NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Tennessee Titans have the slimmest of playoff hopes and must win out to have any chance of keeping them alive. Figuring out who they are would be a first step in the right direction. The Titans (3-9) also must bounce back from last week's ugly loss at Washington that cost this franchise yet another chance to string together consecutive wins for the first time in more than two years. “We know that this is a big opportunity for us to develop as a team and to create and to continue developing our identity,” quarterback Will Levis said. “And so we’re going to make sure that we do our best throughout these next few weeks to do that.” The Jacksonville Jaguars (2-10) lost Trevor Lawrence for the rest of the season after the hit he took from Texans linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair in last week's 23-20 loss to Houston. Their already dim playoff hopes were extinguished Monday night when Denver won. That leaves the Jaguars playing for pride and potentially drafting No. 1 overall for the third time in five years. “It’s all about how you finish,” tight end Evan Engram said. “How we finish probably won’t erase the feeling we have of the season. But as the pride of this franchise, the pride of the team, it’s definitely worth going to finish strong and going to get some wins and fighting for that.” The Titans went into Washington with one of the NFL's stingiest defenses and wound up shredded, giving up a season-worst 267 yards rushing. Defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson said, “We can’t allow what happened last week to happen again.” Wide receiver Calvin Ridley says he's excited to see some old teammates Sunday and downplayed a question about how close Jacksonville's offer to keep him last March might've been when he chose to sign with division rival Tennessee instead. “Doesn't matter right now,” Ridley said. “I'm excited for this week. Jags come in here, play with my boys. I'm excited.” Ridley played one season with Jacksonville after the Jaguars traded for him . He had 76 catches for 1,016 yards and eight TDs last season with the Jaguars. So far this season, Ridley has 43 receptions for 679 yards and three TDs. “I just know I'm going to be ready,” Ridley said. Jacksonville has lost 16 consecutive games when tied or trailing at halftime. It’s a complete flip from the 2022 season, in which the Jaguars rallied to beat Dallas, the Las Vegas Raiders and Tennessee down the stretch to make the playoffs. The 20-16 victory against the Titans in the regular-season finale that year is the last time coach Doug Pederson’s team has come from behind to win after trailing or being tied at the break. Tennessee led 13-7 at the half in that one and was minutes from winning a third straight AFC South title . Jaguars defensive end Josh Hines-Allen needs 4 1/2 sacks to break the franchise record of 55 held by Tony Brackens. Hines-Allen has at least half a sack in four consecutive games against Tennessee, which has given up 43 sacks in 2024. “My family knows about it probably more than me,” Hines-Allen said. “My wife tells me all the time, ‘Hey, get that record. All you just need is four sacks.’ Like, you can just (get) four sacks. “I had a couple games last year where I had three, so I can’t say it’s out of the realm. But I never had four sacks; don’t know what it feels like to do that in one game. But hopefully speak it into existence.” Mac Jones will be starting at quarterback and is 0-2 with the Jaguars this season. He has one more interception (three) than touchdown passes (two) in five appearances. The Titans are looking to see if Levis can keep building on his strong play of the past month and start turning those into wins. Levis is 1-3 since returning from a strained throwing shoulder. He has seven TD passes with two interceptions for a 101.3 passer rating in his past four games. He also is completing 61.7% of his passes for 960 yards. “The cool thing right now for Will is that as we’ve corrected things, he’s corrected them,” Titans coach Brian Callahan said . “And that’s been really fun to watch as he’s made adjustments from game to game, sometimes even from in the game made an adjustment to a coverage or a read, and that part’s been good to see.” AP Pro Football Writer Mark Long in Jacksonville, Florida, contributed to this report. AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
NoneUnidentified drones spotted over three US airbases in Britain, USAF confirms
By PETER SMITH A social-media tribute to Coptic Christians. A billboard in Amish country. A visit to a revered Jewish gravesite. While Donald Trump’s lock on the white evangelical vote is legendary, he and his campaign allies also wooed smaller religious groups, far from the mainstream. As it turned out, Trump won by decisive margins, but his campaign aggressively courted niche communities with the understanding that every vote could be critical, particularly in swing states. Voter surveys such as exit polls, which canvass broad swaths of the electorate, aren’t able to gauge the impact of such microtargeting, but some backers say the effort was worth it. Just one week before the election, Trump directed a post on the social-media platform X to Coptic Christians in the United States —- whose church has ancient