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INDIANAPOLIS — It was just a 10-yard completion, easy to overlook in the wake of a record-setting rushing day and easy to dismiss as one of just 11 pass attempts throughout the Indianapolis Colts’ 38-30 victory Sunday against the Tennessee Titans. But Anthony Richardson’s third-and-8 pass to wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr. just after the two-minute warning in the fourth quarter was pivotal to holding off the visitors’ late rally. If the Colts were forced to punt in that situation, a defense that had allowed touchdowns on three consecutive drives — of 70, 55 and 71 yards — would be back on the field with tremendous pressure to prevent the game going to overtime. Richardson was cold and out of rhythm. He’d been sacked on his most recent pass attempt — on third-and-9 with 6:51 remaining — and he hadn’t gotten a pass off since throwing an incompletion intended for wide receiver Josh Downs at the 11:20 mark. With the dual-threat quarterback and running back Jonathan Taylor combining for 270 of Indianapolis’ single-game franchise-record 335 rushing yards, Richardson had not completed a pass since the 8:33 mark of the third quarter, and he was just 1-for-2 in the second half. Still, he was calm and composed on the crucial third down — hitting Pittman on a simple out pattern to move the chains and keep the clock moving. When the Colts finally did punt the ball back to Tennessee, there were only three seconds remaining for the Titans to work with, It was a forgettable play in the grand scheme of the game, but it was also the most recent evidence of the 22-year-old quarterback’s ability to raise his level of play in the clutch. He’s 3-2 as a starter since taking the role back from veteran Joe Flacco, and the other two victories featured game-winning touchdown drives in the fourth quarter. “I think that’s a special trait — obviously as a young player — that he doesn’t flinch in those times, to lead those comebacks,” Colts head coach Shane Steichen said. “Obviously, the (New York) Jets, the New England (Patriots) game, I mean, those are big-time drives to go win games. “You want that out of young players, especially (when) you see the veteran guys do it around the league all the time, but to do it as a young player speaks volumes of the person that he is.” Despite Richardson’s up-and-down season, Indianapolis has maintained steadfast belief in his potential. Even when he was benched for Flacco, the organization repeatedly stated it was not giving up on the quarterback as its future leader. There’s still plenty of work to be done. Richardon has completed just 47.7% of his passes, and he’s thrown 12 interceptions in 11 starts. His rushing ability again was evident Sunday, and he’s set franchise single-season records for a quarterback with 499 rushing yards and six rushing touchdowns. And he has proven his big-play ability with a league-leading 14.4 yards per completion. The Colts still believe improved consistency will come with increased reps, and they hold out hope the fourth overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft can still become the long-term answer at the game’s most important position. For now, Richardson’s late-game heroics offer the most compelling argument in his favor. “I think it’s just me just playing all the way until the clock hits zero,” Richardson said of his mindset. “I never think about fourth quarter moments or anything like that. I just try to play until the game’s over. And it just happens sometimes that most of it happens in the fourth quarter. So I just try to play through the whistle and just play through the whole game.” AWARD WORTHY After rushing for 218 yards and three touchdowns against the Titans – both the second-highest single-game totals of his career – Taylor has been named the AFC Offensive Player of the Week. It was a major bounce-back performance after Taylor’s unforced fumble just short of the goal line cost the Colts dearly in a pivotal loss against the Denver Broncos a week prior. “It’s always exciting to see that dude just do what he does,” Richardson said. “It’s fascinating, honestly, just to see him hit a gap and just take it to the house. It’s just amazing, especially thinking about what happened in the Denver game. It honestly like wiped my mind. I wasn’t even thinking about it until people were talking about him coming back and having the game he did. “It’s like ‘OK, that’s the type of player he is, the type of person he is.’ He always wants to do better for the team and for himself. And just to see him do that and get what he did on Sunday is just a blessing.” ROSTER MOVES The Colts officially signed right guard Mark Glowinski to the 53-man roster Tuesday after he’d been called up for game day in each of the past three weeks. Guard Antonio Mafi was re-signed to the practice squad after being released from the 53-man roster Monday.March 21-April 19 ★★★ As you do your best to be who you are, you are confronted with parts of yourself that, lazily, want to hang right back. April 20-May 20 ★★★ In your quest for innovation, the Libran Moon is helping you find your sweet spot. Persistence leads to a beautiful functionality. May 21-June 20 ★★★ You may be happy enjoying the little things, but life, in the form of someone close to you, wants you to go further. June 21-July 22 ★★★ The Moon is in Libra. She is reminding you to relax and trust that the renewal you seek will soon unfold naturally. July 23-August 22 ★★★★ Your quest for truth is on steroids. The Sagittarian Sun is inspiring you to look far and wide. Keep on moving on. August 23-September 22 ★★★ Take your stand. Mercury in Sagittarius will help you know and articulate your point of view. It might stir up opposition. September 23-October 22 ★★★ The Moon is conjunct the South Node. The influence of the past is strong today. Take what you need. Leave the rest behind. October 23-November 21 ★★★ Take time for yourself. Connect with your heart’s desire — quietly. Take stock of your situation. Lick your wounds. November 22-December 21 ★★★ Chiron in Aries is insisting you stay on a healing path. You have energy to burn. Try not to let yourself get diverted. December 22-January 19 ★★★ Venus is slowly helping you open your mind to possibilities you have been keeping at arm’s length. Lighten your gaze. January 20-February 18 ★★★★ The Libran Moon is loosening your tongue and restoring your confidence. Articulate your feelings — lyrically. February 19-March 20 ★★★★ The Sagittarian Sun is making you feel adventurous. You are about to put your dreams into place. Neptune is stirring. Observe things quietly from a distance. There’s no need to show your hand, until you have one. Share your energy and your joy in your usual unconstrained way. Sweep everyone around you up in your slipstream. Key: ★★ Challenging ★★★ Encouraging ★★★★ Excellent
Opposition fighters are closing in on Syria’s capita l in a swiftly developing crisis that has taken much of the world by surprise. Syria's army has abandoned key cities with little resistance. Nervous residents in Damascus describe security forces on the streets. The state news agency has been forced to deny rumors that President Bashar Assad has left the country. Who are these opposition fighters? If they enter Damascus after taking some of Syria’s largest cities , what then? Here’s a look at the stunning reversal of fortune for Assad and his government in just the past 10 days, and what might lie ahead as Syria’s 13-year civil war reignites. The aim? Overthrow the government This is the first time that opposition forces have reached the outskirts of the Syrian capital since 2018, when the country’s troops recaptured the area following a yearslong siege. The approaching fighters are led by the most powerful insurgent group in Syria, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, along with an umbrella group of Turkish-backed Syrian militias called the Syrian National Army. Both have been entrenched in the northwest. They launched the shock offensive on Nov. 27 with gunmen capturing Aleppo, Syria’s largest city, and the central city of Hama, the fourth largest. The HTS has its origins in al-Qaida and is considered a terrorist organization by the U.S. and the United Nations. But the group said in recent years it cut ties with al-Qaida, and experts say HTS has sought to remake itself in recent years by focusing on promoting civilian government in their territory as well as military action. HTS leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani told CNN in an exclusive interview Thursday from Syria that the aim of the offensive is to overthrow Assad’s government. Possible rifts ahead The HTS and Syrian National Army have been allies at times and rivals at times, and their aims might diverge. The Turkish-backed militias also have an interest in creating a buffer zone near the Turkish border to keep away Kurdish militants at odds with Ankara. Turkey has been a main backer of the fighters seeking to overthrow Assad but more recently has urged reconciliation, and Turkish officials have strongly rejected claims of any involvement in the current offensive. Whether the HTS and the Syrian National Army will work together if they succeed in overthrowing Assad or turn on each other again is a major question. Others