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Pacers vencen 119-86 a Wizards en juego de la Copa NBA entre dos de los peores equipos de la liga

INDIANÁPOLIS (AP) — Pascal Siakam consiguió 24 puntos y 11 rebotes, y los Pacers de Indiana vencieron 119-86 a los Wizards de Washington el viernes por la noche en un partido de la Copa NBA entre dos de los peores equipos de la liga.

Bennedict Mathurin sumó 20 unidades, y T.J. McConnell tuvo 14 y ocho asistencias para ayudar a Indiana a poner fin a una racha de tres derrotas consecutivas y mejorar su récord a 3-16. Washington cayó a 2-16, reemplazando a los Pacers en el último lugar.

Indiana, plagado de lesiones, ha caído en picada sin Tyrese Haliburton, el estelar jugador que se rompió el tendón de Aquiles derecho en la derrota de los Pacers en el séptimo y decisivo juego ante Oklahoma City en las Finales de la NBA.

Alex Sarr tuvo 24 tantos y ocho rebotes para Washington. Los Wizards rompieron una racha de 14 derrotas seguidas el martes por la noche con una victoria en casa 132-113 sobre Atlanta en la Copa NBA.

Siakam tuvo 17 puntos, seis rebotes y dos robos en la primera mitad para ayudar a Indiana a lograr una ventaja de 64-52. Los Pacers lideraban 94-83 después de tres cuartos.

Ambos equipos tenían un récord de 1-3 en la Copa NBA.

___

Deportes en español AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/28/pacers-vencen-119-86-a-wizards-en-juego-de-la-copa-nba-entre-dos-de-los-peores-equipos-de-la-liga/ 

Posted in News

How Tucker Carlson Put Arab Christians On America’s Map

How Tucker Carlson Put Arab Christians On America’s Map

Authored by Kamal Alam via Al Majalla

US President Donald Trump’s inner circle and his wider MAGA (‘Make America Great Again’) movement can at times appear to be tearing themselves apart over the thorny issue of US support for Israel, which some of his supporters think has committed genocide in Gaza since October 2023.

Trump’s unquestioning support for Israel is increasingly causing him political problems, yet those problems are not coming from the progressive or liberal left, as might be expected, but from the heart of the United States’ deep south, home to millions of Christian conservatives, many of whom listen to journalists like Tucker Carlson, an American conservative political commentator and podcaster who hosted his own talk show on Fox News from 2016 to 2023.

For Carlson and others, Israel’s military actions in the Middle East have been problematic for the effect they have had on the Arab Christians, who are seen as a persecuted minority. Slowly, attention to the plight of Christians in places like Syria, Gaza and the West Bank has grown in America. The effect has been to put Arab Christians back on the US political and media map. This has not sat comfortably with Israel’s supporters.

Via AFP

Historic Heartland of Christianity 

One reason it has hit a chord with Trump’s support base is that American Christians increasingly see the Levant as the heartland of Christianity. This is nothing new. The Levant has held a special place in American Christianity since the 19th-century Ottoman era, when American pilgrims followed the trail from Antioch to Jerusalem via Damascus. At the time, the lands of Palestine, Lebanon and Syria were generally known as Syria.

The languages of Aramaic and Syriac were studied under Syrian monks, and various colleges were set up. Even the famed American University of Beirut was first called the Syrian Protestant College in 1863. Syria was very much associated with the earliest Christians. Jerusalem was even part of southern Syria in textbooks. To some extent, the recent war in Syria has renewed attention on the persecution of Eastern Christianity as a whole, from Iraq to Palestine.

Just as they did 200 years ago, Americans have once again started taking note of the Levant as the heartland of Eastern Christianity, changing the perception and the narrative concerning the importance of Arab Christians, whose lives have been impacted by war there. As in neighboring Iraq and Lebanon, Christians in Syria bore a heavy burden after being targeted by extremist groups because of their faith.

In 2016, the Syrian civil war elicited the first meeting in 1,000 years between the Russian Orthodox Patriarch and a pope, Francis, spurred on by the killings of Christians in Syria and the Middle East. Earlier this year, Carlson put Arab Christians back in the headlines by raising the ire of pro-Israel lobbyists and Christian Zionists by questioning Washington’s support for Israel if it was killing and persecuting Palestinian Christians. 