roots in Egypt. He saluted their “Steadfast Faith in God, Perseverance through Centuries of Persecution and Love for this Great Country.” “This was the first time seeing a major U.S. presidential candidate address the community in this manner,” said Mariam Wahba, a Coptic Christian and research analyst with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington-based research institute. “It was really a profound moment.” She said many Copts share the conservative social views of other Christian groups in the Republican constituency, and they may already have been Trump supporters. But the posting reinforced those bonds. Coptic bishops sent the president-elect congratulations after his victory and cited their “shared social and family values.” Some Assyrian Christians — another faith group with Middle Eastern roots — similarly bonded with Trump, whose mispronunciation of “Assyrian” at a rally created a viral video moment and drew attention to their support. Sam Darmo, a Phoenix real estate agent and co-founder of Assyrians for Trump, said many community members cited the economy, illegal immigration and other prominent voter issues. They echoed other conservative Christians’ concerns, he said, on issues such as abortion, gender identity and religious expression in public. But he said Trump supported various Middle Eastern Christians recovering from the Islamic State group’s oppressive rule. Darmo also credited Massad Boulos, father-in-law to Trump’s daughter Tiffany, for mobilizing various Middle Eastern Christian groups, including Chaldean Catholics, and other voters, particularly in Michigan, such as Muslims. “He brought all these minority groups together,” he said. “We’re hoping to continue that relationship.” But members of Middle Eastern-rooted Christian groups, and their politics, are far from monolithic, said Marcus Zacharia, founder of Progressive Copts, a program of Informed Immigrants, an organization that promotes dialogue on sensitive topics among such groups in the United States and Canada. He said many younger community members question Trump’s stances on issues such as immigration, and sense that conservatives sometimes tokenize them by focusing on the plight of persecuted Christians in the Middle East while neglecting wider issues of repression in countries there that the U.S. supports. He said there needs to be more informed dialogue across the political divide in these communities. “There is no more high time than these next four years to have that way of conducting conversations,” he said. Republicans also made an aggressive push for Amish voters , particularly in the swing state of Pennsylvania, where they are most numerous at about 92,000 (many below voting age). The GOP has made similar efforts in the past, even though researchers have found that less than 10% of them typically vote, due to their separatism from society. But Republicans used billboards, mailers, ads and door-to-door campaigner to drive turnout in Lancaster County, home base to the nation’s largest Amish settlement. On Election Day, Amish voters Samuel Stoltzfus and his wife Lillian Stoltzfus said they were supporting Trump, citing their anti-abortion beliefs. “We basically look at it as murder,” Stoltzfus, 31, said outside a polling center in the Lancaster County community of New Holland, where dozens of other members of the local Amish community voted. Trump has wavered on the issue, dismaying some abortion opponents, though many have said Republicans still align more closely to their views. Stolzfus added: “Make America great again and keep the moral values,” he said. “Let’s go back to the roots.” Steven Nolt, a history professor at Elizabethtown College in Lancaster College who studies the Amish and their voting patterns, said that while it’s too early to say definitively without further research, he doesn’t see evidence of a larger turnout this year. Lancaster County as a whole — most of which is not Amish — is a GOP stronghold that Trump won handily, though both parties’ votes edged up from 2020, according to unofficial results posted by the Pennsylvania Department of State. Trump’s biggest increases were in urban or suburban areas with few Amish, while some areas with larger Amish populations generally saw a modest increase in the Trump vote, said Nolt, director of the college’s Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies. “Bottom line, percentage-wise, not much change in the parts of Lancaster County where the Amish live,” he said. Trump directly reached out to members of the Chabad Lubavitch movement, a prominent and highly observant branch of Orthodox Judaism. Related Articles National Politics | Attorneys want the US Supreme Court to say Mississippi’s felony voting ban is cruel and unusual National Politics | Trump convinced Republicans to overlook his misconduct. But can he do the same for his nominees? National Politics | Trump gave Interior nominee one directive for a half-billion acres of US land: ‘Drill.’ National Politics | Trump’s team is delaying transition agreements. What does it mean for security checks and governing? National Politics | Judge delays Trump hush money sentencing in order to decide where case should go now On Oct. 7, the anniversary of the Hamas attack on Israel that triggered the Gaza war, Trump made a symbolically resonant visit to the “Ohel,” the burial site of the movement’s revered late leader, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson. Wearing a yarmulke, the traditional Jewish skullcap, Trump, who has Jewish family members, brought a written prayer to the Ohel and laid a small stone at the grave in keeping with tradition. The site in New York City, while particularly central to Chabad adherents, draws an array of Jewish and other visitors, including politicians. About two-thirds of Jewish voters overall supported Trump’s opponent, Democrat Kamala Harris, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 120,000 voters. But the Trump campaign has made a particular outreach to Orthodox Jews, citing issues including his policies toward Israel in his first administration. Rabbi Yitzchok Minkowitz of Chabad Lubavitch of Southwest Florida said it was moving for him to see images of Trump’s visit. “The mere fact that he made a huge effort, obviously it was important to him,” he said. Associated Press journalist Luis Henao contributed.
Significant milestones in life and career of Jimmy Carter$('audio,video').mediaelementplayer(); Assistant Commissioner Glenford Miller, Commanding Officer for the Area One Police By Kimone Witter Three men were fatally shot during a police operation in Orange district, St. James on Tuesday morning in search of suspects in the flare-up of violence in Rose Heights. The names of the men have not been released. The police say one of the men is linked to Friday night's murder of social media personality, 23-year-old Marvin Samuels, also known as "41 Busshead", of Rose Heights. Assistant Commissioner Glenford Miller, Commanding Officer for the Area One Police, says the suspect is a key player in the violence in Rose Heights. Following Friday's killing of the TikToker, a house was shot up and two other people shot in Rose Heights on Saturday morning. The shootings have been linked to two gangs fighting for turf. ACP Miller said during Tuesday morning's incident in the troubled community of Hell's Gate, Orange district, the police went to a premises to conduct searches when officers were met with gunfire. They returned fire, during which three men were fatally wounded. Three firearms were seized during the operation. ACP Miller has expressed frustration with the gang violence in the society which has led to many "senseless" killings. He lamented that many of the violent incidents in the Rose Heights area are "friends killing friends" as people vie for "donship". googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1531230668029-0'); });Exelon Corp. stock underperforms Thursday when compared to competitors despite daily gainsBy DEVNA BOSE One of the country’s largest health insurers reversed a change in policy Thursday after widespread outcry, saying it would not tie payments in some states to the length of time a patient went under anesthesia. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield said in a statement that its decision to backpedal resulted from “significant widespread misinformation” about the policy. “To be clear, it never was and never will be the policy of Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield to not pay for medically necessary anesthesia services,” the statement said. “The proposed update to the policy was only designed to clarify the appropriateness of anesthesia consistent with well-established clinical guidelines.” Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield would have used “physician work time values,” which is published by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, as the metric for anesthesia limits; maternity patients and patients under the age of 22 were exempt. But Dr. Jonathan Gal, economics committee chair of the American Society for Anesthesiologists, said it’s unclear how CMS derives those values. In mid-November, the American Society for Anesthesiologists called on Anthem to “reverse the proposal immediately,” saying in a news release that the policy would have taken effect in February in New York, Connecticut and Missouri. It’s not clear how many states in total would have been affected, as notices also were posted in Virginia and Colorado . People across the country registered their concerns and complaints on social media, and encouraged people in affected states to call their legislators. Some people noted that the policy could prevent patients from getting overcharged. Gal said the policy change would have been unprecedented, ignored the “nuanced, unpredictable human element” of surgery and was a clear “money grab.” “It’s incomprehensible how a health insurance company could so blatantly continue to prioritize their profits over safe patient care,” he said. “If Anthem is, in fact, rescinding the policy, we’re delighted that they came to their senses.” Prior to Anthem’s announcement Thursday, Connecticut comptroller Sean Scanlon said the “concerning” policy wouldn’t affect the state after conversations with the insurance company. And New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said in an emailed statement Thursday that her office had also successfully intervened. The insurance giant’s policy change came one day after the CEO of UnitedHealthcare , another major insurance company, was shot and killed in New York City.
