
Olivia Hussey, star of the 1968 film 'Romeo and Juliet,' dies at 73Good Governance: Gemade solicits prayers, support for Alia to deliver on promises
Looking for Wednesday’s Connections hints and answers instead? You can find them here: Hey there! I hope you’re having a great week so far. If you’ll indulge me for a moment, I brought my first proper foray into virtual reality to a close by writing about my experience with Trombone Champ VR . It’s ludicrously silly and one of my favorite games of the year in a walk. I’m going to wait until I get vision-correcting lenses that attach directly to the PS VR2 before my next venture with it. I don’t want to break another pair of glasses! Today’s NYT Connections hints and answers for Thursday, December 5, are coming right up. How To Play Connections Connections is a free, popular New York Times daily word game. You get a new puzzle at midnight every day. You can play on the NYT website or Games app. You’re presented with a grid of 16 words. Your task is to arrange them into four groups of four by figuring out the links between them. The groups could be things like items you can click, names for research study participants or words preceded by a body part. There’s only one solution for each puzzle, and you’ll need to be careful when it comes to words that might fit into more than one category. You can shuffle the words to perhaps help you see links between them. Each group is color coded. The yellow group is usually the easiest to figure out, blue and green fall in the middle, and the purple group is usually the most difficult one. The purple group often involves wordplay. Select four words you think go together and press Submit. If you make a guess and you’re incorrect, you’ll lose a life. If you’re close to having a correct group, you might see a message telling you that you’re one word away from getting it right, but you’ll still need to figure out which one to swap. If you make four mistakes, it’s game over. Let’s make sure that doesn’t happen with the help of some hints, and, if you’re really struggling, today’s Connections answers. As with Wordle and other similar games, it’s easy to share results with your friends on social media and group chats. If you have an NYT All Access or Games subscription, you can access the publication’s Connections archive. This includes every previous game of Connections , so you can go back and play any of those that you have missed. Aside from the first 60 games or so, you should be able to find my hints for each grid via Google if you need them! Just click here and add the date of the game for which you need clues or the answers to the search query. What Are Today’s Connections Hints? Scroll slowly! Just after the hints for each of today’s Connections groups, I’ll reveal what the groups are without immediately telling you which words go into them. Today’s 16 words are... And the hints for today’s Connections groups are: What Are Today’s Connections Groups? Need some extra help? Be warned: we’re starting to get into spoiler territory. Today’s Connections groups are... What Are Today’s Connections Answers? Spoiler alert! Don’t scroll any further down the page until you’re ready to find out today’s Connections answers. This is your final warning! Today’s Connections answers are... It's always nice to get a perfect game, especially when it takes me up to eight straight wins. Here's how I fared: 🟦🟦🟦🟦 🟩🟩🟩🟩 🟪🟪🟪🟪 🟨🟨🟨🟨 LIME and APPLE could have formed the backbone of a group, as could AMAZON and RHINE as rivers. But the blue group was clear as day to me when I got to INTUIT as I was writing out the word list. I often cover news about AMAZON and APPLE, while ORACLE and INTUIT are major companies in the tech industry, so this was an easy one for me. In terms of the clue, ORACLE used to be listed on the Nasdaq, but it moved to the New York Stock Exchange over a decade ago. However, it's reasonably well-known that big tech companies (including the so-called Magnificent Seven of Alphabet/Google, Apple, Amazon, Meta/Facebook, Nvidia, Microsoft and Tesla) tend to be listed on the former. So that seemed appropriate enough for a blue-level clue. Anyway, the combo of OUTSIDE and FRONT led me to the greens in straightforward fashion. It only took a moment to deduce the yellows, and I was fairly sure the others formed the purple group so I cleared them first. I was able to figure out that connection before submitting. That’s all there is to it for today’s Connections clues and answers. Be sure to check my blog for hints and the solution for Friday’s game if you need them. P.S. As tempted as I am to drop in "Rhinestone Cowboy" or Audioslave’s “Like A Stone,” let's continue on with (and probably wrap up) our look at some of the better songs to reach number one in the U.K. singles chart. There are quite a few good ones in truth. For instance, I like all three Spice Girls songs that triumphed in the '90s — "2 Become 1," "Too Much" and "Goodbye." But the best Christmas number one of all time took the top spot in both 1975 and 1991. It is of course, one of the greatest songs ever recorded, "Bohemian Rhapsody." Make sure to headbang appropriately: Have a great day! Call someone you love! If you’re so inclined, please do follow my blog for more coverage of Connections and other word games and even some video game news, insights and analysis. It helps me out a lot! Also, follow me on Bluesky ! 