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panaloko free 100 apk Tottenham joins list of top Premier League teams to lose at Bournemouth as fans jeer Postecoglou Manchester City, Arsenal, and now Tottenham. The list of top Premier League teams beaten at Bournemouth this season is growing. Steve Douglas, The Associated Press Dec 5, 2024 3:20 PM Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message Bournemouth's Dean Huijsen celebrates scoring the opening goal during the English Premier League soccer match between AFC Bournemouth and Tottenham Hotspur in Bournemouth, England, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2024. (Adam Davy/PA via AP) Manchester City, Arsenal, and now Tottenham. The list of top Premier League teams beaten at Bournemouth this season is growing. Dean Huijsen took advantage of Tottenham’s weakness at set pieces to head home a 17th-minute winner in Bournemouth’s 1-0 victory on Thursday. After the game, some Spurs fans appeared to vent their frustration at manager Ange Postecoglou when he went over to the away contingent following his team's insipid display. “They are pretty disappointed, rightly so, and I got some pretty direct feedback as to how we are going,” the Australian coach said, “and that's fair enough.” Bournemouth climbed to ninth — a point and a place above Tottenham in the standings — and underlined its penchant for surprising high-profile visitors to Vitality Stadium. Man City’s remarkable four-game losing run in the Premier League started with a 2-1 defeat at Bournemouth, while fellow title contender Arsenal’s first loss of the season also came at the Vitality, 2-0 on Oct. 19. This was Spurs' sixth defeat of the campaign. They now have as many wins as losses, highlighting the inconsistency blighting their season, and their seven away results so far make remarkable reading: aside from a 3-0 win at Manchester United and a 4-0 thrashing of Man City, Tottenham has lost four and drawn the other at relegation candidate Leicester. “We've got to get out of this space we're in at the moment where we're just not able to get a real grip on our season,” Postecoglou said. An inability to defend set plays continues to hurt Postecoglou’s team. A week after Roma scored twice from them in a 2-2 draw in the Europa League, Huijsen roamed free in the area at a corner and headed home unmarked. Postecoglou said in May said he “wasn’t interested” about his side’s fallibility while defending set pieces, and said after losing 1-0 to Arsenal in September — after a goal from Gabriel at a corner — that “it’s my burden to carry and I’m happy to do that.” “We started well and conceded a really poor goal," Postecoglou said after the Bournemouth game. “It’s a difficult place to come when giving the opposition the opportunity to play in the manner they want.” IWOBI DOUBLE Alex Iwobi scored goals early and late in the game to lead Fulham to a 3-1 win over Brighton. The Nigeria winger intercepted a stray pass out from the back by Brighton goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen and slotted into an unguarded net for the opener in the fourth minute and curled home Fulham’s clinching goal in the 87th. Carlos Baleba equalized for Brighton in the 56th before Brighton midfielder Matt O’Riley – a former Fulham academy player – deflected the ball into his own net from a corner to put the home side back in front. Fulham climbed to sixth in the standings, a point and a place behind Brighton. ___ AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer Steve Douglas, The Associated Press See a typo/mistake? Have a story/tip? This has been shared 0 times 0 Shares Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message Get your daily Victoria news briefing Email Sign Up More Soccer Napoli out of Italian Cup as Tijjani Noslin scores hat trick in 3-1 win for Lazio Dec 5, 2024 2:40 PM Messi and Inter Miami to open Club World Cup against Egyptian club Al Ahly Dec 5, 2024 12:41 PM Trump addresses Club World Cup draw through prerecorded video Dec 5, 2024 11:32 AMDemocrats flip key California House races against national tideNone

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Senate body to review issues of Qasr-e-Naz in Karachi Meeting of standing committee would also be held on January 3, agenda of which has been issued ISLAMABAD: The Senate Standing Committee on Housing and Works has decided to visit Karachi on January 2 to review the issues of Qasr-e-Naz Karachi. The members of the committee, led by the Chairman of the Standing Committee, Senator Nasir Mahmood, would also inspect the Garden Hostel Karachi, Women’s Hostel Karachi and the four-acre land of the Ministry of Housing. A meeting of the standing committee would also be held on January 3, the agenda of which has been issued. According to the agenda, briefing would be given regarding replacement of previous management and actions of the management of Qasr-e-Naz along with ongoing projects, details of all expenses incurred thereof wef FY 2022-23 and onwards. The committee would also get briefing on status of new building of Qasr-e-Naz, functioning and situation of Garden Officers Hostel, including electricity payments made to K-Electric, status of women hostel of Qasr-e-Naz and utilisation of its space. The committee would be briefed on other issues, including booking of rooms and suites in Qasr-e-Naz.

