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Pep Guardiola admits the buck stops with him as Manchester City bid to arrest their dramatic slump in form. The champions crashed to a fifth straight defeat in all competitions – something not experienced by the club in more than 18 years – as they were thrashed 4-0 by Tottenham at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday. The loss, which was also a third in succession in the Premier League and shattered a 52-game unbeaten home run, damaged the club’s hopes of winning an unprecedented fifth title in a row. It is the worst run of Guardiola’s glittering managerial career and the City boss, who extended his contract until 2027 last week, is determined to turn the situation around. The Catalan said: “When we start to lose I say to the people I have to find a way, I have to. It’s my duty, my responsibility, to find a way to be more consistent, that our game will be better and win games. “This is what we have to do.” City have been hampered by injuries to key players in recent weeks, particularly by the absence of Ballon d’Or-winning midfielder Rodri, who has been sidelined for the remainder of the season. Problems have emerged at both ends of the field with a lack of clean sheets – just five in 19 outings this term – and a shortage of goals being scored on occasions, like Saturday, when the prolific Erling Haaland has an off-day. Guardiola said: “We don’t expect to lose important players but it’s happened and you have to find a way. We have to find other abilities. “I don’t think we didn’t create enough chances. We created a lot of chances, clear ones at 0-0, 0-1, 0-2. “Of course we want a lot of players to score but it’s happened now. “I know at the Etihad when we are there and we score goals our momentum is there, but now we are not solid enough. That is the truth. “In both sides normally we are solid but we concede the goals. Now in both sides we are not good enough. “In these situations, what do you have do to? Keep going my friends, keep going. “We have done it in the past – not in terms of results being as bad as now – but we have done it and we face the situation and move forward.”
By REBECCA SANTANA, Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — The picture of who will be in charge of executing President-elect Donald Trump’s hard-line immigration and border policies has come into sharper focus after he announced his picks to head Customs and Border Protection and also the agency tasked with deporting immigrants in the country illegally. Trump said late Thursday he was tapping Rodney Scott, a former Border Patrol chief who’s been a vocal supporter of tougher enforcement measures, for CBP commissioner. As acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Trump said he’d nominate Caleb Vitello, a career ICE official with more than 23 years in the agency who most recently has been the assistant director for firearms and tactical programs. They will work with an immigration leadership team that includes South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as head of the Department of Homeland Security ; former acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement head Tom Homan as border czar ; and immigration hard-liner Stephen Miller as deputy chief of staff. Customs and Border Protection, with its roughly 60,000 employees, falls under the Department of Homeland Security. It includes the Border Patrol, which Scott led during Trump’s first term, and is essentially responsible for protecting the country’s borders while facilitating trade and travel. Scott comes to the job firmly from the Border Patrol side of the house. He became an agent in 1992 and spent much of his career in San Diego. When he joined the agency, San Diego was by far the busiest corridor for illegal crossings. Traffic plummeted after the government dramatically increased enforcement there, but critics note the effort pushed people to remote parts of California and Arizona. San Diego was also where wall construction began in the 1990s, which shaped Scott’s belief that barriers work. He was named San Diego sector chief in 2017. When he was appointed head of the border agency in January 2020, he enthusiastically embraced Trump’s policies. “He’s well known. He does know these issues and obviously is trusted by the administration,” said Gil Kerlikowske, the CBP commissioner under the Obama administration. Kerlikowske took issue with some of Scott’s past actions, including his refusal to fall in line with a Biden administration directive to stop using terms like “illegal alien” in favor of descriptions like “migrant,” and his decision as San Diego sector chief to fire tear gas into Mexico to disperse protesters. “You don’t launch projectiles into a foreign country,” Kerlikowske said. At the time Scott defended the agents’ decisions , saying they were being assaulted by “a hail of rocks.” While much of the focus of Trump’s administration may be on illegal immigration and security along the U.S.-Mexico border, Kerlikowske also stressed the importance of other parts of Customs and Border Protection’s mission. The agency is responsible for securing trade and international travel at airports, ports and land crossings around the country. Whoever runs the agency has to make sure that billions of dollars worth of trade and millions of passengers move swiftly and safely into and out of the country. And if Trump makes good on promises to ratchet up tariffs on Mexico, China and Canada, CBP will play an integral role in enforcing them. “There’s a huge amount of other responsibility on trade, on tourism, on cyber that take a significant amount of time and have a huge impact on the economy if it’s not done right,” Kerlikowske said. After being forced out under the Biden administration, Scott has been a vocal supporter of Trump’s hard-line immigration agenda. He has appeared frequently on Fox News and testified in Congress. He’s also a senior fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation. In a 2023 interview with The Associated Press, he advocated for a return to Trump-era immigration policies and more pressure on Mexico to enforce immigration on its side of the border.Pep Guardiola: It’s my responsibility to solve Manchester City’s poor runDon't Miss These Incredible AiRROBO Black Friday Deals - Unbeatable Prices Await!