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James Carey Lauder-USA TODAY Sports The NHL’s March 7 trade deadline isn’t that far away, and by the time it does arrive, you can make a safe bet that the Vegas Golden Knights are going to pull off a couple of deals to strengthen their lineup, if not for the long-term, then certainly, for the rest of this season and next spring’s Stanley Cup playoffs. What players could be targeted by Vegas? Here are three possibilities: Provorov is scheduled to be a UFA at season’s end, making him a pure rental for the Golden Knights. But, we all should know by now Vegas GM Kelly McCrimmon plays for keeps, even if it is only in the short term. And Provorov’s $4.725-million salary cap hit ( ) makes him an affordable asset, even if another team might have to be involved to retain some salary. But the Golden Knights’ defense corps – already formidable with the addition of Noah Hanifin last season – would arguably be the best in the NHL with Provorov on board. And Columbus wouldn’t be expecting the world in any deal for Provorov. Years ago, the asking price for Provorov would’ve been sky-high, but times have changed, and while the Blue Jackets would need a top draft pick or above-average prospect for Provorov, a deal could be done for him without sending marquee names to Columbus in return. And as an elite depth addition, Provorov would be a terrific addition for Vegas. The Golden Knights don’t have to include a marquee name in every deal they make, and while Carcone isn’t a household name – and with his production this season of only five assists and eight points in 25 games – Carcone is only a year removed from posting 21 goals in 74 games last season. and his status as a pending UFA, make Carcone very attractive for any Stanley Cup front-runner, and Vegas wouldn’t have to offer Utah the sun, moon and stars in any trade. ON THE BOARD FIRST! Michael Carcone scores on the power play to make it 1-0, us. — Utah Hockey Club (@utahhockeyclub) Vegas already has great depth up front, but you never can have too much depth as you approach a playoff run, and that’s why the Golden Knights make sense as a landing spot for Carcone. He could get a fresh start in the Nevada desert, and prove to be a positive addition for the Golden Knights. Injuries have limited the 28-year-old Ehlers to just 27 games so far this season, but the winger has produced well in that limited action, posting 10 goals and 27 points. He’s also going to be a UFA at the end of this season, and he’s likely priced himself out of . But, Vegas has become famous for finding ways to bring in experienced hands and squeeze them into their long-term plans, and Ehlers – who has a modified no-trade clause – would probably welcome the opportunity to play for a legitimate Cup-contender like the Golden Knights. Nice List: Nikolaj Ehlers ✅ — Winnipeg Jets (@NHLJets) Another team might have to be involved to retain some of Ehlers’ $6-million salary, but where there’s a will, there’s a way. And Vegas would be even more of a Cup threat with Ehlers on the team.Beer Glassware Market Industry Trends and Forecasts to 2029, Featuring Fiskars, Eagle Glass Deco, Libbey Glass, Lifetime Brands, Ngwenya Glass, Ocean Glass and Borosil
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Described as a cult leader, attack dog for a foreign government, and contrarian, Frank Furedi used to be one of the foremost communists in the country in the 70s and 80s. Now, he lives in an unassuming Faversham townhouse, backs Brexit, rails against “woke” politics, and works for a Brussels-based think tank – so we sat down to hear about his life and times... “I haven't got very much time to run a cult,” says Frank Furedi in the office of his Faversham house. “Everybody that knows me knows that I'm the opposite because I'm a very private person.” Private or not, Mr Furedi has a very public presence. He is an emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Kent, though he says he never gets to Canterbury anymore as he’s busy with other things. He is in charge of a think tank in Brussels, the Mathias Corvinus Collegium, which is closely linked to the right-wing Hungarian government – and he has been labelled “the godfather of the cult”. Sleepy Faversham has been his home for about 20 years after working at the University of Kent for decades. At first he “didn't think very much” of our county, he says. “Kent was not the centre of intellectual life, and also at the time Canterbury wasn't like what it is now, it was much more quiet and sort of reserved. “But then in a funny kind of way, I began to fall in love with Kent. I don't know why, or what happened, but I began to like the local people. And I did a lot of walking so I really enjoyed the countryside, I still do, my wife and I go walking all the time. “I realised that this was a very nice place, particularly for me because I was doing a lot of high-pressure stuff, that this was a really good place to wind down and get on with life.” His hallway bears posters of philosophers Georg Lukacs and Hannah Arendt, and his office is littered with books and papers - aged Marxist tomes with well-worn spines to photocopied contemporary research papers. Twitter is open on his laptop. Nearer to his desk, and betraying a preoccupation of his, a copy of “Trans: When Ideology Meets Reality” by Helen Joyce protrudes from one of several floor-to-ceiling shelves. “Today, I think it's all with the culture wars, nothing else matters” he says earnestly. The Hungarian-Canadian academic has written almost 30 books, cranking them