t99win
NoneKings break through in victory over the Kraken
Jury awards $310 million to parents of teen killed in fall from Orlando amusement park ride ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The parents of a 14-year-old Missouri boy who fell to his death from a Florida amusement park ride has won a $310 million verdict against the attraction's Austrian builder. The Orlando jury on Thursday ordered Funtime to pay Tyre Sampson's parents $155 million each. The trial lasted only a day as Funtime never appeared in court to defend itself. Icon Park had already settled with Sampson’s family for an undisclosed amount. Sampson stood 6 foot, 2 inches tall and weighed 380 pounds. He fell from the Orlando Free Fall ride at Icon Park because the harness did not fit him and he wasn't warned. Princess of Wales takes another step in return to public life after chemotherapy with carol service LONDON (AP) — The Princess of Wales is taking another step in her return to public life following cancer treatment as she hosts her annual Christmas carol service at Westminster Abbey. This year’s concert is designed to celebrate the support people give to one another, especially as they struggle through difficult times, a theme that may have particular resonance for the princess after abdominal surgery and chemotherapy forced her to step back from public duties for much of 2024. The princess, often referred to simply as Kate, alluded to this in a letter thanking the 1,600 people invited to attend the event because of their efforts to help others in their communities. Hall of Famer Randy Moss is stepping away from ESPN for an extended time to deal with health issue Hall of Fame wide receiver Randy Moss is stepping away from his ESPN analyst role for an extended time to focus on a personal health challenge, the network said in a statement. Moss revealed last week that he’s dealing with a health issue and asked fans to pray for him and his family. The 47-year-old ESPN football analyst made his announcement on Instagram from the set of the network’s “Sunday NFL Countdown” show. He directed his message to men and urged them to get checkups and bloodwork done, without specifying any particular illness. More than a million oven gloves are being recalled after consumers report 92 minor burns NEW YORK (AP) — More than one million pairs of oven gloves are being recalled due to a burn hazard, after dozens of injury reports. Video and e-commerce retailer QVC is recalling about 1.1 million of its “Temp-tations Oven Gloves” because they fail to provide sufficient heat protection. According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, QVC has received 162 reports of insufficient heat protection, including 92 minor burns. Consumers in possession of the now-recalled gloves are urged to stop using them immediately — and contact QVC for a refund. Lionel Messi wins MLS MVP award, the latest trophy on a long list of honors for the Inter Miami star FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Lionel Messi is the MVP of Major League Soccer for 2024. The award comes after a season where he missed 15 of Inter Miami’s 34 regular-season matches with injuries or commitments to Argentina’s national team. He still factored into a league-high 36 goals by scoring 20 and assisting on 16 others. His 2.1 goal contributions per 90 minutes played is the best by any player in any season in MLS history. MLS revealed the voting results Friday. Messi edged out Columbus Crew forward Cucho Hernández for the award, which is determined by a poll of players, club technical staff and select media members. Alternative healer gets 10 years in UK prison for death of woman at slap therapy workshop LONDON (AP) — An alternative healer who advocated “slapping therapy” to treat a range of maladies has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for the death of a 71-year-old diabetic woman who stopped taking insulin during his workshop. Hongchi Xiao, 61, was sentenced Friday after being convicted of manslaughter by gross negligence for failing to get medical help for Danielle Carr-Gomm in 2016. Prosecutors say she was howling in pain and frothing at the mouth during the fourth day of a workshop. The California healer promoted paida lajin therapy that advocates slapping to release “poisonous waste” from the body. He was previously convicted of manslaughter in the death of a six-year-old boy in Australia. Stellantis recalling more than 300,000 Ram trucks for braking system defect Stellantis is recalling more than 300,000 Ram Heavy Duty pickup trucks because a faulty part could cause certain braking and tracking systems to fail. The Netherlands-based automaker said the hydraulic control unit on the trucks is prone to failure, which can cause the anti-lock brake, electronic stability control and traction control systems to not work properly. Stellantis said regular braking systems are