School initiatives focusing on diversity, equity, and inclusion are likely to be first on the chopping block. President-elect Donald Trump has repeatedly talked about shutting down the United States Department of Education. Vice President-elect JD Vance has called universities the “enemy” and “hostile institutions”. And while Trump’s pick for education secretary, former wrestling executive Linda McMahon , stands out primarily for having no apparent experience in the field of education, advocates are anxiously waiting for what many believe will be an all-out war against universities under the incoming administration . While the federal Department of Education has repeatedly been threatened, it is unlikely that the incoming Trump administration will be able to shut it down, as that would need congressional approval – including a supermajority in the Senate, which the Republicans do not have. But the president-elect still has the ability to affect the education sector. Trump has threatened to pull accreditation and federal funding from schools and colleges promoting “ critical race theory , transgender insanity, and other inappropriate racial, sexual or political content”, as he put it. He has also pledged to ensure schools are “free from political meddling”. But some conservative groups are planning to do just that , and hoping to seize on Trump’s second presidency to push for a broad overhaul of the higher education system, seeking to restrict universities’ autonomy on multiple fronts, from student selection and faculty hires, to what can be taught and how. Trump is especially expected to go after “diversity and inclusion”, or DEI, an umbrella term encompassing a broad range of policies meant to ensure equitable access and opportunity to all people, particularly those historically excluded from them. Conservatives have long derided the policies as “wokeism” and rallied against diversity-focused curricula and hiring practices that they claim are part of an alleged liberal agenda to sow division and discriminate against white Americans. Overhauling liberal education Among the proposals Trump or his backers have floated are the shuttering of all diversity and equity offices across the federal government and the removal of chief diversity officers, the targeting of other offices that have traditionally served underrepresented groups, a repeal of reporting requirements on diversity and inclusion, and the scrubbing of policies, regulations, and materials referring to a growing list of terms from “privilege” to “oppression”. “President [-elect] Trump is talking about entrance exams, exit exams, eliminating accrediting bodies, starting for profits, deregulating ... It goes on and on in terms of the ways in which they truly will dismantle as opposed to reform higher education,” Lynn Pasquerella, president of the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U), told Al Jazeera. “While they want to get rid of a DEI bureaucracy, they want to create their own illiberal bureaucracy that controls the curriculum in ways that will go against this distinctively American tradition of liberal education.” What the incoming administration will prioritise remains to be seen, and there appear to be opposing approaches among Trump’s advisers, Isaac Kamola, a political science professor at Trinity College whose research focuses on conservative attacks on higher education, told Al Jazeera. “On the one hand, they’re saying the federal government should be out of state education,” he said. “[On the other], they’re flipping and saying the federal government should actively punish institutions that don’t take the policies that they prefer.” Anxious about the prospect of a crackdown, but unsure of what form that will take exactly, many university administrations “are taking a wait and see attitude”, John Aubrey Douglass, a senior research fellow with the Center for Studies in Higher Education at the University of California, Berkeley, told Al Jazeera. “[But the university administrations may not have] a full appreciation for the potential tsunami that may come in an expansive redefinition of the executive branch and a cavalcade of policy edicts and threats directed at American higher education,” Douglass added. Some states, like California, are preparing for the incoming administration by “lawyering up in the hope of blunting infringements on institutional autonomy and threats of mass deportation”, Douglass continued. But other, Republican-led states, like Texas, Florida , and Alabama, have already implemented policies targeting higher