Ep. 91 How does the government of Israel treat Christians? In the West, Christian leaders don’t seem interested in knowing the answer. They should be. Here’s the view of a pastor from Bethlehem. pic.twitter.com/Gvo116ojnf

— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) April 9, 2024

Asking Questions

Last year, Carlson interviewed Rev. Munther Isaac, a pastor from Bethlehem and a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Christian Church, and chronicled a persistent lack of awareness in the US about the treatment of Christians in the Holy Land. In a sense, he was continuing a theme. Back in 2018, at Fox News, he launched a debate in the US about the killing of Syrian Christians and questioned US support for groups targeting Christians in the Middle East.

Earlier this year, Carlson interviewed Ted Cruz, one of the most prominent Christian supporters of Israel, Ted Cruz, asking him where in the Bible it might suggest that America support Benjamin Netanyahu’s Israeli government at the expense of Arab Christians (Cruz could not cite a passage). Yet while the former Fox News man has led the rallying cry for Syrian and Arab Christians among American conservatives, he has not been alone.

Brad Hoff, a former US Marine, and scholar Zachary Wingerd co-authored Syria Crucified in 2021, which chronicled the plight of Syrian Christians and the impact on Eastern Christianity, while also detailing how American Christians had begun to take notice. Hoff, who lived in Syria, later commenced a speaking tour of schools and churches about Arab Christians and the importance of American Christian evangelicals questioning the stance of Cruz and others.

Starting over a decade ago, Sen. Cruz began very publicly clashing with Middle East Christians over his problematic policies…

Ted Cruz booed off stage by Christians🇺🇸

Cruz Responds: “if you will not stand with Israel then I will not stand with you” pic.twitter.com/gzpBL5LjPI

— The Resonance (@Partisan_12) November 25, 2025

Megyn Kelly, another popular conservative talk show host, has questioned how Christian it can be to ignore Arab Christians’ plight. And US Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene—a Trump-supporting Republican once labelled ‘Lady MAGA’—broke ranks from mainstream Christian support of Israel, calling Israeli actions in Gaza “genocide” (she was later called a “traitor” by Trump).

Shift in Focus

With Carlson using his prominence to give Arab Christians a platform, Arab Christians have slowly taken a lead in policy, both in the Trump administration and the corridors of Washington D.C. Trump’s lawyer and close confidante Alina Hubba is of Iraqi Chaldean heritage. Julia Nesheiwat, a former soldier and White House aide who is married to former US National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, is from a prominent Jordanian Christian family.

I remember the first time I met Randy Fine when he was a candidate before he barely won Florida’s deep red 6th district seat, as we were being told he might actually lose the seat because the strong Trump district couldn’t relate to him and didn’t like him.
He was telling me that… https://t.co/rdGDBNDszl

— Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene🇺🇸 (@RepMTG) July 29, 2025

Trump’s daughter Tiffany is married to Michael Boulos, son of Massad Boulos, a Lebanese Christian businessman and presidential advisor who helped drum up support for Trump among America’s 3.5 million Arab Americans. Marty Makary, of Egyptian Christian heritage, is the Commissioner of Food and Drugs and a key medical advisor to Trump. Even the actor playing Jesus (Jonathan Roumie) in biblical drama The Chosen is of Egyptian-Syrian heritage.

Conservative commentators have put Arab Christians back on the political map in the United States, changing the way Americans see Christians see the Middle East. The full effects of this are yet to be seen, but journalists like Tucker Carlson will likely carry the story.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 11/28/2025 – 22:05

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/how-tucker-carlson-put-arab-christians-americas-map 

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Chicago Bears D’Andre Swift and Kyle Monangai were ‘electric’ as they combined for 255 rushing yards

PHILADELPHIA — The Chicago Bears could hardly get anything going in the passing game at windy Lincoln Financial Field, so the Bears’ success or failure would come down to the run.

Philadelphia Eagles defenders knew it, and they couldn’t do anything about it.

The rushing game systematically dismantled the defending Super Bowl champions to the tune of 281 rushing yards in a 24-15 victory in front of a national TV audience on Friday.