Erik Pratt scores 20 as Milwaukee defeats North Central College 92-57BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Bradley Ezewiro scored 19 points off of the bench to help lead UAB past Alcorn State 91-74 on Sunday night. Ezewiro shot 5 of 5 from the field and 9 for 9 from the line for the Blazers (7-6). Christian Coleman scored 15 points while shooting 6 of 8 from the field and 3 for 4 from the line. Alejandro had 15 points and went 5 of 10 from the field (3 for 6 from 3-point range). The Braves (0-13) were led in scoring by Keionte Cornelius, who finished with 22 points. Jalyke Gaines-Wyatt added 14 points for Alcorn State. Marcus Tankersley finished with 10 points. UAB took the lead with 11:35 remaining in the first half and never looked back. Coleman led their team in scoring with 11 points in the first half to help put them up 50-31 at the break. Ezewiro scored 15 points in the second half to help lead the way as UAB went on to secure a victory, despite being outscored by Alcorn State in the second half by a two-point margin. The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar .THERE is a theory about the Trump victory which, if applied to Ireland would augur major change in the coming election. That theory is that incumbent governments throughout the democratic world are falling in response to anger and unease accumulated through a series of recent crises. Those include, obviously, the pandemic and the fuel price rises occasioned by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. But we have been in an unsettled age since the financial collapse of 2008 when banks discovered that credit they held on paper was often worth about as much as the paper itself. I was one of those who had benefited by a sub prime mortgage, a 100% loan without a deposit, issued in the early 1990s with no security but an endowment policy taken out alongside it. This policy was meant to mature in time to meet the cost of the house. Some chance! But I’d sold the house before that critical moment was reached. Millions of others around the world hadn’t and, what was effectively a scam which I had turned to my advantage failed many others. The supposed value of my house had increased so fast that I was able to sell it for fifty percent more than the notional price I had bought it for three years earlier. I had entered into that scheme at a time of high optimism. I’d never have got a legitimate mortgage by any other means. Chimerical mortgages had empowered people with no money - like myself - to bid high and buy. So house prices rose until the paper stack of dodgy loans tipped over and the value - if you can use that word - of our houses collapsed. Ireland’s banks were about to fail and the government bailed them out. Then the EU bailed out the Ireland - for a price - and it looked for a time as if we were headed for decades of penury. Young people fled to Australia and the USA and England to look for work, while the country was seeming to sink. Actually it came round pretty well. It did so on the basis of a low corporation tax rate that invited Apple and other big companies to come in. Now where Britain next door is struggling with a deficit, Ireland is feeling flush. We have a government which looks too familiar though. The radical things it was going to do, like legalising abortion and same sex marriage are now done, and even with the economy in good order, it still suffers from what other incumbent governments suffer from: an air of having been around too long through the bad times. The US Democrats and the British Conservatives have suffered from a similar gamble by the electorate to elect a party they don’t like very much, or even know very much about, for the sake of getting rid of parties that they are tired of looking at. This sentiment should be favouring Sinn Féin, the government-in-waiting party, the radical opposition. Stay in power long enough and no matter how good you are you accumulate lots of things that people can criticise you for. For the Democrats that included foreign policy entanglements that were expensive and unimpressive; handing Afghanistan back to the Taliban, funding a war in Ukraine but apparently just keeping it going rather than providing the heft for victory, and then backing Netanyahu’s disproportionate murderous assaults on Gaza and Lebanon. Ireland didn’t need to worry about getting the blame for colossal moves like those. And, indeed, they may not even have factored much in the decisions of the US electorate. What did feature was anger at the influx of migrants and that kind of anger plays significantly in Ireland too. But the opposition, Sinn Féin is not seen as a credible counter to it. It has indeed