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He died Sunday, more than a year after entering hospice care, at his home in Plains, Georgia. At age 52, Carter was sworn in as president on Jan. 20, 1977, after defeating President Gerald R. Ford in the 1976 general election. Carter left office on Jan. 20, 1981, following his 1980 general election loss to Ronald Reagan. Here's the latest: The longest-lived American president died Sunday, more than a year after entering hospice care , at his home in the small town of Plains, Georgia, where he and his wife, Rosalynn, who died at 96 in November 2023 , spent most of their lives. “Our founder, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, passed away this afternoon in Plains, Georgia,” The Carter Center said in posting about his death on the social media platform X. It added in a statement that he died peacefully, surrounded by his family. In his 1975 book “Why Not The Best,” Carter said of himself: “I am a Southerner and an American, I am a farmer, an engineer, a father and husband, a Christian, a politician and former governor, a planner, a businessman, a nuclear physicist, a naval officer, a canoeist, and among other things a lover of Bob Dylan’s songs and Dylan Thomas’s poetry.” A moderate Democrat, Carter entered the 1976 presidential race as a little-known Georgia governor with a broad smile, outspoken Baptist mores and technocratic plans reflecting his education as an engineer. After he left office and returned home to his tiny hometown of Plains in southwest Georgia, Carter regularly taught Sunday School lessons at Maranatha Baptist Church until his mobility declined. Those sessions drew visitors from around the world.
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These days, the “F” in LAFC ought to stand for “France.” Free agent Jeremy Ebobisse became the Los Angeles Football Club’s fifth Frenchman on Monday, as the roster takes shape early in the offseason. The deal runs through 2027, with a club option for 2028. “Jeremy is a proven forward in our league who has scored goals and been a meaningful contributor to his teams throughout his career,” LAFC co-president and general manager John Thorrington said in a statement announcing the signing. “We are incredibly excited to welcome Jeremy to strengthen our attack as we continue in our ambitions to compete for multiple trophies in 2025. We know Jeremy will be a great addition to LAFC on and off the field.” Last year at this time, LAFC had one French player on the roster, the prolific Denis Bouanga, who over the course of 2024 was joined by Hugo Lloris, Maxime Chanot and Olivier Giroud. Meanwhile, Ebobisse spent the year suiting up for last-place San Jose, starting 25 of his 31 MLS appearances while scoring six times — a drop in production with the Silicon Valley side following consecutive seasons with double-digit goals (17 in 2022 and 10 in 2023). With 60 goals and 18 assists in 198 MLS regular season appearances, the Paris-born Ebobisse has been a solid performer inside the league since Portland drafted him No. 4 overall from Duke University in the 2017 MLS SuperDraft. Related Articles Los Angeles Football Club | LAFC selects UMass star Alec Hughes in MLS SuperDraft Los Angeles Football Club | Galaxy, LAFC kick off 2025 MLS season with February home games Los Angeles Football Club | Galaxy receives first-round bye in CONCACAF Champions Cup Los Angeles Football Club | LAFC signs 16-year-old Jude Terry to homegrown contract Los Angeles Football Club | LAFC season review: Disappointing finish after much progress Ebobisse helped Portland reach the 2018 MLS Cup final. The forward earned Best XI honors in 2020 when the Timbers won the MLS is Back tournament. Traded by the Timbers to the Earthquakes in the summer of 2021 for more than a million dollars in general allocation money, Ebobisse, a dual national raised in Bethesda, Md., since the age of 2, proved adept at finishing around the goal, linking play, and operating as a hardworking defender.Penn State’s polarizing QB Drew Allar puts critics on mute and keeps winning games