Kyle Monangai (22 carries for 130 yards) and D’Andre Swift (18 for 125) combined for 255 rushing yards, becoming the first Bears teammates to top 100 yards on the ground since Walter Payton (107) and Matt Suhey (102) did it on Nov. 10, 1985, against the Detroit Lions at Soldier Field.

“That’s amazing,” Swift said. “That’s a great stat to have.

“I didn’t even know what the numbers looked like until they told us. … That’s hats off to the O-line. I can’t say that enough, the job that we are doing up front, our receivers block downfield, man, they make our job so much easier.

“We’re starting to click at the right time.”

Chicago Bears running back Kyle Monangai (25) tries to break through the tackle of Philadelphia Eagles safety Reed Blankenship (32) in the third quarter of a game at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on Nov. 28, 2025. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

Monagai said, “It’s an honor to even be in that company in the same sentence as a team as great as that, and a person, a running back, as great as that.”

The Bears tallied 84 yards in the first quarter, tied for the second-most by a team in a game this season. They had a 100-yard third quarter, when Monangai ran seven times for 71 yards (10.1 average).

Swift had four carries for 45 yards in the second, an 11.3 average.

Boosted by a power running game, the Bears dominated time of possession 39:18 to 20:42.

Seventeen of the Bears’ 28 first downs came via the run.

“I don’t think we win the game if we don’t run the ball like we were,” Bears coach Ben Johnson said. “Both the backs, over 100 yards, (were) just outstanding. You could feel decisiveness, you could feel them hitting it downhill. They turned on the gas, and they were lowering their shoulders too.”

He credited the offensive line for coming up “huge” in what became a mostly one-dimensional game plan.

“We knew what we had to do,” Jonah Jackson said. “We trust ourselves so whatever play’s called to open things up and get the run game going.”

Johnson added, “It’s a frustrating game if you were a pass catcher because those conditions were challenging for us to get some consistency going.”

Quarterback Caleb Williams, who completed 17 of 36 passes for 154 yards, said, “When it came down to it, we put the ball in the running backs’ hands and they were electric for us.”

The offensive line opened gaping holes for the backs. Swift put shifty moves on second-level defenders on inside runs or cutbacks off Darnell Wright’s blocks on outside runs.

Monangai simply bowled tacklers over at times after meeting little or no resistance at the line of scrimmage.

The rookie ripped one for 31 yards in the third quarter, emblematic of the day Eagles run defenders were having.

Johnson went with the hot hands, plural, and was unabashed about calling run after run — 47 run plays in all.

“That’s demoralizing to the opposing team,” Swift said.

“We’ve got elite backs,” Williams said. “We have an elite offensive line, and we have an elite wide receiver group that is willing to go put themselves out there and block for the betterment of the team.”

Swift and Monangai also accounted for two of the Bears’ three touchdowns, both on rushes.

Chicago Bears running back Kyle Monangai celebrates his touchdown against the Philadelphia Eagles in the fourth quarter Nov. 28, 2025, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

The Bears were first on the board with Swift’s 3-yard touchdown run, cutting upfield off Jackson’s seal inside as Cole Kmet led him through the gap.

“Throughout the flow of the game, how they kept playing, we knew we were going to have a couple creases, (and) you had to hit it,” Swift said of his cutbacks.

Asked if it felt a little sweeter because his performance came against his former team, where he played in 2023 before the Eagles moved on to Saquon Barkley, who had 56 yards on 13 carries.

“Uh,” Swift paused. “Yeah. For sure.”

Monangai’s touchdown drive began with five straight runs and finished with him carrying eight times in a 12-play drive, including his four-yard tote to the end zone to put the Bears up 17-9 with 12:53 left in the fourth quarter.

“O-line got them to move horizontally, ’backers were flowing, I kind of just hit the crease,” he said. “We’re probably, like, well within the 10-yard line, so not a lot of room to go, safeties were down low, (and I) tried to make one miss and run a guy over, and I was able to.”

Monangai did a little celebration.

“It was a little tribute to Philly, it was a Philly dance called toprocking,” he said. “I told my cousins I’d do it, so I did it.”

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/28/chicago-bears-dandre-swift-kyle-monangai/ 

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Carter Coviello feeds Neuqua Valley’s two Division I prospects, who are feasting. ‘I do enjoy it.’

Neuqua Valley junior guard Carter Coviello knows he can sink shots.

