Going farther
Player poll reveals tax-free deals may not attract stars to PNGNFL coaches and players are constantly on camera, even when they're not on the field. Frequent press conferences with the media provide NFL fans with a steady stream of quotes about their favorite teams and players. These quotes can actually be used to make informed decisions about our fantasy teams. These useful quotes can pertain to injury outlooks, player usage, overall offensive tendencies and philosophy, and more. The key is to know which quotes are actionable, and which ones are just fluff that can be ignored. The vast majority of these quotes will be sourced from the interviews that beat reporters conduct with players and coaches throughout the week. The Coachspeak Index (CSI) does a phenomenal job of listening to these interviews and picking out the key nuggets. In this article, we'll be taking a look at quotes (from CSI and other sources) and analyzing their fantasy impact. Some may be more serious than others, but it's all about getting a feel for coaches and players from information that may not show up in the box score. WEEK 14 FANTASY FOOTBALL RANKINGS QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs | D/ST | Kickers Fantasy Football Coachspeak Highlights: What are coaches saying about Kirk Cousins, Jahmyr Gibbs, and more? John Harbaugh not ready to comment on Diontae Johnson #Ravens HC John Harbaugh on WR Diontae Johnson playing zero snaps on Sunday: "At this time, I'm going to have to wait. There are moving parts that we're going to have to figure out and explore and just see where we’re at.” pic.twitter.com/cnB07HRdDT After Rashod Bateman left in the middle of the game last week, most fans would have expected Diontae Johnson to finally get some legitimate playing time, especially considering the Ravens were playing from behind throughout the second half. Johnson did not log a single snap in this game. When asked to comment on Johnson's lack of playing time in Monday's press conference, John Harbaugh said, "At this time, I am going to have to wait." Key Fantasy Takeaway: It seemed that the Ravens traded for Johnson as an insurance policy in case one of their starters went down. Well, Bateman suffered an injury and Harbaugh can't even confirm if Johnson will get any playing time. Johnson will likely be a stone-cold zero in fantasy and this passing attack should flow through Mark Andrews and Zay Flowers. WEEK 14 WAIVER WIRE & FAAB RECOMMENDATIONS Kendre Miller finally escapes Dennis Allen's dog house Lots of praise for #Saints second-year RB Kendre Miller from head coach Darren Rizzi today. Clean slate, no doghouse. Team source told me "all gas, no brakes" when he makes his return to the field, which could be this weekend against the Giants and their No. 29 ranked rushing... It was no secret that former head coach Dennis Allen was anything but a fan of running back Kendre Miller. In one last spiteful act before being fired, Allen placed Miller on IR with an injury that reportedly did not require an IR stint. Well, Miller is now eligible to return to the field and interim head coach Darren Rizzi said it will be "all gas, no breaks" upon his return. Key Fantasy Takeaway: With the Saints' season already lost, it's possible that we see Miller operate in a bell cow in the final few weeks of the year. Alvin Kamara has borne the brunt of the offensive load throughout the season and he's well on his way to setting a career-high in carries. It wouldn't be a shock if the Saints coaching staff opts to let him rest up down the stretch. Miller is worth a stash in case this becomes a reality. Raheem Morris stands behind Kirk Cousins Raheem Morris says Kirk Cousins has the right mindset to bounce back from yesterday's game: "He's really accountable." He also continues to stand behind Cousins as the starter: "The guys carried us all year, and he's put us in this position." Kirk Cousins hasn't played particularly well in recent weeks and it all came to a head in Week 13 when he threw four picks in a 17-13 loss to the Chargers. Despite three consecutive losses, head coach Raheem Morris is standing behind his veteran quarterback and seemingly doesn't have second thoughts about moving forward with Cousins as the starter. Key Fantasy Takeaway: Cousins has largely been irrelevant in single-quarterback leagues this season, but he's responsible for supporting talents like Drake London and Bijan Robinson. Fantasy managers with either of these two on rosters should be rooting for Cousins to hold onto his job. Cousins has struggled recently, but having him under center is better than diving into the unknown with Michael Penix in the biggest games of the fantasy season. Dan Campbell comments on Jahmyr Gibbs' social media slip-up #Lions HC Dan Campbell on Jahmyr Gibbs’ social media post: “We may as well just put everything out there. I don’t really give a crap. I mean, if we’re gonna lose because of code words, then we’re not good enough anyway. So, I think we’ll just post the whole freakin’ playbook and... https://t.co/GVNwIdE2QW pic.twitter.com/mbtjBkdlLP Jahmyr Gibbs has been under fire recently for posting a video that had a list of the Lions' offensive "code words" in