Misaka sa tower, maghikog unta‘Punjab govt set to launch Minority Cards to boost support for religious minorities’
Thrivent Financial for Lutherans cut its holdings in shares of iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF ( BATS:ITA – Free Report ) by 2.5% during the third quarter, HoldingsChannel.com reports. The firm owned 33,242 shares of the company’s stock after selling 850 shares during the period. Thrivent Financial for Lutherans’ holdings in iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF were worth $4,974,000 as of its most recent SEC filing. Other hedge funds and other institutional investors have also recently made changes to their positions in the company. Asset Dedication LLC acquired a new position in iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF during the 2nd quarter valued at about $25,000. Cultivar Capital Inc. acquired a new position in shares of iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF during the second quarter valued at about $27,000. Fairscale Capital LLC purchased a new position in shares of iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF in the 2nd quarter valued at approximately $27,000. Opal Wealth Advisors LLC purchased a new stake in iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF during the 2nd quarter worth approximately $28,000. Finally, Fifth Third Bancorp purchased a new stake in iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF during the 2nd quarter worth approximately $29,000. iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF Trading Up 1.0 % BATS:ITA opened at $154.51 on Friday. The company has a market capitalization of $7.26 billion, a P/E ratio of 29.96 and a beta of 0.60. iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF has a 12 month low of $145.00 and a 12 month high of $206.56. The firm has a fifty day simple moving average of $150.56 and a 200-day simple moving average of $142.08. iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF Profile iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF, formerly iShares Dow Jones U.S. Aerospace & Defense Index Fund (the Fund), is an exchange-traded fund. The Fund seeks investment results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance of the Dow Jones U.S. Select Aerospace & Defense Index (the Index). Read More Want to see what other hedge funds are holding ITA? Visit HoldingsChannel.com to get the latest 13F filings and insider trades for iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF ( BATS:ITA – Free Report ). Receive News & Ratings for iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter .Clarke Reed, who helped Gerald Ford win the 1976 Republican nomination, has died at 96
GREEN LAKE, Wis. (AP) — A Wisconsin man who faked his own drowning this summer and left his wife and three children has been located in Eastern Europe and is communicating with law enforcement, but he has not committed to returning home, authorities said. Ryan Borgwardt began communicating with authorities Nov. 11, after they tracked him down, Green Lake County Sheriff Mark Podoll said Thursday. The sheriff showed a video that Borgwardt sent police that day from an undisclosed location. The sheriff said no charges have been filed and that he doesn't think they will be necessary while authorities “keep pulling at his heartstrings” to come home. Here are some things to know about Borgwardt and his disappearance: Borgwardt, who is in his mid-40s, lived with his wife and children in Watertown, a city of about 23,000 people northwest of Milwaukee that is known for its German heritage, parochial schools and two dams on the Rock River. The sheriff has said his department was told Aug. 12 that Borgwardt had not been heard from since the previous day, when he traveled about 50 miles (80 kilometers) from home to Green Lake to go kayaking. Borgwardt’s wife said he texted her at 10:49 p.m. to say he was heading to shore. Deputies found Borgwardt’s vehicle and trailer near Green Lake. His kayak was discovered on the lake, overturned and with a life jacket attached to it, in an area where the water is about 200 feet (60 meters) deep. An angler later found Borgwardt’s fishing rod. The search for his body continued for more than 50 days, with divers scouring the lake on several occasions. Clues — including that he reported his passport lost or stolen and obtained a new one a few months before he disappeared — led investigators to speculate that he made it appear that he had drowned to go meet a woman he had been communicating with in the Central Asian country of Uzbekistan. Podoll declined to comment when asked what he knew about the woman, but he said law enforcement contacted Borgwardt “through a female that spoke Russian.” His identity was