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Julian Alvarez and second-half substitute Angel Correa scored twice as Atletico Madrid cruised to an easy 6-0 win at struggling Sparta Prague in the Champions League on Tuesday. The win leaves Diego Simeone’s Rojiblancos on nine points from five games in the competition, while Sparta have four. “Each win makes you happy, especially when the team plays like this throughout the game and scores like today,” Atletico coach Simeone told reporters in the Czech capital. “We really did well today,” he added, hailing his team for playing “with high intensity and speed”. Alvarez opened the scoring 15 minutes into the game as he was brought down just outside the box and then curled a free-kick into the top corner of Peter Vindahl’s goal. Marcos Llorente made it 2-0 two minutes from half-time as he chipped the ball towards the goal and Vindahl let it in, visibly fooled by striker Alexander Sorloth’s attempt at a glancing header. Alvarez fired in his second from close range on 59 minutes after a give-and-go with Giuliano Simeone, the coach’s son. Second-half substitute Antoine Griezmann made it 4-0 on 70 minutes with a low shot inside the box following a one-two with Llorente. Correa rounded off the score with two goals in the final five minutes, first poking in a pass from fellow substitute Samuel Lino and then finishing neatly after a mazy run through the static Sparta defence. – ‘All goals count’ – “The team understood what I want from them from the beginning to the end including the substitutes who played really well as soon as they entered the pitch,” said Diego Simeone. “All goals count. We tried to score as many as possible because it helps with this new format of the Champions League. “We are always aware the game has 90 minutes and we have to play as best we can,” he added. The 54-year-old Argentinian made six changes following Atletico’s 2-1 win over Alaves in La Liga on Saturday, his 700th game across all competitions in charge of the team. But there was little doubt about the outcome as Sparta only managed a single weak shot on goal through Kaan Kairinen in the opening minute. Atletico controlled the game, tirelessly testing the wobbly defence of the reigning Czech champions who have now only won two of their last 12 games in all competitions. Vindahl spared Sparta blushes on several occasions as he stopped close-range efforts from Rodrigo De Paul and Sorloth in the first half and Giuliano Simeone after the break. Atletico took a second straight away win in the Champions League at Sparta after stunning Paris Saint-Germain 2-1 earlier this month. With three games to play in the new-format league phase, they next face underdogs Slovan Bratislava at home on December 10. AFP

Missing teen Lily Peppler found safe, police confirmA 7-year-old rivalry between tech leaders Elon Musk and Sam Altman over who should run OpenAI and prevent an artificial intelligence "dictatorship" is now heading to a federal judge as Musk seeks to halt the ChatGPT maker's ongoing shift into a for-profit company. Musk, an early OpenAI investor and board member, sued the artificial intelligence company earlier this year alleging it had betrayed its founding aims as a nonprofit research lab benefiting the public good rather than pursuing profits. Musk has since escalated the dispute, adding new claims and asking for a court order that would stop OpenAI’s plans to convert itself into a for-profit business more fully. The world's richest man, whose companies include Tesla, SpaceX and social media platform X, last year started his own rival AI company, xAI. Musk says it faces unfair competition from OpenAI and its close business partner Microsoft, which has supplied the huge computing resources needed to build AI systems such as ChatGPT. “OpenAI and Microsoft together exploiting Musk’s donations so they can build a for-profit monopoly, one now specifically targeting xAI, is just too much,” says Musk's filing that alleges the companies are violating the terms of Musk’s foundational contributions to the charity. OpenAI is filing a response Friday opposing Musk’s requested order, saying it would cripple OpenAI’s business and mission to the advantage of Musk and his own AI company. A hearing is set for January before U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland. At the heart of the dispute is a 2017 internal power struggle at the fledgling startup that led to Altman becoming OpenAI's CEO. Musk also sought to be CEO and in an email outlined a plan where he would “unequivocally have initial control of the company” but said that would be temporary. He grew frustrated after two other OpenAI co-founders said he would hold too much power as a major shareholder and chief executive if the startup succeeded in its goal to achieve better-than-human AI known as artificial general intelligence , or AGI. Musk has long voiced concerns about how advanced forms of AI could threaten humanity. “The current structure provides you with a path where you end up with unilateral absolute control over the AGI," said a 2017 email to Musk from co-founders Ilya Sutskever and Greg Brockman. “You stated that you don't want to control the final AGI, but during this negotiation, you've shown to us that absolute control is extremely important to you.” In the same email, titled “Honest Thoughts,” Sutskever and Brockman also voiced concerns about Altman's desire to be CEO and whether he was motivated by “political goals.” Altman eventually succeeded in becoming CEO, and has remained so except for a period last year when he was fired and then reinstated days later after the board that ousted him was replaced. OpenAI published the messages Friday in a blog post meant to show its side of the story, particularly Musk's early support for the idea of making OpenAI a for-profit business so it could raise money for the hardware and computer power that AI needs. It was Musk, through his wealth manager Jared Birchall, who first registered “Open Artificial Technologies Technologies, Inc.”, a public benefit corporation, in September 2017. Then came the “Honest Thoughts” email that Musk described as the “final straw.” “Either go do something on your own or continue with OpenAI as a nonprofit,” Musk wrote back. OpenAI said Musk later proposed merging the startup into Tesla before resigning as the co-chair of OpenAI's board in early 2018. Musk didn't immediately respond to emailed requests for comment sent to his companies Friday. Asked about his frayed relationship with Musk at a New York Times conference last week, Altman said he felt “tremendously sad” but also characterized Musk’s legal fight as one about business competition. “He’s a competitor and we’re doing well,” Altman said. He also said at the conference that he is “not that worried” about the Tesla CEO’s influence with President-elect Donald Trump. OpenAI said Friday that Altman plans to make a $1 million personal donation to Trump’s inauguration fund, joining a number of tech companies and executives who are working to improve their relationships with the incoming administration. —————————— The Associated Press and OpenAI have a licensing and technology agreement allowing OpenAI access to part of the AP’s text archives.