education that analysts expect to offer a blueprint for the Trump administration. An ‘anti-woke’ agenda Trump’s expected attacks on universities are part of a years-long, organised effort by well-funded conservative groups to reshape US higher education, said Kamola, the political science professor. “It’s not enough to just police what faculty are saying, they fundamentally want to change the institutions, so that they teach what the political operatives prefer,” he added. For his part, Trump already gave a glimpse of what is to come in his first term in office. Following the racial justice movement that began after the 2020 police killing of George Floyd, a Black man, by a police officer – and the conservative backlash that followed – Trump signed an executive order late in his first term, seeking to “combat race and sex stereotyping”. The order was blocked in court and President Joe Biden quickly withdrew it, but some conservative states wrote similar directives into state legislation, effectively curtailing classroom discussions on racism and sexism. Copycat “educational gag orders”, as the measures have become known, have been introduced in 46 states. Texas led the charge against DEI last year with legislation that forced institutions to close their diversity offices and led to the removal of words like “race”, “gender”, “class” and “equity” from course names and descriptions. In Florida, Republican Governor Ron DeSantis , who has made the battle against diversity and inclusion one of his defining issues, signed a bill last year to block federal and state funding to programmes promoting DEI at public universities. “DEI is better viewed as standing for discrimination, exclusion and indoctrination,” DeSantis said when he signed the bill into law. “That has no place in our public institutions.” Pasquerella, of the AAC&U, said when Trump lost the 2020 election, many state legislatures, governors and governing boards “took up where he left off in terms of his intrusion into academic integrity and institutional autonomy”. A flurry of state-level legislation sought to “restrict the capacity of institutions to make decisions around the curriculum, tenure and promotion, shared governance”, she said, noting that those prerogatives are “fundamental to American higher education, which in part derives its strength from the fact that what gets taught, who teaches it, how it’s taught, who gets admitted, are free from governmental intrusion and undue political influence”. Under Trump 2.0 , the federal government will likely get behind and boost those efforts. “What we’re expecting with the next administration is a resurgence of the efforts to restrict training courses or instruction on racism or sexism,” Leah Watson, a senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union’s (ACLU) Racial Justice Program, told Al Jazeera. Already, the targeted terminology has expanded to include “diversity and inclusion”, as well as any references to “privilege, oppression, intersectionality, sexual orientation, and gender identity”, Watson noted. “There’s just a wide-range effort to censor those completely in a variety of ways,” she added. “Once you’re focussed on eliminating these so-called woke ideologies, it really becomes an all-encompassing thing.” Holding the line Because diversity and inclusion is a broad term that encompasses a wide range of initiatives, and because its terminology and approaches have been adopted in an equally broad array of settings, Trump’s anti-DEI agenda risks swallowing up all kinds of university programmes, advocates warn. “Colleges and universities in the US have swept up a vast array of largely student support services under the moniker of DEI,” said Douglass, citing for instance services for transfer students from community colleges. “Many programmes once had the title simply of Educational Opportunity Programmes without the language of ‘equity’ that seems to indicate an equal distribution of a highly sought good, like admission to a selective university or a faculty position, without regard to merit.” Rather than capitulate to conservatives’ demands to dismantle DEI, or overcorrect by scrapping programmes and policies before they are required to do so by law, universities should not back down, said Watson, of the ACLU. “It’s important for them to hold the line on preserving the academic freedom that allows professors to teach free of government interference,” she added, noting that legal precedent is in the universities’ favour. “Students have a right to learn information and they have a right to learn