confirmed through asking him questions that the sheriff said only Borgwardt would know and by a video he made and sent them Nov. 11. He has spoken with someone from the sheriff's department almost daily since. However Podoll said Thursday that Borgwardt's exact location in Eastern Europe was not known. Podoll said Chief Deputy Matt Vande Kolk has been the one communicating with Borgwardt and their conversations have all taken place via email. Vande Kolk told The Associated Press in an email Friday that authorities are trying to determine Borgwardt's exact location. But that might not be easy even with modern surveillance technology. Scott Shackelford, executive director of the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research at Indiana University, said authorities should be able to locate Borgwardt through his device's internet protocol address, a unique number assigned to every device connected to the internet. But he said it's very easy to mask an IP address and make it appear as if the device is in one country when it's really in another. Software exists that can route your IP address across the globe, Shackelford said. Police may not have the expertise, the manpower or any interest in digging through multiple layers of cyber deception, he said. Wearing an orange T-shirt, Borgwardt, unsmiling, looks directly at the camera, apparently filmed on a cellphone. Borgwardt says he is in his apartment and briefly pans the camera, but mostly shows a door and bare walls. “I’m safe and secure, no problem,” he says. Borgwardt has told authorities he overturned his kayak on the lake, dumped his phone in it and paddled an inflatable boat to shore. He told authorities he chose Green Lake because it is Wisconsin's deepest at 237 feet (over 72 meters). He then rode an electric bike stashed by a boat launch about 70 miles (110 kilometers) through the night to Madison, the sheriff said. From there, by Borgwardt's account, he traveled by bus to Detroit and then Canada, where he boarded a plane. Police are still verifying Borgwardt’s description of what happened, Podoll said. Borgwardt faked his death and fled because of “personal matters,” thinking it was the right thing to do, the sheriff said. Investigators found that he took out a $375,000 life insurance policy in January for his family. “He was just going to try and make things better in his mind, and this was the way it was going to be,” Podoll said. Borgwardt has not yet decided to return home, and if he does it will be of his own free will, according to Podoll. Deputies are stressing to him the importance of returning home and cleaning up the mess he made. The sheriff suggested that Borgwardt could be charged with obstructing the investigation into his disappearance, but so far no counts have been filed. The search for Borgwardt, which lasted more than a month, is said to have cost at least $35,000. Borgwardt told authorities that he did not expect the search to last more than two weeks, Podoll said, and his biggest concern is how the community will react to him if he returns. This story was updated to correct the spelling of Scott Shackelford’s last name, which had been misspelled “Shackleford.” Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Receive the latest in local entertainment news in your inbox weekly!
Why Miami’s Pop-Tarts Bowl appearance is important even after missing College Football Playoff
Polls close in Ghana's general election overshadowed by worst economic crisis in a generationFormer Nebraska head coach Scott Frost has landed his first college job since his time with the Huskers, and it's a familiar location. Frost is set to take over at UCF, the program he coached from 2016-17 before heading to Nebraska, according to multiple reports. 247Sports and The Orlando Sentinel reported the news Saturday. Previous reported indicated that UCF was down to two candidates, Frost and UNLV head coach Barry Odom, in its quest to replace the fired Gus Malzahn. The Knights chose to reunite with Frost over the 48-year-old Odom, who led UNLV to a 10-win season this fall. Frost rebuilt a UCF football program coming off a winless season into a six-win squad, then a 13-0 team during the 2017 season which stands as the best in UCF's program history. Frost had been out of the college game since his firing at Nebraska in September 2022. He compiled a 16-31 record at his alma mater, completing four losing seasons before being fired three games into the 2022 campaign. The former Nebraska head coach's first job since was with the Los Angeles Rams this fall, where he briefly worked as an analyst. Having failed to rebuild at Nebraska, the 49-year-old Frost now returns to the school where he thrived as an up-and-coming offensive coach. Get local news