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Balochistan, Sindh unite against amendments

Irrigation ministers of both provinces say move against provincial autonomy




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Turkmenistan to access Gwadar Port under CPEC

MOU between Gwadar, Turkmenbashi ports to be inked soon




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Actor Shagufta Ejaz celebrates wedding anniversary in hospital amid husband's treatment

Ejaz shared birthday celebrations in her YouTube vlog; voiced concerns about inadequate private hospital facilities



  • Life & Style

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It’s VMA Season! Here are some of the most iconic & chaotic moments of the MTV Video Music Awards

Relive the wildest moments that prove the VMAs are never short on drama or surprises!




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Payment details of Tom Cruise’s Olympics stunt revealed

Casey Wasserman, LA28 President and Chair, discloses amount Cruise charged for his 15-minute performance



  • Life & Style

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Commitment to conservation

Nature Conservation Act 2024 targets Margallah Hills' protection with revenue generation and strict penalties.




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Scientists reveal rare fragment of a large motorcycle size meteorite

The fragment - black and shiny on the outside with a light grey, concrete-like interior - weighs less than 90 grams




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PS5 Disc Drive is selling out after PS5 Pro announcement

The PS5 Disc Drive is selling out online following the PS5 Pro reveal, leaving gamers scrambling to secure one.










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WordPress. How to make pages show posts from certain categories and assign them to top menu

This tutorial shows how to make pages show posts from certain categories and assign them to top menu in Wordpress.

The post WordPress. How to make pages show posts from certain categories and assign them to top menu appeared first on Template Monster Help.





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HTML. How to create a menu

This tutorial shows how to create a menu in HTML. Usually to create a menu we use an onordered list. You can for sure use the div, span, p or other tags but unordered list gives you more flexibility in …

The post HTML. How to create a menu appeared first on Template Monster Help.




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HTML/CSS. How to create vertical and horizontal menu

This tutorial will show you how to create a vertical and horizontal menus in HTML using CSS styles. Before you proceed please make sure you are familiar with unordered list HTML tags. Also please check the tutorial on how to

The post HTML/CSS. How to create vertical and horizontal menu appeared first on Template Monster Help.




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Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt

This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is Arianity with a comment about Bezos’s endorsement gambit backfiring: In second place, it’s an anonymous reply to someone defending Trump’s lawsuit against CBS: Alright. Let’s see every trump interview over his life released in full and uncensored. For editor’s choice on the insightful side, […]




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'I recently lost a loved one. How to cope with this immense loss?'

Hi Haya,

I recently lost a loved one very unexpectedly and it’s been extremely challenging for me to deal with their sudden passing. I’m set to leave Karachi and settle abroad soon, but this sense of loss has been really difficult for me to cope with.

My...




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Does daytime sleepiness increase dementia risk in older adults?

A representational image depicting a lady relaxing on a couch. — Freepik

A new study has disclosed that older adults, who are excessively sleepy during the day or have prominent sleep issues, are at an increased risk for a pre-dementia condition known as motoric cognitive risk...




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Benny Blanco spills on special morning ritual with Selena Gomez: 'Our Moment'

Benny Blanco spills on special moment of day with Selena Gomez

Benny Blanco candidly shared that the early morning hours are his "favorite time" with Selena Gomez

In a recent chat with People, the music producer uncovered that he is a "real morning person" and this is his favorite...




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Britney Spears reunites with son Jayden after prolonged estrangement

Britney Spears reunites with son Jayden after prolonged estrangement

Britney Spears reconnected with her youngest son, Jayden, after a prolonged estrangement.

Spears had not seen her sons, Sean Preston and Jayden, since they moved to Hawaii last August with their father Kevin...




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Ask the Experts: Standard vs. Specification and Guidance Documents

In this recent Ask the Experts question, learn the difference between a standard and a specification. For more answers, visit the Ask the Experts page.




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13 Reasons Why season three will be yet another disappointment

The trailer has left people feeling confused, somewhat surprised and also overjoyed. For me, it's disappointment.




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India, China pledge to intensify efforts for full disengagement on Himalayan border

Separately, Indian FM said India's economic relationship with China has been very "unfair" and "imbalanced"




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Pirate IPTV-Selling ‘Law Enforcement Officer’ Faces Wiretapping Claim

A lawsuit filed in the U.S. claims that a pirate IPTV seller adopted a novel marketing strategy to support a business with 450,000 subscribers . According to the plaintiffs, the owner of the service "held himself out as a Chicago-area law enforcement officer" to "mitigate potential concerns" over the unlawfulness of his business. A theoretical damages claim of more than a billion dollars, plus an allegation of wiretapping, makes this case a little more spicy than most.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.