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — Deputy Foreign Minister Francois Wu (吳志中) is in Somaliland to attend President-elect Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi’s inauguration. The foreign ministry said in a press release on Wednesday that Wu is serving as special envoy to President Lai Ching-te (賴清德). Wu and his delegation were welcomed in Hargeisa by Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Rhoda Jama Elmi, Somaliland’s representative to Taiwan Mohamed Omar Hagi Mohamoud, and members of the transition team. Wu will attend the inauguration ceremony on Thursday to congratulate Abdullahi as the new Somaliland president on behalf of the Taiwan government. The foreign ministry said Wu will also meet with outgoing President Muse Bihi Abdi and other government officials. On the campaign trail, Abdullahi reassured Taiwan that bilateral ties would not change under his presidency. The Taiwan representative office in Somaliland maintains connections with his Waddani Party. Taiwan and Somaliland established strong ties in 2020. The two democracies share the similarity of not being globally recognized as countries, and denied membership from the UN and most international bodies due to political circumstances. The two sides cooperate in public health, information technology, agriculture, and education. Taiwan has supported two key projects in Somaliland, including a road infrastructure project and a medical center. Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in 1991. It has functioned as a de facto sovereign state, but it is not officially recognized by any country.

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By 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.Cadiz Inc. Declares Quarterly Dividend for Q4 2024 on Series A Cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock

LEWISBURG — Retiring Buffalo Valley Regional Police Chief Paul Yost calls the hiring of Dan Embeck as his replacement as a full-circle moment for both men's careers. Both Yost, in 1979, and Embeck, in 2000, began their police careers in the Milton Police Department. Embeck, with 24 years of experience, started last week as the incoming chief of the Buffalo Valley Regional Police Department and took the oath of office on Friday with Lewisburg District Judge Jeffrey Rowe. Embeck will replace Yost, an officer with 45 years of experience, once Yost retires on Dec. 18. "My legacy, if there's anything for me, is what I'm proud of," Yost, of McEwensville, said. "There's Dan, who I hired (in Milton) and now has come full circle here. I have Craig Lutcher who is now chief of Point Township and another hire was Curt Zettlemoyer who took over as the chief of Milton. I have the legacy of at least three chiefs and other supervisors who have come up through the ranks since I came on board. I would say that's the biggest part of it." "I started with him and now he's ending with me," Embeck, of New Columbia, said. "It's pretty neat." Embeck was one of 10 interested candidates. He was selected after interviews were conducted earlier this summer and the police commission announced Embeck as the new chief in October. Embeck said the legacy he wants to leave behind is similar to Yost's. "I want to build the next generation up so they're ready to take over when I'm done," Embeck said. "I tell the cadets all the time, I want them to be better than I am in my generation. When they come in, and they do this, and they get to where I'm at, I want them to teach the next generation so they're even better. Each generation becomes a little bit better at this." Yost, a native of New Columbia, spent 26 years employed at Milton Police Department until he reached the rank of chief in 2003. Yost approached his first retirement date in 2005 but wasn't ready to turn in the badge yet. He was hired as the chief of the Lewisburg Police Department until Lewisburg and East Buffalo Township combined their police forces in 2012 as the Buffalo Valley Regional Police Department. Yost became the first chief of the new endeavor. Yost said in 45 years he has had a wide variety of police calls from robberies to physical assaults to homicide and tragic accidents. He has helped women deliver babies and watched people die. He was part of the investigation into Norman Gundrum, who was 16 years old when he fatally stabbed 18-year-old Bobby Coup 64 times in Milton in December 1993. "Once it's over, you got to tuck that away," Yost said. "You can't keep reliving that or it's going to eat away at you. It probably still affects the mentality of how we look at things." Yost considers his biggest accomplishment to be building the regional department and leaving it in a position for the future. "It was definitely a wild ride," Yost said. "You dealt with the politics of two municipalities and the merging of a lot of things over a period of time. That was the reflection of the government leaders at that time who saw the insight to say this is the way to go in the future." Embeck, a native of New Columbia, started his career at the Milton Police Department in June 2000 where he reached the rank of corporal, holding that supervisory position for 11 years, and he has worked part-time for BVRPD. He was hired as chief of the South Williamsport Police Department in 2021. When he was a detective in Milton for 15 years, he specialized in sexual assault investigations. "Although it took a toll, I'm very proud of the work I did with the sexual assault cases and victims," Embeck said. "You take a bucket, every time you have a sexual assault, you take a cup of water and dump it into the bucket. That bucket never drains and eventually gets full. Once it gets full, that's it. I hit that point probably two years before I stopped doing it." He was a member of the Special Emergency Response Team as well as the criminal investigator for the Milton Police Department for 16 years. He is a firearms instructor, taser instructor and field training officer. He is also a Municipal Police Academy instructor at Mansfield University and president of FOP Lodge 52. When he heard that Yost was retiring, Embeck said he did some "soul searching" and ultimately didn't want to pass on the opportunity. He said he is not usually the type to jump from job to job. Embeck said he wants to review the complement of officers on staff to determine promotions and supervisory roles. He wants to make sure the equipment and technology are not only working but able to be maintained for years to come. He wants to update the uniform to include more external vests instead of vests under the shirt. "Promotions are the big thing for me," Embeck said. "We need that hierarchy in place. With guys retiring, we're losing it and we need it back in place." Embeck is also planning to review a policy prohibiting facial hair on officers. "I do not have any issues with facial hair," Embeck said. "We will get the policy in place and get that implemented. We'll make some changes. They're not major, but they're there." In the new year, Embeck said he plans to do ride-alongs with officers and have conversations with commission members to discuss the issues and what priorities need to be addressed. The commission also plans to host an event for the public to meet Embeck. Yost said the biggest differences between policing 45 years ago and now are the equipment and the technology. "When I started, here's your keys, here's your badge, don't shoot anybody," Yost said. "You still went to the academy, but at that point, we were carrying six shooter wheel guns on a swivel holster with a nightstick and a radio. There weren't any cameras. There weren't any TASERs. If you were called to a bar fight, it was you and them. There wasn't any Tasering anybody. It was knock down, drag them out." Everything is on a computer and defendants can appear in front of a judge via a camera, he said. Yost said he plans to enjoy his retirement by engaging in his hobbies: landscaping, construction, camping and a little bit of traveling. "I guarantee I won't be getting up at 5 a.m. every day anymore," Yost said.‘It was our rock'n'roll’ - How the ZX Spectrum became a 1980s iconThe King is scheduled to attend the show at London’s Royal Albert Hall on Friday which will see Sir Elton John and his husband David Furnish present a musical number from their new show The Devil Wears Prada – based on the 2006 Oscar-nominated film. Cast members Vanessa Williams, who plays Miranda Priestly, and Matt Henry, who stars as art director Nigel, were among those posing on the red carpet ahead of the performance which showcases an original score by Sir Elton. The variety show will also see debuts from British singer Sophie Ellis-Bextor with her hit track Murder On The Dancefloor while Eurovision winner Nemo is also featured on the bill. Also posing on the carpet were US magicians and comedy duo Penn and Teller, whose performance marks their 50th anniversary. Comedy will come from Ted Lasso star Ellie Taylor, writer and comic Scott Bennett, Scottish comedian Larry Dean and political comic Matt Forde – who posed on the red carpet with a crutch after undergoing surgery for cancer on his spine. Among the arrivals was TV presenter Lorraine Kelly, who will make an appearance in this year’s show with her Change And Check Choir led by Wet Wet Wet singer Marti Pellow. The choir, made up of women from across the UK who detected their breast cancer through Kelly’s campaign, will perform Love Is All Around, which is being re-released to raise awareness of breast cancer early detection. It comes hours after Camilla insisted the “show must go on” after pulling out of attending the performance on Friday evening as doctors advised that she should prioritise rest. A Buckingham Palace spokesperson said: “Following a recent chest infection, the Queen continues to experience some lingering post-viral symptoms, as a result of which doctors have advised that, after a busy week of engagements, Her Majesty should prioritise sufficient rest. “With great regret, she has therefore withdrawn from attendance at tonight’s Royal Variety Performance. His Majesty will attend as planned.” A royal source said the Queen was “naturally disappointed to miss the evening’s entertainments and sends her sincere apologies to all those involved, but is a great believer that ‘the show must go on'”. “She hopes to be back to full strength and regular public duties very soon,” the source added. The Royal Variety Performance will air on ITV1, ITVX, STV and STV Player in December. Money raised from the show will go to help people from the world of entertainment in need of care and assistance, with the Royal Variety Charity launching an initiative to help those with mental health issues this year.Stock market today: Wall Street gains ground as it notches a winning week and another Dow record