delivered to your inbox!Basketball Noon FS1 Coppin State at Georgetown. (Live) Noon WSTM2 WSTQ Eastern Kentucky at Louisville. (Live) 2 p.m. ESPN2 Ole Miss at Memphis. (Live) 2 p.m. FS1 Loyola (Md.) at DePaul. (Live) 2 p.m. WSTM2 WSTQ Bucknell at Syracuse. (Live) 2 p.m. WTVH North Carolina Central at North Carolina A&T. (Live) 4 p.m. ESPN2 Women’s College Basketball Oregon State at Gonzaga. (Live) 4 p.m. SNY Fairfield at Columbia. (Live) 4 p.m. WTVH Howard at Hampton. (Live) 6 p.m. FS1 Delaware at St. John’s. (Live) 8 p.m. WFXV UCLA vs. Gonzaga. (Live) Football 11 a.m. ESPN Wasabi Fenway Bowl: Connecticut vs. North Carolina. (Live) Noon WSYR WUTR Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl: Boston College vs. Nebraska. (Live) 1 p.m. NFL Los Angeles Chargers vs. New England Patriots. (Live) 2:15 p.m. ESPN Isleta New Mexico Bowl: Louisiana vs. TCU. (Live) 3:30 p.m. WSYR WUTR Pop-Tarts Bowl: Iowa State vs. Miami. (Live) 4:30 p.m. NFL Denver Broncos vs. Cincinnati Bengals. (Live) 4:30 p.m. WSTM2 WSTQ Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl: Miami (Ohio) vs. Colorado State. (Live) 5:45 p.m. ESPN Go Bowling Military Bowl: East Carolina vs. NC State. (Live) 7:30 p.m. WSYR WUTR Valero Alamo Bowl: BYU vs. Colorado. (Live) 8:15 p.m. NFL Arizona Cardinals at Los Angeles Rams. (Live) 9:15 p.m. ESPN Radiance Technologies Independence Bowl: Marshall vs. Army. (Live) Horse Racing 4 p.m. FS1 Horse Racing America’s Day at the Races. (Live)Geode Capital Management LLC raised its position in Pediatrix Medical Group, Inc. ( NYSE:MD – Free Report ) by 2.4% during the 3rd quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The firm owned 1,936,751 shares of the company’s stock after buying an additional 45,155 shares during the quarter. Geode Capital Management LLC owned about 2.26% of Pediatrix Medical Group worth $22,452,000 at the end of the most recent quarter. Other hedge funds have also recently bought and sold shares of the company. Quest Partners LLC increased its holdings in Pediatrix Medical Group by 25.6% in the 3rd quarter. Quest Partners LLC now owns 3,054 shares of the company’s stock valued at $35,000 after buying an additional 622 shares during the period. nVerses Capital LLC bought a new stake in shares of Pediatrix Medical Group during the 2nd quarter valued at approximately $31,000. Innealta Capital LLC bought a new stake in shares of Pediatrix Medical Group during the 2nd quarter valued at approximately $33,000. Quarry LP grew its holdings in shares of Pediatrix Medical Group by 54.1% during the 3rd quarter. Quarry LP now owns 4,735 shares of the company’s stock valued at $55,000 after purchasing an additional 1,662 shares during the last quarter. Finally, CWM LLC grew its holdings in shares of Pediatrix Medical Group by 134.0% during the 3rd quarter. CWM LLC now owns 6,427 shares of the company’s stock valued at $74,000 after purchasing an additional 3,681 shares during the last quarter. 97.71% of the stock is owned by institutional investors. Insider Buying and Selling In other Pediatrix Medical Group news, EVP Mary Ann E. Moore sold 8,108 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction dated Friday, November 8th. The shares were sold at an average price of $16.00, for a total transaction of $129,728.00. Following the sale, the executive vice president now directly owns 135,810 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $2,172,960. This represents a 5.63 % decrease in their ownership of the stock. The transaction was disclosed in a document filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which is available through this link . Also, Director Mark S. Ordan sold 27,600 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction dated Wednesday, November 13th. The shares were sold at an average price of $15.35, for a total transaction of $423,660.00. Following the sale, the director now directly owns 138,683 shares in the company, valued at approximately $2,128,784.05. This trade represents a 16.60 % decrease in their ownership of the stock. The disclosure for this sale can be found here . 