He understands, though, that his role is all about the art of the pass. In his second varsity season and first as the starting point guard, Coviello is the guy tasked with finding the Wildcats’ two big shooters and Division I prospects, junior guard Mason Martin and sophomore forward Cole Kelly.

“Mason and Cole are our primary scorers,” Coviello said. “Coach tells me all the time when I’m a facilitator, that’s when we most succeed. So that’s what I try to do for the team so we can win.”

Coviello mostly succeeded at that during the opening week of the season. The Wildcats won their first two games at the Hoops for Healing Tournament before losing to Oswego East 74-65 in Oswego on Friday.

“Point guard is the most important player on the team, so he’s got to do it all,” Neuqua Valley coach Todd Sutton said. “He’s got to run the show.”

Coviello earned the starting nod by showing marked improvement at both ends of the court.

“He doesn’t turn it over like he did last year,” Sutton said. “He’s playing better defense, and he’s much more confident.”

Coviello demonstrated that confidence against Oswego East. He scored two points on five shots but had six assists, finding Kelly and Martin with crisp passes all over the floor.

Three of those assists came in the opening four minutes as the Wildcats (2-1) took a 13-7 lead, and that was Coviello at his best. Kelly, one of the top players in the state with offers from DePaul and Illinois, finished with 30 points and nine rebounds, and Martin added 22 points three days after he scored 41 against West Aurora.

Neuqua Valley’s Cole Kelly (32) puts up a shot against Oswego East’s Joshua Ankumah-Saikoom during a game in the Hoops for Healing Tournament in Oswego on Friday, Nov. 28, 2025. (Sean King / Naperville Sun)

Those two will get most of the attention, but Coviello is happy feeding them.

“I do enjoy it,” Coviello said. “I love playing unselfish. I know I can score the ball, but I feel like we just succeed more when I’m getting our guys the shots that they make all the time. That’s what puts us in a better position to win.”

Senior forward Andrew Hoffmann, a Wisconsin-Eau Claire football commit, agrees the Wildcats need Coviello to be on point.

“He’s just a great passer, one of the best passers on the team,” Hoffmann said. “We need a guy that can obviously get our two best scorers the ball, and that’s what he does. That’s his role on this team, and he knows that.”

Coviello is doing it better than he ever has.

“He’s improved tremendous over the past offseason playing Breakaway,” Hoffmann said. “He’s covering usually the best player on the other team, so he can go both ways. He’s giving a lot of effort.”

Neuqua Valley’s Carter Coviello, left, guards Oswego East’s Mason Lockett during a game in the Hoops for Healing Tournament in Oswego on Friday, Nov. 28, 2025. (Sean King / Naperville Sun)

The Wildcats are requiring a lot from Coviello, whose role has expanded exponentially since last season.

“Last year, I started a couple of games, but I think this year it’s a lot different because of the expectations that are on me now,” he said. “I have to stay on the floor at all times.

“That’s kind of my goal, where I’m not getting ticky-tack fouls, no turnovers. I know I’m usually getting one of the better defensive assignments.”

Coviello’s defensive assignment against Oswego East (3-0) was his toughest yet. He was the primary defender on senior guard Mason Lockett, a DePaul commit.

Lockett scored a game-high 39 points, making 13 of 22 shots from the field and all 10 of his free throws. Coviello tried his best and got help from his teammates, as junior guard Arshil Khimani drew two charging fouls on Lockett. Hoffmann took another charge from junior forward Jacsen Tucker.

Neuqua Valley’s Carter Coviello (24) shoots from 3-point range during a game against Oswego East in the Hoops for Healing Tournament in Oswego on Friday, Nov. 28, 2025. (Sean King / Naperville Sun)

The Wildcats led 55-51 with 5:42 left in the fourth quarter, and Hoffman made a free throw that tied the game at 56-56 at the 4:06 mark. But Lockett scored 11 points after that, starting with a drive that resulted in the go-ahead three-point play.

“He’s different than what I’ve tried to guard before,” Coviello said. “He’s very unique in his style.

“He plays at kind of his own pace, so it was a little hard to keep up with his rhythm because sometimes he would go slow, sometimes he would speed it up. It was difficult.”

The Wildcats are unlikely to see many players as good as Lockett, so the game was encouraging.