information even when the government doesn’t agree.” “It is a very scary time for universities,” Watson added. “But universities have to continue to preserve academic freedom and the right to learn – those are critical to them fulfilling their mission.” As universities prepare to fight back, some education advocates have expressed hopes that gutting education may not be the first item on the agenda for the incoming administration, which has also pledged to launch a mass deportation campaign on day one, and has a long list of other policies and agencies Trump has pledged to target. Others hoped the incoming administration would be too dysfunctional to pull off its ambitious, if destructive, plans for higher education. “It will take time to launch attacks from Washington,” said Douglass. “And one can assume much chaos in the initial year of Trump’s return.”Ange Postecoglou relishing Tottenham’s key run of fixtures before Christmas
StockNews.com initiated coverage on shares of Bio-Path ( NASDAQ:BPTH – Get Free Report ) in a research note issued on Sunday. The firm set a “sell” rating on the stock. Bio-Path Stock Up 2.6 % Shares of BPTH stock opened at $0.82 on Friday. The firm’s 50 day moving average price is $0.97 and its two-hundred day moving average price is $1.51. Bio-Path has a 52-week low of $0.61 and a 52-week high of $12.37. Hedge Funds Weigh In On Bio-Path An institutional investor recently bought a new position in Bio-Path stock. Armistice Capital LLC purchased a new stake in Bio-Path Holdings, Inc. ( NASDAQ:BPTH – Free Report ) during the second quarter, according to its most recent filing with the SEC. The firm purchased 97,000 shares of the company’s stock, valued at approximately $194,000. Armistice Capital LLC owned 4.66% of Bio-Path at the end of the most recent reporting period. Institutional investors own 5.74% of the company’s stock. About Bio-Path Bio-Path Holdings, Inc operates as a clinical and preclinical stage oncology focused RNAi nanoparticle drug development company in the United States. The company develops products based on DNAbilize, a drug delivery and antisense technology platform that uses P-ethoxy, which is a deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) backbone modification intended to protect the DNA from destruction. Read More Receive News & Ratings for Bio-Path Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Bio-Path and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter .
TEHRAN – Iran's Foreign Ministry has issued a strong rebuke of Ukraine, accusing Kyiv of violating international obligations by supporting terrorist groups in West Asia. Mojtaba Damirchiloo, Assistant Foreign Minister and Director-General for Eurasia, sharply criticized what he termed illegal arms trafficking by Ukrainian officials and their backing of terrorist organizations operating in Syria. In a statement, Damirchiloo declared that Ukraine's actions represent a clear breach of international commitments to counter terrorism. He specifically highlighted the danger posed by Takfiri extremist groups in Syria, entities designated as terrorist organizations by the UN Security Council. Damirchiloo characterized Ukraine's support for these groups as unethical and a violation of international law, warning that such alliances ultimately fuel global insecurity and violence and invariably backfire on those who sponsor them. Dismissing Ukrainian allegations of Iranian involvement in the Ukraine conflict as baseless and politically motivated, Damirchiloo asserted that these accusations are designed to curry favor with the "genocidal Zionist regime" and the U.S. in pursuit of financial and military aid. Reiterating Iran's consistent position, Damirchiloo emphasized Tehran's opposition to the war in Ukraine from its inception, its refusal to interfere in the conflict, and its persistent calls for all parties to engage in dialogue and pursue diplomatic solutions to resolve their disputes. Local reports as well as statements from Russian officials show Ukraine has been training members of the Tahrir al-Sham terrorist group which launched a major attack into Syria’s Aleppo province last week and has been making advancements since then. A Ukrainian news outlet with ties to the government called the Kyiv Post has also confirmed that the terrorists operating in Syria are “Ukrainian trained”. Some reports even suggests that Ukraine’s special forces have joined the terrorists in their attacks against the Syrian army.Survivors of abuse in care know how redress should work – will the government finally listen?