2.00% of the stock is owned by insiders. Analyst Ratings Changes Read Our Latest Research Report on Pediatrix Medical Group Pediatrix Medical Group Stock Performance Shares of MD stock opened at $13.49 on Friday. The firm has a market capitalization of $1.16 billion, a PE ratio of -4.41, a price-to-earnings-growth ratio of 2.00 and a beta of 1.57. The firm has a fifty day simple moving average of $14.29 and a two-hundred day simple moving average of $11.15. The company has a current ratio of 1.42, a quick ratio of 1.42 and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.83. Pediatrix Medical Group, Inc. has a 12 month low of $6.62 and a 12 month high of $16.41. Pediatrix Medical Group ( NYSE:MD – Get Free Report ) last posted its earnings results on Friday, November 1st. The company reported $0.44 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, topping the consensus estimate of $0.37 by $0.07. Pediatrix Medical Group had a negative net margin of 12.65% and a positive return on equity of 12.79%. The firm had revenue of $511.20 million during the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $498.87 million. During the same quarter in the prior year, the business posted $0.29 EPS. The business’s revenue was up .9% compared to the same quarter last year. Analysts forecast that Pediatrix Medical Group, Inc. will post 1.26 EPS for the current fiscal year. About Pediatrix Medical Group ( Free Report ) Pediatrix Medical Group, Inc, together with its subsidiaries, provides newborn, maternal-fetal, pediatric cardiology, and other pediatric subspecialty care services in the United States. It offers neonatal care services, such as clinical care to babies born prematurely or with complications within specific units at hospitals through neonatal physician subspecialists, neonatal nurse practitioners, and other pediatric clinicians. Featured Stories Five stocks we like better than Pediatrix Medical Group Stock Dividend Cuts Happen Are You Ready? S&P 500 ETFs: Expense Ratios That Can Boost Your Long-Term Gains Insider Selling Explained: Can it Inform Your Investing Choices? How AI Implementation Could Help MongoDB Roar Back in 2025 Dividend Screener: How to Evaluate Dividend Stocks Before Buying Hedge Funds Boost Oil Positions: Is a Major Rally on the Horizon? Want to see what other hedge funds are holding MD? Visit HoldingsChannel.com to get the latest 13F filings and insider trades for Pediatrix Medical Group, Inc. ( NYSE:MD – Free Report ). Receive News & Ratings for Pediatrix Medical Group Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Pediatrix Medical Group and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter .
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The Federal Government has called on Nigerians to patronise and promote Made-in-Nigeria goods and services for sustainable economic development of the country. The Permanent Secretary, Special Services Office and the Supervising Permanent Secretary, Political and Economic Affairs Office in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF), Mohammed Sanusi Danjuma, made the call at the Regional and State Coordinators Conference of Made-in-Nigeria in Abuja. Patronise ‘Made In Nigeria’ Products To Create Employment, Agency Begs NASS The Permanent Secretary, who was represented at the event by the Director, International Organisation Department (IOD), Musiliu Oladunjoye, stated that the conference was a crucial step in Nigeria’s journey towards economic growth and development. In a statement by the director of media in the Office of the SGF, Segun Imohiosen, he added that effective collaboration, innovative solutions and capacity building will serve as a booster to the Made-in-Nigeria project. The National Coordinator of the Made-in-Nigeria Project, under the International Organisation Department in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, George Nwabueze, said that the Made-in-Nigeria project was beyond a slogan but a movement that has the capacity to boost Nigeria’s economic fortune. He, therefore, urged all Nigerians to take pride in patronising products and services that are homegrown, crafted, and delivered by talented entrepreneurs, artisans and innovators in the country. While delivering his keynote address, Barrister Promise Ogadinma Mbani, the Eastern Coordinator of Made-in-Nigeria Products, observed that one of the major setbacks for the ‘Made-in-Nigeria’ products was the cultural preference for foreign products. He advocated for registration, standardisation and promotion of Made-in-Nigeria products and services in the country in order to improve patronage within and outside the shores of the country. He further emphasised the need to educate, sensitise and create awareness among Nigerians on the advocacy.Consisting of Apple , Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Tesla, Meta, and Nvidia, the Magnificent Seven has delivered consistent outperformance in recent years, but it appears that their market dominance could be under threat. Since its launch in April 2023, Roundhill’s Magnificent Seven ETF (MAGS) has grown more than 120%, buoyed by an AI boom and a series of strategic acquisitions by tech market leaders to reaffirm their position among the world’s strongest stocks by market capitalization. However, the news in recent days that China has launched an antitrust investigation into global chip giant Nvidia under suspicions