“We’ve got a lot of potential,” Coviello said. “But we’re really just focused on this week, who we’re playing and how are we going to get past them.”

Matt Le Cren is a freelance reporter.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/28/basketball-neuqua-valley-carter-coviello-cole-kelly-mason-martin/ 

Posted in News

Northwestern agrees to $75 million fine to settle Trump dispute

Northwestern University will pay a $75 million fine to settle allegations of antisemitism from the Trump administration, restoring hundreds of millions of federal funding, officials announced Friday.

As part of the agreement, Northwestern also said it will continue following federal anti-discrimination laws, review its international admission policies and terminate an agreement reached with pro-Palestinian demonstrators last year.

The nearly $800 million in federal research funding was abruptly paused in April. The money is expected to be fully restored within 30 days, according to a statement from Northwestern University interim President Henry Bienen.

“This is not an agreement the University enters into lightly, but one that was made based on institutional values,” Bienen said. “As an imperative to the negotiation of this agreement, we had several hard red lines we refused to cross: We would not relinquish any control over whom we hire, whom we admit as students, what our faculty teach or how our faculty teach.”

Other universities have agreed to pay fines to restore federal funding, as President Donald Trump pressures institutions to align with his political priorities. He has particularly criticized elite universities as hubs of antisemitism and progressive culture.

Northwestern’s $75 million settlement, to be paid over three years, is the second-highest amount agreed to by a university. In August, Columbia University pledged to pay $200 million in a similar deal.

“Today’s settlement marks another victory in the Trump Administration’s fight to ensure that American educational institutions protect Jewish students and put merit first,” Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a statement. “Institutions that accept federal funds are obligated to follow civil rights law — we are grateful to Northwestern for negotiating this historic deal.”

The deal will allow Northwestern to draw on all research funding, including overdue payments, lift any stop-work orders on non-terminated grants and protect the university’s eligibility for future grants. It will also close all pending investigations from the Department of Education, Department of Justice and the Department of Health and Human Services related to anti-discrimination laws and race-based admissions.

As part of the agreement, Northwestern also said it would commit to Title IX — which prohibits sex-based discrimination —  by providing single-sex housing and locker room facilities for women upon request.

Additionally, it will review its international admissions and develop training “to socialize international students to the norms of a campus dedicated to inquiry and open debate,” Bienen said. To ensure compliance, Northwestern said it will establish a committee on its board of trustees dedicated to the agreement.

The paused funds had sent shockwaves through Northwestern’s research infrastructure beginning in April. As administrators scrambled to cover expenses, they resorted to a string of budget cuts — including hundreds of layoffs this summer.

The intense federal pressure led to the abrupt resignation of former President Michael Schill in September. Schill had faced an onslaught of conservative criticism since last year over his handling of Northwestern’s pro-Palestinian encampment and the resulting agreement he reached with demonstrators.

Northwestern University President Michael Schill resigns amid funding freeze

In its deal with the Trump administration, Northwestern said it would terminate that agreement.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/28/northwestern-agrees-to-75-million-fine-to-settle-trump-dispute/ 

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Katy Perry Gets $2 Million After Suing Dying 85-Year-Old Veteran Over Real Estate Dispute

Katy Perry Gets $2 Million After Suing Dying 85-Year-Old Veteran Over Real Estate Dispute

Pop superstar Katy Perry has won $2 million in a protracted property battle by filing a lawsuit against 85-year-old Army veteran Carl Westcott, who is now bedridden with Huntington’s disease and receiving hospice care.

Perry’s legal action, detailed in court filings reviewed by the New York Post, sought more than $8 million in damages from Westcott, including $3.25 million for lost rental income during the litigation, $2.2 million for property renovations and $3 million in attorney fees. The dispute centers on an eight-bedroom estate in the celebrity enclave of Montecito, where Perry and her then-boyfriend, actor Orlando Bloom, acquired the property in July 2020 for $15 million.

Perry and Bloom penned a personal note to Westcott imploring him to accept their bid.

We’re expecting a baby next month and think this home is the perfect place to welcome her,” the couple wrote, according to court documents. Days after signing, Westcott, then 81 and recovering from back surgery on pain medication, attempted to rescind the deal, claiming diminished mental capacity. Westcott’s condition has deteriorated sharply since, with the neurodegenerative Huntington’s disease eroding his cognitive functions and confining him to bed.