take advantage While the flash offensive against Syria’s government began in the north, armed opposition groups have also mobilized elsewhere. The southern areas of Sweida and Daraa have both been taken locally. Sweida is the heartland of Syria’s Druze religious minority and had been the site of regular anti-government protests even after Assad seemingly consolidated his control over the area. Daraa is a Sunni Muslim area that was widely seen as the cradle of the uprising against Assad’s rule that erupted in 2011. Daraa was recaptured by Syrian government troops in 2018, but rebels remained in some areas. In recent years, Daraa was in a state of uneasy quiet under a Russian-mediated ceasefire deal. And much of Syria's east is controlled by the Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdish-led group backed by the United States that in the past has clashed with most other armed groups in the country. Syria's government now has control of only three of 14 provincial capitals: Damascus, Latakia and Tartus. What’s next? Much depends on Assad’s next moves and his forces' will to fight the rebels. A commander with the insurgents, Hassan Abdul-Ghani, posted on the Telegram messaging app that opposition forces have started carrying out the “final stage” of their offensive by encircling Damascus. And Syrian troops withdrew Saturday from much of the central city of Homs, Syria's third largest, according to a pro-government outlet and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. If that city is captured, the link would be cut between Damascus, Assad’s seat of power, and the coastal region where he enjoys wide support. “Homs to the coastal cities will be a very huge red line politically and socially. Politically, if this line is crossed, then we are talking about the end of the entire Syria, the one that we knew in the past,” said a Damascus resident, Anas Joudeh. Assad appears to be largely on his own as allies Russia and Iran are distracted by other conflicts and the Lebanon-based Hezbollah has been weakened by its war with Israel, now under a fragile ceasefire. The U.N. special envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, seeks urgent talks in Geneva to ensure an “orderly political transition,” saying the situation is changing by the minute. He met with foreign ministers and senior diplomats from eight key countries including Saudi Arabia, Russia, Egypt, Turkey and Iran on the sidelines of the Doha Summit. President-elect Donald Trump in his first extensive comments on the developments in Syria said the besieged Assad didn’t deserve U.S. support to stay in power. “THIS IS NOT OUR FIGHT,” Trump posted on social media. ___ Associated Press writer Abby Sewell in Beirut contributed.
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A bankruptcy judge on Monday delayed a hearing in conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ effort to stop the satirical news outlet The Onion from buying Infowars, keeping the auction sale up in the air for at least another few weeks. Jones alleges fraud and collusion marred the bankruptcy auction that resulted in The Onion being named the winning bidder over a company affiliated with him. A trustee overseeing the auction denies the allegations and accuses Jones of launching a smear campaign because he didn't like the outcome. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez had been scheduled to hear an emergency motion to disqualify The Onion's bid on Monday, but put it off until either Dec. 9 or Dec. 17. That's also when the judge will hear arguments on the trustee's request to approve the sale of Infowars to The Onion. Lopez said it made sense to have one hearing on both requests. “I want a fair and transparent process and let’s just see where the process goes," Lopez said. Lopez could ultimately allow The Onion to move forward with its purchase, order a new auction or name the other bidder as the winner. At stake is whether Jones gets to stay at Infowars’ studio in Austin, Texas, under a new owner friendly to him, or whether he gets kicked out by The Onion. The other bidder, First United American Companies, runs a website in Jones’ name that sells nutritional supplements. Jones continues to broadcast his show from the Infowars studio, but he has set up a new location, websites and social media accounts as a precaution. The trustee shut down the Austin studio and Infowars' websites for about 24 hours last week after The Onion was announced as the winning bidder, but allowed them to resume the next day, drawing more complaints from Jones. Jones declared bankruptcy and liquidated his assets after he was ordered to pay nearly $1.5 billion