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2025-01-11   

3 nourishing recipes to cut down on ultra-processed food in 2025Graphjet technology director sells shares worth $281,460digital circus store

NoneGeraldo Rivera and John Ramsey face off years after TV host staged a ‘mock trial’ for JonBenét’s murderWMU_safety, 3:41. WMU_Abdus-Salaam 31 pass from Wolff (Zurak kick), 1:50. WMU_Ja.Buckley 15 run (Zurak kick), :19. EMU_Mimms 10 run (Reese pass from Snyder), 12:02. WMU_Abdus-Salaam 22 run (Zurak kick), 6:04. EMU_Mimms 1 run (Gomez kick), 2:16. WMU_FG Zurak 25, 11:33. EMU_FG Gomez 32, 7:52. RUSHING_E. Michigan, Mimms 18-127, Mattord 8-37, Snyder 7-27, Te.Lockett 1-7, Singleton 1-4, Brown 1-1. W. Michigan, Abdus-Salaam 19-135, Ja.Buckley 19-103, Lowry 3-13, Nixon 3-(minus 4), (Team) 3-(minus 6), Wolff 3-(minus 11). PASSING_E. Michigan, Snyder 7-22-1-91. W. Michigan, Wolff 12-17-0-126. RECEIVING_E. Michigan, Allen 3-59, Mimms 2-16, Te.Lockett 1-9, Devereaux 1-7. W. Michigan, Abdus-Salaam 3-40, Toudle 3-23, Ja.Buckley 3-13, Bosma 2-33, Dieudonne 1-17. MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.

Jimmy Carter’s ascent to the White House was something few people could have predicted when he was governor of the US state of Georgia. It was no different for Jimmy Carter in the early 1970s. It took meeting several presidential candidates and then encouragement from an esteemed elder statesman before the young governor, who had never met a president himself, saw himself as something bigger. He announced his White House bid on December 12 1974, amid fallout from the Vietnam War and the resignation of Richard Nixon. Then he leveraged his unknown, and politically untainted, status to become the 39th president. That whirlwind path has been a model, explicit and otherwise, for would-be contenders ever since. “Jimmy Carter’s example absolutely created a 50-year window of people saying, ‘Why not me?’” said Steve Schale, who worked on President Barack Obama’s campaigns and is a long-time supporter of President Joe Biden. Mr Carter’s journey to high office began in Plains, Georgia where he received end-of-life care decades after serving as president. David Axelrod, who helped to engineer Mr Obama’s four-year ascent from state senator to the Oval Office, said Mr Carter’s model is about more than how his grassroots strategy turned the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary into his springboard. “There was a moral stain on the country, and this was a guy of deep faith,” Mr Axelrod said. “He seemed like a fresh start, and I think he understood that he could offer something different that might be able to meet the moment.” Donna Brazile, who managed Democrat Al Gore’s 2000 presidential campaign, got her start on Mr Carter’s two national campaigns. “In 1976, it was just Jimmy Carter’s time,” she said. Of course, the seeds of his presidential run sprouted even before Mr Nixon won a second term and certainly before his resignation in August 1974. In Mr Carter’s telling, he did not run for governor in 1966, he lost, or in 1970 thinking about Washington. Even when he announced his presidential bid, neither he nor those closest to him were completely confident. “President of what?” his mother, Lillian, replied when he told her his plans. But soon after he became governor in 1971, Mr Carter’s team envisioned him as a national player. They were encouraged in part by the May 31 Time magazine cover depicting Mr Carter alongside the headline “Dixie Whistles a Different Tune”. Inside, a flattering profile framed Mr Carter as a model “New South” governor. In October 1971, Carter ally Dr Peter Bourne, an Atlanta physician who would become US drug tsar, sent his politician friend an unsolicited memo outlining how he could be elected president. On October 17, a wider circle of advisers sat with Mr Carter at the Governor’s Mansion to discuss it. Mr Carter, then 47, wore blue jeans and a T-shirt, according to biographer Jonathan Alter. The team, including Mr Carter’s wife Rosalynn, who died aged 96 in November 2023, began considering the idea seriously. “We never used the word ‘president’,” Mr Carter recalled upon his 90th birthday, “but just referred to national office”. Mr Carter invited high-profile Democrats and Washington players who were running or considering running in 1972, to one-on-one meetings at the mansion. He jumped at the chance to lead the Democratic National Committee’s national campaign that year. The position allowed him to travel the country helping candidates up and down the ballot. Along the way, he was among the Southern governors who angled to be George McGovern’s running mate. Mr Alter said Mr Carter was never