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Keep cruisin'


A COVID-19 warning for cruise ships was dropped. A NASA astronaut’s landing defies U.S. tensions with Russia. Bruce Willis announces his departure from acting.

👋 It's Nicole, bringing you all the news you need to know Wednesday. 

But first, batten down the hatches. More than 50 million Americans are at risk of experiencing severe weather Wednesday, especially across the Deep South.

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CDC: It's okay to set sail 

After more than two years of discouraging travelers from taking cruises amid the pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dropped its COVID-19 risk assessment of cruise travel Wednesday. The removal of the COVID-19 Cruise Ship Travel Health Notice doesn’t mean that sailing the seas comes without any risk. A spokesperson for the health agency said travelers should analyze the risk as they would for any other travel. The decision to lift the notice was based on the pandemic’s state and decreased rates of COVID-19 on cruise ships.

Little progress for Russia-Ukraine talks 

No breakthroughs were reached in talks with Ukraine to end Russia’s invasion, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday. None of the officials involved in the talks described them as positive, Peskov said. The Russian military suffered such heavy losses that units were forced to return to Belarus and Russia, putting pressure on Russia’s overwhelmed logistics, the British Defense Ministry said in an assessment Wednesday. President Joe Biden pledged $500 million in additional support to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during a phone call Wednesday.

👉More news: Wednesday's latest updates

What everyone's talking about

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Bruce Willis takes a bow

Bruce Willis is stepping away from acting because of health issues. The 67-year-old actor known for his roles in “Die Hard” and “Pulp Fiction” was diagnosed with aphasia, a language disorder that hinders a person’s ability to communicate and talk with others. According to an Instagram post by his daughter Rumer, the condition is “impacting his cognitive abilities,” causing the star to step away from his celebrated career. The joint family statement described the decision as “challenging” but expressed love and appreciation for fans’ support.

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson on way to Supreme Court

President Joe Biden’s Supreme Court nominee has bipartisan support for her confirmation. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Wednesday that she would vote yes on Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s nomination. Collins’ vote would move the needle in the Senate, which is evenly split along party lines and needs a simple majority of 51 of the 100 senators to make the judge the first Black woman to serve on the country's highest court. Republicans pushed Jackson during confirmation hearings last week, but Collins said in a statement that although she will not agree with every one of Jackson’s votes, “that alone, however, is not disqualifying.”

Real quick

NASA astronaut returns to Earth in Russian capsule

NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei landed on Earth Wednesday with two Russian cosmonauts after a record 355-day spaceflight at the International Space Station.  The American landed in a Soyuz capsule – a Russian capsule – in Kazakhstan with Pyotr Dubrov and Anton Shkaplerov of the Russian Space Agency. The trio’s return from space comes as tensions between the United States and Russia escalate over Vladimir Putin’s deadly invasion of Ukraine. Vande Hei said he avoided the subject of the war with his two Russian crewmates during the flight. One of the cosmonauts remarked that during orbit, “we are one crew.”

Title IX falling short at 50

Title IX turns 50 this summer. The federal law requires schools receiving public funds to guarantee gender equity across a range of areas, but it's best known for its mandate to provide women with equal athletic opportunities. After five decades, schools still fall short of this directive. Paste BN interviewed coaches, athletes and athletic directors to evaluate where disparities lie. Though the number of girls and women playing sports has soared, schools lag in ensuring opportunities are equitable. Spending imbalances between men’s and women’s teams are often hidden – another way women are told they don’t matter.

A break from the news

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