Michigan TE Colston Loveland, a top-20 prospect, declares for 2025 NFL Draft

Boise State football fans have spent years dreaming of the day the team would have a real chance to win a national championship by playing in the College Football Playoff. That opportunity is here, but those who want to see the Broncos in the Fiesta Bowl had better make like running back Ashton Jeanty and move quickly. Boise State will be allotted a minimum of 10,000 seats to sell for each round of the playoffs, according to the team’s Ticketmaster page. The Fiesta Bowl is a quarterfinal game. The school advised those interested that, because of time constraints, they should place order requests for each round in which they are interested. Ticket purchases will be limited to a maximum of 12 per person. Bronco Athletic Association members have until Friday, Dec. 13, to put their names in for priority tickets. After that, tickets will be subject to availability, according to the university. When and where will the games be? Since Boise State was given a first-round bye, the team now has several weeks off. The Broncos will play in the Fiesta Bowl at 5:30 p.m. on Dec. 31 at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, located about 20 minutes northwest of downtown Phoenix. Coach Spencer Danielson’s team is the No. 3 seed in the 12-team playoffs. Boise State will face the winner of No. 6 Penn State vs. No. 11 SMU. The school has also started selling tickets to the semifinals, which is where the Broncos would advance if they won that game. Those will be played in the Orange Bowl in Miami and the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, with one on Thursday, Jan. 9, and the other on Friday, Jan. 10. The national championship game will be Monday, Jan. 20, in Atlanta. How much are tickets, where can you get them? Fans have two price options for the quarterfinal round. They can buy the regular reserved ticket for $205 on the Ticketmaster website , or opt for the more expensive $330 club-level seats. Those include access to club lounges and bars in an enclosed glass area overlooking the stadium floor in Glendale, according to the stadium’s website. If tickets run out at the higher price, customers will be automatically moved to the next available price level, Boise State said. If Boise State makes it all the way to the championship game, ticket prices will take a steep jump. The school is offering them at three price points: $710, $1,100 and $1,575. For those who want to go to a later-round game regardless of whether Boise State qualifies, they can choose to pay immediately. But there is a safer option: Fans can sign up for tickets for later rounds, and then wait to pay until they see whether the Broncos won and advanced. Those with tickets also will have to deal with travel, of course. American, Southwest, Alaska and Allegiant airlines all fly nonstop to Phoenix airports. And be prepared to pay, because a quick check Sunday showed that flight prices skyrocketed just after the Fiesta Bowl announcement. This story was originally published December 8, 2024, 3:24 PM.