seriously considered. Still, Mr Carter got to know, among others, former vice president Hubert Humphrey and senators Henry Jackson of Washington, Eugene McCarthy of Maine and Mr McGovern of South Dakota, the eventual nominee who lost a landslide to Mr Nixon. Mr Carter later explained he had previously defined the nation’s highest office by its occupants immortalised by monuments. “For the first time,” Mr Carter told The New York Times, “I started comparing my own experiences and knowledge of government with the candidates, not against ‘the presidency’ and not against Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. It made it a whole lot easier”. Adviser Hamilton Jordan crafted a detailed campaign plan calling for matching Mr Carter’s outsider, good-government credentials to voters’ general disillusionment, even before Watergate. But the team still spoke and wrote in code, as if the “higher office” were not obvious. It was reported during his campaign that Mr Carter told family members around Christmas 1972 that he would run in 1976. Mr Carter later wrote in a memoir that a visit from former secretary of state Dean Rusk in early 1973 affirmed his leanings. During another private confab in Atlanta, Mr Rusk told Mr Carter plainly: “Governor, I think you should run for president in 1976.” That, Mr Carter wrote, “removed our remaining doubts.” Mr Schale said the process is not always so involved. “These are intensely competitive people already,” he said of governors, senators and others in high office. “If you’re wired in that capacity, it’s hard to step away from it.” “Jimmy Carter showed us that you can go from a no-name to president in the span of 18 or 24 months,” said Jared Leopold, a top aide in Washington governor Jay Inslee’s unsuccessful bid for Democrats’ 2020 nomination. “For people deciding whether to get in, it’s a real inspiration,” Mr Leopold continued, “and that’s a real success of American democracy”.Uddhav Thackeray’s move to gradually turn to aggressive Hindutva to safeguard his support base has angered the Samajwadi Party, which has threatened to disassociate itself from the opposition coalition Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi (MVA). On Saturday, when the three-day special session of the Maharashtra assembly commenced for the oath-taking ceremony of the newly elected MLAs and the election of the assembly speaker, MVA MLAs walked out to protest against the alleged manipulation of EVMs in the assembly elections. However, two Samajwadi Party MLAs, Abu Azmi and Rais Shaikh, went ahead and took their oaths. The rift began on December 6 when Shiv Sena (UBT) party secretary Milind Narvekar posted an image of the Babri Masjid demolition on social media with pictures of Bal Thackeray and the latter’s remark that he was proud of those who had demolished the mosque. Photographs of party chief Uddhav Thackeray and Aaditya Thackeray were also posted. The post and pictures kicked up a row, and Rais Shaikh expressed his anger on social media. “This is to remind you that the Shiv Sena (UBT) enjoyed enormous support from secular votes in the Lok Sabha and Vidhan Sabha elections. The glorification of the dark day in India’s history is uncalled-for and unwarranted. I strongly condemn such glorification,” he said in a post. Azmi said there was “no co-ordination in the MVA during the seat-sharing talks for the assembly polls and the campaign”. READ | On Abu Azmi's MVA exit declaration, SP says ‘national leadership to decide’ “Now, as per reports, after the defeat in the assembly elections, Uddhav Thackeray has asked his party leaders and workers to aggressively pursue the Hindutva agenda,” he said. “Yesterday, party leader Narvekar posted a message supporting the demolition of the Babri mosque. We cannot tolerate this so we are reconsidering our alliance with the MVA.” One of the reasons for the party’s debacle seems to be its traditional voters ditching it as a result of the Mahayuti’s allegations that the Thackeray faction ditched Hindutva for Muslim votes. In the party’s preparations for the upcoming civic polls, Thackeray has asked his workers to aggressively pursue Hindutva to counter the Mahayuti. Narvekar’s act is seen as part of the same strategy. Recently, the Shiv Sena (UBT) raised questions about the assaults on Hindus in Bangladesh and reached out to railway minister Ashwini Vaishnav to protect the Hanuman temple at Dadar Central railway station from demolition. Milind Narvekar did not respond to calls and messages about his post. Shiv Sena (UBT) MLA Sunil Raut, while reacting to Azmi’s statement, said, “I am not aware if Azmi has had a discussion with his party leadership before making this statement. As far as our stand on it is concerned, the party leadership will decide.” Rais Shaikh, when asked about the decision of the two Samajwadi Party MLAs to take oath, said, “We were not informed about the decision to not to take oath, so we did. It was just a communication issue. We are in alliance with MVA.” However, Shaikh added that his party had reservations about the Shiv Sena (UBT) pursuing aggressive Hindutva. “They should stay away from it,” he said. “If they continue with this stand in the coming days, we will rethink the alliance.”