not affected by the defective part and that it’s unaware of any related injuries. The trucks in question are all model years 2017-18 and include the Ram 2500, 3500, 4500 and 5500. The company is unaware of any injuries related to the defect. El Salvador's president is triumphant after his bet on bitcoin comes true SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) — El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele is triumphant about his big bet on bitcoin as the cryptocurrency reached historic highs, surpassing $100,000 for the first time. Bitcoin has been legal tender in the country since 2021 but it never quite matched the president’s enthusiasm. The value of the government’s reported investment now stands at more than $600 million. Bitcoin has rallied mightily since Donald Trump’s election victory last month, exceeding the $100,000 mark on Wednesday night, just hours after the president-elect said he intends to nominate cryptocurrency advocate Paul Atkins to be the next chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission. NBA returning to China for pair of Suns-Nets preseason games in 2025 The NBA is returning to China next season. The league has struck a deal to play preseason games there more than five years after the league was effectively banned for Commissioner Adam Silver not punishing Daryl Morey for tweeting support of anti-government protesters in Hong Kong. Brooklyn and Phoenix will play games in China’s gambling hub of Macao on Oct. 10, 2025, and again two days later. There are more games planned for China in 2026, a source told The Associated Press. F1 champion Max Verstappen to become first-time father with girlfriend Kelly Piquet ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Formula 1 champion Max Verstappen is set to become a father for the first time with his girlfriend Kelly Piquet. There’s racing heritage on both sides of the family. Verstappen secured his fourth F1 title last month and Kelly’s father Nelson Piquet was a three-time champion in the 1980s. Verstappen says on Instagram that "we couldn’t be happier with our little miracle.” Verstappen is aiming to win his 10th F1 race of the year at the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix on Sunday. Practice gets underway later.
We unleash Grad missiles at Russian troops from a pick-up truck. Our mission can last ten minutes, max. On the eleventh, the drones will find us and that will be that... Richard Pendlebury and photographer Jamie Wiseman report from Ukraine's Pokrovsk front By RICHARD PENDLEBURY and PHOTOGRAPHER JAMIE WISEMAN Published: 22:19, 6 December 2024 | Updated: 22:40, 6 December 2024 e-mail View comments We’re in a secret workshop near the critical frontline city of Pokrovsk. Here, hundreds of Grad rockets are being prepared for use by the embattled and under-resourced Ukrainian army a little up the road. Some of the ammunition was locally produced, the rest ‘battlefield trophies’ – captured from the Russians. But the most striking detail is where these artillery rockets were manufactured. What lies around us in this nondescript shed is hard evidence of the globalisation of the Ukraine conflict, if not a slide towards a full-blown Third World War. A stack of missiles with red stripes around the warheads were made in Russia , we are told. Another smaller stockpile came from the arsenal of the former Warsaw Pact satellite, now Nato member, the Czech Republic. Over there are the rockets captured from Russia but made by two supposedly non-aligned countries, Pakistan and Iraq . Next to them is a quantity of Grads from Iran , one of Russia’s key allies and weapon suppliers. ‘And these,’ says an army engineer, pointing to a number of rockets with distinctive black warheads, ‘were supplied by North Korea .’ It’s that Asian dictatorship’s direct intervention in this European conflict which has brought us closer to the brink of a global or even – President Putin threatens – nuclear war . The arrival in Russia this autumn of 10,000 North Korean troops to fight Ukraine in the Kursk region was the ‘escalation’ which prompted US President Joe Biden to finally drop one of his so-called red lines. Ukraine would henceforth be allowed to use American-supplied long-range weapons against targets inside Russia. The UK has also permitted Storm Shadow cruise missiles to be similarly used. Escalation followed escalation with alarming rapidity. We’re in a secret workshop near the critical frontline city of Pokrovsk, writes Richard Pendlebury ‘Fire!’ a soldier shouts and the first ranging rocket goes with an astounding noise. The backblast sends a rolling cloud of black dust across the setting sun We stop in the cover of a wood to don our body armour. The soldiers produce the electronic ‘situational’ map, writes Richard Pendlebury Putin responded by changing Russia’s engagement protocols to permit the use of nuclear weapons against