On Christmas Eve, Pope Francis appeals for courage to better the world
Stickler First With Live Commerce Analytics App in TikTok Shop App StoreBella’s Bartok takes the stage at the Stone Church for the third annual New Year’s Eve “Strange Ones Ball – Babylon in Brattleboro” on Tuesday, Dec. 31. “ We're excited to host Bella's Bartok's 7th Annual Strange Ones Ball for the third consecutive year! This will be their 8th show at the Church and every one is always a highlight of the year,” says Robin Johnson, owner and manager of the Stone Church. Johnson continues, “Their wild and exuberant genre-fluid carnival of sounds is a perfect match for our rock ‘n’ roll church of misfits. The New Year’s show always takes the church to another level and this year will be no exception — with the addition of the incredible Hayley Jane Band.” Bella’s Bartok’s current lineup includes: Julia Posin on lead vocals/washboard; Chris Whearty on lead guitar; Kade Parkin on drums; Zach Effman on bass; Vida Cripps as the puppeteer and Asher Haidak-Putnam on lead vocals and rhythm guitar. The Sentinel caught up with musician and founding member Asher Haidak-Putnam by phone recently at his home in Northampton, Mass. to talk about all things band and New Year’s Eve Ball at the Church. Here’s an excerpt of the conversation. V.C.: Hey Asher, good talking to you! Usually Bartok does two nights at the Church for New Year’s Eve, why only one show this year? A.P.: NYE fell on a Tuesday, so we weren’t sure we could get people out on a Monday night. V.C.: What’s the theme of the Strange One’s Ball this year? A.P.: It’s Babylon in Brattleboro — an all-night cacophony of cabaret that puts the roar back into the roaring ‘20s. Given the political dimensions of the country and the world at large, it feels a bit like 1925. There is a lot of progressive movement going forward and outright fascism — one step forward two steps back. Moving us back — like to the 20s — and I think people are picking up on that. We’re getting loud about it. V.C.: You started Bartok in 2008 and met as UMASS students, now you’re in your third lineup. What’s the band’s origin story? A.P.: We all met playing music in the Northampton area and on the scene in Albany, N.Y. and Brattleboro, Vt. I’m promoted to singer now! Back then I was just a guitarist. Given our lineup change which has settled since Covid, we found a group of folks that we have known or met through music. We’re jamming in different ways. We meet every Monday and work on new tunes. All of us are within a block of each other in Northampton which is really convenient. V.C.: So what’s the real story of how you started in 2008? A.P.: The myth or the truth? I think I’ll tell you the myth. I was back from school on break, playing with my brother and some other family members and started playing on the street in Great Barrington, Mass. to get some beer and gas money. It went from there. It was magnetic — people coming out and dancing around — we were playing our old Balkan, eastern European folk songs or punk rock songs acoustically. That was our gateway into folk punk. That’s what we were then. Now we are more dance punk. V.C.: Your band is named for Hungarian ethnomusicologist and composer Béla Bartók? A.P.: Yeah. My grandfather is from Romania and we grew up listening to that stuff. My grandmother was very interested in folk music of the mountains. Are you familiar with the music by Alan Lomax from the 1920s? He brought to the fore ethnomusicology and that is what Bela did with Roma, Jewish and mountain people, it was folk music. V.C.: This is your 8th time playing at the iconic Stone Church in Brattleboro. What should the audience expect at the NYE Strange One’s Ball at the Church this year? A.P.: Before Covid our themes would be “The Muppets” or post-apocalyptic and people were dressed to the nines! The Muppet show was amazing. We had so many pigs in space characters, I was blown away. “Very well done, Kermit!” Post Covid, no one is dressing up; the audience is not getting into costuming. No one dressed up for our heaven and hell theme last year. We are going for the roaring ‘20s, cabaret style. If you have something to dress up with, do it and come and dance! We are finally playing with our comrade in arms Hayley Jane and her crew. We’ve been playing festivals with her since 2015 but we’ve never shared a bill together. She’s opening the show with her band. I’ve known her since my early 20s. She is great. She has the same vibe and same sound and same message as we do. V.C.: You are really a band of street performers at heart who are passionate about social justice and other current events. Say more. A.P.: Absolutely! We are very passionate about lots of issues of the day. We are kids or grandkids of immigrants, a lot of us are queer or gay. A lot of us have partners or family members who are black, brown, Muslim or Jewish. The mainstream of this country doesn’t tend to like us. It’s a passionate thing when you love someone and you see that there are government policies or social norms that are enacted to ensure their discomfort or death and “that just ain’t right.” V.C.: What was your first instrument and how did you start playing music? A.P.: Piano at age 8 or 9. My dad is a musician, and his siblings are all musicians. I grew up in it. He was in a touring band for a long time. V.C.: Who were some of