If you've been keeping track of automotive news in the past year or so, you know that U.S. Automaker Chrysler is in a tough spot. Its parent company, Stellantis, continues to face serious financial struggles, and while Stellantis claims that it has no plans to kill off or sell Chrysler, one has to imagine that could change if times continue to be tough for the company. Of course, this is hardly the first time Chrysler itself has faced such troubles, with the brand narrowly surviving the 2008 financial crisis through a merger with Fiat. However, when the company faced financial troubles in the early 1980s, Chrysler was ultimately able to save itself by releasing a successful run of new cars that were essentially based on the same platform. Those vehicles would be dubbed K-Cars in Chrysler's marketing materials, with the company boasting that the vehicles were the product of years of development, as well as a rash of technological advancements and some serious design ingenuity. Upon their 1981 release, gearheads and everyday consumers alike were no doubt curious about what the K in K-Cars actually stood for. More than 40 years later, many people still do not know what that K actually stands for, and we'd wager that one and all will be a touch disappointed to learn it doesn't really stand for anything. Instead, K is just the letter designation assigned by Chrysler to the platform on which the vehicles were built. [Featured image by IFCAR via Wikimedia Commons | Cropped and scaled | Public Domain] For a point of reference, the platform and vehicles that directly preceded K-Cars in the Chrysler lineup were called L-Cars. Despite the ' alphabetical designations, the K-Car was far from a step backward for Chrysler, with the company and then boss, Lee Iacocca, instead eyeing the vehicles as a necessary pivot from the smaller L-Car towards a line of fuel-efficient, front-wheel drive mid-size builds that focused on performance and comfort. Over its production run, the K-Car platform would prove both inexpensive to make and incredibly versatile, with Chrysler shaping and reshaping it for more than a decade to produce builds of every shape and size across several of its then subsidiaries, including Dodge and the now defunct Plymouth badge . When the platform debuted in 1981, there were just a pair of options available on the K-Car platform in the Plymouth Reliant and the Dodge Aries. Once those vehicles hit showroom floors, both builds were popular with consumers, reportedly accounting for 36% of vehicles sold under the greater Chrysler shingle. Those sales figures continued to grow over the ensuing years and eventually led Chrysler back from the brink of financial ruin. Emboldened by the success of the K-Car, bosses at Chrysler Corporation continued to lean on the platform in several other builds, including the Chrysler Le Baron, the Dodge 400 and 600 models, and even the revival-ready Chrysler Executive Limousine . The K-Car platform also served as the base for the O.G. Dodge Caravan. Successes aside, Chrysler eventually moved on from the platform in the mid-1990s, with the turbo-charged Dodge Spirit and Plymouth Acclaim closing out the line in 1995.Yoon’s decision can be directly linked to the political turmoil that has engulfed South Korea in recent months. Addressing the nation in a televised statement, Yoon declared martial law as a measure to counter the “pro-North-Korean forces” and “to save the country [from] anti-state forces that are trying to paralyse the essential functions of the state and destroy the constitutional order of liberal democracy”. Before the decree, the main opposition, the Democratic Party of Korea, had presented a budgetary bill slashing 4.1 trillion won (US$2.8 billion) from the initial plan proposed by the government. This marked the watershed to Yoon’s decision as he claimed that the opposition had left him unable to govern. The imposition of martial law drew sharp criticism in South Korea and beyond. After the declaration, thousands took to the streets amid a heavy military presence. Lawmakers were able to enter a heavily guarded parliament, eventually voting to overturn the decision. Politicians condemned Yoon’s decree as illegal and unconstitutional.TORONTO — Canada's main stock index pushed higher to end Monday up almost 150 points on light trading action, while U.S. stock markets also gained ahead of the Christmas break. "Today is a quiet pre-Christmas Day of trading," said Kevin Burkett, a portfolio manager at Victoria, B.C.-based Burkett Asset Management. While markets in both Canada and the U.S. were mild, Burkett suggests watching the markets closely during the holiday season, a contrast to what's typically a sleepy period for markets. "We're continuing to watch markets very closely here because you've got some tectonic plate shifting in terms of the macroeconomic backdrop," he said. "It's all the political conversations both in Canada and in the U.S." Burkett added fiscal policy seems to be disconnected from monetary policy in the post-pandemic period. "The fiscal policy may shift and that shift absolutely has market implications both in the short and long term," he said. The S&P/TSX composite index was up 149.50 points at 24,748.98. Statistics Canada released its latest numbers on Canada's economic growth, up 0.3 per cent in October — driven by the mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction sector. The loonie continued its slide, trading for 69.47 cents US compared with 69.61 cents US on Friday. The