the background. Dan Campbell confirmed in an interview that this isn't an issue at all and that, "If we’re gonna lose because of code words, then we’re not good enough anyway." Key Fantasy Takeaway: Some people looked too closely into this issue and thought this may have a negative impact on Gibbs' playing time. Campbell put these concerns to rest in this interview and insinuated that it would be ridiculous to limit a player's role because of a social media post. Expect to see Sonic and Knuckles firing on all cylinders as the Lions look to lock up the No. 1 seed. Raheem Morris provides some clarity on Kyle Pitts' usage #Falcons HC Raheem Morris on Kyle Pitts only playing 40% of snaps today, and whether Morris is pleased with what they’re getting from Pitts: “We’ve got so many people that we’ve gotta get the ball to. Sometimes those days happen. I would like to see Kyle get more production. I... pic.twitter.com/DAKfDrq8ij Kyle Pitts played a season-low 38 percent of snaps last week and posted his second fantasy goose egg of the season. When asked about Pitts' limited role, head coach Raheem Morris essentially said that Pitts slipped through the cracks due to the numerous offensive weapons at the Falcons' disposal. Morris went on to say, "We'll figure things out as we go" regarding his future usage. Key Fantasy Takeaway: Pitts' athleticism and ability to create after the catch make him an incredibly appealing fantasy option. However, given his sporadic usage and troubling target-earning metrics, it's hard to rely on Pitts in lineups every week. 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The International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) has announced the competition winners for its 37th edition. The awards were unveiled at a ceremony on Thursday in Amsterdam at the Internationaal Theater Amsterdam, just a few blocks from the iconic Rijksmuseum. This year’s IDFA selection includes more than 250 documentary titles, many hinging on the current wars and ideological fissures plaguing the world. In a unanimous decision from jurors Juliana Fanjul, Sophie Fiennes, Grace Lee, Asmae El Moudir, and Kazuhiro Soda, Maciej J. Drygas’ Polish archival documentary “Trains” took the IDFA Award for Best Film in the international competition. The film is a rail journey through 20th-century Europe taking place entirely within steam locomotives and railroad cars. “The jury was unanimous. This is a bold and inventive use of archive. The film shows us routes to the positive and negative consequences of modern industrial innovation. It harnesses the magic of cinema and as an audience we are haunted by our present historical time, even while we bear witness to the past,” the jury said in a statement. The win includes a 15,000 euro cash prize. The IDFA Award for Best Directing (worth 5,000 euros) in the international competition went to Auberi Edler for “An American Pastoral,” centered on ideological battles in a small, conservative Pennsylvania town. “By simply looking and listening, this director reveals the current complexity at the heart of the United States. Her deep commitment to observation allows the viewer to come face to face with the communities in the film and provides critical insight into the results of the last U.S presidential election,” said the jury. The IDFA Award for Best Editing also went to Maciej J. Drygas for “Trains,” while the IDFA Award for Best Cinematography went to Zvika Gregory Portnoy and Zuzanna Solakiewicz for the refugee portrait “The Guest,” from Poland and Qatar. In the Envision Competition, which showcases daring international and world premieres, the award for Best Film went to “Chronicles of the Absurd,” a hybrid portrait of Kafkaesque repression within and outside Cuba. “Formally complex with a film language that arises organically and directly from its limitations, this film impressed us with the use of an audio track as a political diary,” the jury said. The Award for Best Directing in the Envision Competition went to Massimo D’Anolfi and Martina Parenti for “Bestiaries, Herbaria, Lapidaries” (Italy/Switzerland), while the Award for Outstanding Artistic Contribution went in a tie to Omar Mismar for “A Frown Gone Mad” (Lebanon) and to Yo-Hen So for “Park” (Taiwan). The jury members for the Envision Competition were Sam Green, Nduka Mntambo, Kumjana Novakova, B. Ruby Rich, and Wael Shawky. In the DocLab Competition for Immersive Non-Fiction, Lisa Schamlé won the top prize for “Me, a Depiction” hailing from the Netherlands. Another local title, “The Liminal” (also from Lebanon, Palestine, and Norway) from Alaa Al Minawi won a special mention in that section. Pegah Tabassinejad’s “Entropic Fields of Displacement” (Canada) won the IDFA DocLab Award for Digital Storytelling. Emeline Courcier’s “Burn from Absence” (France/Canada) received the DocLab Special Mention for Digital Storytelling. In the short documentary competition, Theo Panagopoulos’ “The Flowers Stand Silently, Witnessing” (U.K.) won for Best Short Documentary. A special mention also went to “Mama Micra” (Germany) by Rebecca Blöcher. The IDFA Award for Best Youth Documentary (13+) went to Eefje Blankevoort and Lara Aerts for “Everything