your early musical influences? A.P.: System of a Down, TV on the Radio, definitely Nirvana, Nine Inch Nails and Weird Al. V.C.: What is the most important aspect of a live performance? A.P.: No one has ever asked me that. That’s cool. Wow. It’s the people. That’s it. The back and forth; it’s the symbiosis. V.C.: Where are you touring next year? A.P. : We tour extensively from January to November. We have every weekend booked out. We never made it past the Rockies before. We go from Detroit to New Orleans, from Boston to Colorado, Southeastern Canada into Ontario. We haven’t hit Texas or California yet. V.C.: What is your favorite part of being in this band? A.P.: I can hold the boss accountable! We lean on the collective end of things. We are each other’s bosses, so we hold each other accountable and get things done. It’s the healthiest relationship that is celibate. Imagine being a nun except a little wilder and perhaps later nights. I look at us like an emotion processor machine for the masses. We are so tuned into creative aspects of our lives and other people have a more difficult time engaging with that, so we can help them do that. They say, “Hey, this performance really got me through a hard time in my life!” That is the ultimate high, really. SHOW DETAILS Join Bella’s Bartok for an evening of joy, revelry and defiance for the 7th Annual Strange One's Ball, with special guest Hayley Jane Band and LJ as Emcee, on Tuesday, Dec. 31 at the Stone Church, 210 Main St., in Brattleboro, Vt. Doors open at 8 p.m. and the show is at 9 p.m. Open to all ages. For more information, visit www.stonechurchvt.com/#/events/109807 . For more information on Bella’s Bartok, visit www.bellasbartok.com/home , their Facebook page www.facebook.com/bellasbartok or on Instagram @BellasBartok. Steve Rice piece
Every month, the Social Security Administration schedules several Social Security payments, including retirement, disability, and SSI benefits, to ensure that all beneficiaries have enough money to cover their living expenses, enjoy retirement, and, in certain situations, combat poverty. Because the SSA must distribute over 72 million payments each year, they created an annual payment schedule that informs beneficiaries of the exact payment dates on which they will receive monthly benefits. Nonetheless, this schedule may change due to federal holidays or weekends. If you are currently qualified for retirement, survivor, and disability insurance (RSDI) or Supplemental Security Income (SSI), find out about the future payment dates, conditions, and new payment levels for 2025. Social Security has confirmed two new changes in the regular payment schedule The Social Security payment schedule typically provides five rounds of payments based on the program beneficiaries qualify for, the date they claimed their first benefits, and, in some situations, the date they were born. These payments begin on the first of the month for SSI recipients and on the third of the month for RSDI beneficiaries who received their first Social Security check before May 1997. Once these payments are made, the federal agency sends three further payment rounds on the second, third, and fourth Wednesdays of each month to RSDI claimants who received benefits after 1997. However, this normal routine will change in some months, such as in January, due to payment dates falling on holidays and weekends. The two important changes will come for those beneficiaries who qualify for the SSI program. As the first of January falls on a holiday, these beneficiaries will receive their payments in advance on December 31st. This means that SSI beneficiaries will be the first ones to receive the new increased Social Security checks, including the cost of living adjustment (COLA) , in 2024. Besides this advanced payment, beneficiaries from the Supplemental Security Income program will also receive other payments in advance, but this will happen in January. Because the first of February falls on a weekend, the Social Security Administration will reschedule that payment for January 31st, which means that beneficiaries won’t receive their regular benefits in February, but they will receive them at the end of January. To understand these particular changes in the regular schedule, please refer to the official payment schedule or check the upcoming payment dates for January here: Keep in mind that if your Social Security check didn’t arrive on the scheduled date, you should wait at least three mailing days before contacting the Social Security customer service , as the delay may come from your bank rather than from the federal agency. Also, for additional information regarding your monthly payments, remember to access your My Social Security account, where you can download financial statements and request further processes related to Social Security. How much will SSI beneficiaries get over the next few months? As you can see above, SSI beneficiaries will get their benefits on various days over the first three months of the year. However, we will also talk about how much they will make. For example, the average monthly benefit for SSI users in 2024 is $698, and they will also receive two additional payments based on the filing category they selected when they applied for the program (currently set at $1,415 for eligible couples and $943 for individuals). However, as a result of the new cost of living adjustment (COLA) hike that was confirmed last October 10th, this will alter as of January 2025. Recipients of Supplemental Security Income will now earn, on average, $715, which is $17 higher than the existing amount due to the new 2.5% COLA rise for 2025. Individuals and couples also receive $967 and $1,450, respectively.CHERRY HILL, N.J., Nov. 