Syrian insurgents reach the capital's suburbs. Worried residents flee and stock up on suppliesAmid an ongoing diplomatic dispute over the arrest of a Hindu priest, Bangladesh reiterated that India must address Dhaka’s longstanding concerns to enhance bilateral relations, while expressing optimism about maintaining positive ties with mutual interests safeguarded. Bangladesh’s Foreign Affairs Adviser, Touhid Hossain, acknowledged a shift in the relationship between the two nations since August 5, referring to it as an undeniable “reality”. “After August 5, relations with India have been changed and this is the reality,” said Hossain. He emphasised that Bangladesh have to build a relationship with India “in view of this reality.” “I believe India will understand how to take forward relations with Bangladesh under the changed circumstances,” Hossain said. Ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had to flee her country on August 5 afternoon following a swift and violent regime change. Hasina narrowly escaped a violent mob and was forced to take refuge in India after arriving in a Bangladesh Air Force. Hossain emphasised that India must address Bangladesh’s persistent concerns to improve their bilateral ties. He pointed out that while Bangladesh’s previous government made efforts to address India’s concerns, India had not reciprocated by addressing Bangladesh’s issues. The diplomatic rift between India and Bangladesh escalated after Hindu priest Chinmoy Krishna Das, a former member of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), was arrested at Dhaka’s Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport. Das, who also serves as a spokesperson for the Bangladesh Sammilita Sanatani Jagran Jote, was denied bail and remanded in jail by a Chattogram court in connection with a sedition case. This led to violent clashes between his supporters and security forces, resulting in the death of a lawyer. Hossain made these comments during a roundtable discussion titled ‘Bangladesh-India Relations: Expectations, Barriers, and Future,’ organised by the South Asian Institute of Policy and Governance (SIPG) and the Department of Political Science & Sociology at North South University, according to the Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS) news agency. While acknowledging the change in relations since August 5, Hossain remained hopeful that Bangladesh could establish a good relationship with India, ensuring the protection of both countries’ bilateral interests. “We remain optimistic that we will be able to build a good relationship with India, ensuring our mutual interests are protected,” Hossain said, as quoted by BSS. He also highlighted the importance of national consensus on foreign policy, noting that political divisions within Bangladesh had hindered the country’s ability to fully realise its potential. In the wake of this week’s anti-Hindu incidents, including Das’s arrest and attacks on Hindu temples and communities, India expressed grave concern on November 29. The Indian government urged Bangladesh’s interim administration to uphold its duty to protect all minority communities. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar stated in Parliament that India had taken serious note of the violence against minorities in Bangladesh and stressed that it is Dhaka's primary responsibility to ensure the safety and liberty of all citizens, including minorities. On the other hand, Bangladesh also expressed deep concern over violent protests at its Deputy High Commission in Kolkata, urging New Delhi to ensure the security of its diplomatic missions in India.Final Audio announces the D8000 DC and DC Pro flagship headphones