Ukraine. To drive home the point, Russia aimed an Oreshnik ballistic missile against the Ukrainian city of Dnipro – the first use of such a Doomsday weapon in the history of warfare. Thankfully it was not carrying its usual payload of nuclear warheads. But the warning was clear. Against this backdrop, the clock continues to tick down to January 20, 2025, when Donald Trump – an admirer of Putin and vocal critic of America’s multi-billion-dollar support for Ukraine – returns to the White House. Here in Donbas, the war is going badly for Ukraine. There is no other way of putting it. The Russians are advancing faster than at any time since 2022. In the face of overwhelming odds, huge infantry losses and ‘red lines’ against using Western weaponry, the Ukrainian defence lines are bending, creaking and breaking. The focus of this Kremlin push is the Pokrovsk district, where we are now. It’s the logistics hub for the Ukrainian military’s defence of Donbas. Read More Putin mouthpiece Sergei Lavrov renews threats of WW3 in interview with Tucker Carlson Three days after our visit to the workshop, six of these rockets will be launched by a special army unit, against a concentration of Russian troops and vehicles preparing to assault Pokrovsk. Mail cameraman Jamie Wiseman and I have been given exclusive access to the preparation and execution of this mission. The 122mm calibre Grads are not ballistic missiles. But Ukraine, which gave up its nuclear stockpile in the 1990s in order to secure its separation from the Soviet empire, has to fight with what it’s got, as the war enters a critical stage. Another beautiful morning in the Donbas. But the clear blue skies mean the Russian kamikaze drone threat is high. Today we are to accompany a reconnaissance of the Pokrovsk district with the team that will carry out the rocket attack. A military pick-up equipped with an electronic warfare set leads our small convoy. We’re told to keep within 100 yards of our leader in order to benefit from its drone-jamming umbrella. A stack of missiles with red stripes around the warheads were made in Russia, we are told, writes Richard Pendlebury Another smaller stockpile came from the arsenal of the former Warsaw Pact satellite, now Nato member, the Czech Republic writes Richard Pendlebury Some of the ammunition was locally produced, the rest ‘battlefield trophies’ – captured from the Russians, writes Richard Pendlebury This is easier said than done. The convoy drives at high speed, often leaving the Tarmac roads to go across country. The Highway Code no longer applies here. Our first destination is the small city of Kurakhove. When we last visited, in January, the Russians were a 20-minute drive away. We stop in the cover of a wood to don our body armour. The soldiers produce the electronic ‘situational’ map. ‘The frontline is only two and a half miles from the centre of Kurakhove this morning and it could have moved closer since then,’ says the squad leader. ‘That means we are in range of and could be targeted by anything from mortars to FVPs (kamikaze drones). We won’t be stopping.’ Read More Russia 'could target Gibraltar or Cyprus in retaliation for Ukraine using Shadow Storm missiles' We pass a huge roadside billboard of the Virgin Mary: ‘Dear Mother of God please save Ukraine,’ it reads. Shortly afterwards, we reach the outskirts of Kurakhove. Or what is left of it. In January Kurakhove was full of dread. Rockets were falling on the edge of town as we arrived. Now it feels doomed. Since our first visit, the row of shops at the junction where the main highway to Donetsk city meets Victory Street has been devastated by artillery fire. The cafe on the corner where we once ate barbecue chicken and drank chai is shuttered. The drunk who was directing traffic in the snow is gone, although we see a single female civilian striding defiantly along the roadside with a shopping bag. We spin about and speed westwards again. In a village a few miles down the road, we stop at a cafe that is still open. A young woman is serving hot drinks and snacks to a clientele of soldiers, within artillery range of the Russian advance. Yes, she expects to have to evacuate, she says, but not yet. Would we like chocolate on our cappuccinos? The resilience of ordinary Ukrainians in the ‘red zones’ is always impressive. North, now, to Pokrovsk city. The Russians are five miles from its centre. We approach the city through a flat agricultural landscape punctuated by spoil heaps and pitheads. Smoke is rising all along the horizon to our right, where the Russians are attempting a breakthrough. We are warned that Russian kamikaze drones are operating along a major boulevard in the city centre. It’s eerily quiet. The last evacuation train has left and the daily curfew extends from 3pm to 11am. In the main square, the municipal rose beds need deadheading, the grass verges mowing. But for that to