out with industrial efficiency. They aren’t pithily named and carry the hulking subtitles common to modern pop-political writing. ‘The War Against the Past: Why The West Must Fight For Its History’ is his most recent book. When he entered political life in the 1970s, his work was less Waterstones new releases table and more roadside stand at a demonstration. Mr Furedi was the first chairman of the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP), founded in 1978 after a succession of People’s Front of Judea-style splits over theoretical minutia which started in the International Socialists. The RCP arose from the tangle of limbs and literature as a fringe, disciplined and contrarian front, even compared to their Trotskyist contemporaries. Living Marxism magazine, which persisted as LM after the party wound-up in the 90s, was sued out of existence by ITN for libel after claiming in 1997 they had “faked” pictures of Bosnians interned in a Serbian-run camp in Yugoslavia. Before their tussle with the law, Living Marxism is a catalogue of the radical positions of which Mr Furedi was the primary architect. They interviewed Gerry Adams at the height of the troubles hailing him as “the man they tried to ban,” and called Margaret Thatcher the “dictator in Downing Street.” Many members of the RCP, including Furedi himself, adopted and wrote under fake names, fearing police surveillance and conflict with others on the political fringes. Paranoia doesn’t mean people aren’t out to get you. Evidence provided to the Undercover Policing Inquiry shows Special Branch paying close attention to Furedi and his comrades, infiltrating meetings and describing them as “a vociferous nuisance and irritant” after attending their 1983 conference. Grainy Metropolitan Police documents from the 1980s brim with information about the comings and goings of RCP members, their residences, and in some cases histories of street-fighting and arrests at demonstrations. The RCP dissolved in 1997, but the network of people involved in it, and with Furedi, has persisted according to some - Guardian writer George Monbiot has described Furedi as the “godfather of the cult.” “You never find people who were in the RCP calling me a cult leader,” Furedi insists. But he acknowledges the disciplined approach to reading and discussion he fostered in the party had an influence. “You were expected to do a lot of intellectual work, otherwise you wouldn't be in the RCP. It was like a laboratory of ideas. “That was, to me, the reason why we stayed together for such a long period of time. Because of the buzz that comes with discussion, debate, looking into books, looking into problems. “But for some people that's seen as bizarre. You know, ‘why aren't you partying on a Saturday night or something? Why are you going away for the weekend to discuss Hegel's dialectics?’ “People that have come out of it have a certain sense of themselves, and a certain sense of confidence and belief that they can make things happen. “There are many, many other people that are not named by Monbiot and all these other people, who went through the RCP. “There are a lot of people who are in a very influential position,” and hence the tendency for people to conspiracy-theorise about their influence. Munira Mirza, a former RCP member and PhD student of Furedi’s, served as a deputy to Boris Johnson when he was mayor of London, and adviser when he was PM. Claire Fox, a key member of the RCP in its day, is now Baroness Fox in the House of Lords, and was a Brexit Party MEP. Many other alumni are in academia or the media - especially Spiked Online, the effective successor of Living Marxism magazine. “I'm very proud of the fact that I've had 50 PhD students, and a large number of them I'm still in contact with,” Furedi says. “And we're still on the same page on most things, not everything. “That's the job of an academic - creating your own school. I try to influence people.” Many of that milieu, and Furedi especially, are now despised by the left as right-wing turncoats. They all supported Brexit, and the most prominent graduates are frontline soldiers in the culture war. He wrote for Spiked in 2021 an article headlined “the trans assault on free speech”, castigating “transgenderism” as “the indoctrination of young minds” driven by an “authoritarian impulse. In our interview he says mass immigration “undermines the very integrity of democracy,” and describes free speech as a “foundational freedom.” POLITICO magazine described him as “attack dog” for the right-wing government of Viktor Orbán. For many who see themselves as communists today, these are the indelible marks of the beast. “You know, I don't feel I'm right-wing, but if people want to call me right-wing, I don't particularly care.” “I mean, I call myself populist, humanist, or whatever, because these are labels that reflect my own self-image of what I think. “There are things I'm very conservative about, things like history, tradition, the family, you know, those roots that bind a community together. I'm very liberal when it comes to individual freedoms, freedom of speech, the right to choose, autonomy. And I'm very left-wing when it comes to economic matters.” Despite being in permanent opposition, Furedi says he is still optimistic: “There's no point in doing what I'm doing if I didn't believe that the world could be a better place. “There's no such thing as a hopeless situation.”OU JAC receives threats after attack on Allu Arjun’s home in Hyderabad