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'CM face to be from BJP': Ajit Pawar reveals what went inside Mahayuti meet at Amit Shah's Delhi residenceQatar tribune dpa Warsaw Members of Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s Civic Platform (PO) party have chosen Warsaw Mayor Rafat Trzaskowski as their candidate for the Polish presidential election in May 2025, Tusk announced on Saturday. The liberal-conservative party’s members voted 74.75% in favour of the 52-year-old Trzaskowski. Polish Foreign Minister Radostaw Sikorski finished a distant second in the primary election with 25.25% of the vote. “I have received a very strong mandate,” Trzaskowski said after his victory. Trzaskowski previously ran in the Polish presidential election in 2020, when he narrowly fell short of defeating Andrzej Duda in a run-off. On Saturday, he said the support of party members gives him energy, determination and courage to win the presidential election, where his main rival will be the candidate from the nationalist conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party. Sikorski offered his support for Trzaskowski following the announcement of the results: “You hit the bull’s eye with your idea of the primaries. We have mobilized our party with it.” The exact date of the presidential election has not yet been set. PiS plans to announce the choice of its candidate at a meeting in Kraków on Sunday. Incumbent Duda, a member of PiS, is term-limited after having served as the country’s president since 2015. The youthful-looking Trzaskowski has been the mayor of Warsaw since 2018. Before that, the political scientist, who studied at Oxford and speaks five foreign languages, was a member of the European Parliament. Copy 24/11/2024 10

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Ganghwa, South Korea: For seven years, Kim Seongmin has been facing a cancer that has spread to his lungs, brain and liver. Doctors recently gave him only months to live. He can’t sleep at night without painkillers. Still, Kim broadcasts into North Korea twice a day, bringing its people news and information they are cut off from because of strict censorship laws. “North Korea is keeping its people like frogs trapped in a deep well,” ​said Kim​, 62, during an interview at his rural home on this island west of Seoul, where he records and edits shows for Free North Korea Radio. “We broadcast to help them realise that there is something wrong with their political system.” Kim Seongmin, president of Free North Korea Radio, edits content for the station at his home on Ganghwa Island, west of Seoul, South Korea. Credit: Chang W. Lee/The New York Times For two decades, North Korean defectors living in South Korea have been infiltrating the North with outside news and entertainment, through balloons floated across the border or broadcasts such as those from Kim’s radio station. But Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader, has grown increasingly sensitive to “anti-socialist and non-socialist” influences that could threaten his totalitarian grip on power, and he is cracking down on such efforts like never before. Authorities are searching homes and pedestrians, meting out harsh punishments, including public executions, to people who consume news and TV dramas ​from South Korea, or even if they sing, speak​, dress ​and text-message like South Koreans, according to North Korean documents and a South Korean government report. Bottles filled with rice and packages, each containing propaganda posters, a US dollar bill and a Bible, which Kim Seongmin’s group plans to send to North Korea. Credit: Chang W. Lee/The New York Times North Korea has been flexing its military muscle beyond the Korean Peninsula by sending troops and weapons to Russia to support its war against Ukraine. But at home, Kim Jong-un is reinforcing the country’s defences against foreign influences. He has built more walls along North Korea’s border with China, giving soldiers there a shoot-to-kill order to stop an outflow of refugees and an influx of people smuggling outside goods and information. He has destroyed ​his country’s few roads and railways linking to South Korea​, after declaring that the North was no longer interested in reunification with the South. And he has introduced a slate of draconian new censorship laws. “We sense the fears of the Kim Jong-un regime​,” Admiral Kim Myung-soo, the chair of South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, told parliament recently. This year, the North called foreign content being sent across from the South “filth” and retaliated by sending balloons filled with rubbish and broadcasting eerie noises across the border. Defectors prepare to release balloons carrying leaflets and a banner denouncing Kim Jong-un in 2016. Such continued campaigns have enraged the Kim regime. Credit: AP Kim, the founder of Free North Korea Radio, was a captain and propaganda writer at a North Korean artillery unit when he fled to China in 1995. He wanted to defect to South Korea but was arrested at a Chinese port. He said he was on his way to Pyongyang, North Korea’s capital, for certain execution when