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Ryan Reynolds shares rare deleted moment from set of 'Deadpool & Wolverine'

Ryan Reynolds marked the Disney+ release of Deadpool & Wolverine on November 12 by sharing a humorous deleted scene from the film.

Four months after the movie’s theatrical debut, Reynolds celebrated its streaming launch by posting the unseen clip on his Instagram stories and X...




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Kate Middleton, Prince William issue statement as they make special announcement

Kate Middleton, Prince William issue statement as they make special announcement

Kate Middleton and Prince William issued a statement to make an exciting announcement after confirming that the Princess of Wales will host her fourth Together at Christmas Carol Service.

The Prince...




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Buckingham Palace releases new statement amid Queen Camilla health scare

Buckingham Palace releases new statement amid Queen Camilla health scare

Buckingham Palace made a special announcement, revealing that Queen Camilla has resumed her public duties after a brief health-related hiatus.

The Queen Consort stepped back from Royal duties after she was...




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Coldplay updates music lovers with another exciting announcement

Coldplay updates music lovers with another exciting announcement

Coldplay recently announced an exciting show in Ahmedabad, India.

The boy-band, who is set to in the Indian cities next year in January, declared that the show will take place at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad...




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Bilawal, Mengal agree on joint strategy for budget

Both leaders express concern over spread of coronavirus in country




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‘Jihad for democracy’: Imran Khan urges PTI to prepare for nationwide street movement

Nawaz Sharif has been kept in check with a scare, otherwise he would have fled long ago, says PTI founder




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Analog Equivalent Rights (9/21): When the government knows what news you read, in what order, and for how long

Privacy: Our analog parents had the ability to read news anonymously, however they wanted, wherever they wanted, and whenever they wanted. For our digital children, a government agent might as well be looking over their shoulder: the government knows what news sources they read, what articles, for how long, and in what order.

For our analog parents, reading the news was an affair the government had no part of, or indeed had any business being part of. Our analog parents bought a morning newspaper with a few coins on the street corner, brought it somewhere quiet where they had a few minutes to spare, and started reading without anybody interfering.

When our digital children read the news, the government doesn’t just know what news source they choose to read, but also what specific articles they read from that news source, in what order, and for how long. So do several commercial actors. There are at least three grave issues with this.

The first is that since the government has this data, it will attempt to use this data. More specifically, it will attempt to use the data against the individual concerned, possibly in some sort of pre-crime scheme. We know this that since all data collected by a government will eventually be used against the people concerned, with mathematical certainty.

In an attention economy, data about what we pay attention to, how much, and for how long, are absolutely crucial predictive behaviors. And in the hands of a government which makes the crucial mistake of using it to predict pre-crime, the results can be disastrous for the individual and plain wrong for the government.

Of course, the instant the government uses this data in any way imaginable, positive or negative, it will become Heisenberg Metrics — the act of using the data will shape the data itself. For example, if somebody in government decides that reading about frugality probably is an indicator of poverty, and so makes people more eligible for government handouts, then such a policy will immediately shape people’s behavior to read more about frugality. Heisenberg Metrics is when a metric can’t be measured without making it invalid in the process.

(The phenomenon is named after the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, which is traditionally confused with the Observer Effect, which states you can’t measure some things without changing them in the process. The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is actually something else entirely; it states that you can’t measure precise momentum and position of a subatomic particle at the same time, and does not apply at all to Heisenberg Metrics.)

The second issue is that not only government, but also other commercial actors, will seek to act on these metrics, Heisenberg Metrics as they may be. Maybe somebody thinks that reading fanzines about motorcycle acrobatics should have an effect on your health and traffic insurance premiums?

The third issue is subtle and devious, but far more grave: the government doesn’t just know what articles you read and in what order, but as a corollary to that, knows what the last article you read was, and what you did right after reading it. In other words, it knows very precisely what piece of information leads you to stop reading and instead take a specific action. This is far more dangerous information than being aware of your general information feed patterns and preferences.

Being able to predict somebody’s actions with a high degree of certainty is a far more dangerous ability than being vaguely aware of somebody’s entertainment preferences.

Our analog parents had the privacy right of choosing their information source anonymously with nobody permitted (or able) to say what articles they read, in what order, or for what reason. It’s not unreasonable that our digital children should have the same privacy right, the analog equivalent privacy right.