to relatives of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. He was ordered to pay damages for defamation and emotional distress in lawsuits in Connecticut and Texas after he repeatedly said the 2012 shooting that killed 20 first graders and six educators was a hoax staged by actors to increase gun control. Proceeds from the liquidation are to go to Jones’ creditors, including the Sandy Hook families who sued him. Last year, Lopez ruled that $1.1 billion of the Sandy Hook judgments could not be discharged in the bankruptcy. On Monday, he denied a request from Sandy Hook families to make the full $1.5 billion not dischargeable, meaning the debt cannot be wiped clean. Also Monday, lawyers for the social media platform X objected to any sale of the accounts of both Jones and Infowars, saying X is the owner of the accounts and it has not given consent for them to be sold or transferred. Jones' personal X account, with 3.3 million followers, was not part of the auction, but Lopez will be deciding if it should be included in the liquidation. Jones has praised X owner Elon Musk on his show and suggested that Musk should buy Infowars. Musk has not responded publicly to that suggestion and was not among the bidders. Jones was permanently banned from Twitter in 2018 for abusive behavior, but Musk restored Jones’ account on the platform he has since renamed X in December last year. Jones alleges The Onion’s bid was the result of fraud and collusion involving many of the Sandy Hook families, the humor site and the court-appointed trustee. First United American Companies submitted a $3.5 million sealed bid, while The Onion offered $1.75 million in cash. But The Onion's bid also included a pledge by Sandy Hook families to forgo some or all of the auction proceeds due to them to give other creditors a total of $100,000 more than they would receive under other bids. The trustee, Christopher Murray, said that made The Onion's proposal better for creditors and he named it the winning bid. Jones and First United American Companies claimed that the bid violated Lopez’s rules for the auction by including multiple entities and lacking a valid dollar amount. Jones also alleged Murray improperly canceled an expected round of live bidding and only selected from among the two sealed bids that were submitted. Jones called the auction “rigged” and a “fraud” on his show, which airs on the Infowars website, radio stations and Jones' X account. He filed a counter lawsuit last week against Murray, The Onion's parent company and the Sandy Hook families in the bankruptcy court. In a court filing on Sunday, Murray called the allegations a “desperate attempt” to delay the sale of Infowars to The Onion and accused Jones, his lawyers and attorneys for First United American Companies of a “vicious smear campaign lobbing patently false accusations.” He also alleged Jones collaborated with First United American Companies to try to buy Infowars. Lopez’s September order on the auction procedures made a live bidding round optional. And it gave broad authority to Murray to conduct the sale, including the power to reject any bid, no matter how high, that was “contrary to the best interests” of Jones, his company and their creditors. The assets of Infowars' parent company, Free Speech Systems, that were up for sale included the Austin studio, Infowars' video archive, video production equipment, product trademarks, and Infowars' websites and social media accounts. Another auction of remaining assets is set for Dec. 10. Jones is appealing the $1.5 billion in judgments citing free speech rights, but has acknowledged that the school shooting happened . Many of Jones’ personal assets, including real estate, guns and other belongings, also are being sold as part of the bankruptcy. Documents filed in court this year say Jones had about $9 million in personal assets, while Free Speech Systems had about $6 million in cash and more than $1 million worth of inventory. Dave Collins, The Associated Press