he jumped through the window of a train toilet booth while an armed guard waited outside. He fled back to China and arrived in Seoul in 1999. He launched Free North Korea Radio in 2004. “He was a pioneer, the first North Korean defector to start a radio broadcast into the North,” said Lee Min-bok, a fellow defector who began sending leaflet-filled balloons to the North around the time Kim started his radio broadcasts. “He spoke more closely to the North Korean heart, because he broadcast in North Korean dialects.” During recent broadcasts,​ Kim’s station reported international criticism of the North’s troop ​dispatch to Russia and invited North Korean female veterans to testify to any sexual violence they had endured in the North’s Korean People’s Army. It carried letters from Japanese people whose family members had been kidnapped to ​the North. North Korean defectors living in ​the South reported that there was hot water in every South Korean home while ordinary North Koreans had to take cold showers, even in the winter. Lee Si-young, director of Free North Korea Radio, at the recording studio where its content is recorded daily in Seoul, South Korea. Credit: Chang W. Lee/The New York Times Kim often gets information from informers inside the North who use mobile phones with prepaid Chinese SIM cards. With those phones, they can pick up Chinese signals from near the border and exchange calls, text messages and photos with Kim. With their help, he reported the execution of Jang Song-thaek, Kim Jong-un’s uncle, in 2013, days before the North’s state media announced it. Through his sources, Kim also monitored young North Koreans who grew up in the wake of a famine in the 1990s and have depended more on unofficial markets than on state rations to feed themselves. They trust their government less than the generations before them did and have an insatiable appetite for foreign entertainment and news, which they obtained through CDs, DVDs and computer memory sticks smuggled from China, as well as through balloons carrying USB drives and broadcasts such as Kim’s. Kim can’t tell how many North Koreans listen to his shortwave broadcasts, which are financed by US and South Korean human rights and religious groups. In the North, all radio and TV sets have their channels fixed to receive only government broadcasts, although defectors say people often manipulate their devices to receive South Korean broadcasts. Free North Korea Radio and other sources of outside news – such as Radio Free Asia, funded by the US Congress, and North Korea Reform Radio, which is run by another group of defectors – seek to chip away at the information blackout. The office of Free North Korea Radio in Seoul, South Korea. Credit: Chang W. Lee/The New York Times Efforts to exert influence from abroad have increasingly drawn Kim Jong-un’s ire as he seeks to control the country’s younger generations, according to internal North Korean government documents Kim received from his informers. “Anti-socialist and non-socialist practices” have become a malicious tumour that “penetrated deep into social life in general,” putting North Korea’s socialist system at a crossroads, said one of the ​North Korean documents that Kim shared with The New York Times . In an unnamed provincial city, 9000 high school students surrendered themselves for watching “impure” videos after authorities promised not to punish them. Under laws introduced recently by Kim Jong-un, those who watch, possess or distribute South Korean content face a punishment of five to 10 years in labour camps, according to the South’s National Intelligence Service. Even those who “speak, write or sing” in a South Korean style or publish texts using South Korean fonts face up to two years of hard labour. Loading Those who distribute them widely face the death penalty. A 22-year-old farmworker was killed by firing squad in 2022 for possess​ing 70 songs and three movies from South Korea​ and sharing them with seven other people, according to a human rights report from South Korea’s Unification Ministry. Last year, North Korea called for “random inspections” of electronic devices to ferret out those who consume South Korean videos and broadcasts. The crackdown has created a chilling effect, leading to an estimated 70 per cent drop in outside information reaching North Koreans, said Kang Shin-sam, head of the Seoul-based human rights group Unification Academy, during a recent forum. But some North Koreans find new ways to circumvent censorship, other analysts say. Kim Seongmin worked at a studio in Seoul with a staff of five other North Korean defectors until he moved months ago to his island house. Two police officers are assigned to guard him against possible terrorist attacks from North Korea. Loading Over the years, he has received numerous threats from South Koreans who accused him of raising tensions with the North, as well as anonymous packages that contained dead mice or dolls smeared with red paint, and with knives stuck in their chest. A North Korean secret police officer he had known in the North​ once called him from China, threatening to harm ​his sisters in the North, Kim said.