WASHINGTON, Feb 11 (Reuters) – The U.S. army stated on Saturday it nonetheless couldn’t supply even primary particulars about an flying saucers it shot down off Alaska a day earlier, and introduced it had noticed one more high-altitude airborne object, now flying over Canada.
U.S. President Joe Biden ordered the shoot-down of the UFO over sea ice close to Deadhorse, Alaska on Friday, a day after U.S. pilots first noticed — and tried to determine — the thing because it flew into U.S. airspace.
The Pentagon on Friday supplied just a few particulars, together with that the thing was the scale of a small automobile, it was flying at about 40,000 ft and couldn’t maneuver and seemed to be unmanned.
On Saturday, the U.S. army’s Northern Command instructed little extra had been discovered about it, whilst search and restoration efforts entered their second day.
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“We’ve no additional particulars right now in regards to the object, together with its capabilities, objective, or origin,” Northern Command stated.
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It famous troublesome arctic climate circumstances, together with wind chill, snow, and restricted daylight that hinder search and restoration efforts.
“Personnel will modify restoration operations to take care of security,” Northern Command stated.
Simply minutes after the replace on the restoration actions, the U.S. army’s North American Aerospace Protection Command (NORAD) stated it recognized a brand new high-altitude airborne object over northern Canada. Northern Command and NORAD are each led by U.S. Air Power Gen. Glen VanHerck.
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NORAD stated army plane had been presently working from Alaska and Canada in assist of its actions.
“Whereas we can’t focus on specifics associated to those actions right now, please be aware that NORAD conducts sustained, dispersed operations within the protection of North America by way of one or all three NORAD areas,” it stated in a press release.
NORAD itself consists of each the US and oversees aerospace warning, aerospace management and maritime warning for North America.
America is at a heightened state of alert after a suspected Chinese language surveillance balloon flew throughout the US and Canada for per week earlier than it was shot down on Feb. 4.
Reporting by Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali in Washington; Modifying by David Gregorio
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Our Requirements: The Thomson Reuters Belief Rules.
Phil Stewart
Thomson Reuters
Phil Stewart has reported from greater than 60 international locations, together with Afghanistan, Ukraine, Syria, Iraq, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, China and South Sudan. An award-winning Washington-based nationwide safety reporter, Phil has appeared on NPR, PBS NewsHour, Fox Information and different packages and moderated nationwide safety occasions, together with on the Reagan Nationwide Protection Discussion board and the German Marshall Fund. He’s a recipient of the Edwin M. Hood Award for Diplomatic Correspondence and the Joe Galloway Award.
Idrees Ali
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Thomson Reuters
Nationwide safety correspondent specializing in the Pentagon in Washington D.C. Stories on U.S. army exercise and operations all through the world and the affect that they’ve. Has reported from over two dozen international locations to incorporate Iraq, Afghanistan, and far of the Center East, Asia and Europe. From Karachi, Pakistan.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – After last week’s inter-division chaos, Week 4 of the Alaska high school football season saw a return to normalcy for the top teams in the state.
Twelve games took place during the weekend, with an additional thirteenth scheduled game, a nine-man contest between Nikiski and Valdez, canceled due to a lack of available Buccaneer players.
West 35 – Colony 16
The Knights invaded West Anchorage on Friday and hung close with Division I’s top team, leading 16-14 late in the third quarter. However, the Eagles notched 21 unanswered points to put Colony away and stay unbeaten on the season.
South 33 – East 7
The East Anchorage Thunderbirds returned home on Saturday looking to notch their first victory of the year, but a red-hot South Anchorage squad cruised over them to a third straight win.
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Wolverines back Ethan Yarrington rushed for a pair of 60-yard scores to bring his season touchdown total to 7 across four games.
Homer 26 – Redington 0
The defending D-III state champions made the trip up to the valley to challenge the frisky Redington Huskies, and pulled out a shutout win in a defensive slugfest.
The Mariners have allowed just 8 points this season, all against Houston in a season-opening win. In the three games since, Homer stayed unbeaten while outscoring opponents 104-0.
WEEK 4 HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SCORES
Week 4 high school football scores around Alaska.(KTUU)
Week 4 high school football scores from around Alaska.(KTUU)
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Soldotna senior running back Andon Wolverton makes a play during a game Friday, Aug. 29, 2025, between Division II’s Soldotna and Division I’s Dimond High. Soldotna won, 56-7. (Photo by Stephanie Burgoon)
With high school football teams from both Division I and II playing out of state this past week, several matchups between the two levels took place and even one between Division II and III teams.
The most highly anticipated nonconference game of the Week 3 slate was between reigning Division I state champion Dimond and two-time defending Division II state champion Soldotna on Friday night. However, it turned out to be another lopsided victory for the visiting Stars as they steamrolled the Lynx 56-7 to remain undefeated while dropping their foes to 0-3 for the first time since 2021.
“We’re definitely off to a good start,” Soldotna head coach Galen Brantley said. “I feel like our kids are executing really well for where we are at this point in the season.”
Half of Soldotna’s touchdowns were scored by senior running back Andon Wolverton,who rushed for 101 yards and found the end zone four times from 1, 4, 10 and 32 yards out.
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“I’m glad we won, it was a battle and it was intense,” he said. I was really trying and at the end of the day, I’m glad I could get into the end zone.”
Wolverton would’ve most likely had a fifth touchdown had an official not made him leave the field after he came up limping a bit, after ripping off a 19-yard run and going down just shy of the goal line. The Stars still scored on the next play on a 2-yard touchdown from senior Ethan Piscoya.