TEL AVIV: Israel has watched the rapid overthrow of the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad with a mixture of hope and concern as officials weigh the consequences of one of the most significant strategic shifts in the Middle East in years. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the ousting of Assad as an “historic day” that followed the blows delivered by Israel against Assad’s supporters Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon that had created a chain reaction throughout the region. “This of course creates new, very important opportunities for the State of Israel. But it is also not without risks,” he said on a visit to the border area on Sunday. Israel has pushed tanks over the border into the buffer zone with Syria to prevent a spillover from the turmoil there, but has declared its intention of staying out of the conflict engulfing its neighbour. Netanyahu said Israel was working on a policy of “good neighbourliness” and would “extend a hand of peace” to Druze, Kurds, Christians and Muslims. “We will closely follow developments. We will do what is necessary to protect our border and protect our security,” he said in a filmed statement. The lightning advance of Syrian rebel forces since their seizure of Aleppo last week has thrown further turmoil into a region already reeling from the shocks of the war in Gaza and Israel’s subsequent campaign against the Iranian-backed Hezbollah movement in Lebanon. “At the moment, if we aren’t attacked we will just retain the current situation,” Israel’s Consul General in New York Ofir Akunis told Reuters. “Nobody should think that this threat of the Shiite-Iranian axis of evil has been eliminated entirely, there are changes but we need everyone... to be even more vigilant about this,” said Akunis. Overnight, the Israeli military said it was not interfering with internal events in Syria but would “operate as long as necessary in order to preserve the buffer zone and defend Israel and its civilians.” The rapid collapse of the Syrian government has presented Israel with a mix of problems and opportunity, said Dina Lisnyansky, a specialist in regional politics at Tel Aviv University. Iran’s inability to protect its long-time ally Assad has underlined the weakness laid bare by Israel’s devastating campaign against Hezbollah, which left the long-time Iranian proxy reeling, its long-feared missile arsenal largely destroyed and most of its top leadership dead. But the advance of a disparate group of rebel forces with roots in the Islamist ideology of Al Qaeda risks re-igniting chaos in Syria and creating a new security threat on Israel’s borders. “It really depends on what happens next in Syria,” Lisnyansky said. “We need to know if it goes to the peaceful side of events or perhaps whether a new civil war could occur in Syria, which would of course endanger our borders,” she said. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ document.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value", ( new Date() ).getTime() );

Pep Guardiola sure 75 per cent of Premier League clubs want Man City relegated

Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan on Friday said he spotted “dozens” of drones over his home Thursday night as questions mount over unexplained drone activity. Rep. Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J., on Thursday accused the Pentagon of being “incredibly stupid” with its handling of recent drone sightings in his home state. The Biden administration’s Department of Defense on Wednesday denied the congressman’s claim that an Iranian “mothership” is involved in recent unexplained drone sightings. Hogan joined those calling for answers in a lengthy post shared via X in which he described his own brush with the mysterious drones. “Last night, beginning at around 9:45 p.m., I personally witnessed (and videoed) what appeared to be dozens of large drones in the sky above my residence in Davidsonville, Maryland (25 miles from our nation’s capital),” he wrote. “I observed the activity for approximately 45 minutes.” Attached was a video showing several lights floating through a night sky. Hogan continued, describing growing public concern and frustration over the sightings. The government, he said, should use its technology to determine the origin of the drones. “We are being told that neither the White House, the military, the FBI, nor Homeland Security have any idea what they are, where they came from, or who has launched or is controlling them—and that they pose no threat,” he wrote. “That response is entirely unacceptable,” Hogan added. “I join with the growing bipartisan chorus of leaders demanding that the federal government immediately address this issue. The American people deserve answers and action now.” Reacting to the post was former Colorado state Rep. Rob Witwer, R-District 25. “For those who have forgotten or never knew about it, there were significant drone sightings in Colorado just before the pandemic,” he wrote. New York Post journalist Steven Greenstreet suggested, however, the lights in the video match the constellation Orion. Flight data around the time Hogan claimed to have filmed the video, he added, shows three planes flying near his location. New Jersey state Sen. Jon Bramnick, R-21st District, on Monday called for a “limited state of emergency” to ban all drones until the public receives answers about the drone sightings. Have a news tip? Contact Jackson Walker at jacwalker@sbgtv.com or at x.com/jlwalker. Content from The National Desk is provided by Sinclair, the parent company of FOX45 News.

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari on Tuesday emphasized the urgent need to transform healthcare accessibility in Pakistan, calling for enhanced capacity and advanced technological solutions to address critical challenges in the medical sector. During a meeting with Mr. Khurram Jameel, Managing Director and CEO of Siemens Healthineers Pakistan, the President discussed strategies to improve healthcare infrastructure, particularly through innovative medical imaging technologies. The discussion highlighted Siemens Healthineers’ dedication to delivering sustainable and equitable healthcare solutions across the country. President Zardari underscored the importance of adopting transformative strategies to reshape Pakistan’s healthcare landscape, ensuring that quality medical services reach underserved regions. He lauded Siemens Healthineers for its pivotal role in addressing healthcare disparities and pledged his full support to initiatives aimed at bridging these gaps. Mr. Khurram Jameel shared the organization’s vision for advancing healthcare in Pakistan, emphasizing its commitment to enhancing accessibility and improving patient outcomes. He detailed Siemens Healthineers’ efforts to deploy state-of-the-art technologies and expertise to mitigate systemic disparities, aligning with the government’s priorities for sustainable development in the sector. The President expressed his appreciation for the company’s contributions and introduced Mr. Jameel to key government officials, including Governor Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Faisal Kareem Kundi, former Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf, Dr. Asim Hussain, and Federal Minister Syed Naveed Qamar. These interactions aimed to foster collaboration between public and private sectors in addressing Pakistan’s pressing healthcare needs. During the meeting, President Zardari reiterated the government’s commitment to facilitating private-sector initiatives that align with national healthcare goals. Mr. Jameel, in turn, thanked the President for his support and the opportunity to engage with senior cabinet members, reaffirming Siemens Healthineers’ resolve to lead Pakistan’s healthcare transformation. The company pledged to continue its efforts to innovate and expand healthcare accessibility, particularly in remote and underserved areas, as part of its mission to strengthen Pakistan’s healthcare infrastructure and improve the lives of its people. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ document.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value", ( new Date() ).getTime() );