​ But he persisted. In July, the South Korean government awarded him a citizen’s medal for his work. Lee Si-young, another defector who joined the station’s staff eight years ago, said she listened to Free North Korea Radio while in the North. “For North Koreans, our radio signals are like a lighthouse in the darkness, bringing hope that a better day will come,” she said. Kim said he would die knowing that the work he started would be continued by younger defectors he trained. “I will die a happy man,” he said. This article originally appeared in The New York Times . Save Log in , register or subscribe to save articles for later. Dictators North Korea South Korea Kim Jong-un For subscribers Most Viewed in World Loading

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Myles Rice scores 18 to lead Indiana to 77-68 victory over WinthropGeraldo Rivera and John Ramsey face off years after TV host staged a ‘mock trial’ for JonBenét’s murderFormer President Jimmy Carter, who died at age 100 on Sunday in Plains, Georgia, had endured several health challenges in recent years. In 2019, he underwent surgery after breaking his hip in a fall. Four years earlier, Carter was diagnosed with metastatic melanoma that had spread to his brain, though just months later, he announced that he no longer needed treatment due to a new type of cancer therapy he'd been receiving. In February of 2023, the Carter Center, the organization founded by the former president to promote human rights worldwide, announced that Carter, with "the full support of his family and his medical team," would begin receiving hospice care at home. "After a series of short hospital stays, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter today decided to spend his remaining time at home with his family and receive hospice care instead of additional medical intervention," the Carter Center said in a statement at the time. Carter was the oldest and longest-lived U.S. President, telling People Magazine in 2015, when he was 95, that he never expected to be alive for as long as he has. Here are some of the recent health challenges that Carter faced before his death on Dec. 29. MORE: Jimmy Carter to receive hospice care following hospitalizations: Carter Center Surgery on his liver Carter underwent elective surgery on Aug. 2, 2015, at Emory University Hospital to remove a small mass in his liver, the Carter Center announced at the time. While the surgery was successful and doctors said he would make a full recovery, the surgery revealed further health challenges for the former president. 2015 cancer diagnosis On Aug. 11, 2015, Carter said that the surgery on his liver revealed that he had cancer and it spread to other parts of his body. "I will be rearranging my schedule as necessary so I can undergo treatment by physicians at Emory Healthcare," he said in a statement through his organization. There is a history of cancer in Carter's family. His mother died of breast cancer. His father, two sisters and brother all died of pancreatic cancer. Doctors discovered that Carter had melanoma, one of the most common cancers affecting men and women in the U.S. and the most dangerous form of skin cancer. Melanoma has a very high risk of metastasizing throughout the bloodstream or lymphatic system and to other body parts. The 39th president said at an Aug. 20, 2015 press conference, that an MRI of his head and neck revealed that the cancer had spread to four different parts of his brain. Carter, who was 90 years old at the time, said that when he discovered that the cancer had spread, he thought he didn't have much time left, which didn't alarm him. "I just thought I had a few weeks left, but I was surprisingly at ease," Carter said. "I've had a wonderful life. I have thousands of friends...so I was surprisingly at ease, much more so than my wife was." At the press conference, Carter said that despite the ease of knowing he lived a full life, he would follow his doctors' recommendation to ensure he "extends" his life as long as he can. He underwent surgery, radiation therapy and cancer treatment called immunotherapy to fight the disease. Carter received treatments between August 2015 through February 2016. In December 2015, responding well to treatment, Carter said MRI scans showed that there were no longer any signs of spots of melanoma on his brain, nor did any new ones develop. The former president announced to his church in March 2016, that doctors stopped his treatment after seeing no signs of tumors. According to experts, the successful treatment was likely primarily due to the drug pembrolizumab, which targets cancer by ramping up the body's immune system. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the treatment in 2011. Dehydration at Habitat for Humanity On July 13, 2017, the 2002 Nobel Peace Prize recipient was taken to the hospital for observation after becoming dehydrated while building homes in the hot sun at a Habitat for Humanity site in Winnipeg, Canada. Carter was back at the work site the next day following his discharge from the hospital, the Carter Center announced. Falls at his Georgia home Carter fell at his Plains, Georgia, home as he was leaving to go turkey hunting, breaking his hip, his organization announced in May 2019. The Grammy Award winner had hip replacement surgery at Phoebe Sumter Medical Center in Americus, Georgia, on May 13, 2019. "President Carter said his main concern is that turkey season ends this week, and he has not reached his limit," the Carter Foundation said. "He hopes the State of Georgia will allow him to rollover the unused limit to next year." A few days later, the Carter Center announced that he would be undergoing physical therapy from the surgery and recovering at home. On Oct. 6, 2019, Carter fell at his home in Georgia. He ended up getting stitches above one of his eyebrows. A few weeks later, on Oct. 22, 2019, the former president fell again at his home. He was admitted to the hospital and treated for a minor pelvic fracture, the Carter Center said. Carter had surgery on Nov. 12, 2019, to relieve pressure on his brain caused by bleeding because of the falls at his home. According to the Carter Center, there weren't any complications from the surgery. At-home hospice care On Saturday, The Carter Center announced that the former president is receiving hospice care at home, where he is expected to spend his final moments with his loved ones, rather than seek further medical treatment. "He has the full support of his family and his medical team," the Carter Center said in a statement. "The Carter family asks for privacy during this time and is grateful for the concern shown by his many admirers." MORE: Jimmy Carter's life in pictures Despite the health challenges in recent years, Carter credits his marriage to his wife, former first lady Rosalynn Carter, for his longevity. "It's hard to live until you're 95 years old," he told People Magazine in 2019, a few weeks after his second fall. "I think the best explanation for that is to marry the best spouse, someone who will take care of you and engage and do things to challenge you and keep you alive and interested in life." ABC News' Meredith Deliso, Julia Jacobo, Dr. Chantel Strachan and Gillian Mohney contributed to this report.

Savion Williams rushed for two touchdowns and Josh Hoover threw for 252 yards as TCU pulled away from Arizona in the second half, winning 49-28 on Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas. The Horned Frogs (7-4, 5-3 Big 12) scored touchdowns on five consecutive possessions, starting late in the first half after the Wildcats (4-7, 2-6) pulled within 14-13. Williams carried nine times for 80 yards, scoring on runs of 1 and 20 yards in the first half. Hoover completed 19 of 26 passes, with one touchdown and one interception, before being pulled midway through the fourth quarter when the Frogs were up by 21. TCU took control after leading 21-13 at halftime, going up 35-13 on a 38-yard reception to JP Richardson midway through the third. Arizona kept its hopes alive, ending a 15-play, 75-yard drive with a 3-yard touchdown pass to Chris Hunter on fourth down on the first play of the fourth quarter. The two-point conversion made it 35-21. But the Horned Frogs responded with another TD drive, capped by a 6-yard run by Cam Cook for a 42-21 advantage. Arizona added a 70-yard fumble return touchdown with one minute to go for the game's final score. Tetairoa McMillan caught nine passes for 115 yards to become the Arizona career leader in receiving yardage with 3,355. He surpassed his receivers coach, Bobby Wade (3,351), at the top spot. The Wildcats' Noah Fifita completed 29 of 44 passes for 284 yards with two touchdowns and an interception, which happened on the game's first snap. TCU promptly scored on a 4-yard run by Trent Battle, and Williams added a 1-yard TD run late in the first quarter for a 14-0 lead. But the Wildcats fought