telecom sector was the biggest loser at the closing on TSX, which Burkett attributed to "tax loss selling happening at the end of the year." Competition Bureau Canada announced on Monday it was suing Rogers Communications Inc. for allegedly making misleading claims about its infinite wireless plans. The stock price for Rogers, which is hovering near 52-week lows, fell 0.7 per cent on Monday. Meanwhile, BCE was down almost 1.4 per cent and Telus dropped 0.9 per cent. Burkett suggested the day's poor performance among telecom companies was likely tax loss selling since it's almost the end of the year. "It's been a tough year for the communication services sector," he said. South of the border, communications services was the top-performing sector, led by large-cap tech companies. Several big technology companies helped support the gains, including chip companies Nvidia and Broadcom. In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 66.69 points at 42,906.95. The S&P 500 index was up 43.22 points at 5,974.07, while the Nasdaq composite was up 192.29 points at 19,764.89. The February crude oil contract was down 22 cents at US$69.24 per barrel and the February natural gas contract was down six cents at US$3.35 per mmBTU. The February gold contract was down US$16.90 at US$2,628.20 an ounce and the March copper contract was down one cent at US$4.09 a pound. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 23, 2024. Companies in this story: (TSX: GSPTSE, TSX: CADUSD, TSE: BCE, TSE: RCI. B) Ritika Dubey, The Canadian Press
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Oracle Announces Fiscal 2025 Second Quarter Financial ResultsKeir Starmer via Associated Press Keir Starmer has said he is “looking towards a better, brighter future for every person” after a gloomy end to 2024. The prime minister also said he was “hoping for peace, particularly in the Middle East” in his Christmas message to the country. Advertisement Starmer will celebrate his first Christmas as PM with his family at Chequers, before they travel abroad for a few days over New Year. He has endured a difficult first six months in office since Labour’s landslide election victory on July 4. The row over chancellor Rachel Reeves ’ decision to take winter fuel payments off 10 million pensioners continues to dog the government. Advertisement But it is the economic fallout from her tax-raising Budget which has the dominated the final weeks of the year. Official figures confirmed last week that the economy shrunk in October, as it did in September, while inflation is once again on the rise . The Office for National Statistics (ONS) also revealed on Monday that the economy flatlined in Labour’s first three months in office. Advertisement The findings were the latest blow for Starmer, who has vowed that the UK will have the fastest growing economy in the G7 by the time of the next election. But despite the avalanche of bad news, the prime minister said he was optimistic for the future. He said: “As Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, the Christmas story reminds all of us to reach out to one another. To care for one another. And to look after those around us. “This Christmas, I will be hoping for peace, particularly in the Middle East as the birthplace of the Christmas story. Advertisement “I’ll be looking towards a better, brighter future for every person and celebrating the joy and wonder that Christmas brings. “So, from my family to yours, I hope you have a very merry Christmas.” Starmer also used his message to pay tribute to “those who will spend their Christmas serving others this year”, including NHS staff, emergency workers, the Armed Forces and charities. Meanwhile, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said she wanted everyone in the country to have a “happy” Christmas. Advertisement She said: “It’s a time for us to support all of those people who need our assistance, who need our help, who need our support. “And that’s one of the best things about Christmas, that it isn’t just about all of the things that we love and want to do, but thinking about other people. “And so my message to everyone this Christmas is have a happy one. “But also remember all of the people who might be in your community or even in your family who need your support. And let’s not forget them either.” Advertisement Related keir starmer kemi badenoch Blow For Rachel Reeves And Keir Starmer As Inflation Reaches Eight-Month High UK Economy Shrinks For Second Month In A Row, Dealing A Blow To Rachel Reeves 'Worst Of All Worlds': Economy Flatlines As Businesses Make Gloomy Forecast For 2025