Privacy remains your own responsibility.




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Analog Equivalent Rights (21/21): Conclusion, privacy has been all but eliminated from the digital environment

Privacy: In a series of posts on this blog, we have shown how practically everything our parents took for granted with regards to privacy has been completely eliminated for our children, just because they use digital tools instead of analog, and the people interpreting the laws are saying that privacy only applies to the old, analog environment of our parents.

Once you agree with the observation that privacy seems to simply not apply for our children, merely for living in a digitally-powered environment instead of our parents’ analog-powered one, surprise turns to shock turns to anger, and it’s easy to want to assign blame to someone for essentially erasing five generations’ fight for civil liberties while people were looking the other way.

So whose fault is it, then?

It’s more than one actor at work here, but part of the blame must be assigned to the illusion that that nothing has changed, just because our digital children can use old-fashioned and obsolete technology to obtain the rights they should always have by law and constitution, regardless of which method they use to talk to friends and exercise their privacy rights.

We’ve all heard these excuses.

“You still have privacy of correspondence, just use the old analog letter”. As if the Internet generation would. You might as well tell our analog parents that they would need to send a wired telegram to enjoy some basic rights.

“You can still use a library freely.” Well, only an analog one, not a digital one like The Pirate Bay, which differs from an analog library only in efficiency, and not in anything else.

“You can still discuss anything you like.” Yes, but only in the analog streets and squares, not in the digital streets and squares.

“You can still date someone without the government knowing your dating preferences.” Only if I prefer to date like our parents did, in the unsafe analog world, as opposed to the safe digital environment where predators vanish at the click of a “block” button, an option our analog parents didn’t have in shady bars.

The laws aren’t different for the analog and the digital. The law doesn’t make a difference between analog and digital. But no law is above the people who interpret it in the courts, and the way people interpret those laws means the privacy rights always apply to the analog world, but never to the digital world.

It’s not rocket science to demand the same laws to apply offline and online. This includes copyright law, as well as the fact that privacy of correspondence takes precedence over copyright law (in other words, you’re not allowed to open and examine private correspondence for infringements in the analog world, not without prior and individual warrants — our law books are full of these checks and balances; they should apply in the digital too, but don’t today).

Going back to blame, that’s one actor right there: the copyright industry. They have successfully argued that their monopoly laws should apply online just as it does offline, and in doing so, has completely ignored all the checks and balances that apply to the copyright monopoly laws in the analog world. And since copying movies and music has now moved into the same communications channels as we use for private correspondence, the copyright monopoly as such has become fundamentally incompatible with private correspondence at the conceptual level.

The copyright industry has been aware of this conflict and has been continuously pushing for eroded and eliminated privacy to prop up their crumbling and obsolete monopolies, such as pushing for the hated (and now court-axed) Data Retention Directive in Europe. They would use this federal law (or European equivalent thereof) to literally get more powers than the Police themselves in pursuing individual people who were simply sharing music and movies, sharing in the way everybody does.

There are two other major factors at work. The second factor is marketing. The reason we’re tracked at the sub-footstep level in airports and other busy commercial centers is simply to sell us more crap we don’t need. This comes at the expense of privacy that our analog parents took for granted. Don’t even get started on Facebook and Google.

Last but not least are the surveillance hawks — the politicians who want to look “Tough on Crime”, or “Tough on Terrorism”, or whatever the word of choice is this week. These were the ones who pushed the Data Retention Directive into law. The copyright industry were the ones who basically wrote it for them.

These three factors have working together, and they’ve been very busy.

It’s going to be a long uphill battle to win back the liberties that were slowly won by our ancestors over about six generations, and which have been all but abolished in a decade.

It’s not rocket science that our children should have at least the same set of civil liberties in their digital environment, as our parents had in their analog environment. And yet, this is not happening.

Our children are right to demand Analog Equivalent Privacy Rights — the civil liberties our parents not just enjoyed, but took for granted.

I fear the failure to pass on the civil liberties from our parents to our children is going to be seen as the greatest failure of this particular current generation, regardless of all the good we also accomplish. Surveillance societies can be erected in just ten years, but can take centuries to roll back.

Privacy remains your own responsibility today. We all need to take it back merely by exercising our privacy rights, with whatever tools are at our disposal.

Image from the movie “Nineteen-Eighty Four”; used under fair use for political commentary.