happen, the constant artillery soundtrack needs silencing. We visit the ruins of Corleone’s cafe and pizza restaurant, where we used to meet contacts before a Russian missile closed it down. Today we are to accompany a reconnaissance of the Pokrovsk district with the team that will carry out the rocket attack It’s that Asian dictatorship’s direct intervention in this European conflict which has brought us closer to the brink of a global or even – President Putin threatens – nuclear war, writes Richard Pendlebury The authorities have even evacuated a statue of a local worthy, which is not a vote of confidence in Pokrovsk’s ability to hold out. The following morning finds us in a maple grove beside a sunflower field, a few miles behind the front. The rocket squad is here to conduct its final practice. They have arrived with their launch vehicle, a Mitsubishi pick-up, which has been adapted to carry four Grad tubes on the flatbed. This exercise is about marginal gains. On the fire mission, every second will count, both for hitting the target and getting away alive, in a location thick with enemy drones and within range of Russian counter-battery fire. Certainly, the men shout and run as if it’s for real. All the time, their leader is bent over his iPhone stopwatch, like a 19th-century frigate captain practising broadsides. Meanwhile the war continues around us. The constant beeping of the unit’s drone detector warns that a Russian Lancet (kamikaze drone) is hunting nearby. A trio of Mi-8 helicopters pass across our front, at tree-top height to avoid Russian air defence systems. Distant artillery sounds like a huge door being slammed. The practice reaches its climax with the imaginary launch of a volley of Grads. Read More Vladimir Putin will tell Donald Trump to 'screw himself', Kremlin hardliner warns ‘Fire!’ shouts one soldier. ‘Bang!’ shouts another. And so on, four times. Then the controlled chaos of packing up and the getaway. The stopwatch is stopped. ‘Eight minutes and one second,’ the leader announces. He is not happy. It should have been faster. The real operation will take longer. ‘On the frontline, our missions can last ten minutes, maximum. Because on the eleventh minute we will certainly [be located] and that will be that.’ The day of the mission starts with yet another air-raid alert. One gets to recognise the distinct tones of individual sirens. The one here in Kramatorsk does not have the mournful stirring start of others, but goes straight into its monotone shriek. The local birds seem to hate the sound as much as we do. The wind is blowing hard today and that will impact the mission. Kamikaze drones struggle with a windspeed of more than ten metres per second, we are told. Today the wind is double that, which is good for our safety. But it will also affect the accuracy of the Grad missiles. The rockets to be used today were made in Pakistan. The men paint messages on their casing, screw in detonators and then load the tubes. writes Richard Pendlebury As we watch, I chat to the deputy commander. His wife and children are refugees in Lincolnshire which, he says, is ‘very beautiful’. He shows me a family photograph. How surreal all this seems, writes Richard Pendlebury Temperature and coordinates are measured. Everything has to be right. One of the men carries the unit’s ‘drone gun’ – a pump- action shotgun – with a belt of bright brass-ended cartridges, writes Richard Pendlebury We set off in convoy, again, behind the electronic warfare truck and the launch vehicle, which is disguised with camouflage netting. Eventually, we turn off the highway on to a military track along a ploughed field. The weather has been hot recently and our vehicles throw up billows of dust that can be seen for miles. But it’s still very blowy, so the drones will struggle to track us. We hope. We stop in a clearing on the edge of a wood beside a field of black earth. Waiting for us is the ammunition van carrying the Grads. The squad leader explains the mission: ‘Two sighting rockets, then four more shots in a volley and we leave as fast as we can. If there is something in the air [Russian artillery] you lie flat or jump into a hole, if you can. You do not ever run for the vehicles.’ The rockets to be used today were made in Pakistan. The men paint messages on their casing, screw in detonators and then load the tubes. Nearby, a Starlink set – a satellite communication device manufactured by Elon Musk’s SpaceX – is being used. The operator is talking to the drone unit. Temperature and coordinates are measured. Everything has to be right. One of the men carries the unit’s ‘drone gun’ – a pump- action shotgun – with a belt of bright brass-ended cartridges. The weapon of last resort. The soldiers enjoy a final cigarette, then we leave for the launch site. This final leg of the journey has a Mad Max quality to it, as the vehicles race each other, wreathed in dust clouds, across vast rolling fields. Even the enormous slag heap in the distance looks like Ayers Rock. A soldier leaps on to the launcher to make an adjustment. The tube is reloaded. Then there’s another hellish roar and the second sighting rocket shoots into the sky We drive into treeline on a ridge overlooking a wooded valley. A lonely soldier is already standing in the middle of a field with an artillery-aiming compass on a tripod. The wind is blowing hard and the sun has sunk below the treeline as the soldiers set up the launcher and begin to call out coordinates and adjustments. A soldier climbs a tree to cut down a branch that is blocking the line of fire. As we watch, I chat to the deputy commander. His wife and children are refugees in Lincolnshire which, he says, is ‘very beautiful’. He shows me a family photograph. How surreal all this seems. The wind drops. ‘Get ready,’ says the unit commander. ‘Remember what I told you.’ We crouch in the undergrowth. ‘Fire!’ a soldier shouts and the first ranging rocket goes with an astounding noise. The backblast sends a rolling cloud of black dust across the setting sun. Jamie feels the dragon’s breath on his arm. A soldier leaps on to the launcher to make an adjustment. The tube is reloaded. Then there’s another hellish roar and the second sighting rocket shoots into the sky. Now a tense pause as the drone operator who has been watching the fall of the first two Grads calls in aiming corrections. More reloading. The big moment has come. ‘Volley fire!’ is the order – and four missiles are launched in quick, deafening succession. The last has barely left the launcher when the escape begins. Controlled panic. The launcher reverses at speed out of the treeline and the driver, pumping his fist out of the window, accelerates away. We must follow, but Jamie has lost a camera in the undergrowth and I’m screaming at him to leave it. Within one minute of the launch all of us are speeding into a Walt Disney sunset. ‘Volley fire!’ is the order – and four missiles are launched in quick, deafening succession, writes Richard Pendlebury No counter battery fire and the drone images will show two of the rockets scoring direct hits on enemy troops and light armoured vehicles No counter battery fire and the drone images will show two of the rockets scoring direct hits on enemy troops and light armoured vehicles. The rocket squad is on target and lives to fight another day. And each day is more dangerous – for Ukraine and the world. The globalisation of the war took another step forward this month when the Ukrainian defence minister was hosted in Seoul by the South Korean president. They discussed South Korea becoming a new weapon supply source. Notwithstanding the Asian democracy’s own political turmoil, that will be a major development. The Ukraine war will have come to both sides of the Korean peninsula. Meanwhile, major attacks continue. Almost two weeks ago, Russia launched its biggest drone strike on targets across Ukraine since the full-scale invasion. Later, one million Ukrainians were left without power after a concentrated attack on the country’s electricity grid. Punishment for the use of Western weapons inside Russia. Set against these figures, those six Grads we saw fired might seem inconsequential. But not as symbols of Ukraine’s continued defiance. Additional reporting: Oleksandr Kostiuchenko Russia Ukraine Share or comment on this article: We unleash Grad missiles at Russian troops from a pick-up truck. Our mission can last ten minutes, max. On the eleventh, the drones will find us and that will be that... Richard Pendlebury and photographer Jamie Wiseman report from Ukraine's Pokrovsk front e-mail Add commentGCI promotes a natural feeling of affinity between Chinese and Latin American people
Psychiatry Year in Review: 2024
'Bruce Willis in the Sixth Sense': Bush adviser says Hegseth doesn't know nomination diedOnce the celebrities had tucked into a feast, thanks to Maura Higgins and Reverend Richard Coles winning 12 portions of food in ‘Terrifying Teddy Bears’ Picnic’, the first argument of the series took place between Dean McCullough and Corrie's Alan Halsall. Dean had to be woken up by Alan from his sleep as the campmates needed wood for the fire, which Jane Moore needed help carrying - due to current roles in the camp, Dean was the only person who was allowed to do it. But a hesitant Dean accused Alan of saying he "didn't fancy it" when instead, he just "needed a minute" to sort his contact lenses. Your votes mean Coleen and Dean are about to have a trucking terrifying time when they face Absolute Carnage ⚠️ #ImACeleb pic.twitter.com/Q9PcJ3SwF1 In response to this, I'm a Celebrity fans have slammed Dean for being "aggressive" towards Alan. One said on X: "nah but there was no need for Dean to go off at Alan like that #ImACeleb" Another wrote: "Dean and this aggression??? Don’t speak to