None'Mass methanol poisoning' which killed British lawyer and five others in Laos could claim MORE lives as 11 backpackers remain in hospital after drinking lethal shots In addition to the six deaths, 14 tourists developed methanol poisoning About 11 other foreign nationals remain in hospital fighting for their lives It is not yet unclear how and where the victims were poisoned By MEGAN HOWE Published: 08:49 EST, 24 November 2024 | Updated: 08:53 EST, 24 November 2024 e-mail View comments Eleven backpackers remain in hospital fighting for their lives after drinking lethal shots in a 'mass methanol poisoning' in Laos which has killed six others. British lawyer Simone White, 28, from Orpington in Kent died after drinking free shots allegedly laced with deadly methanol. Ms White was an associate lawyer specialising in technology and intellectual property at the London office of the American law firm Squire Patton Boggs. After completing her A-levels at St Olave's Grammar School, she studied law at Newcastle University before taking the fast-track course at the BPP law school. She was among six foreign tourists who have died from a suspected mass incident of methanol poisoning in Vang Vieng. In addition to the six deaths, 14 tourists who had been drinking in the party town developed methanol poisoning within days of each other. And about 11 other foreign nationals remain in hospital fighting for lives. It is not yet clear how and where the victims were poisoned. British lawyer Simone White, 28, from Orpington in Kent (pictured) died after drinking free shots allegedly laced with deadly methanol Authorities in Laos detained the manager and owner of the Nana Backpackers Hostel in Vang Vieng but no charges have been laid - the owner and bartender deny any alcohol served at their bar had been contaminated or diluted with methanol Ms White was an associate lawyer specialising in technology and intellectual property at the London office of the American law firm Squire Patton Boggs Melbourne teenagers Holly Bowles (left) and Bianca Jones (right), both aged 19, died following a night out in the party town of Vang Viang this month after drinking tainted alcohol Ms White's friend, Bethany Clarke, a healthcare worker also from Orpington, took to the Laos Backpacking Facebook group to warn other travellers. She said: 'Urgent — please avoid all local spirits. Our group stayed in Vang Vieng and we drank free shots offered by one of the bars. 'Just avoid them as so not worth it. Six of us who drank from the same place are in hospital currently with methanol poisoning.' Sue White, Simone's 'devastated' mother, shared how her 'kind, fun-loving' daughter and friends took 'six shots' each, watered down with Sprite, before falling ill and having 'trouble breathing'. She told The Sun how Simone and two friends took themselves to hospital the day after, but were 'dismissed' by medics, who told them they had food poisoning. By the time an ambulance arrived to take them on to a private facility, Simone was already 'delirious', her mother said, adding 'I think, basically, it had already affected her brain'. Melbourne teenagers Bianca Jones and Holly Bowles, both aged 19, died following a night out in the party town of Vang Viang this month after drinking tainted alcohol . The friends, who were on holiday on the island, became ill and failed to check out of Nana Backpacker hostel on November 13. Bianca Jones, 19, from Melbourne, (left) and Holly Bowles, also 19, (right) died in the mass methanol poisoning Jones and Bowles were evacuated to Thailand after asking hostel staff for help and died in separate Bangkok hospitals a week later with loved ones at their bedsides. American tourist James Louis Hutson, 57, was found dead inside his room at the Nana Backpacker Hotel in Vang Viang on November 13. According to the Vientiane Times, workers at the hostel had entered his room after realizing he had not left all day and found him unconscious. The outlet reported that he was taken to hospital, with police finding four empty bottles of beer and two empty bottles of vodka in his room. Meanwhile, horrific details have emerged about the two Danish women, Anne-Sofie Orkild Coyman, 20, and Freja Vennervald Sorensen, 21, who died, as it was revealed the pair were vomiting blood for hours after consuming the drinks. The disturbing final moments were a world away from the picturesque travel photo they shared days earlier after the pair happily posed with friends while in Vietnam. The Danish girls, originally from Roskilde, a town of around 53,000 people 35km west of Copenhagen, were avid travellers. Two Danish girls Anne-Sofie Orkild Coyman, 20, and Freja Vennervald Sorensen, 21, died in the Laos methanol poisoning The two women were reportedly staying in Nana Backpacker Hostel when workers found them unwell in their rooms after they were late to check out. Pictured is the hostel Ms Sorensen is pictured enjoying a drink earlier in their trip, while the women were in Bangkok The women are pictured in Vietnam a few weeks ago, with friends they made while travelling around South East Asia. Ms Sorensen is standing on the far left, while Ms Coyman is standing second from the right After graduating from high school in June last year, they spent time exploring Italy and Hungary before saving up for a big 2024 trip around South East Asia. In September, the pair spent time travelling around Thailand, before venturing on to Cambodia, then journeying to Vietnam, before making their way to Laos. Shortly after the poisoning a man who shared a mutual friend with Ms Sorensen and Ms Coyman posted a warning online, urging other travellers to be cautious about their drinks. 