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BLINCYTO® (BLINATUMOMAB) ADDED TO CHEMOTHERAPY SIGNIFICANTLY IMPROVES SURVIVAL IN NEWLY DIAGNOSED PEDIATRIC PATIENTS WITH B-CELL PRECURSOR ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA (B-ALL)Wake Forest keeps Detroit Mercy at arm's length for win
Sharks make roster moves ahead of game vs. L.A. KingsArmed Arizona man 'threatened to kill Donald Trump and his family' in series of unhinged videos Manuel Tamayo-Torres posted videos brandishing high-powered weapons CLICK HERE: Sign up for DailyMail.com's daily U.S. politics newsletter Follow DailyMail.com's politics live blog for all the latest news and updates By JON MICHAEL RAASCH, U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM Published: 19:32 GMT, 27 November 2024 | Updated: 19:36 GMT, 27 November 2024 e-mail 1 View comments An Arizona man has been arrested after posting numerous videos online brandishing rifles, shotguns and a high-capacity AR-15 while threatening to kill Donald Trump and his children. Manuel Tamayo-Torres posted 'numerous lengthy videos' on Facebook threatening Trump and his family and even attended one of the president-elect's rallies in Arizona, court documents show. 'You're gonna die, your son's gonna die,' Tamayo-Torres said in a scary video posted Thursday. 'Your whole family is going to die.' 'This is reality for you now. This is the only reality you have in your future, dying,' the clip continued. 'Secret Service, FBI , CIA and the military are all defenseless.' Tamayo-Torres was charged with making threats against the president-elect, who is referred to as 'Individual 1' in the court filings. In another video Tamayo-Torres threatens to shoot Trump before holding up 'what appears to be a white AR-15 style rifle with a 30-round magazine inserted into it,' according to officials. The officials also describe in the court filings how the Arizona man made threats 'on a near-daily basis.' Almost everyday Tamayo-Torres posted videos 'where he talks about [Individual 1] and his family kidnapping and sex-trafficking his children.' An Arizona man was arrested for making threats to kill Donald Trump and his family Manuel Tamayo-Torres, who made repeated threats on Trump and his family, was at Trump's August 23 rally in Glendale Arizona, court documents reveal Tamayo-Torres said he witnessed the president-elect and the Secret Service 'kidnap his daughter' at the Glendale rally Even more shockingly, Tamayo-Torres even appeared at a Trump campaign rally in August. A video from August 23 shows Tamayo-Torres at a Trump campaign rally at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona. In the video the man claims he 'observed [Individual 1] and Secret Service kidnap his daughter there.' Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) officials claim they discovered images on Facebook showing Tamayo-Torres holding a verified arsenal of weaponry. He brandished an AR-15, a rifle and a shotgun in one video, ATF officials claim in the court documents. Tamayo-Torres was arrested in California after videos showed him around the San Diego area, though the charges were filed in Arizona. This is just one of the latest threats made against the president-elect in what has been a tumultuous year for his personal safety. While visiting a section of the U.S.-Mexico border wall in Arizona in August, DailyMail.com tipped off Trump that another Arizona man who had made death threats against the Republican was on the loose. Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump tours the southern border with Mexico, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024, in Sierra Vista, Arizona Ronald Lee Syvrud, 66, is being sought by Arizona authorities in connection with an alleged assassination plot on Donald Trump Trump thanked DailyMail.com for letting him know, saying 'Thank you for telling me.' Then with a chuckle he said: ' Let's get out of here right now!' It was a surprisingly chipper response just over a month after the first attempt on his life. Notoriously Trump was shot in the ear during a July 13 campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks struck the president and several others, killing father Corey Comperatore as he shielded his family from incoming fire. Crooks was killed by Secret Service shortly after opening fire with an AR-15. The horrific rally prompted a review of the Secret Service, and soon thereafter its ex-director, Kimberly Chealte, resigned after getting ridiculed by Democrats and Republicans in Congress for the innumerable security failures that day. Again on September 15 Trump was targeted by another would-be assassin. Secret Service counter snipers keep watch during a campaign rally with Donald Trump Ryan Wesley Routh following his arrest in Martin County, Florida, on September 15. The gunman accused of planning to kill Donald Trump at his Florida golf course was indicted September 24, 2024 on three additional counts, including attempted assassination of a major presidential candidate Ryan Routh, 58, hid in the hedges near Trump's West Palm Beach golf course Trump International with an AK-47 and cameras before fleeing after being fired upon by Secret Service. Routh is currently being held in a federal detention center in Miami. Earlier this month, the Justice Department announced charges in an alleged Iranian plot to try to kill Trump. Donald Trump Arizona Share or comment on this article: Armed Arizona man 'threatened to kill Donald Trump and his family' in series of unhinged videos e-mail Add comment
