway build on this work, according to the Foundation for Biomedical Research.

Although much of the public believes that such research is helpful, Americans are becoming less tolerant of animal testing. In 2001, 65% of Americans polled said they found testing on animals morally

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