Will Be Alright” (Netherlands). A special mention here went to “Simply Divine” (France/Romania) by Mélody Boulissière. The IDFA Award for Best Youth Documentary (9-12) went to Poorva Bhat for “What’s the Film About?” (India). Martijn Blekendaal received a special mention here for “The Invisible Ones” (Netherlands/Belgium). More overall awards were given, including The IDFA Award for Best First Feature for “CycleMahesh” (India) by Suhel Banerjee. The IDFA Award for Best Dutch Film went to Luuk Bouwman for “The Propagandist” (Netherlands). The Beeld & Geluid IDFA ReFrame Award went to Farahnaz Sharifi for “My Stolen Planet” (Iran/Germany), a moving essay film about the filmmaker’s experience emigrating to Germany at the peak of the Woman, Life, Freedom protests in her home country, which she watched from afar on social media. Radu Jude and Christian Ferencz-Flatz received the Beeld & Geluid IDFA ReFrame Award special mention for “Eight Postcards from Utopia” (Romania), a collage of Romanian commercials made after the country converted to capitalism after Nicolae Ceaușescu’s death. inally, the FIPRESCI Award went to “Writing Hawa” (France/Netherlands/Qatar/Afghanistan) by Najiba Noori. IDFA opened on Thursday, November 14 and runs through Sunday, November 24. Festival director Orwa Nyrabia, who has been at IDFA since 2018, previously announced that he will step down after this year’s edition.
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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — After taking over as governor amid a scandal in 2018, Republican Mike Parson hoped to bring stability to a state that had just watched the unsettling resignation of his predecessor. But, in an expansive interview as he prepares to leave office, Missouri’s 57th chief executive said he remains in awe of how multiple crises unfolded during his tenure as chief executive. Within weeks of taking over for scandal-plagued Republican Eric Greitens, the former state lawmaker and county sheriff raced to Branson in the aftermath of the sinking of a duck boat ride at Table Rock Lake that killed 17 tourists. There was a flood, a drought , a crisis in the St. Louis prosecutor’s office and the COVID-19 pandemic. “There was so much turmoil when I first walked in these doors. The first big challenge was, ‘How do you stabilize that?’” Parson said. “I think at the end of the day, we did.” Parson will leave the warren of offices overlooking the Missouri River on the Capitol’s second floor on Jan. 13, handing the keys to Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe, a fellow Republican who has signaled he too wants relative continuity in 2025 by retaining a number of Parson holdovers to serve in his Cabinet. In a wide-ranging conversation with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Parson said there were many incidents that no governor could have been prepared to face, including a respiratory virus that infected a third of all residents and killed 22,000 Missourians. Like other governors, Parson faced evolving and often conflicting health advice, as well as members of the public split on masks, vaccines and school and business closures. “It was one of the most difficult times I had,” Parson said. “It was just unprecedented.” The governmental response to the virus wasn’t just a fight between a more relaxed approach in rural Missouri versus heightened health concerns in more populous urban areas, Parson said. “Some people wanted mandates, some people didn’t and that was all over the state,” said Parson, pointing to examples that came from friends in his hometown of Bolivar. “I remember people down home talking about churches, for example. I remember people calling me and saying you need to shut the churches down,” Parson said. “And that was people back home. You had that kind of pressure every day.” The COVID-19 shutdowns sent Missouri’s unemployment rate skyrocketing, pushing beyond the 12% level in April 2020. But, through a combination of vaccines and businesses opening, the rate was down to 6.8% by July 2020 and 4.2% a year later. “The whole time you’re fighting the virus you’re trying to keep the economy going,” he said. Parson said his decision to not shut down the state was based largely on his experience of owning a Polk County gas station in his younger days. Small business owners need to pay loans, mortgages and employees. “We made it possible for people to stay open,” Parson said. “I think looking back on it we did the right thing.” It wasn’t smooth sailing. In July 2020, Parson downplayed the risk of children contracting the coronavirus during school reopenings, insisting “they’re going to get over it.” “These kids have got to get back to school,” he said at the time. “They’re at the lowest risk possible. And if they do get COVID-19, which they will — and they will when they go to school — they’re not going to the hospitals. They’re not going to have to sit in doctor’s offices. They’re going to go home and they’re going to get over it.” “We gotta move on,” he continued. “We can’t just let this thing stop us in our tracks.” The blowback was harsh. Some health officials expressed concern about returning to schools because students could