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Pirate Party enters parliament in Luxembourg, gets 17% in Prague

Pirate Parties: This past weekend, elections were held in Luxembourg and the Czech Republic. The Pirate Party of Luxembourg tripled their support and entered the Luxembourg Parliament with two MPs, and in the Czech Republic, the Pirate Party increased their support further – now receiving a full 17% in Prague.

With 6.45% of the votes of the final tally, the Luxembourg Pirate Party is entering its national Parliament, being the fifth Pirate Party to enter a national or supranational legislature (after Sweden, Germany, Iceland, and the Czech Republic). This may not seem like much, but it is a very big deal, for reasons I’ll elaborate on later. A big congratulations to Sven Clement and Marc Goergen, new Members of Parliament for Luxembourg!

Further, the Czech Republic has had municipal elections, and the Czech Pirate Party showed a full 17.1% support in Prague, the Czech capital, making the Pirates the second biggest party with a very narrow gap to the first place (at 17.9%). This may or may not translate to votes for the Czech national legislature, but is nevertheless the highest score recorded so far for a Pirate Party election day. I understand the Czech Pirates have as many as 275 (two hundred and seventy-five!) newly-elected members of city councils, up from 21 (twenty-one). Well done, well done indeed!

For people in a winner-takes-all system, like the UK or United States, this may sound like a mediocre result. In those countries, there are usually only two parties, and the loser with 49% of the vote gets nothing. However, most of Europe have so-called proportional systems, where 5% of the nationwide votes gives you 5% of the national legislation seats. In these systems, the parties elected to Parliament negotiate between themselves to find a ruling majority coalition of 51%+ of the seats, trying to negotiate common positions between parties that are reasonably close to each other in policy. This usually requires a few weeks of intense negotiations between the elections and the presentation of a successfully negotiated majority coalition.

Further, it could reasonable be asked what kind of difference the Czech Republic or Luxembourg could possibly make on their own in the global information repression. The answer is, a whole lot. The key here is realizing that one country is sufficient to break the global repression of information; the repression is completely dependent on every single country keeping watertight doors. If one single country decides to allow the free movement of culture and knowledge, then all such distribution will immediately be based there. The copyright industry lobby in other countries will protest, quite loudly, but there’s not really anything they can do about it.

And since the problem from a policymaking standpoint has been that the industry-age era politicians consider the Internet-related policy areas completely peripheral in the first place, conceding those policy areas will be seen as very cheap price to bind those votes to a majority coalition.

“One country is sufficient to break the global repression of information.”

A relevant comparison is how Canada has now legalized cannabis at the country level, following many state-level initiatives here and there in the world, and at once, the floodgates are open. Not just for the illegal distribution networks, but more importantly, for legalization everywhere else. As a German politician dryly said today, “what’s possible in Canada is also possible in Germany”, proposing that cannabis should be legalized outright in Germany. I would imagine the tone is similar in most places — or, importantly, many enough places.

The Luxembourg and Prague coalition talks have just started, with an outcome typically expected in a few weeks.




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Payment Methods



 

Within kunstform BMX Shop you can pay with the following payment methods:
- PayPal
- Credit Card
- Direct Debit
- Bank Transfer
- Cash on Delivery
- Cash / EC-Card

 

PayPal

Pay your order easy, fast and save with PayPal. To use this payment methode you need to have a PayPal account which you can create at www.paypal.com. PayPal is on of the most secure and fastes possibilties to do payments for online shopping! PayPal Installment Payment

To be able to use PayPal Installment Payment, you need a German PayPal account in which a bank account is stored and confirmed as a source of payment. In our online shop, select PayPal as the payment method, log into your PayPal account and PayPal Installment Payment should appear as an additional payment option on PayPal. PayPal Installment Payment is available from a shopping cart of 199 EUR up to max. 5,000 EUR available. The term is 12 months, the effective annual interest rate is 9.99 percent unless there are any marketing offers on the part of PayPal.

Credit Card


The option "Credit Card" will be possibil over our external payment service PayPal (Europe) S.à rl. You don't need a PayPal account.

How it works:

After you have selected the payment method "Credit Card", you will be automatically redirected to the payment authorization. Then just enter your credit card information and run the authorization. After successful authorization you will be automatically redirected to the order confirmation page and can submitted the order.

Direct Debit


Let your payment simply debited from your bank account. The payment will be possibil over our external payment service PayPal (Europe) S.à rl. To choose this option, you must be at least 18 years old and requires a successful credit check. You don't need a PayPal account.