The driving force behind Wolverton and the Soldotna offense’s overall prolific scoring was the Stars offensive line, which was perfectly aligned and executing for most of the night. On most of the scoring runs and large gains, ball carriers went untouched into the end zone or the second and third levels of the defense.
While Dimond’s defense struggled to keep Soldotna from marching up and down the field, the same couldn’t be said on the other side of the ball for both teams. The Stars pitched a shutout in the first half, posting a 42-0 advantage after two quarters of action. They held the Lynx scoreless until the 3:35 mark in the fourth quarter, when senior tight end Austin Young was able to drag a couple of backup defenders who subbed in across the goal line for a 32-yard score.
South Anchorage defeated Lathrop in their interdivisional matchup Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025. (Josh Reed / ADN)
On Saturday, the top interdivisional matchup also took place in town as two-time Division II runner-up Lathrop came down from Fairbanks to take on South Anchorage. The Division I representative didn’t disappoint in this game, with the Wolverines successfully defending their home turf with a 31-7 victory over the Malemutes.
“It was all the team,” junior Ethan Yarrington said. “We pushed through together.”
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He led the charge for the Wolverines on both sides of the ball with a three-touchdown performance on offense and a defensive outing that included several tackles for loss and a fumble recovery.
“It was all my offensive line,” Yarrington said. “On the two touchdowns where we just punched it up the middle, I put my nose in there right behind my offensive line, give all the credit to them.”
After establishing a 24-0 lead heading into halftime, South looked like it was poised to cruise to victory but Lathrop showed some promise courtesy of a pair of sparks provided by their special teams unit. A long kickoff return by junior Kenyon Pulgarin set up the offense with a short field, and it only took them three plays to find the end zone and cut into the Wolverines’ lead.
On the ensuing kickoff, Lathrop caught South’s kick-return team off-guard with an onside kick attempt that was successfully recovered. With the Malemutes driving again, the Wolverines’ defense took the ball and momentum back on the second of three turnovers that senior Carsen Hawes came up with in the game. Just when it seemed like Pulgarin was streaking wide open over the middle for a touchdown, he came over the top and recorded the first of his two interceptions.
“We knew they were going to come back, so we pounced on them right when they did,” Yarrington said. “We were a little bit lackadaisical coming out (of halftime). We were up big and thought it was going to be a breeze, but I knew in the back of my mind that they were going to score no matter what.”
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After being held scoreless in the third quarter, he helped the Wolverines pull away for good by ripping off a 62-yard touchdown in which he broke tackles before erupting down the right sideline.
“It was a little toss-play right there, I cut it up and made a play, found green and got out of there,” Yarrington said.
Elsewhere in interdivision action from this past weekend, both West Anchorage and Service narrowly escaped Interior opponents with decisive victories that were decided by less than a field goal to remain undefeated. The Eagles came up with another clutch defensive stop to beat West Valley 28-27 while the Cougars prevailed 8-6 in a defensive battle with North Pole.
Colony pulled off a rally in the Mat-Su after initially falling behind 14-0 at home to Wasilla on Friday night. The Knights forced a pair of overtimes and came up with a defensive stand to complete the comeback 27-21. Emerging Division II contender Palmer’s offense continued to stay hot with a third straight game of scoring 40-plus points in a 41-20 blowout of Division I foe Juneau-Douglas on Saturday to wrap up the weekend’s action.
Outside of the state, Chugiak traveled down to Alameda, California, on Thursday to take on Encinal and returned home with a 45-6 victory. On Friday, Bettye Davis East Anchorage was nearly 500 miles south in the same state to face Southwest San Diego and fell to 0-3 after a 39-21 defeat.
A mother of three was viciously mauled and dragged 100 yards by a brown bear just moments after stepping outside her Alaska home for an early morning jog.
Ariean Fabrizio Colton, 36, miraculously survived the terrifying encounter but has remained hospitalized since the ferocious animal left her with severe injuries requiring surgery Tuesday morning, according to local wildlife officials and her devastated family.
Around 5 a.m., the bear charged from a nearby property and ambushed Colton roughly 150 feet from her Kenai home, dragging her down the road before a neighbor found her shocked and bloodied body in his yard, Alaska Wildlife Trooper David Looring told KTUU.
Ariean Fabrizio Colton, 36, miraculously survived the terrifying encounter but remains hospitalized with severe injuries. GoFundMe
“He heard the barking, wolfing sound of a bear, he’d been around bears before and he thought a bear might have got a dog and was doing something in the neighborhood,” the trooper told the outlet.
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“He didn’t really think much of it and then he heard it some more. [In] daylight, he walked out there and located a female in the woods on his property.”
Officials said the mom of three was standing 150 feet away from her Kenai home when the bear ambushed her. GoFundMe
Wildlife officials said the married nurse — who recently moved to southern Alaska — was conscious when found but was bleeding heavily from her face and scalp.
Colton was transported to a hospital in Anchorage, located nearly three hours from her home.
“She is stable, but has suffered severe injuries that will require extensive surgeries and a long hospital stay,” her loved ones said Tuesday in a GoFundMe, that has since raised more than $63,700.
A neighbor found her with severe wounds and bleeding from her head and scalp. GoFundMe
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“Ariean has had her initial surgery and the doctors are positive and hopeful. It is still a long road to recovery,” the family said in an update Saturday.
Officials believe the wild animal was a brown bear based on its tracks, but said it hasn’t been located.
They urged residents and visitors to remain alert as bears bulk up on salmon and berries for the winter.
Her family said she’ll require extensive surgeries and a long hospital stay. GoFundMe
“If you do get out in the woods, make sure you can hear your surroundings and what is going on,” Lorring told the outlet.
“And that can be as simple as putting in one AirPod and not two.”