carry the virus home to older relatives. “I probably didn’t do it as tactfully as I should have,” Parson now acknowledges. “It was pretty brutal. People came after me with both barrels.” The governor’s approach to COVID-19 was similar to how he addressed other issues. Often out of sync Parson governed as a staunch Republican, eagerly taking up GOP talking points on guns, immigration and cultural issues. He signed a strict abortion ban in 2019 that went into effect in 2022 when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. He won legislative support to give the nation’s lowest-paid state workers raises topping 25% to address an ongoing labor shortage in his administration, but he refused to sign any state worker employee union contracts during his entire tenure. Long waiting times for residents seeking state benefits were a frustrating feature of the Parson era. Missouri voters also sent Parson and his fellow Republicans multiple reminders that Missouri is not a wholly red state when it comes to social service issues. In 2020, for example, Missouri voters approved an expansion of Medicaid coverage after years of Republican opposition to President Barack Obama’s signature achievement of trying to fix the nation’s health care system. Parson opposed the expansion as a dangerous drain on tax revenues. The administration slow-walked the voter-approved rollout until the Supreme Court of Missouri held the expansion amendment to be constitutional. People began enrolling in October 2021, nearly a year after the matter was approved at the ballot box. Expansion has proven popular. As of Dec. 6, more than 316,000 adults were enrolled to get health coverage. In all, there are nearly 1.3 million Missourians receiving health insurance through Obamacare. In response to the Medicaid vote and other citizen-led petition drives, Parson says lawmakers must make it harder for residents to amend the state’s constitution. Republicans who control the Legislature were unable to raise the threshold for passage during a contentious spring legislative session and, by the fall, voters overturned the ban on abortion through an initiative petition. Although Parson favors toughening the standards for passage of amendments, he also urged the Legislature to resolve problems before residents feel the need to make changes themselves at the ballot box. “If you don’t take action ... people are going to go to the initiative petition process because they get frustrated because nothing ever happens here and nobody is willing to come to a compromise,” Parson said. The state budget also grew exponentially during his tenure, some of that due to an influx of billions of dollars in federal funds. As he leaves office, Parson contends that a series of income tax cuts also helped boost the bottom line. “Yes, the budget has ballooned during this administration. There’s no doubt about it,” he said. “It’s because revenues went up. If you put money back in people’s pockets, the general revenue and the economy grows.” Picking the ‘right people’ Parson’s relationship with the Democrat-controlled St. Louis region was sometimes testy over Republican opposition to tightening the state’s loose gun laws and ongoing threats to put the city’s police department under state control. “I set out early on to make sure the people of St. Louis realize I just wasn’t some old country boy from southwest Missouri and I was just going to take care of things back home,” Parson said. “For the state of Missouri to do well, St. Louis must do well.” “You’ve got to be part of finding solutions. Sometimes when you get involved it becomes controversial,” he said. Parson said he never imagined he would be in the middle of a fight over the St. Louis city prosecutor’s office when he was first sworn in. “I didn’t even know it was my job to pick the circuit attorney of St. Louis,” Parson said. In 2023, Parson appointed Gabe Gore , a civil attorney, to rebuild the city prosecutor’s office following the abrupt resignation of beleaguered Circuit Attorney Kimberly M. Gardner. Gore, then a partner at the high-powered and politically connected Dowd Bennett law firm, served on the Ferguson Commission following protests over the 2014 death of Michael Brown and worked as an assistant U.S. attorney prosecutor in the 1990s. “That was a big selection. You could tell he cared about the city,” Parson said of Gore. Parson also had the unprecedented opportunity to appoint four people to statewide office to fill vacancies when the officeholder ran for higher office and left the post open. He elevated state treasurer Eric Schmitt to attorney general to succeed Josh Hawley. Hawley and Schmitt are now both U.S. senators. Parson named Scott Fitzpatrick, a state representative, to succeed Schmitt as treasurer. Fitzpatrick is now state auditor. The governor named his general counsel Andrew Bailey to succeed Schmitt as attorney general and lawyer Vivek Malek to succeed Fitzpatrick as treasurer. “I really tried to pick people who were good for the jobs,” he said. All four ran for election after their appointments and voters gave them easy wins on Election Day — a result Parson says means that he chose the right people. “I think the people