Lincoln's Allo announces plans to provide service to Flagstaff, ArizonaSenior congressional correspondent Chad Pergram reports the latest from Capitol Hill. A top Team Trump official disclosed the moment that "really set the campaign on a trajectory to victory" – the day President-elect Donald Trump arrived in Columbiana County, Ohio, to survey the East Palestine train derailment. "The ripples from that day do not get enough attention," White House communications director-designate Steven Cheung said on X, formerly Twitter, in retweeting an op-ed making that assertion. In February 2023, a Norfolk-Southern train hauling caustic industrial chemicals – including vinyl chloride – derailed in a small community near the Pennsylvania border, causing immediate chaos and long-lasting, widespread damage to the region. A controlled burn held shortly after the derailment released toxic phosgene into the air. WHISTLEBLOWER ALLEGES MISTAKES IN INITIAL EAST PALESTINE DISASTER RESPONSE Steven Cheung (inset) and Donald Trump. (Getty) On February 23 – Ash Wednesday – Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, hosted Trump at the site, where the former and future president highlighted Americans "forgotten" by President Joe Biden – who had not yet shown up and would not visit for several more months. The Republican mogul handed out "Trump"-branded water and met with local officials. Meanwhile, officials in both Ohio and Pennsylvania were also visibly working to hold the railroad accountable. In his tweet, Cheung was responding to an op-ed by Pittsburgh-based Washington Examiner writer Selina Zito, who covered the crisis at the time. Zito wrote that Trump’s arrival had happened at a political nadir for the Republican, following the 2022 midterm losses and amid a then-close presidential primary race with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. She noted in a tweet that it was Vance – his future running mate – who brought him to the site. Trump’s mantra of "you are not forgotten" to Rust Belt residents too often forgotten by Washington helped change minds in the area, Zito wrote, quoting a local resident who said she had "switched parties because of the way he spoke directly to the concerns." "I have voted for him both times since then," the woman, who owns an East Palestine farm, said. TRUMP VISITS EAST PALESTINE, HANDS OUT TRUMP-WATER: ‘WE STAND WITH YOU’ Former President Donald Trump, with Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, departs after greeting supporters and touring water pumps at Little Beaver Creek during a visit to East Palestine, Ohio. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty) Trump told residents that day that "in too many cases, your goodness and perseverance were met with indifference and betrayal." The disparity between Trump’s eagerness to "show up" and Biden’s apparent putting-off of a visit to East Palestine helped turn the tide in the Republican’s favor, the column continued. "100%," Cheung wrote in his tweet. Trump’s former running mate, Mike Pence, also called out Biden at the time, saying he was "AWOL" and remarking to Fox News that the Delaware Democrat’s policies had "derailed the economy of East Palestine long before that train came through." On the Pennsylvania side of the line, both Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro and his then-former gubernatorial opponent, state Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Gettysburg, also responded quickly to the derailment. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Shapiro lodged a criminal referral at the time, and Mastriano led hearings that hosted affected residents along the Ohio border wherein Norfolk-Southern CEO Alan Shaw notably no-showed. "It is very disheartening to hear that these alleged delays and botched response approaches took place – especially since those in East Palestine, Ohio, and areas in my district here in Pennsylvania have been dealing with the aftermath of this derailment for over a year now," state Sen. Elder Vogel Jr. told Fox News Digital at the time, after a whistleblower had spoken out about alleged mistakes from Biden’s EPA response – which the agency disputed. Charles Creitz is a reporter for Fox News Digital. He joined Fox News in 2013 as a writer and production assistant. Charles covers media , politics and culture for Fox News Digital. Charles is a Pennsylvania native and graduated from Temple University with a B.A. in Broadcast Journalism. Story tips can be sent to charles.creitz@fox.com.

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