One of the more surprising foreign policy ideas the Trump team has proposed on the eve of its ascension to power is military intervention in Mexico to go after drug cartels and possibly stop migrants headed to the United States. The idea seemed so wild and provocative — siccing U.S. troops on a peaceful neighbor — that Mexican officials figured it was nothing more than Trump bluster aimed at revving up his base. But now President-elect Donald Trump’s choice of Ronald D. Johnson to serve as ambassador to Mexico has them wondering if he is serious . Johnson is both a former U.S. military officer — a Green Beret — and a former CIA official. And in his previous post as U.S. ambassador to El Salvador, Johnson was an enthusiastic enforcer of Trump’s policies in support of its president, Nayib Bukele , an authoritarian widely accused of human rights abuses in a massive crackdown on gangs and in silencing dissent. Trump has already threatened Mexico with 25% tariffs on many of its exports to the U.S. — including tomatoes, avocados, tequila and car parts — if the government of President Claudia Sheinbaum does not “do more” to stop the entry of migrants and fentanyl into the U.S. over its southern border with Mexico. Many economists say such an action would not only blow up prices for U.S. consumers but also probably send the Mexican economy into a free fall , which in turn could spur more migration to the United States. “Mexico can expect enormous pressure,” Maureen Meyer, programs vice president at the Washington Office on Latin America, said in an interview. The focus will be almost exclusively on immigration and law enforcement, she predicted, while “issues of concern to the human rights community — reproductive rights, climate, democracy — will all take a step back.” She and others said that will probably be true across Latin America as a Trump government fortifies common cause with right-wing governments and parties in Argentina, Brazil and elsewhere, but will have the most impact in Mexico because of its 2,000-mile border with the United States and its close economic and cultural ties. Johnson, not to be confused with the Republican Wisconsin senator of the same name, has resided in Florida since stepping down as ambassador to El Salvador at the end of the first Trump administration. He is an Alabama native, married with four grown children and five grandchildren, and spent time in Iraq and Afghanistan as part of his CIA duties. He also worked on counter-insurgency operations during El Salvador’s civil war in the 1980s, when the U.S. supported the right-wing government against leftist guerrillas. “Ron will work closely with our great Secretary of State Nominee, [Florida Sen.] Marco Rubio, to promote our Nation’s security and prosperity through strong America First Foreign Policies,” Trump said on Truth Social in announcing the nomination this month. “Together, we will put an end to migrant crime, stop the illegal flow of Fentanyl and other dangerous drugs into our Country and MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN!” Trump wrote. This week, Trump added a plan to designate Mexican drug cartels as terrorists, a step that might be used as authorization for deploying U.S. troops. In his campaign platform, Trump said he would order the Pentagon to use “special forces, cyber warfare, and other covert and overt actions to inflict maximum damage on cartel leadership, infrastructure, and operations.” But it remains unclear how many of these steps Trump could take unilaterally. Terrorist designations usually require action by other agencies, such as the State Department, and some members of Congress who advocate a tougher approach to Mexican drug trafficking are nevertheless reluctant to send U.S. troops into the fray without approval by the Mexican government. In Mexico, news of Johnson’s nomination was greeted warily, with many seeing a clear signal of the Trump administration’s intended, narrow focus. Johnson’s “resume is the message,” Jorge Castañeda, a former foreign minister in Mexico, said in an essay for the Nexos news website. “Johnson has no experience in economic, commercial or financial matters. He is not coming to Mexico for that.” Where Johnson does have ample experience is in counter-insurgency. Johnson probably “will demand a change in the security strategy in Mexico,” said Mexican commentator León Krauze. “Trump likes spectacle, and has long considered the possibility of delivering to his electorate images of unilateral incursions into Mexican territory to arrest major drug lords, Hollywood-style.” Many in Mexico are weary of U.S. intervention in security matters and blame the U.S. in part for backing former President Felipe Calderon’s military assault on drug cartels beginning in 2006, which sparked devastating levels of violence that persist to this day. Still others, just as exhausted by high murder and kidnapping rates, and having lost confidence in Mexican law enforcement often bought off by criminals, have started to lean toward welcoming U.S. troops. Security cooperation between the U.S. and Mexico diminished greatly during the presidency of Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who accused U.S. forces of “abusive meddling” in 2020 when the former Mexican defense secretary, Salvador Cienfuegos, was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport on suspicion of drug trafficking. López Obrador forced the Trump administration to return Cienfuegos to Mexico, where he was awarded a major military decoration. The damage strained U.S.