of the state said, ‘You did a pretty good job,’” Parson said. There also were controversies inside the Capitol and outside. At the height of the pandemic, amid concerns about the ongoing spread of the virus, former House Speaker Rob Vescovo informed Parson’s office that he would have to deliver the annual State of the State speech to an empty House chamber. An enraged Parson received permission to give his speech in the Senate chamber. Two days later, a fuming Parson fired off a letter accusing Vescovo of engaging in a “purposeful and disgusting scheme to embarrass” him. “Instead, Wednesday became an insider stunt and petty show of arrogance and political power,” Parson wrote. Dealing with the media In 2021, Parson accused the Post-Dispatch of hacking into a state website despite evidence that his own administration’s computer shortcomings had left personal information about Missouri teachers available within a few mouse clicks on a state-run website. He never apologized for the accusation after prosecutors declined to press charges. Parson also raised eyebrows for pardoning Central West End attorney Mark McCloskey and his wife, Patricia, in 2021 for brandishing guns at protesters who were moving through the neighborhood. He also was criticized in 2024 for pardoning Britt Reid, the son of Kansas City Chiefs Coach Andy Reid, who had been in prison for a drunken driving crash that seriously injured a 5-year-old girl. His decision this month to commute the prison sentence of former police detective Eric DeValkenaere , the first Kansas City officer ever convicted of killing a Black man, was, as expected, highly controversial. But Parson also was widely praised for granting clemency to Patty Prewitt , who had spent 40 years behind bars for her husband’s 1984 murder. “It wasn’t like we liked all the stories anyone wrote, but you’re not in the business of writing everything I like,” Parson said. “You have to learn to deal with the media. From Day One, we tried to establish a role with the media. And for the most part we were able to do that,” he said. Parson said Kehoe will hit the ground running next month. He hopes the former senator and Jefferson City businessman will address the state’s child care industry, which has not recovered from the pandemic. A key to solving the problems lies with Kehoe navigating divisiveness among Republicans, who have been unable to overcome differences in the state Senate, leading to a record-low number of non-budget bills going to Parson’s desk. “I think he’s got a really good foundation to build on,” Parson said. “If there is one thing on the table that I didn’t get done ... you’ve got to do something about the day care situation in the state.” “It is a huge issue for everyday people out there. There’s just a lack of it,” Parson said. As he heads back to Bolivar, a city of 11,300 people, his small cattle operation and home to Southwest Baptist University, Parson said the last six years were more intense than many can imagine. “The worst part of the job is time. You just have very little time,” Parson said. “I missed my family. I missed a lot of ball games. It is a pressure cooker every day and it just never stops.” But, he said, “We got about everything done that we started out to do. I’m looking forward to going home.” ©2024 STLtoday.com . Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.Good Mama detergent has rewarded loyal consumers with prizes worth over N5m during its recently concluded ‘Good Mama’s Day Out’ campaign in Ibadan, Lagos, and Ilorin, blending fashion, entertainment, and community engagement to celebrate personal style and brand loyalty. In a statement, Good Mama stated that its campaign kicked off in Ibadan on November 23, 2024, and culminated in Ilorin, with Lagos hosting a fashion show featuring social media influencer Tomike Adeoye, popularly known as Olori Ebi. Attendees competed in categories like Best Dressed, Best Head Tie, and Best Catwalk for prizes that included cash, washing machines, and pressing irons. Brand Manager, Ramat Haruna, explained that the event aimed to “celebrate personal style and community spirit,” while also showcasing the practical benefits of the Good Mama detergent. Related News Drop in beans price excites Lagos traders, consumers Electricity consumers demand disconnection over rising tariffs Consumers exploited through counterfeit products – Minister Head of Marketing, Toyin Dania, emphasised the campaign’s focus on creating meaningful consumer connections, stating, “This was an opportunity to celebrate consumers’ confidence and style. It allowed us to go beyond selling a product by creating a community-driven experience.” Participants also engaged in interactive activities like wash demonstrations, games, and raffle draws. The events showcased Good Mama’s advanced detergent formula, which promises extra clean and fresh results, aligning with the campaign’s theme of presenting one’s best self. The brand added it launched an ongoing online campaign tagged ‘Vibe in Style with Good Mama’ to complement the physical events, including Lyrical Challenge, Laundry Moment, and Own Your Style, offering consumers additional chances to win cash prizes and other rewards.