back, getting a 17-yard touchdown reception by Hunter and field goals of 53 and 43 yards from Tyler Loop to climb within 14-13 with 1:55 go before halftime. That's almost how the half ended, but the Horned Frogs converted third-and-18 on the ensuing drive and then gained 24 yards on third-and-25 to the Arizona 20. That set up a 20-yard run by Williams on fourth-and-1 with 13 seconds left for a 21-13 lead. --Field Level MediaFranklin Resources Inc. Invests $1.11 Million in iShares Bitcoin Trust (NASDAQ:IBIT)Hours after journalist and television host Munni Saha was taken into custody last night, the detective branch (DB) of police released her in the early hours. "Police did not detain her. People detained her and then handed her over to the police. The Tejgaon police first took her to the police station. She was later moved to the DB police compound for security reasons," Rezaul Karim Mallick, additional commissioner (DB) of the Dhaka Metropolitan Police, told The Daily Star. "Munni Saha had a panic attack and fell ill. Considering her condition and that she is a female journalist, we released her under Section 497 of the Criminal Procedure Code," Mallick said, adding that she must appear in court to seek bail and comply with future police summons. She was handed over to her family on bond, he added. According to section 497 of The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, subsection (1) when any person accused of any non-bailable offence is arrested or detained without warrant by an officer in charge of a police station or appears or is brought before a Court, he may be released on bail, but he shall not be so released if there appear reasonable grounds for believing that he has been guilty of an offence punishable with death or transportation for life: Provided that the Court may direct that any person under the age of sixteen years or any woman or any sick or infirm person accused of such an offence be released on bail. Earlier, around 9:20pm last night, Munni Saha went to a media office at Janata Tower of the capital's Kawran Bazar. While she was leaving the office by car, a group of people blocked her. Mobarak Hossain, officer-in-charge of the Tejgaon Police Station, told The Daily Star, "Munni Saha was wanted in a case filed earlier. She was arrested after police rescued her from locals in the capital's Kawran Bazar area." Sohel Rana, inspector (investigation) of the Tejgaon Police Station, told The Daily Star, "We rushed to the spot and rescued Munni Saha. A team from the detective branch of police then took her into custody." According to video footage, circulated on social media, people were seen accusing Munni Saha for spreading misinformation during the BDR mutiny in 2009 through her reporting. On July 22, a murder case was filed against 193 individuals including Munni Saha and six other journalists over the death of a student – 17-year-old Nayeem Howlader -- in the capital's Jatrabari area on July 19. Nayeem's father Kamrul Islam filed the murder case with Jatrabari Police Station. The six other journalists named in the case are Mozammel Haque Babu, managing director and editor-in-chief of Ekattor TV; Syed Ishtiaque Reza, former chief news editor (CNE) of Ekattor TV; Ahmed Jobaer, a director of Somoy TV; Farzana Rupa, former principal correspondent of Ekattor TV; Shakil Ahmed, former head of news at Ekattor TV; and Nayeemul Islam Khan, former prime minister Sheikh Hasina's press secretary. Of the FIR-named journalists in the case, Mozzamel Babu, Farzana Rupa, and Shakil Ahmed have been arrested. They are now in jail.

Nvidia’s Billionaire Sell-Off! Are They Seeing the Future?BOSTON -- Philadelphia Flyers coach John Tortorella was frustrated with a couple of calls during a 4-3 overtime loss to the Boston Bruins on Saturday. "Let me start: One thing I teach my team to do is not dive," he said in opening his postgame news conference. "Maybe I should start teaching them that. The way this has gone here ... maybe I should teach them to dive." The Flyers were called for two tripping penalties -- neither of them led to goals -- in the third period. They also were whistled for a tripping penalty that led to a goal in the second. Boston scored twice in the third period of its fourth consecutive win. Philadelphia blew a third-period lead for the second straight game. "I'm not going to go too far into it," Tortorella said. "That's one of the things we talk about as a team: 'We've got to play an honest game. There's no cheating, there's no embarrassing referees. You don't embarrass the referees."'Saquon Barkley becomes ninth running back to rush for 2,000 yards in a season

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