that the company has violated its anti-monopoly laws is the latest blow in a series of regulatory pushbacks against the global dominance of Wall Street’s biggest players. Trade Wars Disrupt Tech China’s decision to investigate Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) stems from a 2020 deal to acquire Mellanox Technologies Ltd. The State Administration for Market Regulation alleged that approval was granted for the deal on the condition that the tech giant did not discriminate against Chinese companies . The $7 billion acquisition was approved provided that the Israeli computer networking manufacturer provided information about new products to rivals within 90 days of making them available to Nvidia. It’s this aspect of the deal that China is looking to scrutinize. However, the timing of the investigation is crucial. President-elect Donald Trump has been vocal in his pledges to impose heavy tariffs on trade with China. While a 60% tariff was threatened on the campaign trail, in November, Trump suggested that an additional 10% tariff would be placed on all trade with the nation. Although Trump has suggested that the tariffs are a response to drugs like fentanyl being exported to the US, the President-elect has long adopted an aggressive stance towards China, which may complicate the growth of globally-focused Wall Street firms. Nvidia appears to be caught up in an emerging trade war between the US and China, and given that the Asian powerhouse makes up around 17% of the firm’s revenue , the outcome of the investigation could be a troubling time for the tech leader that had been on course to sell $12 billion worth of chips to China in 2024. Google in Antitrust Hot Water Search engine giant and its owner, Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), were found to have violated antitrust laws as the firm created a tech empire, according to a federal judge in August 2024. The judge found that Google violated section 2 of the Sherman Act, with accusations that its services and advertising kept users locked into the company in a way that prevented the emergence of competitors. The fallout from the trial saw GOOGL fall 11.6% from its July 2024 peak by the end of November, with fresh uncertainty over what the future holds for its tech empire at a time of accelerating innovations. In November, the US Department of Justice suggested that Google divest its Chrome internet browser as a remedy in the wake of the case. The DOJ also ruled that Google should be prevented from entering into exclusionary agreements with third parties like Apple and Samsung in a move that could open the door for more competitors to capture market share in the future. Crucially, the department suggested that Google be prohibited from giving preference to its search service within its other products. AI Could Destabilize Tech Leaders These antitrust investigations are taking place against the backdrop of a tech boom powered by artificial intelligence. OpenAI recently launched ChatGPT Search in a move that saw Google quickly begin testing its own real-time conversational search function. With data suggesting that as much as 20% of searches in 2023 occurred without the use of a keyboard, voice search powered by AI could be a key battleground for dominance among the world’s biggest tech firms. Fresh scrutiny over the market monopolies that leading tech companies are building could open the door for fresh competitors to destabilize Wall Street’s status quo among the Magnificent Seven . Should Investors be Wary of the Magnificent Seven? Renewed scrutiny over the market dominance of Magnificent Seven firms comes at a time when markets haven’t been so concentrated at the top since 1960 . Today, the Magnificent Seven account for 30% of the S&P Index in terms of capitalization, which may be challenged as new innovations, especially when it comes to transactions transparency , bring fresh opportunities. With a trade war between the US and China beginning to accelerate, and greater industry scrutiny of tech giants like Google, the Magnificent Seven could see some new challenges emerge in 2025 even as the Trump administration is expected to support a pro-growth outlook for Wall Street. The brightest global tech stocks have proven themselves time and again, and it’s reasonable to expect that their growth will continue for the foreseeable future, but the impressive 120% rally of Roundhill’s Magnificent Seven ETF over the past 18 months may be considerably harder to replicate looking ahead.Thirty-five years after “When Harry Met Sally...” asked the question of whether straight men and women can be friends without sex getting in the way, “ Matt and Mara ” rephrases it with more anxiously fraught social stakes — raising the