When Katja Vogt considers a Jaguar, she pictures a British-made car purring confidently along the Italian coastline — a vision of familiarity that conveys "that dreaming, longing feeling we all love." She's not sure what to think about Jaguar now after the 89-year-old company announced a radical rebranding that featured loud colors and androgynous people — but no cars. Jaguar, the company says, will now be JaGUar. It will produce only electric vehicles beginning in 2026. Say goodbye to British racing green, Cotswold Blue and black. Its colors are henceforth electric pink, red and yellow, according to a video that sparked backlash online. Its mission statement: "Create exuberance. Live vivid. Delete ordinary. Break moulds." "Intrigued?" @Jaguar posted on social media. "Weird and unsettled" is more like it, Vogt wrote on Instagram. "Especially now, with the world feeling so dystopian," the Cyprus-based brand designer wrote, "a heritage brand like Jaguar should be conveying feelings of safety, stability, and maybe a hint of rebellion — the kind that shakes things up in a good way, not in a way that unsettles." Our brands, ourselves Jaguar was one of several iconic companies that announced significant rebrandings in recent weeks, upending a series of commercial — and cultural — landmarks by which many modern human beings sort one another, carve out identities and recognize the world around them. Campbell's, the 155-year-old American icon that artist Andy Warhol immortalized in pop culture decades ago, is ready for a new, soupless name. Comcast's corporate reorganization means there will soon be two television networks with "NBC" in their name — CNBC and MSNBC — that will no longer have any corporate connection to NBC News, a U.S. legacy news outlet. One could even argue the United States itself is rebranding with the election of former President Donald Trump and Republican majorities in the House and Senate. Unlike Trump's first election in 2016, he won the popular vote in what many called a national referendum on American identity. Are we, then, the sum total of our consumer decisions — what we buy, where we travel and whom we elect? Certainly, it's a question for those privileged enough to be able to afford such choices. Volumes of research in the art and science of branding — from "brandr," an old Norse word for burning symbols into the hides of livestock — say those factors do contribute to the modern sense of identity. So rebranding, especially of heritage names, can be a deeply felt affront to consumers. "It can feel like the brand is turning its back on everything that it stood for — and therefore it feels like it's turning its back on us, the people who subscribe to that idea or ideology," said Ali Marmaduke, strategy director with the Amsterdam-based Brand Potential. He said cultural tension — polarization — is surging over politics, wars in Russia and the Mideast, the environment, public health and more, creating what Marmaduke said is known as a "polycrisis": the idea that there are several massive crises converging that feel scary and complex. "People are understandably freaked out by that," he said. "So we are looking for something that will help us navigate this changing, threatening world that we face." Trump's "Make America Great Again" qualifies. So did President Joe Biden's "Build Back Better" slogan. Campbell's soup itself — "Mmm Mmm Good" — isn't going anywhere, CEO Mark Clouse said. The company's new name, Campbell's Co., will reflect "the full breadth of our portfolio," which includes brands like Prego pasta sauce and Goldfish crackers. What is Jaguar? None of the recent activity around heritage brands sparked a backlash as ferocious as Jaguar's. The company stood as a pillar of tradition-loving British identity since World War II. Jaguar said its approach to the rebrand was rooted in the philosophy of its founder, Sir William Lyons, to "copy nothing." What it's calling "the new Jaguar" will overhaul everything from the font of its name to the positioning of it's famous "leaper" cat. "Exuberant modernism" will "define all aspects of the new Jaguar world," according to the news release. The approach is thought to be aimed at selling fewer cars at a six-figure price point to a more diverse customer base. The reaction ranged from bewilderment to hostility. Memes sprouted up likening the video to the Teletubbies, a Benetton ad and — perhaps predictably — a bow to "woke" culture as the blowback intersected with politics.