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Real Good Food Company, Inc. (Nasdaq: RGF) ("Real Good Foods” or the "Company”), a leading health and wellness frozen and refrigerated foods company, announced today that, on November 20, 2024, the Listing Qualifications Staff of The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC ("Nasdaq”) notified the Company that the Company's failure to timely file its Form 10-Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC”), for the period ended September 30, 2024, serves as an additional basis for the delisting of the Company's securities from Nasdaq, per Nasdaq Listing Rule 5250(c)(1). The Company previously presented its plan to file all delinquent periodic reports with the SEC, including the Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2024, and requested an extension to do so at a hearing before the Nasdaq Hearings Panel (the "Panel”). The Panel has not yet issued its decision following the hearing. Despite the efforts described above, there can be no assurance that the Company will ultimately regain compliance with all applicable requirements for continued listing or that the Panel will grant the Company a further extension. About Real Good Food Company Real Good Foods (Nasdaq: RGF) is a leading health and wellness frozen and refrigerated foods company, providing a better way to enjoy your favorite foods. The Company's mission is to provide "Real Food You Feel Good About Eating”, making delicious, nutritious foods that are low in sugar, low in carbohydrates and high in protein. The Real Good Foods family of products includes breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks - available in over 16,000 stores nationwide with additional direct-to-consumer options. To learn more, please visit our website at realgoodfoods.com or join us on social media @realgoodfoods - where we maintain some of the largest followings in the frozen food industry today. Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which statements are subject to considerable risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements include all statements other than statements of historical fact contained in this press release, including statements regarding the timing of the filing of Company's late periodic reports and amendments to prior periodic reports, the Company's plan to request a hearing to appeal its delisting determination by Nasdaq, and the Company's plan to request various extension periods to regain compliance with the Listing Rule. The Company has attempted to identify forward-looking statements by using words such as "anticipate,” "believe," "estimate," "expect," "intend," "may," "plan," "predict," "project," "should," "will," or "would," and similar expressions or the negative of these expressions. Forward-looking statements represent management's current expectations and predictions about trends affecting the Company's business and industry and are based on information available as of the time such statements are made. Although the Company does not make forward-looking statements unless it believes it has a reasonable basis for doing so, it cannot guarantee their accuracy or completeness. Forward-looking statements involve numerous known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause its actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements predicted, assumed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Some of the risks and uncertainties that may cause its actual results to materially differ from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements, including the risk of further delays in the filing of the Company's late periodic reports and restated financial statements in amendments to prior periodic reports, the discovery of additional information regarding the error identified in the Company's previously issued consolidated financial statements, the scope of the anticipated restatement of previously issued financial statements as a result of the error, the remediation by management and the Company's independent registered public accounting firm of the identified material weaknesses in internal control over financial reporting, the Panel's determination following the Company's appeal of its delisting decision, the Panel's decision whether or not to grant the Company various extension periods following the submission of a hearing request to regain compliance with the Listing Rule, the Company's ability to regain compliance with the Listing Rule and other continued listing standards and other risk factors described in the section entitled "Risk Factors" in its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022 and other documents filed with or furnished to the SEC by the Company from time to time. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this press release. Except as required by law, the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly release the result of any revisions to these forward-looking statements to reflect the impact of events or circumstances that may arise after the date of this press release. Investor Relations Contact The Real Good Food Company 3 Executive Campus, Suite 155 Cherry Hill, NJ 08002 [email protected]