His son, Court Westcott, blamed the stress of the litigation for accelerating his father’s decline, saying the case has “devastated his health and spirit.” However, a Santa Barbara County Superior Court judge rejected that argument in 2023, ruling that Westcott failed to substantiate his incapacity.

Perry’s legal team further alleged that Westcott had entertained a competing offer from Maria Shriver, the former wife of Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Ruling in her favor, LA County Superior Court Judge Joseph Lipner awarded Perry $2.8 million for lost rental value and $260,000 for repair of water damage and fallen trees – but deducted $1 million from the total award because he said Perry could have invested her money elsewhere, while Westcott lost interest on the same amount. 

The optics of a millionaire pop star demanding hefty damages from a very ill man are terrible,” PR strategist Abesi Manyando told The Telegraph. “This isn’t just a lawsuit, it’s now a David and Goliath narrative – a global superstar with wealth, legal resources and leverage versus an elderly, declining veteran who already lost his home. And that dynamic carries emotional weight.”

It is not the first time Perry has been embroiled in a high-profile legal fight involving real estate. In 2018, Sister Catherine Rose Holzman, an 89-year-old nun, collapsed and died in a Los Angeles courtroom during a hearing tied to Perry’s attempted purchase of a former convent from the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. The nuns had opposed the sale to the singer, arguing the property belonged to their order; Holzman’s last public words before her fatal collapse were directed at Perry were, “To Katy Perry, please stop.”

Perry, a prominent Democrat supporter who performed at President Joe Biden’s 2021 inauguration and campaigned for Vice President and failed presidential candidate Kamala Harris in 2024, has recently been linked romantically to former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 11/28/2025 – 21:30

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/katy-perry-gets-2-million-after-suing-dying-85-year-old-veteran-over-real-estate-dispute 

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Aerolíneas adoptan corrección de software para aviones Airbus A320

Por AUDREY McAVOY

Un modelo de avión ampliamente utilizado por aerolíneas comerciales en todo el mundo necesita una corrección de software para atender un problema que contribuyó a que una aeronave de JetBlue sufriera una pérdida repentina de altitud el mes pasado, dijeron el fabricante y los reguladores de seguridad aérea europeos el viernes.

La medida podría resultar en algunos retrasos en los vuelos.

Airbus dijo que un análisis del incidente de JetBlue reveló que la intensa radiación solar podría corromper datos primordiales para el funcionamiento de los controles de vuelo en la familia de aviones A320.

La Agencia de la Unión Europea para la Seguridad Aérea emitió una orden que requiere que los operadores del A320 aborden el problema. La agencia dijo que esto podría causar “alteraciones a corto plazo” en los horarios de vuelo.

American Airlines tiene alrededor de 480 aviones de la familia A320, de los cuales 209 están afectados. La corrección debería tomar alrededor de dos horas para muchos aviones, y las actualizaciones deberían completarse para la gran mayoría el viernes, dijo la aerolínea. Unos pocos se terminarán el sábado.

American Airlines espera algunos retrasos, pero dijo que se enfoca en limitar las cancelaciones mientras los clientes regresan a casa de los viajes por el feriado del Día de Acción de Gracias. Afirmó que la seguridad sería su prioridad principal.

Delta indicó que esperaba que el problema afectara a menos de 50 de sus aviones A321neo. United señaló que seis aviones en su flota están afectados y espera interrupciones menores en algunos vuelos. Hawaiian Airlines afirmó que no sería afectada.

Mike Stengel, socio de la firma de consultoría de gestión de la industria aeroespacial AeroDynamic Advisory, dijo que la corrección podría atenderse entre vuelos o en revisiones nocturnas de los aviones.

“Definitivamente no es ideal que esto esté sucediendo en un avión muy ubicuo en un muy ocupado fin de semana festivo (en Estados Unidos)”, dijo Stengel. “Aunque, nuevamente, el lado positivo es que sólo debería tomar unas pocas horas actualizar el software”.

Al menos 15 pasajeros de JetBlue resultaron heridos y fueron llevados al hospital después del incidente del 30 de octubre a bordo del vuelo de Cancún, México, a Newark, Nueva Jersey. El avión fue desviado a Tampa, Florida.