Tetairoa McMillan, one of the best wide receivers in Arizona history, will skip his final year of eligibility and enter the 2025 NFL Draft, he announced on social media on Thursday. Projected as a top-10 draft pick, the 6-foot-5, 212-pound McMillan finished his illustrious career at Arizona with 3,423 receiving yards, breaking the mark set by Bobby Wade (3,351). In three seasons, the Hawaii native also posted the fourth-most catches (213) and third-most touchdowns (26) in school history. "Wildcat Nation, this journey has been everything I dreamed of and more," McMillan wrote on Instagram. "From the moment I committed to the University of Arizona, to every second spent wearing that Arizona jersey ... it's been an absolute honor. "The University of Arizona has provided me with the platform to grow and chase my dreams. ... Thank you from the bottom of my heart. To the best fans in the country, I appreciate you for all of the love and support you have given me these last 3 years. I will always be a Wildcat." In 2024, McMillan totaled 84 grabs (ninth in Division I) for 1,319 yards (third in Division I) and eight touchdowns for the 4-8 Wildcats. He also ranked third in Division I with 109.9 receiving yards per game. McMillan is a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award, given to the most outstanding receiver in college football. --Field Level MediaFor leftist SYRIZA, the real challenge now lies ahead. We don’t mean the likelihood of more MPs defecting from its parliamentary group or the fact that the ill-mannered Pavlos Polakis came second in Sunday’s party leadership race with a stunning 43% that established him as the de facto voice of the opposition within the party. The challenges that lie ahead go a long way back. What’s left of SYRIZA will have to confront the past of a party that had its moment in the sun – in whichever way that was – and the fundamental questions that challenge the left globally. Who are they? Where are they headed? What is their message? How do they address the core contradictions that led the movement to disrepute and the party to such fragmentation? Self-criticism is the first thing that is required, for both tactical and essential reasons. Any initiative to bring the country’s “progressive forces” together, as SYRIZA has been touting for years, demands that it first heal the wounds it inflicted. There are many in center-left PASOK who will not soon forget how they were slandered and attacked – literally, too – by the clamorous hordes of SYRIZA when the leftists finally got their turn at the helm of government. The essential reasons are more important. There are many in SYRIZA who pine for those times of sheer audacity that led to the party’s pyrrhic victory in 2015 – hence Polakis’ 43%. But hooligan tactics do not build solid foundations or formulate propositions that can stand the test of time. Political parties need to develop deep roots in society instead of tapping into its most base and fickle instincts. Beyond the challenges it faces in Greece, the left is also in very poor shape globally. It is almost impressive how badly it’s doing, given that capitalism is coming under such serious fire. Workers everywhere are expressing their opposition to the system that is making them poorer by voting for the far-right. The left’s decline is bolstering its rivals, like Donald Trump, and empowering the representatives of big capital, like Elon Musk. Worldwide, the left is starting to look outdated or at least disconnected from society’s concerns and hopes, and, above all, from the social classes it seeks to represent. We obviously don’t expect Sokratis Famellos, as SYRIZA’s new leader, to solve the global problems of the left – we hardly expect him to solve the domestic ones. But we do hope that he initiates a bold dialogue about the problems besetting the left, a dialogue with something more meaningful to propose rather than “out with the Mitsotakis government.” Let’s not forget that it was this kind of thinking which took SYRIZA into what was one of the worst periods of its history – when Stefanos Kasselakis thought he had what it takes to bring down Kyriakos Mitsotakis.None