-Mexico relations and hampered work in Mexico by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Sheinbaum, who took office Oct. 1, is similarly likely to be reticent in cooperating with Trump. After his initial threats about military attack and tariffs, she telephoned him at his resort in Mar-a-Lago and then posted on X that Mexico would cooperate with the U.S. on relevant topics, but that the country would not bend to the will of the U.S. as it had in drug war that began in 2006. “We are going to collaborate .. but without subordinating ourselves,” she wrote. “We will always defend Mexico as a free, sovereign and independent country.” Eschewing the military-heavy approach of some of her predecessors could set Sheinbaum on a collision course with Trump and Johnson. Sheinbaum “is not a Bukele type,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, a Massachusetts Democrat who specializes in Latin America and has been highly critical of the Salvadoran leader. “She wants good relations with Mexico ... but is not looking to kiss Trump’s ring.” Another major question is how Johnson would treat human rights issues in Mexico. In El Salvador, where he was ambassador from 2019 to 2021, Johnson refrained from criticizing Bukele as the government rounded up tens of thousands of people in an effort to reduce gang crime. Some had gang affiliations, but many did not. According to human rights organizations, most were denied due process, innocents including children were detained, and hundreds were tortured in jail and died. Homicide rates declined substantially, although there is dispute over by how much . Johnson also failed to sound the alarm over Bukele’s attempts to stack the country’s Congress and the Supreme Court with loyalists in what critics have described as a power grab that eroded El Salvador’s hard-fought democracy. Bukele frequently spoke of his warm friendship with Johnson. The two were photographed yachting together in the Pacific off El Salvador’s coast. In June, long after Johnson had left his posting as ambassador, he joined Donald Trump Jr., Tucker Carlson and Rep. Matt Gaetz to attend Bukele’s inauguration to a questionably legal second term. It is highly unlikely Johnson will have a similar relationship with Sheinbaum, Mexico’s first female president, a climate scientist by training, and representative of a leftist political party. Wilkinson reported from Washington and Linthicum from Mexico City. A special correspondent in San Salvador also contributed.New Jersey fines firms $40K for sports betting violations
Accenture, the University of Toronto (U of T), and McGill University, along with other organisations in Canada, have been recognised among Canada’s 100 Best Diversity Employers for 2024. The recognition comes as part of the competition that honours companies that excel in fostering workplace diversity and inclusiveness. This accolade highlights their exceptional programmes aimed at supporting key groups: visible minorities (including the Black community and newcomers), women, persons with disabilities, Indigenous peoples, and LGBTQ individuals. The process involved a detailed review of diversity programs at different organisations which was then compared with others in the same industry. Organisations that showed strong support for at least one of the five recognised diversity groups received awards. However, this article focuses on the programs that help visible minorities, that is the Black community and newcomers to Canada. Why do these organizations make the list 1. Accenture Inc. Accenture was recognised as one of Canada’s Best Diversity Employers for 2024 due to its commitment to achieving internal workforce representation goals by 2025 across nine diversity dimensions: Asian, Black, Latin/Hispanic, Middle Eastern, Indigenous Peoples, persons with disabilities, military, LGBTQ and women. The company tracks its progress through monthly reviews of a Canadian scorecard, which provides metrics on headcount mix, recruitment mix, and turnover gap. Additionally, Accenture collaborates with community partners to offer one-year apprenticeships to marginalised youth, Indigenous communities, newcomers to Canada, and refugees, providing them with training in new and emerging technologies. 