When Is the Optimal Time to Sell? Cycle Top Price Predictions for XRP, Solana, and DogenThe senior linebacker opted to stick around, believing in coach Kenny Dillingham's vision for a better future. It came sooner than anyone outside the program expected. "I’m doing whatever I can to win,” McCullough said. “I’m not really a stat player. This is my last year of college and my main goal is just to win.” The Sun Devils are doing just that, becoming one of college football's biggest surprises along the way. Picked to finish last in its first Big 12 season, Arizona State (8-2, 5-2 Big 12) now controls its destiny for a spot in the conference title game. The 21st-ranked Sun Devils have already clinched their first bowl berth since 2021, the year they were last ranked in the AP Top 25 before this week. Arizona State has taken down two ranked teams this season, 27-19 over then-No. 16 Utah on Oct. 11 and 24-14 at then-No. 20 Kansas State last weekend. The Sun Devils will play their biggest home game in recent memory against No. 14 BYU on Saturday , the first home game between ranked teams in Tempe since 2014. Beat the Cougars and Arizona State can clinch a spot in the Big 12 Championship on Dec. 7 in Arlington, Texas, with a win over rival Arizona in the regular-season finale. “It means a lot to these guys to come in here with that chip on their shoulder and do something that really nobody thought we could do,” Dillingham said. Arizona State faced adversity on and off the field when Dillingham arrived in 2023. After winning eight games in 2021, the Sun Devils went 3-9 the following year while under investigation by the NCAA, a combination that led to the firing of Herm Edwards during his fifth season here. Dillingham had success as Oregon's offensive coordinator and brought the requisite enthusiasm of being a young — he was 32 at the time — first-time head coach returning to his alma mater. Despite rallying the community around the program, Dillingham fell into hard luck his first season in the desert. The Sun Devils were decimated by injuries, particularly at quarterback, and never recovered, finishing 3-9 for the second straight season. But Dillingham had the pieces in place. He proved to be adept at finding the right players through the transfer portal, landing former Sacramento State running back Cam Skattebo two years ago and former Michigan State quarterback Sam Leavitt prior to this season. The hard-running Skattebo has been one of the nation's best running backs and Leavitt has been a perfect fit for Arizona State's offense, making good decisions while extending plays with his legs. The portal success extends across Arizona State's roster and Dillingham has sprinkled in solid recruiting classes while convincing key players to remain, a combination that's meshed into a team that could crash the College Football Playoff if the pieces fall just right. “We were a three-win team twice,” Dillingham said. “We were under NCAA sanctions. Most head coaches, to be brutally honest, get fired if you take a job under sanctions. You don’t survive. You’re hired to be fired. That’s the nature of the beast and right now we’re sitting here at 8-2, and I couldn’t be prouder." Dillingham's vision for a better future, one the rest of the country didn't see coming, is here and now. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
We Asked ChatGPT 4.0 Which Top Crypto Is Set To Dominate 2025 Ripple (XRP), Polygon (POL), Pepe (PEPE) or Lightchain AI
No. 21 Arizona State on the rise in Kenny Dillingham's second season as coachThe Constitution of India is an embodiment of the aspirations of its citizens. These aspirations were also reflected in the long and painstaking process through which the Constitution came into being. This process, however, didn’t begin on November 26, 1949, when the first session of the Constituent Assembly was gavelled into existence. Debates and discussions on what should be incorporated into the Constitution started in the 19th century itself. Social movements played a crucial role in shaping the constitutional discourse, laying down the foundations of equality, dignity, social justice, and equal opportunity for any future document to govern a yet-to-be-born republic. The movements, led by Jyotiba Phule and Dr. BR Ambedkar, respectively, in different periods of history are representative of the direct impact of social movements on the framing of the Constitution. Phule’s constitutional project took inspiration from the 13th Amendment (1865) to the American Constitution, which abolished the slavery of African Americans. In 1873, Phule wrote a seminal book, titled Gulamgiri (translated as slavery), with a dedication to “the good people of the United States as a token of admiration for their sublime disinterested and self-sacrificing devotion in the cause” of slavery. Phule also hoped that the oppressor communities in India would follow a similar track in abolishing untouchability and emancipating the oppressed castes. Gulamgiri was a sharp critique of India’s caste system and oppression. In the same year, Phule also started the Satyashodhak Samaj (the truth seekers’ society) movement to unite the oppressed castes, promote their education, and build an alternative vision of an equal society. He further advocated before the British government for free and compulsory education for all. In 1882, he submitted to the Hunter Commission a document that asked the administration to “be kind enough to sanction measures for the spread of female primary education”. Dr. Ambedkar built further on Phule’s legacy in demanding constitutional rights for the oppressed castes. Before the Southborough Committee in 1919, Dr Ambedkar insisted on universal adult franchise (voting rights) for all Indians. Rejecting the contention that “franchise should be given to those only who can be expected to make an intelligent use of it’, he argued that franchise would promote the political awakening of the marginalised communities, who had long been excluded from politics and the social mainstream. The two Mahad Satyagraha led by Dr Ambedkar in 1927 established the groundwork for the non-discrimination principle and broadened the constitutional imagination of rights. The Satyagraha was a challenge to the age-old practice of restricting Dalits from accessing water from a public source used by oppressor castes. Dr Ambedkar regarded the access to public places and water resources as a fundamental civil right. In March 1927, thousands of oppressed castes walked several kilometres, under the leadership of Dr. Ambedkar, to drink water from the Chavdar tank, which was made open to everyone by the Mahad municipality in Maharashtra. However, after the gathering drank water from the tank, it was attacked by a large crowd of people from the oppressor castes, who came with sticks and stones. Later, the oppressor castes performed purification of the water tank by chanting hymns, while taking out the water from the tank in pots. This was seen by Dr Ambedkar as an effort to demoralise the Dalits in demanding their rights. Dr Ambedkar then launched a second Satyagraha in Mahad in December 1927. During this gathering, he presented certain resolutions prepared by him beforehand. These resolutions highlighted the principles that all human beings were born equal; the use of public roads, public schools, public water sources and temples is open to all; and that the “law should be equally applicable to all”. These are the modern principles of equality before law and equal protection of laws, and non-discrimination, which were later incorporated in Articles 14 and 15 of the Constitution. The second Mahad Satyagraha also rejected the authority of “Manusmriti” as Dr Ambedkar publicly burnt it. During the Round Table conferences in London in the early 1930s, Dr Ambedkar presented a clause on non-discrimination and equal access to public places, which were inspired not only by Mahad Satyagraha, but the words of the American Civil Rights Act of 1875. His negotiations at the Conference, and later with Mahatma Gandhi, led to the reservation of seats for Dalits in Parliament and state assemblies. This framework was expanded later in the Constitution by providing for the reservation of seats for backward classes, including the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes, in government services and educational institutions. Around this time, Dr. Ambedkar also wrote a landmark lecture titled “Annihilation of Caste” as part of his advocacy against caste oppression, but refused to deliver it after the organisers asked him to tone down his content. Later published as a book in 1936, it conceptualised “a society based on liberty, equality and fraternity”. As he elaboarated in this treatise, fraternity was “only another name for democracy”. These ideas garnered through the anti-caste social movements were brought by Dr Ambedkar to the Constituent Assembly. Similarly, other members of the assembly carried forward the demands from anti-colonial struggle, women’s movements, Adivasi movements, and peasant movements. In effect, social movements were instrumental in deciding the fate of the final text of several constitutional provisions such as equality, free speech, freedom of conscience and social reform, universal adult franchise, constitutional remedies, and even the Preamble. The broader principles embedded in the Constitution, influenced by earlier pre-independence social movements, were invoked by subsequent movements to advocate for enhanced constitutional safeguards and rights for citizens. Post-independence social movements have led to the enactment of laws to prohibit and prevent atrocities against Dalits and Adivasis, outlaw manual scavenging, and provide adequate quotas in educational institutions for other backward classes. Several pieces of legislation, such as the law providing the right to information, have been passed due to the efforts of civil society-led movements. These vignettes hint at why the Indian Constitution is a unique document – one that lays the legal foundation of a republic but more importantly creates a just and equitable social landscape for that republic to stand and thrive on. This is why pioneering American constitutionalist Granville Austin called the Constitution primarily a social document, one that he described as the cornerstone of a nation. Anurag Bhaskar is the author of The Foresighted Ambedkar: Ideas That Shaped Indian Constitution Discourse. The views expressed are personal.