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Banks puts up 22 in UMBC's 84-71 win against TowsonMission Services Hamilton: Emma’s Place/Willow’s Place was the fortunate recipient of close to $11,000 at the November meeting of 100 Women Who Care Burlington (100WWCB). The local chapter of 100 Women Who Care met at the Burlington Golf and Country Club on Monday evening to choose one of three charities that made presentations. The fortunate non-profit, Mission Services of Hamilton is a multi-service organization. Willow’s Place is a safe day space for women experiencing homelessness offering hot meals, showers, laundry, housing support and social connections. Emma’s Place is a 15-bed shelter. Upon discharge from area hospitals, homeless women often go to Willow’s Place, which serves five women monthly. Neither Burlington nor Halton have homeless shelters specifically for women, and the same applies to a daytime space. The funds from the donation will be used for a health day for women with various providers on site. Each woman would have a ‘passport’ to access foot care, haircuts, Naloxone kit training, covid/flu vaccinations, diabetes information, food, water, snacks, receive a backpack, winter coat and boots. Jaclyn Smith, assistant director of outreach programs for women and children, told the group that the goal of the non-profit is to restore hope and empower people to find their way forward. Thanks to Maria Rozakis Adcock and an anonymous donor, the other two presenting charities went home with $750 each: Halton Food For Thought and United Way for Halton and Hamilton. Shelter Movers, September’s charity of choice gave an update on what the funds - $12,300 in total – will help accomplish. They currently help with moving services for all survivors of abuse, and women make up more than 90 per cent of their clients. The donated funds would be used to ramp up recruitment efforts in Halton, secure storage in the area, moving up to five individuals or families each month in Halton Region. 100WWCB meets for about one hour, four times a year, when three registered charities that serve Burlington or Halton are nominated. In total the group has donated close to $300,000 to 48 charities. Currently there are 120 members. In 2025, the group meets: Monday, Jan. 13, Monday, April 14, Tuesday, Sept. 23 and Wednesday, Nov. 19. To join 100 Women Who Care’s Burlington chapter, visit them online here .
Six FIRs filed for sharing ‘edited’ videos of KejriwalNEW LONDON — With the close of the 2024 firearm season, area wildlife managers believe the overall 2024 deer harvest is on its way to show a rebound from 2023. The nine-day firearm season in Deer Permit Area 277 signaled the upward trend, with an 11% increase in the harvest over the same time period in 2023, according to information provided by Cory Netland, area wildlife manager with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources in New London. The firearm season in 2024 saw 2,951 deer taken, as compared to 2,664 last year. Deer Permit Area 277 ranks as one of the best in the state for the deer population it holds. The area runs from near Glenwood to just west of Dassel and includes northern Kandiyohi County. As of Nov. 20, the total harvest to date for the area was 3,545, including archery, according to the Minnesota DNR website. Firearm season data for other permit areas showed similar increases. Curt Vacek, Appleton area wildlife manager with the DNR, also expects that final numbers will show an increase in the deer permit areas in the western area of the state. Harvest numbers from the start of the firearm season and anecdotal evidence indicates the region is on track for an increased overall harvest. “It felt busier this year,” said Vacek. He noted that statewide deer hunting license sales showed an uptick after a few years of decline. In Deer Permit Area 278, which includes the Lac qui Parle refuge, the harvest during the 2024 firearm season totaled 449 deer as compared to 440 last year, a 2% percent increase. In Deer Permit Area 281, which includes the Minnesota River from Montevideo to near Renville, the firearm harvested totaled 854 deer compared to 791 last year, an 8% increase. Statewide, the 2023 harvest totaled 158,678, an 8% decrease from the previous year and 14% below the five-year average. As of this week, the 2024 statewide harvest totaled 143,176, which is 7% higher than last year at this point, according to the Minnesota DNR. This year’s final tally is still in the making. The muzzleloader season begins at month’s end, and the archery season continues through the end of the year. By year’s end, the wildlife managers believe the harvest numbers in this area will surpass those of 2023 and fall in line with the five-year average. Why the harvest was lower last year is anyone’s guess. “Last year puzzles all of us,” said Vacek. Netland said he was also surprised by the reduced harvest one year ago. Because of the lower harvest, an early antlerless season was not offered in Deer Permit Area 277 this year. If this year’s harvest numbers show the expected improvement, Netland said an early antlerless season would likely be reinstated for the permit area next year.
‘Wheel of Fortune’ Fans Beg Ryan Seacrest to Change His ‘Forced’ Bonus Round Move
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