2. The University of Toronto (U of T) The U of T was selected for its extensive efforts in promoting racial equity, diversity, and inclusion. U of T’s anti-racism and cultural diversity office provides professional development courses to enhance faculty and staff’s understanding of their roles and responsibilities in advancing these goals. These courses cover topics such as addressing anti-Black racism, preventing racial discrimination and harassment, and managing microaggressions. 3. McGill University This university earned its place among Canada’s Best Diversity Employers for its comprehensive five-year action plan to tackle anti-Black racism. This plan, developed in consultation with stakeholders across the university, includes a commitment to hiring five per cent Black tenure-track or tenured professors by 2032, with an interim target of at least 40 Black tenure-track and tenured professors by 2025. McGill also aims to increase the representation of Black management and executive staff from 3.4 per cent to 5 per cent by 2025 and 6.8 per cent by 2032. As part of this action plan, McGill recently launched an internal internship pilot program for Black-identifying employees, featuring coaching and experiential learning opportunities.After upset win, Penn State out to extend Rutgers' woes
East Carolina wins 71-64 over StetsonAt the McLaren Technology Center (MTC) in Woking, England, the Formula One racing giant explained how it's using AI to improve its chances on the track. Dan Keyworth, McLaren's director of business technology, said generative AI tools are offering new capabilities for F1 teams, including the ability to run in-depth simulations of certain possibilities that might take place during races. Various F1 teams have been exploiting modern advances in technology for years — from cloud computing to AI and machine learning. WOKING, England — Inside McLaren's massive technology center, artificial intelligence isn't something that's shouted from the rooftops. > 24/7 San Diego news stream: Watch NBC 7 free wherever you are However, the 60-year-old motorsports giant is an avid user of the tech behind the scenes. At the McLaren Technology Center (MTC), located in Woking, England, the company explained how it's using AI to improve its chances on the Formula One track. "We're an organization that's used traditional machine learning tech products for a long time," Dan Keyworth, McLaren's director of business technology, said in a press briefing at the MTC in October. Using machine learning, McLaren is able to base its decision-making on probability, which in turn helps it train its AI models, according to Keyworth. The racing firm showed off numerous examples of technological innovation at the MTC. They range from real-time data monitoring inside its secretive mission control room, to the use of "digital twins" (3D digital versions of physical objects) of real cars that allow teams to model the conditions that actual vehicles will need to perform in. Keyworth said there are three main areas where McLaren is applying AI in a big way: improving car performance, day-to-day operations, and commercialization. He added that generative AI tools are offering new capabilities for F1 teams, including the ability to run in-depth simulations of certain possibilities that might take place during races. Money Report CNBC Daily Open: Holiday-thinned markets cheered by strong Wall Street finish Honda shares set for best day in more than 16 years on share buyback plan, Nissan deal That could span from working out an ideal time a car should spend at pit stops, to deciding on which tires to add onto the vehicle when replacing an old set. "What AI allows us to do from a generative perspective is to actually game out more of those actual scenarios and go, 'What will happen?'" Keyworth said. Some of those scenarios are starting to lead to "pretty accurate" results — to an "almost scary" degree, heh added. Tech has long been key to success when it comes to motorsports — and not just for McLaren. Various F1 teams have been exploiting modern advances in technology for years — from cloud computing to AI and machine learning. Aston Martin Aramco, for example, touts the use of so-called "data lakes" — massive data storage centers — and machine learning tech to learn from vast volumes of data to predict patterns and improve decision-making. Clare Lansley, Aston Martin Aramco's chief information officer, says machine learning algorithms can blend data on tires, the weather and track conditions, and use predictive analytics to optimize decisions. In an April blog post , she said the speed at which these developments are happening is "really impressive." "By adopting this tech, we are going to be able to free up multiple engineers so they can focus more