Airbus está registrada en los Países Bajos, pero tiene su sede principal en Francia.

Es uno de los mayores fabricantes de aviones del mundo junto a Boeing.

El A320 es el principal competidor del 737 de Boeing, de acuerdo con Stengel. Airbus actualizó su motor a mediados de la década de 2010 y los aviones en esta categoría se llaman A320neo, dijo.

El A320 es la familia de aviones de un solo pasillo más vendida del mundo, dice el sitio web de Airbus. ___

Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/28/aerolneas-adoptan-correccin-de-software-para-aviones-airbus-a320/ 

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Patullo, coordinador ofensivo de Eagles, seguirá en su puesto pese a problemas de Hurts y Barkley

Por DAN GELSTON

FILADELFIA (AP) — Los cánticos comenzaron temprano por parte de los frustrados fanáticos de los Eagles, y resonaron con más fuerza a medida que las jugadas ofensivas ineficaces se acumulaban en otra derrota más.

“¡Despidan a Kevin! ¡Despidan a Kevin!”.

Los seguidores de los Eagles hicieron oír su opinión acerca del coordinador ofensivo Kevin Patullo el viernes, durante la derrota por 24-15 ante los Bears de Chicago.

El entrenador Nick Sirianni tomó otra decisión que no gustará a los fanáticos: Patullo se queda.

“No vamos a cambiar al encargado de las jugadas”, afirmó Sirianni.

Ya esta semana, el estratega le dio a Patullo un voto de confianza, apenas un día después de que los Eagles convirtieron una ventaja de 21-0 en una derrota por 24-21 en Dallas.

Lo hizo de nuevo el viernes, incluso cuando continúan surgiendo preguntas sobre las capacidades de Patullo.

“Nunca se trata de una sola persona”, expresó Sirianni. “Tengo confianza en todo el grupo. Sé que siempre se volverá a Kevin. Si pensara que era una sola cosa, entonces haría esos cambios. Obviamente, son muchas cosas diferentes. No creo que sea Kevin”.

Sirianni podría haber tomado fácilmente la decisión del despido —tanto para cambiar la percepción de que los campeones del Super Bowl están hundiéndose como para sacudir una ofensiva que luce estancada pese a estar llena de talento.

En cambio, se mantendrá leal a Patullo, al menos de cara al partido del 8 de diciembre contra los Chargers de Los Angeles-

Los números contra los Bears cuentan una parte de la historia: los Eagles realizaron solo 17 jugadas y consiguieron dos primeros y 10 (con 83 yardas totales y 26 por tierra) en la primera mitad. Filadelfia realizó apenas 51 jugadas para 317 yardas frente a las 85 jugadas para 425 yardas de Chicago.

Las decisiones que llevaron a los deslucidos números fueron simplemente desconcertantes.

Los Eagles tenían el balón en su propia yarda 35 con 2:47 minutos restantes en la primera mitad y realizaron una sola jugada —un pase de una yarda a A.J. Brown— antes de dejar que el reloj corriera hasta la pausa de los dos minutos. Eso desató una de las olas de abucheos más fuertes de los fanáticos, los mismos que rugieron hace dos meses y medio, cuando el estandarte del campeonato del Super Bowl fue develado en la noche inaugural de la campaña.

La memoria es corta en los deportes.

¿Las yardas ganadas por Filadelfia en la mayoría de los intentos de carrera? Aún más cortas.

Saquon Barkley fue superado por el ex corredor de los Eagles D’Andre Swift y nuevamente no tuvo a dónde ir.

Un ejemplo evidente ocurrió en los albores del segundo cuarto. Jalen Hurts conectó con DeVonta Smith para una ganancia de 30 yardas —lanzó solo 27 yardas más en la mitad— que llevó el balón a la yarda 38 de los Bears.

Barkley fue detenido para una pérdida de tres yardas en segunda oportunidad y Hurts lanzó detrás de un Smith completamente desmarcado en tercera. Los Eagles se conformaron con un gol de campo.

Los Eagles continúan respaldando públicamente a Patullo, aunque ningún jugador sería tan imprudente como para pedir que despidan a un coordinador.