An exhibition at London’s Wallace Collection is exploring the art of timekeeping by showcasing five breathtaking clocks designed by André-Charles Boulle , the famed 18th-century Parisian craftsman. Titled “ Keeping Time: Clocks by Boulle ,” the show celebrates the designer’s ornate style. Boulle was a renowned cabinetmaker for France’s Louis XIV , and he operated out of a workshop in the Louvre , where he built “tables, candle stands and whatever else French royalty and nobles desired,” per the Guardian ’s Jonathan Jones. During that time, he also created his elaborate clocks. “As confections of marquetry and gilt bronze, [Boulle’s clocks] epitomize the spectacle of the French Baroque,” Alexander Collins, a curator at the Wallace Collection, tells Artnet ’s Verity Babbs. Today, high-end timepieces are ubiquitous symbols of luxury and quality. However, Enlightenment clockmakers like Boulle were pioneers in merging technical precision with artistry. The Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens changed the game in 1656 with the invention of the pendulum. Boulle learned how to take the new technology and turn it into something beautiful. “These clocks were at the cutting edge of 18th-century technology, combining exquisite artistry and mechanical expertise into a unique and innovative blend,” says Xavier Bray, the Wallace Collection’s director, in a statement. “Through Boulle’s clocks and the display, we hope visitors will be able to transport themselves into the world of Louis XIV.” Boulle did not make his ornamental timepieces alone. He relied on a team of artists and craftspeople to create each clock, which were designed to signal that their owners came from wealth. Made from expensive materials, they also featured images that “incorporated motifs from antiquity and myth,” per Artnet . Figures like Venus and Cupid make appearances in scenes that champion love and life. Meanwhile, Father Time is often depicted holding his scythe, signifying that every moment is fleeting. “Boulle’s clocks don’t deny the existence of time,” writes the Guardian . “For all their luscious decor their faces are simple, clear, modern, telling time with a claim to real precision. But their symbols tell you not to be afraid. Love and live, they say, and forget the clock.” Alongside Boulle’s clocks, the Wallace Collection is also showcasing Enlightenment-era artworks that explore similar themes. Nicolas Poussin ’s A Dance to the Music of Time (1634-6) portrays four figures representing the four seasons moving in a circular formation, like a clock. They are dancing to the melody of Father Time, who is pictured playing a lyre. Also on display is François Anguier ’s The Borghese Dancers (1642), a bronze relief featuring five women representing the Horae , mythological goddesses symbolizing time and the changing seasons. “ Keeping Time: Clocks by Boulle ” is on view at the Wallace Collection in London through March 2, 2025. Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday. Julia Binswanger | READ MORE Julia Binswanger is a freelance arts and culture reporter based in Chicago. Her work has been featured in WBEZ, Chicago magazine, Rebellious magazine and PC magazine.Accord University Ushers in a New Era of Education with Digital Media InitiativeThe Chief Comvener of the Alternative Movement, a political pressure group, Otunba Segun Showunmi, has praised Bauchi State Governor, Sen Bala Abdulkadir Muhammad, for his outstanding leadership and commitment to good governance of the state. The Ogun State gubernatorial candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2023 general elections, Otunba Segun Showunmi, commended the governor while interacting with a selected group of journalists in Bauchi on Friday, shortly after having a town hall meeting with stakeholders under his Alternative Movement. The governor was commended for delivering real dividends of democracy to the people of Bauchi State even beyond his campaign promises but in line with democracy and democratic government. He said, “Let me tell you, I never expected what I have seen on the ground in terms of developmental projects since I came in. The man had done massive development for the good of the people of the state.” Segun Showunmi added that, “I have known the governor of this state for a long time because I’m a PDP man from the beginning. And he knows me; I’ve never visited the state with the eye of searching for any value like that.” According to him, “But since we started this alternative movement, I’ve started looking at all of them from the eye of value. And, you know what I see, I cannot even imagine that Governor Bala Mohammed has done such phenomenal work here.” “I went to his conference room, where he has his Executive Council meeting, yesterday. They just showed me just to look like a tourist reload. I was so excited. Ah, ah, in this Nigeria, no such in any Governor’s Office in this country. I went to some of the roads; I saw locations where, for more than 40 years since 1976, nobody