acutely on car performance," she noted. Another F1 team deploying AI to improve its racetrack performance and strategy is Red Bull-owned Visa Cash App RB. Peter Bayer, CEO of RB, said earlier this year that the Italian F1 team is making use of AI to compete down to "hundreds and thousandths of a second." Speaking at an event with the firm's software partner Epicor at its factory in Faenza, Italy, Guillaume Dezoteux, RB's head of vehicle performance, said that AI can help inform teams when it comes to planning as "it means you don't need to run 100 simulations." Keyworth noted that none of the innovation that goes on inside McLaren would happen without the help of IT tools and equipment from partners like Cisco and Google . "Connectivity is probably the lifeblood of the sport," he said ahead of the Oct. 27 Mexico City Grand Prix race. "Without it, nothing starts. No car can be on the track safely." A key component behind McLaren's ability to keep data flowing through to its teams in real-time is its so-called mobile data centers. These are miniature server rooms that get flown around to different races around the world to keep the digital components of the operation online consistently. "These mobile data centers are flown alongside the famous F1 cars to each race location and brought online remotely to enable real-time storage and data processing" from the MTC, Chintan Patel, Cisco's chief technology officer for the U.K. and Ireland, told CNBC. Another area where AI is adding benefits is commercialization, according to McLaren's Keyworth. For fans and partners, he said, McLaren is increasingly trying to "enrich the journey and experience, and make our fans feel more connected." With AI, McLaren can better target fans located in more nascent markets for F1 like the U.S., where the sport has grown in popularity — for example, by personalizing information to fans at certain times of day. Meanwhile, when it comes to using AI on the business side of things, Keyworth said, the main area of improvement the company is seeing is in "making everybody's lives richer, slicker, faster, more efficient." "It's not a labor replacement — it's a 'laborious' replacement," he said. "You want to unlock your team to do the things that you hired them for — not to work through the overhead that lives in their role." Also on CNBC Forced migration is 'the next big challenge' for business, says leadership guru CONVERGE LIVE 2025: Request your invitation Business leaders need to tackle forced migration, says leadership professorThe Vegas Golden Knights offense came to life against the Montreal Canadiens, as part of a 6-2 victory at Bell Centre on Saturday. The Golden Knights improved to 13-6-2 on the season, and goalie Adin Hill made 15 saves. “I thought it was a lot of good things, it wasn’t just luck,” Golden Knights coach Bruce Cassidy said. “And once you get a lead like that, then you should be able to finish the job, and we did.” Here are three takeaway from the game: Explosive Second Period The Golden Knights’s offense has been inconsistent of late, but it came to life by scoring five goals in the second period to put the game away early. Tomas Hertl, Cal Burke, Ivan Barbashev, Tanner Pearson, and Keegan Kolesar scored in the period. “It was a great feeling, even better that we were able to close it out,” Kolesar said. Golden Knights’ Top Line Dominates Eichel (one goal, two assists) and Barbashev (one goal, two assists) had a dominant night against the Canadiens. Montreal made a push in the third period, scoring two goals, but Eichel’s goal at 18:12 capped off a good night for the top line. “They had a good night,” Cassidy said. “Let’s face it, in the third period, we got off our game; they pushed us. I know it’s late, but at the end of the day, good on them to make a play.” It has been a game of musical chairs on Eichel’s right wing with forward Mark Stone out of the lineup. Cassidy has tried Alexander Holtz, Pavel Dorofeyev, and most recently Burke in that spot, which brings us to... Burke’s First NHL Goal Burke tallied his first NHL goal by playing alongside the top line. “It feels good. It takes a little bit of pressure off, knowing that you can do it and you’ve got a goal, so you’re not always fishing for it,” he said. “To score my first goal, assisted by Eichel and Barbashev. ‘Barbie’ made a good pass, put it on a platter for me.” Burke has played six career NHL games after spending most of his career in the minors. While Burke’s time with the team may be limited, the Golden Knights hope he can give them some valuable minutes and solid play during his stint with the team. Paul Delos Santos is the Las Vegas sports insider for Dice City Sports. Follow him on X at @PaulDelos_ . This article first appeared on Dice City Sports and was syndicated with permission.