Trae Young collected 34 points and 10 assists and the visiting Atlanta Hawks never trailed en route to a 136-107 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Sunday night. Reserve De'Andre Hunter added 22 points for the Hawks, who have won four games in a row. Jalen Johnson chipped in 15 points, six steals and one block. Onyeka Okongwu returned after missing five games due to a knee injury and scored 15 points off the bench, Zaccharie Risacher contributed 14 points and Clint Capela had 11 points and 13 rebounds. Scottie Barnes had 19 points, eight rebounds and three steals for the Raptors, who have lost 10 straight games. RJ Barrett added 17 points, and Jakob Poeltl (groin injury) was back in the lineup after missing four games and had 13 points. Bruce Brown made his season debut and scored 12 points off the bench for Toronto, which committed 31 turnovers. Atlanta led 35-25 after one quarter, taking advantage of 10 Toronto giveaways. Toronto started the second quarter with a 6-2 run, but Young's 3-pointer bumped Atlanta's lead to 14 points, 47-33, with 8:36 to play in the frame. The Raptors then used an 11-2 surge to cut the margin to five with five minutes remaining. However, the Hawks stayed in control before settling for a 64-58 lead at the break after the Raptors' Chris Boucher canned a 31-foot 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer. Atlanta shot 43.8 percent from the field in the first half and had nine turnovers. Meanwhile, Toronto shot 57.9 percent overall during the first two quarters while committing 17 turnovers. Atlanta was up 76-64 with 9:21 left in the third quarter after Risacher's dunk following Young's steal. A 7-0 rally extended Atlanta's lead to 17 with 5:41 remaining in the frame, and Hunter's 3-pointer stretched the gap to 21 points, 99-78, with 2:53 to go. Atlanta had a 104-82 cushion after three quarters and saw its advantage reach as many as 31 in the fourth. --Field Level Media/ReutersNo. 14 ASU, No. 17 Iowa State front-runners for possibly wild Big 12 finishJaylon Johnson isn't interested in bright spots with the Bears' skid at 5 games
A forecaster says ripe avalanche conditions are expected to persist across much of British Columbia for the rest of the week. Large swaths of the province, stretching from the coast to the Alberta boundary, are under “considerable” or “moderate” avalanche danger warnings. Tyson Rettie with Avalanche Canada says the conditions are largely a result of a series of storms that have lead to temperature fluctuations and significant amounts of snow at high elevation points. “We’ve seen a pattern of a storm every 18 hours or so on the coast for over a week now,” Rettie said in an interview Tuesday. “Every time the storm comes through, it deposits significant amounts of snow, often with strong or extreme winds.” He said storms like these deposit wind and storm slabs, or layers of snow, on mountains. These deposits bond together on top of existing layers of snow, Rettie said, and when the top slab is stronger than the layer beneath it, the greater the risk for an avalanche. “We’re seeing formation of both storm and wind slabs that are large enough to justify a ‘considerable hazard’ (warning),” he said. “Even just the new snow itself can form what we call a storm slab problem or a wind slab problem.” As of Tuesday afternoon, Avalanche Canada had a “considerable hazard” warning covering Vancouver Island, a stretch of coastal B.C. from Powell River to Pemberton in the east, and more areas. There were also significant areas of the province covered under “moderate hazard” avalanche warnings. One of these moderate areas is east of Pemberton towards Lillooet, and Rettie noted a few avalanches have been reported in the area over the past week. On Monday, four backcountry skiers were buried in an avalanche on Ipsoot Mountain north of Whistler, B.C., and a fifth was partially buried. All were rescued. B.C. Emergency Health Services said in a statement that three of the skiers were transported to hospital in stable condition, while the other two didn’t require hospitalization. Premier David Eby shared his appreciation for the first responders in a social media post, calling it “an incredible rescue.” Const. Antoine Graebling with the Whistler RCMP detachment said the avalanche was a 2.5 on a five-point scale, which means it was large enough to seriously injure or kill people. Graebling said his detachment hasn’t been notified of any other avalanches. But he and Rettie both said conditions can change daily. “Each of these storms is bringing a significant amount of precipitation, often warmer temperatures and strong or extreme wind speeds,” Rettie said. “The more intense the storm, the higher the danger.” He said the storm pattern is expected to continue near the coast for the rest of this week. “The timing and intensity of it is a bit uncertain. But at least over the next three days, we’re expecting a couple of significant storms to impact the coast,” he said. He encouraged backcountry skiers to check the Avalanche Canada forecasts, which are updated daily, before they hit the slopes.
LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) — Jaylon Johnson wasn't all that interested in discussing any bright spots or reasons to have hope for the Chicago Bears. The star cornerback made his feelings clear. “I’ve been in slumps four, five years in a row now,” Johnson said Monday. "So, I mean at the end of the day, I don’t look for, ‘OK, what is going to be better in the future?’ ... It will be better when it’s better. So, right now, it’s not better. That’s all I can go off of.” The Bears (4-7) are last in the NFC North and have five straight losses after in overtime. They wiped out an 11-point deficit in the final 22 seconds of regulation, only to come up short again when the Vikings' Parker Romo kicked a 29-yard field goal. It was the third game during this skid that came down to the final play. in Week 8 and had a in Week 11. Players have openly questioned some of the coaching decisions in recent weeks. Offensive coordinator Shane Waldron got fired before the game against Green Bay. And coach Matt Eberflus' game management came under more scrutiny against Minnesota. With the Bears trailing 17-10 in the third quarter, there was some confusion on a fourth-and-4 at the Vikings 27. Eberflus said he didn't do a good enough job communicating on the previous play that they would go for it on fourth down. That led to a chaotic sequence in which Santos and long snapper Scott Daly ran onto the field, only to get waved off by a lineman. Quarterback Caleb Williams had to rush to get everyone lined up properly in order to avoid a delay of game. He wound up barking out the wrong play because he misheard the call from offensive coordinator Thomas Brown and threw an incomplete pass. Receiver DJ Moore said Eberflus had not addressed that play with the team. The Bears were scheduled to meet later Monday. “That moment was just like, like a ‘what is going on’ moment that we could have avoided,” he said. The passing game. Williams has clearly looked more comfortable in the two games since Brown replaced the fired Shane Waldron as offensive coordinator. The No. 1 draft pick followed up a solid performance against Green Bay by throwing for 340 yards and two touchdowns. It was his fourth straight turnover-free game and fifth in a row without an interception. Field goal protection. One week after his game-ending 46-yard field goal attempt against Green Bay got blocked, Santos had a 48-yarder rejected on his first try against Minnesota. It happened from the same area, in the middle of the line, when the Vikings' Jerry Tillery knocked down the kick. “I just think it’s technique," Eberflus said. "It’s getting your foot down, bracing up there, staying lower. ... We just have to do a better job there with that.” It was the third blocked field goal for Santos this year, the most for Chicago in a single season since it also had three blocked in 2012. He had a 43-yard try blocked in a win over Jacksonville on Oct. 13. Moore. The Bears have done a better job getting Moore involved under Brown. Moore caught seven passes for a season-high 106 yards and a touchdown against Minnesota. That gave him 14 receptions for 168 yards the past two games, compared to 13 for 104 yards over the previous four. Johnson's 27-yard catch down the middle set up Santos' tying field goal at the end of regulation. But it's not just deep shots. The Bears are finding ways to get the ball in his hands, allowing him to turn short passes into bigger gains. He also had a 13-yard run. RB D’Andre Swift. After a string of solid outings, Swift had just 30 yards on 13 carries. To be fair, he has been dealing with a groin issue, and he was going against the NFL's No. 1 run defense. The Bears reported no injuries during the game. 5-18 — The Bears' record in one-possession games in nearly three seasons under Eberflus, including a 2-5 mark this year. They are 14-31 overall during Eberflus' tenure. The schedule doesn't get any easier, with a Thanksgiving matchup at NFC North leader Detroit. The Lions (10-1) have won nine straight since losing to Tampa Bay in Week 2. AP NFL:Heavy travel day starts with brief grounding of all American Airlines flightsTimberwolves win third straight game, again in dramatic fashion