'The past few days I have been busy with a Belgian friend looking for two girls he travelled with,' the man wrote. 'For more than 72 hours, no contact could be made while they had agreed to meet in Vang Vieng. 'The strange thing was that their last message was that they had both been vomiting blood for 13 hours... They have both since died.' According to local police reports obtained by the Sydney Morning Herald, Ms Sorensen and Ms Coyman drank at the hostel before going to local bars on the evening of November 12. They arrived back around midnight but spent the entire next day in their room, before they were discovered about 6pm lying on their bathroom floor unconscious. Ms Jones' (pictured) parents who was evacuated to Thailand and died in hospital surrounded by loved ones Ms Bowles' (pictured) died following a night out in the party town of Vang Viang alongside her friend Ms Jones Hostel manager and bartender Duong Duc Toan (pictured) is reportedly among 'a number of people' who have been detained by police for questioning, but no charges have yet been filed They were taken to Vang Vieng Hospital in a coma before being transported to a hospital in the capital of Vientiane. They were reportedly declared dead at about 3.30am on the 14th. The Laos government has recently broken its silence on the mass poisonings and vowed to 'bring the perpetrators to justice'. Officials said they were 'deeply saddened' and extended their 'deepest condolences' to the families of the victims. 'The government of the Lao PDR is profoundly saddened over the loss of lives of foreign tourists in Vang Vieng District, Vientiane Province and expresses its sincere sympathy and deepest condolences to the families of the deceased,' the statement read. 'The government of the Lao PDR has been conducting investigations to find causes of the incident and to bring the perpetrators to justice in accordance with the law. 'The government of the Lao PDR reaffirms that it always attaches the importance and pays attention to the safety of both domestic and foreign tourists.' Following news of Ms Jones' death, local police attended Nana Backpackers to question employees. Police demanded to see which spirits were used by bar staff on the night Ms Jones and Ms Bowles were provided free cocktails, The Herald Sun reported. Laos Police were seen talking to employees and inspecting bottles of spirits inside the bar during their visit to the hostel. The hostel owner, Duong Duc Toan, is reportedly among 'a number of people' who have been detained by police for questioning, but no charges have yet been filed. But he and the hostel's bartender Toan Van Vanng denied any alcohol served at their bar had been contaminated or diluted with methanol. Toan said he bought the alcohol from a certified distributor and that free shots of Tiger Vodka had been served to around 100 guests. The manager said he had yet to received any complaints from other backpackers who been given shots on the night. To prove his point, he even drank from one of the vodka bottles that were in use on the night to prove it was safe. 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Century Complex in Letterkenny celebrated the grand opening of its new family entertainment centre last night, unveiling indoor crazy golf, AR Darts, new Century Play party complex bar and function room all under one roof! The latest additions add even more entertainment options to the complex, not forgetting the classic movie experience at their 8-screen cinema alongside Backstage Bar & Grill and Bida’s Bar. The new games are a fusion of fun and technology. The indoor crazy golf course is perfect for families and friends of all ages, with 27 creatively designed holes. Enjoy a mix of technological courses along with fun courses as you compete to be the crazy golf champion! Kieran Tobin checks out one of the creative crazy golf courses One of the colourful courses of Century Complex Indoor Mini Golf Century Complex has also introduced an augmented reality (AR) darts experience that combines traditional dartboard fun with modern technology. The i nteractive, auto-scoring darts games are available in 7 thrilling games to challenge your friends to. To enhance your gaming experience, you can conveniently order food and drinks using a table service option. Century Complex also has a wide range of kids party packages available with something to suit all age groups. Choose from fun in Century Play for the younger age groups, exciting movies in Century Cinemas to suit all age groups and a round of golf from the Front 9 or Back 9 courses – this is the ideal party package for teenagers. The Letterkenny cinema is nearing a century in business. It originally opened in 1935 on the Port Road, before moving down to Leckview Lane in 2001. The new complex stretches across 85,000ft – not including the cinema! Century Play party booths Owner Mark Doherty, the driving force behind Century Complex, with his wife Pauline and sons Cormac (left) and Ciaran (right) celebrating the new Indoor Mini Golf and AR Darts centre Century Complex staff L-R: John Kirwin, Chantelle Grant, Managing Director Mark Doherty, Chloe Russell and Jasmine Frith Conor O’Donnell, Cormac Doherty, Kealan Dunleavy and Kieran Tobin A post shared by DonegalWoman.ie (@donegalwoman)20 yrs of growth felled in a day, FIR against 2 ‘slayers’AP Business SummaryBrief at 12:10 p.m. EST