accompanying and ever-relevant query of whether two neurotic writers should really fraternize with each other at all. The fourth feature from Canadian writer-director Kazik Radwanski is an itchy, unsettled and often poignant relationship drama, consistent with his previous works not just in shared personnel — notably lead actors Deragh Campbell and Matt Johnson , who also headlined Radwanski’s 2019 breakout “Anne at 13,000 Ft.” — but in a tingly, seasick storytelling sensibility that makes something volatile and cinematic out of ostensibly static material. A decade or two ago, when the mumblecore movement was at its zenith in North American indie filmmaking, a trim, talky character piece like “Matt and Mara” — a highlight of this year’s Berlinale Encounters competition — might have seemed less of an outlier than it does on the 2024 arthouse scene. Which isn’t to say that Radwanski’s freewheeling, improvisatory approach feels dated or derivative. As with “Anne at 13,000 Ft.,” a gnawing character study which ran on the quivery sense of characters and actors being pushed to the edge of their comfort level, his latest resists coziness even as it pursues a sometimes warm, sometimes raw intimacy between characters who know each other either too well or not quite enough, depending on what level of companionship they settle on. At the outset, Radwanski’s fleet, on-the-fly script furnishes the audience with little backstory regarding its syllabically compatible title characters, instead trusting us to fill in their history (which turns out to be both simple enough and a little complicated) as we get to know them. Mara (Campbell), a thirtysomething creative writing professor at a Toronto university, appears to have several reactions at once — exhilaration and exasperation lapping each other on the actor’s remarkable, sharp-planed face — when Matt (Johnson), whom she hasn’t seen in several years, blusters unannounced into one of her classes. It’s a typically brash, entitled stunt from a man whose cocksure personality and easy, dudeish tone have made him something of a celebrity on the New York lit scene, with multiple well-regarded novels to his name. Half a lifetime ago, they were close friends at college in Canada, and regarded as equally prodigious talents. Now Mara has gone the teaching route while still awaiting her literary breakthrough, and raising a young daughter with her husband Samir (Mounir Al Shami), a handsome, accomplished musician from whom she seems almost entirely disconnected. To mutual friends, she rather jarringly announces that she has no feeling whatsoever for music; the subtext is discomfitingly obvious. Into this breach, calculatedly or otherwise, steps Matt — back in town for an indefinite period, and determined to work his way back into Mara’s life with his considerable force of personality. When they’re mistaken for a couple by a stranger, she runs with the charade, in part because her old friend brings a fizzy energy to her life that it’s been missing for some time, but perhaps more crucially because he reminds her of when her life was less placid and more promising. When Samir drops out of driving her to an out-of-town literary festival where she’s due to give a talk, Matt agreeably steps in — adding a charged stop to that most romantically auspicious of tourist spots, Niagara Falls, to the itinerary. For much of the film, we don’t know exactly whether Matt and Mara’s first estrangement was merely a matter of geography and circumstance, or a more personally motivated rift. Yet the more time the reunited friends spend together, the edges of their relationship edging uncertainly into less platonic territory, we see the ways in which their respective vanities and insecurities chafe against each other, now exacerbated by age and past experience. Campbell’s and Johnson’s performances, both expert in aptly clashing registers, contribute to the unease: Her nervy, compressed intensity is initially tempered by his breezy jocularity before, in time, the two energies begin to aggravate each other. Radwanski’s script is low on incident — and the film, at a tight, jittery 80 minutes, can afford to be — but this tension keeps it taut and urgent, in the manner of particularly gripping people-watching: Even Nikolay Michaylov’s restless, sometimes invasively close-up camera operates on a close interest in human nature itself, its gaze fixed keenly on its protagonists’ reactions to various miniature, everyday epiphanies and bombshells. “Matt and Mara” isn’t a relationship study where you especially root for the union of its title characters, but you can’t look away from them either way.
Jessica Chastain Reflects on Breaking Family's Generational Cycle by Going to College: 'Determined to Escape'