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WASHINGTON — Ex-Rep. Matt Gaetz allegedly paid for sex with a 17-year-old girl and bought and used illegal drugs during more than 20 parties with female escorts, a congressional report said Monday. A final report from the House Ethics Committee accuses the former Florida lawmaker, who was briefly nominated to be President-elect Trump’s attorney general, of illegally paying thousands of dollars for sex with paid escorts, including the underage girl. He also bought and used illegal drugs including ecstasy and cocaine at parties with the women in Florida and on vacation jaunts, the report said. “There is substantial evidence that Representative Gaetz violated House Rules and other standards of conduct prohibiting prostitution, statutory rape, illicit drug use, impermissible gifts, special favors or privileges, and obstruction of Congress,” the 37-page report said. The final report, which says Gaetz likely broke numerous state laws, was released after the House Ethics Committee voted to publicly release it in a reversal of its usual policy. Gaetz sued the committee in federal court on Monday, in a failed effort to block release of the report. “There is a reason they did this to me in a Christmas Eve-Eve report and not in a courtroom of any kind where I could present evidence and challenge witnesses,” Gaetz tweeted. Gaetz, 42, an outspoken conservative Republican, has denied breaking any laws and says he is being smeared by political enemies, although he admits partying too hard in his younger years. Federal prosecutors investigated Gaetz for violating sex trafficking laws in relation to much of the same conduct but declined to charge him. The report details nearly $100,000 in payments from Gaetz to a dozen women for either sex or drugs during about 20 encounters, all of which took place after he was elected to represent a deep-red congressional district in the Florida Panhandle in 2016. “From 2017 to 2020, Representative Gaetz made tens of thousands of dollars in payments to women that the Committee determined were likely in connection with sexual activity and/or drug use,” noted the report, which lists payments totaling more than $90,000 to 12 different women. All of the encounters were consensual, although one of the women told the committee the escorts were too impaired to consent to sex at times. “When I look back on certain moments, I feel violated,” one woman told the panel, the report said. A Florida woman told the committee she was just 17 and had recently finished her junior year in high school when Gaetz had sex with her twice at a 2017 house party. He paid her $400 cash after the encounters, the report said. The woman said she didn’t tell Gaetz she was underage and he didn’t ask. He has emphatically denied ever having sex with any underage girl. One the report’s most lurid findings surrounded allegations of a drug-fueled 2018 jaunt to the Bahamas, bankrolled by marijuana lobbyists, during which witnesses said Gaetz took ecstasy and had sex with at least four paid escorts. The trip skirted rules limiting gifts to lawmakers, the report said. Gaetz won reelection in November to what would have been a fourth term in Congress. But he resigned on the day Trump nominated him for attorney general in an apparent ploy to prevent release of the damning report. His bid to become the nation’s top law enforcement officer imploded within a matter of days. Not long after that, Gaetz inked a deal with One America News. He plans to join the right-ring network’s primetime lineup in January. The Republican-led panel initially voted against releasing the report because Gaetz was no longer in Congress. But it made a surprising U-turn at a closed-door meeting and voted to release the final version.