Growing up in North Dallas, my childhood holidays were a delightful fusion of faiths and traditions. My stepdad Michael, who’s been in my life since I was seven, brought his Jewish heritage into our Christmas-decked home with grace and humor. Each December, his "Hanukkah corner" stood proudly in our house, surrounded by twinkling Christmas lights, stockings, and a big Christmas tree with tons of ornaments. One year, when Christmas and Hanukkah overlapped, we crafted him a custom “Christmukkah” yarmulke. We took a real yarmulke and covered it with red felt and a fluffy white pom-pom topper. He just laughed heartily and wore it with a twinkle in his eye that rivaled the menorah candles. Thanks to him, I learned to spin the dreidel and even memorized snippets of the Hebrew blessings sung while lighting the menorah. Michael, with his steady and supportive presence, took on the role of our Christmas Eve chauffeur, delivering us right to the church door and waiting to bring us home. One of my most cherished memories with Michael is visiting the Museum of Biblical Art in Dallas a decade ago. Seeing it through his Jewish perspective revealed layers of meaning I’d never considered. It deepened my appreciation for how our beliefs are woven together in ways that transcend labels. Through our discussions about faith, I’ve come to appreciate grace, understanding, and the shared journey of exploring spiritual truths. Michael is approaching 90 now, and I know our Christmukkahs together are limited. Yet, the lessons he’s given me about faith, family, and the beauty of blending traditions will always shine brightly in my heart.

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