“No creo que algo grande necesite cambiar”, dijo Barkley. “El cielo se está cayendo fuera del vestuario, lo entendemos. Pero no tengo más que la máxima confianza en los hombres de este vestuario, incluidos jugadores y entrenadores. Esto va a requerir de todos el unirnos, bloquear el ruido. No podemos señalar con el dedo a nadie”.

En la señal más clara hasta ahora de que estos Eagles no están jugando como para llegar de nuevo al Super Bowl, ni siquiera su conocida jugada de tush push funcionó. Hurts perdió el balón en la jugada que una vez fue imparable, lo que llevó a un touchdown de los Bears.

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Deportes AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/28/patullo-coordinador-ofensivo-de-eagles-seguir-en-su-puesto-pese-a-problemas-de-hurts-y-barkley/ 

Posted in News

“I Have A Bridge To Sell You” – Pirro Unleashes On Left’s “Nonsense” Vetting

“I Have A Bridge To Sell You” – Pirro Unleashes On Left’s “Nonsense” Vetting

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Former U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro exploded on Fox News Wednesday, eviscerating the left for mass-importing unvetted Third Worlders under Biden—labeling claims that vetting was robust as “nonsense.”

Pirro blasted, “If you think there was a vetting, I have a BRIDGE to sell you!” 

Referring to the untold numbers of Afghans that entered the U.S., she further raged “90K people…what do we do? Call the FBI in Afghanistan and say, ‘Gee, do you have anything on this guy?’”

🚨 HOLY CRAP! US Attorney Jeanine Pirro UNLEASHES on the Left for mass-importing 3rd worlders and Afghans

“NONSENSE…If you think there was a vetting, I have a BRIDGE to sell you!”

“90K people…what do we do? Call the FBI in Afghanistan and say, ‘Gee, do you have anything on… pic.twitter.com/6T60nI1aBA

— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) November 28, 2025

“It’s like the 10-20 million illegals let in, we don’t know who they are until we suffer the consequences,” Pirro urged, adding “Stop namby-pambying around!”

Pirro’s fury spotlights Biden’s “no vetting” fiasco, as even CNN Security Analyst John Miller admitted, it was completely “chaotic” with “spotty” Afghan records. Up to 90K+ were imported after the disastrous 2021 U.S. withdrawal, many via hasty asylum under Biden’s Operation Allies Welcome.

The Biden regime proceeded to fill airports with throngs of illegals, seemingly having no  long term plan for the massive influx.

As we earlier highlighted, Trump dropped a monumental Thanksgiving bombshell, announcing “I will permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover.”

Trump also vowed “reverse migration” to cure the chaos.

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Tyler Durden
Fri, 11/28/2025 – 20:55

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/i-have-bridge-sell-you-pirro-unleashes-lefts-nonsense-vetting 

Posted in News

Aaron Rodgers está listo para regresar como quarterback titular de Steelers contra Bills

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Aaron Rodgers, con todo y su fracturada muñeca izquierda, comenzará el partido del domingo, cuando Pittsburgh reciba a Buffalo.

Rodgers, quien se perdió la derrota de la semana pasada ante Chicago después de lesionarse la muñeca contra Cincinnati el 16 de noviembre, participó en la práctica completa el viernes, por segundo día consecutivo.

El entrenador en jefe de los Steelers, Mike Tomlin, dijo que Rodgers no tendrá ninguna designación relacionada con lesiones. Ello allana el camino para que el quarterback de 41 años regrese al campo.

“Todo está listo”, afirmó Tomlin.

Rodgers expresó el miércoles que tenía la esperanza de jugar, pero dijo que en última instancia dependería de Tomlin y del personal médico. Los Steelers lo dejaron fuera del encuentro contra los Bears después de que estuvo limitado en la práctica la semana pasada.

Pittsburgh (6-5) ha perdido cuatro de seis duelos, pero puede romper el empate en el primer lugar con Baltimore si logra vencer a los Bills (7-4).

Los Steelers también recuperarán al apoyador externo Alex Highsmith después de que se perdió dos partidos por una lesión en el pectoral. Se espera que el receptor abierto D.K. Metcalf, quien se torció un tobillo en Chicago, también juegue.

___

Deportes en español AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/28/aaron-rodgers-est-listo-para-regresar-como-quarterback-titular-de-steelers-contra-bills/