How it works:

After you have selected the payment method "Direct Debit", you will be automatically redirected to the payment authorization. Then just enter your bank details and run the authorization. After successful authorization you will be automatically redirected to the order confirmation page and can submitted the order.

This payment methode is only available if your shipping address is in Germany.

Bank Transfer


Payment via bank transfer (for example with your online banking ). The shipping will hapen after we received the money! All necessary account info of kunstform BMX Shop you will get in the order confirmation email after you did your order. Banktransfers inside countries of the European Union (EU) do not cost any extra fees.

Cash on Delivery (only with shipping option DHL Package)


Payment (cash for the postman) after you received the package. We will calculate a fee of 3 Euro for this payment. 2 Euro more will be added from DHL as transmission fee. The shipping will be directly after we received your order!

This payment methode is only available if your shipping address is in Germany.

Cash / EC-Card


Pick up your order at kunstform BMX Shop in Stuttgart or Berlin within regular business hours and pay in the shop cash or with your EC-Card.

Once all products are in stock, we will inform you about the pick-up date.

This payment methode is only available if Self Pickup Stuttgart or Self Pickup Berlin is choicen as shipping method

 




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Fiend 2019 BMX Sale / Vans Dandois / WTP Rahmen Sale / mankind



Currently we have the Fiend 2019 BMX bikes and the previous models of wethepeople BMX frames on sale! We just received the Matthias Dandois signaturecolorway from the Vans Old Skool Pro BMX shoe and the Mankind Winter 2019 Softgoods collection.

Related links:




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Markus Schwital - Documentary by Leo Doerfler



Our bro Markus Schwital has teamed up with the filmmaker Leo Doerfler and released a small but epic documentary about Markus and his passion for BMX Flatland riding. You can expect great shots from Stuttgart, interesting background information and of course the finest BMX Flatland action.

Enjoy the video!

Video & editing: @leo.doerfler
Rider: @markusschwital




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Trump ramps up transition moves with key appointments

US President-elect Donald Trump with his campaign manager Susie Wiles.— Reuters/file

US President-elect Donald Trump named new members for his incoming administration on Monday, tapping loyalists for several key posts after signaling his desire to have his cabinet confirmed...




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Trump makes new appointments, Rubio tipped for secretary of state

US President-elect Donald Trump and Republican US Senator Marco Rubio 2011. — Reuters

US President-elect Donald Trump announced new members of his incoming administration on Monday, and was expected to pick Senator Marco Rubio as secretary of state.

Both Rubio and...




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US airman who leaked classified Pentagon documents jailed for 15 years

An undated image of the suspect, national guardsman Jack Teixeira, can be seen reflected in an image of the Pentagon in Washington, DC in this photo illustration created on April 13, 2023. — AFP

Jack Teixeira, an American airman who admitted to leaking a trove of...




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Group Launches Quinceañera Program Designed to Form Young Catholic Women

cna




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EWTN’s Father Wade Menezes Urges Men to ‘Stand Firm, Be Strong’

interview




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Pakistan spinner Noman Ali wins ICC Men's Player of the Month

Noman Ali celebrates after taking the wicket at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium in Rawalpindi, on October 26, 2024. — AFP

KARACHI: Pakistan spinner Noman Ali has been named the ICC Men’s Player of the Month for October 2024, edging out South African pacer Kagiso...




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Departure of Clark, Reese opens door for new crop of talented women's players

Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese helped bring women's basketball to new heights over the past two years. While there may be a ratings dip from last season's record high, there are plenty of talented players like Paige Bueckers, JuJu Watkins, Deja Kelly and Hannah Hidalgo ready to continue the rise.




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From Strong to Justice, meet some of the top freshmen in women's basketball

UConn's Sarah Strong doesn't need to look far to find inspiration as she gets ready to begin her college career.




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What Is The Greatest Commandment

What Is The Greatest Commandment covers how Jesus uses a trick by the religious leaders to force them...and us to choose who we will serve.




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Georgetown upsets No. 21 Creighton, faces No. 9 UConn for Big East women's title

Kelsey Ransom scored 14 points to lead sixth-seeded Georgetown to a 55-46 upset of No. 21 Creighton in the Big East Tournament semifinals.




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Bueckers helps No. 10 UConn women win Big East Tournament crown with win over Georgetown

Paige Bueckers scored 27 points and had five blocks to help No. 10 UConn beat Georgetown 78-42 on Monday night to win its 22nd Big East Tournament title.