been eroded by it, with many in the party’s support base joining the anti-migrant protests while the party struggled to retain its credibility as the party of the vulnerable and the poor, new arrivals included. In England too, the rise of the Reform Party surfed the same mood and did well in votes if not so well in seats. The irony is that the revolt against incumbent parties who have failed to assuage the new populist aversion to migrants may be saved by its obvious opposition’s failure to get its head round the problem too. Had party leader Mary Lou MacDonald done what Trump and Nigel Farage of Reform did, and blamed most of our problems on refugees she might have gained political credit. But she couldn’t. For one thing, she leads a party that just wouldn’t do that. It would be too much out of character with the party’s long identification with the oppressed of the world. And being a united Ireland party it just can’t demand the closure of the border with the UK which divides the island. Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, the chief parties of the governing coalition have been fortunate in the opposition they face. An anti-migrant movement is available in Ireland to a leader who will emerge and direct it. No such leader is to be found. Whew! See More: Donald Trump, General Election, IrelandNASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Tennessee Titans have the slimmest of playoff hopes and must win out to have any chance of keeping them alive. Figuring out who they are would be a first step in the right direction. The Titans (3-9) also must bounce back from last week's ugly loss at Washington that cost this franchise yet another chance to string together consecutive wins for the first time in more than two years. “We know that this is a big opportunity for us to develop as a team and to create and to continue developing our identity,” quarterback Will Levis said. “And so we’re going to make sure that we do our best throughout these next few weeks to do that.” The Jacksonville Jaguars (2-10) lost Trevor Lawrence for the rest of the season after the hit he took from Texans linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair in last week's 23-20 loss to Houston. Their already dim playoff hopes were extinguished Monday night when Denver won. That leaves the Jaguars playing for pride and potentially drafting No. 1 overall for the third time in five years. “It’s all about how you finish,” tight end Evan Engram said. “How we finish probably won’t erase the feeling we have of the season. But as the pride of this franchise, the pride of the team, it’s definitely worth going to finish strong and going to get some wins and fighting for that.” The Titans went into Washington with one of the NFL's stingiest defenses and wound up shredded, giving up a season-worst 267 yards rushing. Defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson said, “We can’t allow what happened last week to happen again.” Wide receiver Calvin Ridley says he's excited to see some old teammates Sunday and downplayed a question about how close Jacksonville's offer to keep him last March might've been when he chose to sign with division rival Tennessee instead. “Doesn't matter right now,” Ridley said. “I'm excited for this week. Jags come in here, play with my boys. I'm excited.” Ridley played one season with Jacksonville after the Jaguars traded for him . He had 76 catches for 1,016 yards and eight TDs last season with the Jaguars. So far this season, Ridley has 43 receptions for 679 yards and three TDs. “I just know I'm going to be ready,” Ridley said. Jacksonville has lost 16 consecutive games when tied or trailing at halftime. It’s a complete flip from the 2022 season, in which the Jaguars rallied to beat Dallas, the Las Vegas Raiders and Tennessee down the stretch to make the playoffs. The 20-16 victory against the Titans in the regular-season finale that year is the last time coach Doug Pederson’s team has come from behind to win after trailing or being tied at the break. Tennessee led 13-7 at the half in that one and was minutes from winning a third straight AFC South title . Jaguars defensive end Josh Hines-Allen needs 4 1/2 sacks to break the franchise record of 55 held by Tony Brackens. Hines-Allen has at least half a sack in four consecutive games against Tennessee, which has given up 43 sacks in 2024. “My family knows about it probably more than me,” Hines-Allen said. “My wife tells me all the time, ‘Hey, get that record. All you just need is four sacks.’ Like, you can just (get) four sacks. “I had a couple games last year where I had three, so I can’t say it’s out of the realm. But I never had four sacks; don’t know what it feels like to do that in one game. But hopefully speak it into existence.” Mac Jones will be starting at quarterback and is 0-2 with the Jaguars this season. He has one more interception (three) than touchdown passes (two) in five appearances. The Titans are looking to see if Levis can keep building on his strong play of the past month and start turning those into wins. Levis is 1-3 since returning from a strained throwing shoulder. He has seven TD passes with two interceptions for a 101.3 passer rating in his past four games. He also is completing 61.7% of his passes for 960 yards. “The cool thing right now for Will is that as we’ve corrected things, he’s corrected them,” Titans coach Brian Callahan said . “And that’s been really fun to watch as he’s made adjustments from game to game, sometimes even from in the game made an adjustment to a coverage or a read, and that part’s been good to see.” AP Pro Football Writer Mark Long in Jacksonville, Florida, contributed to this report. AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
Jimmy Carter: Many evolutions for a centenarian ‘citizen of the world’The much-awaited prequel to Outlander, titled Outlander: Blood of My Blood, is set to premiere on Starz in 2025. ET Year-end Special Reads What kept India's stock market investors on toes in 2024? India's car race: How far EVs went in 2024 Investing in 2025: Six wealth management trends to watch out for While the debut season is yet to grace our screens, fans are already wondering about the possibility of a second season. Centered on the love stories of Jamie Fraser’s parents, Ellen and Brian, as well as Claire’s lesser-known lineage, this spinoff has stirred speculation about its future, as mentioned in a report by TV Insider. Here’s everything we know so far about the potential for Outlander: Blood of My Blood Season 2. Talk of a Second Season: What’s Been Said? Though there has been no official confirmation from Starz regarding a second season, the groundwork for future installments seems promising. 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In an interview, Gabaldon mentioned that she has material for three prequel books centered on Jamie Fraser’s parents, with Blood of My Blood drawing from the synopsis of the first book, as per the TV Insider report. Gabaldon’s comments suggest that the storyline could expand beyond a single season, especially with rich literary material waiting to be explored. However, the decision ultimately rests with Starz, which has yet to announce any renewals or long-term plans for the series, as per the report by TV Insider. What Could Season 2 Cover? With the first season of Outlander: Blood of My Blood still unreleased, it’s challenging to predict the exact trajectory of Season 2. The initial installment is expected to delve into the lives of Ellen MacKenzie and Brian Fraser in 18th-century Scotland, along with the love story of Claire’s parents, Henry and Julia, set against the backdrop of World War I England. Should the series return for a second season, fans could see a deeper exploration of these romances and the historical contexts that shape them. While Jamie’s parents have been referenced occasionally in Outlander, Claire’s family remains largely uncharted territory. This prequel could provide an opportunity to illuminate their lives and legacies. Who Could Return for Season 2? If Outlander: Blood of My Blood secures a second season, viewers can expect the main cast to reprise their roles. This includes Harriet Slater as Ellen MacKenzie, Jamie Roy as Brian Fraser, Jeremy Irvine as Henry, and Hermione Corfield as Julia. Season 1’s supporting cast is equally impressive, featuring Rory Alexander as young Murtagh, Sam Retford as young Dougal, Sadhbh Malin as Jocasta Cameron, and Tony Curran as Lord Lovat, among others. Additional casting for Season 2 would depend on the story’s direction, possibly introducing new characters pivotal to the narrative. What Lies Ahead for Outlander: Blood of My Blood? As fans eagerly await the premiere of Outlander: Blood of My Blood, the prospect of a second season adds to the excitement. With Diana Gabaldon’s wealth of prequel material and the show’s ambitious historical scope, the series has immense potential for expansion. FAQs How many episodes will Outlander season 7 have? The seventh season stands out as the longest yet, featuring an impressive total of 16 episodes. How old is Jamie when he dies in Outlander? In a 2014 interview on the Outlander Podcast , Diana Gabaldon revealed that Jamie is around 25 years old at the time of his death. (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel )
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