Alan like that #imaceleb" Someone posted: "Omg is dean serious?! Alan couldn’t of been nicer when trying to wake him up! #imaceleb" This person agreed: "what was actually wrong with what alan said to dean?? he was being so gentle with him like huh ?? #imaceleb" Did you see this argument between Dean and Alan? (Image: ITV) This user noticed: "dean didn’t even go straight down to get the wood he went down to argue with alan?? #imaceleb" "Protect Alan at all costs," hailed an ITV viewer. Elsewhere, Wayne Rooney has encouraged I'm a Celebrity viewers to vote for his wife Coleen to do a trial as he feels she would want to “put herself to the test”. The former England footballer, 39, said he was “proud” of how Coleen was doing in the Australian jungle in a post on social media on Saturday. (function (d, s, n) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; js = d.createElement(s); js.className = n; js.src = "//player.ex.co/player/a5bdf049-8774-4ded-a60a-5688cea4a8f9"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); js.setAttribute('programmatic', 'true'); js.onload = function () { const playerApi237931 = ExCoPlayer.connect('a5bdf049-8774-4ded-a60a-5688cea4a8f9'); playerApi237931.init({ "autoPlay": false, "mute": true, "showAds": true, "playbackMode": "play-in-view", "content": { "playFirst": [ { "title": "How much is Ant and Dec's net worth?", "src": "https://large-cdn.ex.co/transformations/production/3dac3c05-257d-45d2-b760-c1524f8b72f3/720p.mp4" } ], "playlistId": "649d33682e5cf6001258ca95" }, "sticky": { "mode": "persistent", "closeButton": true, "pauseOnClose": true, "desktop": { "enabled": false, "position": "bottom-right" }, "mobile": { "enabled": false, "position": "upper-small" } }}); }; }(document, 'script', 'exco-player')); The couple, who first met at school and began dating aged 16, share four sons – Kai Wayne, Klay Anthony, Kit Joseph and Cass Mac. Recommended reading: “Proud of @ColeenRoo on @imacelebrity she’s doing great”, he wrote on X, alongside a collage of photos of her on the show. “Me and the boys would love to see her doing a trial and we know she’d want to put herself to the test. “If you can download the #ImACeleb and let’s get voting!” I'm a Celebrity continues on ITV1 and ITVX from 9pm on Sunday, November 24.
None
Forteza kicks six field goals to lift Laval to 22-17 win over Laurier in Vanier CupIndian Railways Set To Install Kavach 4.0 To Enhance SafetyPenn State has won a closely watched trademark fight over an online retailer’s use of its vintage sports logos and images. A Pennsylvania jury awarded Penn State $28,000 in damages on Wednesday over products made and sold by Vintage Brand and Sportswear Inc., two firms co-founded by former minor league baseball player Chad Hartvigson. Penn State accused them of selling “counterfeit” clothing and accessories, while the defendants said their website makes clear they are not affiliated with the university. At least a dozen other schools have sued the defendants on similar grounds, including Purdue, Stanford and UCLA, Penn State said in its 2021 lawsuit. However, the Penn State case was the first to go to trial and seen by some as a test case in the sports merchandising industry. “It addresses an important issue with trademark law — whether or not the mark owner is able to prevent third parties from using its marks on T-shirts and paraphernalia without permission,” said Tiffany Gehrke, a trademark lawyer in Chicago who was not involved in the case. The verdict, she said, maintains the status quo, while a victory for Vintage Brand “could have shaken things up.” It followed a six-day trial in federal court in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, overseen by Chief U.S. District Judge Matthew W. Brann. It was not immediately clear if the defendants planned to appeal. Phone and email messages left with their lawyers on Thursday were not immediately returned. Penn State, in a statement, called its trademarks “critical” to the school’s brand, and said it was grateful for the verdict. “The university appreciates this result as it relates to the many hundreds of licensees with whom the university works and who go through the appropriate processes to use Penn State’s trademarks,” the statement said. Penn State, founded in 1855, adopted the Nittany Lion as its mascot in 1904 and has been using various images of the animal, along with the school’s seal and other logos, for decades, the lawsuit said. The school now has more than 100,000 students at 24 campuses. Never miss a moment with the WHYY Listen App! Play, pause, and rewind the live radio stream, access on-demand audio features, and dive into podcasts from both local and national sources. WHYY is your source for fact-based, in-depth journalism and information. As a nonprofit organization, we rely on financial support from readers like you. Please give today.
- Previous: m bet999 fun
- Next: bet 999 slot