has done anything.” He stressed that “Nigerians need to know what he is doing; these are the kind of people we need to lead the country. He is not a one-sided person; I have seen roads in areas described as Christian-dominated.” He added, “I appreciate him for what he is doing; he has taken it upon himself to replicate what the late Abubakar Tafawa Balewa did for the entire nation. He is really doing great.” The politician added that “I was at the Palace of the Emir of Bauchi to pay homage; I was just looking at him as he was speaking. I’m not a government person, but he spoke well about the governor.” “He said he had carried the traditional institution along. He said, Remember the last time you came to my palace; it was not like this; he has renovated all our palaces. He takes our opinion in governance, and he’s doing well here,” he added. According to him, That was not what I went for, but that is really why we came—to find leaders among us, who we will hear that are good. And then we begin to look at them, and I’m sure it will be the same all over. Nobody should look down on us.” READ MORE FROM: NIGERIAN TRIBUNE
By JILL COLVIN NEW YORK (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump wants to turn the lights out on daylight saving time. In a post on his social media site Friday, Trump said his party would try to end the practice when he returns to office. “The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn’t! Daylight Saving Time is inconvenient, and very costly to our Nation,” he wrote. Setting clocks forward one hour in the spring and back an hour in the fall is intended to maximize daylight during summer months, but has long been subject to scrutiny. Daylight saving time was first adopted as a wartime measure in 1942. Lawmakers have occasionally proposed getting rid of the time change altogether. The most prominent recent attempt, a now-stalled bipartisan bill named the Sunshine Protection Act , had proposed making daylight saving time permanent. The measure was sponsored by Florida Sen. Marco Rubio , whom Trump has tapped to helm the State Department. Related Articles National Politics | Ruling by a conservative Supreme Court could help blue states resist Trump policies National Politics | A nonprofit leader, a social worker: Here are the stories of the people on Biden’s clemency list National Politics | Nancy Pelosi hospitalized after she ‘sustained an injury’ on official trip to Luxembourg National Politics | Veteran Daniel Penny, acquitted in NYC subway chokehold, will join Trump’s suite at football game National Politics | About 3 in 10 are highly confident in Trump on Cabinet, spending or military oversight: AP-NORC poll “Changing the clock twice a year is outdated and unnecessary,” Republican Sen. Rick Scott of Florida said as the Senate voted in favor of the measure. Health experts have said that lawmakers have it backward and that standard time should be made permanent. Some health groups , including the American Medical Association and American Academy of Sleep Medicine, have said that it’s time to do away with time switches and that sticking with standard time aligns better with the sun — and human biology. Most countries do not observe daylight saving time. For those that do, the date that clocks are changed varies, creating a complicated tapestry of changing time differences. Arizona and Hawaii don’t change their clocks at all.
NEW YORK (AP) — President-elect wants to turn the lights out on daylight saving time. In a post on his social media site Friday, Trump said his party would try to end the practice when he returns to office. “The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn’t! Daylight Saving Time is inconvenient, and very costly to our Nation,” he wrote. Setting clocks forward one hour in the spring and back an hour in the fall is intended to maximize daylight during summer months, but has long been subject to scrutiny. Daylight saving time was first adopted as a wartime measure in 1942. Lawmakers have occasionally proposed getting rid of the time change altogether. The most prominent recent attempt, a now-stalled bipartisan bill named the , had proposed making daylight saving time permanent. The measure was , whom Trump has tapped to helm the State Department. “Changing the clock twice a year is outdated and unnecessary,” Republican Sen. Rick Scott of Florida said as the Senate voted in favor of the measure. Health experts have said that lawmakers have it backward and that standard time should be made permanent. , including the American Medical Association and American Academy of Sleep Medicine, have said that it’s time to do away with time switches and that sticking with standard time aligns better with the sun — and human biology. do not observe daylight saving time. For those that do, the date that clocks are changed varies, creating a complicated tapestry of changing time differences. Arizona and Hawaii don't change their clocks at all.
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