In 2004, Sachin Tendulkar shelved the cover drive on his way to a famous unbeaten double century in Sydney. Virat Kohli may have to follow suit if he is to bow out of Test cricket on his own terms. At a glance, Kohli, 36, has the numbers of a player who is gone, but this is not one of the cases where if it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck. Virat Kohli departs the MCG on Monday, caught in the cordon again. Credit: AP Unlike Rohit Sharma, whose game looks completely off, Kohli’s issue is a question of technique and temperament. Kohli is still in pristine physical condition. But while his eyes and reflexes may not be as sharp as they once were, it’s a lack of discipline that is hurting him most. Kohli’s career has been built on control, but he is now having trouble suppressing his natural urges, whether it’s ignoring hecklers in the crowd, picking blues with a teenaged debutant or, most obviously, balls outside off stump. All six of Kohli’s dismissals this series have come to catches behind the wicket. His unbeaten ton in the second innings in Perth, when India were already in an unassailable position when he batted, was as close to a junk-time Test century as you can get. His 100 not out is an outlier in a campaign that has also produced scores of 5, 7, 11, 3, 36 and 5. His series average of 27.83 is in keeping with the 31.32 he has averaged in 38 games since the start of 2020. If he was not Virat Kohli, he’d have been dropped a long time ago. The Australians would never say this publicly out of respect for Kohli, and probably fear of Mother Cricket, but they know they have Kohli’s measure. Bowl the ball in the fourth and fifth stump channel outside off, perhaps even wider, and wait for the nick to come. “Well that’s the line I’ve been talking about the whole series. Get it wide and get it full. That’s the sixth time Mitch Starc’s gotten Virat Kohli in Test cricket. The trap was set. The bait was thrown out there and the big fish has fallen for it,” former Australia captain Ricky Ponting said on Seven. With the exception of his century in Perth, when the fizz had gone from the game, the closest Kohli has come to resisting temptation came on the second day of this Test when he made the Australians bowl at him. By ignoring balls outside off stump, he dragged Australia’s lines closer to his pads and scored through the leg side. The drives he played were aimed as close to the bowler as he could instead of the gaping hole, greater than the length of a centre square in the MCG’s winter configuration, between mid-off and gully. His extravagant drive at Mitchell Starc from the final ball before lunch on Monday was directed through cover. Tendulkar, India’s last batting demi-god, provided the template for Kohli. Twenty-one years ago in Sydney, unhappy with being caught behind the wicket earlier in the series, Tendulkar did not hit a boundary through cover in his 241 not out. The plan was devised after a conversation with his brother, who told him his weakness was a matter of shot selection rather than technique. “I need discipline to be in the driving seat,” Tendulkar said in an interview published on his Facebook page in 2021. “My natural instincts, they have to be sitting in the passenger’s seat. “I suddenly realised all the bowlers are bowling in that corridor on the sixth stump, not even fourth stump. If you are going to keep bowling away from me and frustrate me, I’m going to take on this challenge and frustrate you. It’s one versus 11, let’s see who loses patience first. I’m not going to play a single cover drive.” Steve Waugh did it with the hook shot, but warehousing a stroke that has produced so many runs for a batter requires the discipline of a monk. The confidence and self-belief that has driven Kohli through his career will tell him he still can play that shot well. The habits of a lifetime also die hard. “He’s done it so much over the years, its become muscle memory for him – cover drive, cover drive, cover drive,” former Australia opener Simon Katich said on SEN. This should not be unfamiliar territory for Kohli. On his miserable tour of England in 2014 when he was tormented by James Anderson, Kohli was caught by the wicketkeeper or in the cordon in seven of his 10 innings. Four years later, he averaged nearly 60. The difference? “He left it a lot better and he was a lot more patient,” Anderson told the Test Match Special podcast in 2020. “He waited for you to bowl at him, and then he’s very strong off his legs so he could score freely.” Kohli knows what to do, it’s a matter of whether still can. News, results and expert analysis from the weekend of sport are sent every Monday. Sign up for our Sport newsletter .