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Jimmy Carter age: How old was the longest-living president in US history?HIMS Stock Soars to All-Time High, Reaching $30.45
World reaches $300 bn climate finance deal at COP29Share Tweet Share Share Email Half of organizations (54%) have experienced a cybersecurity incident in the past year. In the next 12 to 24 months, three-quarters (73%) of all organizations believe they will likely be disrupted by a cybersecurity incident. Building cyber resilience so that you can persistently prevent, withstand, and recover from disruptions to your network infrastructure is becoming increasingly important. So, what is standing in the way? The answer lies in the disconnect between ITOps and SecOps. Traditionally, ITOps has been mandated to build, support, maintain, and keep available network infrastructure across various scenarios, in data centers and the cloud, and to support employees in offices and remote workers. In this hybrid world, the ability to keep networks up and running 24/7 becomes a top priority. IT and network teams build competence around network devices, and their success depends on their ability to protect network availability. Meanwhile, SecOps has a mandate to detect and prevent breaches. Focused on threats to the organization, they discourage using technologies and processes that expand the attack surface. Because SecOps operates largely outside the network, they rely on ITOps to keep network infrastructure hardened against attacks and have little visibility into recovery when an attack happens. Different mandates put ITOps and SecOps on different sides of the fence, working independently and with a limited understanding of their complementary roles in protecting the organization. Rekha Shenoy, CEO of BackBox An Ever-widening Gap The disconnect is exacerbated because SecOps is aligned with auditing and compliance. CISOs are reporting to Boards as the responsibility for business risk within the context of cyber now falls within SecOps. Security spending is growing at double-digit rates as the cost and impact of breaches have increased, the importance of protecting data and systems and keeping networks running is well understood, concern over compliance and audits grows, and fear of AI-enabled threat actors spreads. But the trick isn’t to invest more in security monitoring and detection in this world. Fifty-eight percent of the time , organizations learn of a security breach from external sources – either benign third parties (34%) or attackers themselves (24%). Instead, the trick is to mitigate risk faster than it can be exploited and withstand and recover quickly when disruptions happen. In other words, we must build cyber resilience and collaboration between ITOps and SecOps, which is fundamental to this effort. A Checklist to Foster Collaboration and Build Cyber Resilience The largest organizations say that transforming legacy technology and processes is the greatest barrier to cyber resilience. When only 29% of ITOps teams fully understand SecOps and only 30% of SecOps teams fully understand the role of ITOps, it’s time to transform how these teams work together and eliminate a major barrier to cyber resilience. If strengthening cyber resilience is a priority for your organization, here’s a checklist for ITOps/SecOps collaboration. Establish shared goals – A strong relationship starts with a common understanding of the mission to protect the organization’s assets and data, and maintain confidentiality, integrity, and availability. With this shared understanding, you can agree on priorities, understand roles and responsibilities, and identify areas of overlap where the teams must work together to achieve mutual success. Have a common way to assess and manage risk – Network teams are focused on operational risk related to network infrastructure availability and performance, while security teams are focused on incident prevention and risk mitigation. Ultimately, the objective is the same: to keep the business moving forward. Developing a common way to assess and manage risk will ensure both teams are on the same page and working together with the best interests of the business in mind. Become partners in compliance – Organizations don’t always work together to ensure compliance . When audits happen, security hands off a list of requests and reports they need from the network team that, in turn, scrambles to respond. Instead, collaborate to identify and implement controls and processes that meet legal, industry, and internal requirements and mandates. Tools that automatically audit configurations and groom them back into compliance help teams proactively keep systems secure and compliant. Bring it full circle with incident response – Despite best efforts, incidents happen. A critical component of cyber resilience is the ability to withstand and recover from disruptions. Create a shared plan that both teams trust to maintain business continuity and integrity. When something happens, you will have already established how to investigate, contain, and remediate as well as restore normal operations. Remove budget barriers – Coalescing on a coordinated SecOps and ITOps cyber resilience practice also sheds light on the areas within ITOps that are core to security and may have previously gone unnoticed and underfunded. Network device vulnerability management is one of the last bastions for manual work but is foundational to cyber resilience. Automation tools that track and remediate network infrastructure vulnerabilities should be funded accordingly. Organizations will continue to suffer disruptions from cyberattacks. Strengthening cyber resilience is the best way to mitigate the impact and keep your business moving forward . With a checklist that helps ITOps and SecOps teams find common ground, you can coordinate efforts that meet their core mandates of network availability and incident prevention and build a more cyber-resilient organization in the process. Related Items: Cyber Resilience , cybersecurity , ITOps , SecOps Share Tweet Share Share Email Recommended for you The Cybersecurity Blueprint for a Borderless World: Zero Trust Preparing the Next Generation: Cyber Brain Academy’s Focus on Cybersecurity Professionals Sree Gopinath’s Advocacy for Digital Privacy: Defending Critical National Interests Comments
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MUMBAI: The Indian stock market opened lower on Monday as selling was seen in the auto, IT, PSU bank, financial service, FMCG, media, energy and metal sectors on Nifty in early trade. At around 9:30 am, Sensex was trading at 78,523.25 after declining 175.82 points or 0.22 per cent, while the Nifty was trading at 23,758.20 after declining 55.20 points or 0.23 per cent. The market trend remained negative. On the National Stock Exchange (NSE), 815 stocks were trading in green, while 1,454 stocks were in red. According to experts, "as investors leave 2024 behind and look forward to the New Year, there will be more concerns than confidence, at least in the early days of 2025." "The biggest concern for stock markets, globally, is uncertainty surrounding Trump 2.0. The concern is that since market valuations are high any negative news might cause corrections," they added. Nifty Bank was down 74.80 points or 0.15 per cent at 51,236.50. Nifty Midcap 100 index was trading at 56,796.90 after dropping 182.90 points or 0.32 per cent. Nifty Smallcap 100 index was at 18,673.75 after dropping 82.10 points or 0.44 per cent. On the sectoral front, buying was seen in the Pharma and Healthcare sector. In the Sensex pack, Tata Steel, M&M, HCL Tech, Tech Mahindra, Maruti Suzuki, Bajaj Finserv, Titan, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Reliance were the top losers. Adani Ports, Bharti Airtel, ITC, Zomato, Nestle India, ICICI Bank, NTPC and UltraTech Cement were the top gainers. The Dow Jones declined 0.77 per cent to close at 42,992.21. The S&P 500 declined 1.11 per cent to 5,970.84 and the Nasdaq declined 1.49 per cent to close at 19,722.03 in the previous trading session on Friday. In the Asian markets, Bangkok and Seoul were trading in green while China, Japan, Jakarta and Hong Kong were trading in red. Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) sold equities worth Rs 1,323.29 crore on December 27, while domestic institutional investors bought equities worth Rs 2,544.64 crore on the same day.
Commerce Department to reduce Intel's funding on semiconductorsWARSAW, Poland (AP) — Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski has been selected by Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s centrist Civic Coalition as its candidate in next year's presidential election, beating out Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski. Tusk announced the decision at a party gathering on Saturday, a day after more than 22,000 party members voted in a primary to select who should run to replace the incumbent, Andrzej Duda. Tusk said Trzaskowski won nearly 75% of the votes, and Sikorski slightly over 25%. Political observers in Poland say Tusk's pro-European Union party has already put itself in a strong position ahead of the presidential election by showing that it had two strong candidates, generating a buzz around them and allowing party members to choose in a democratic process. “We are responsible people, we are responsible for the fate of our homeland today,” Tusk told supporters at the party event. He said it was only the start of what is expected to be a difficult campaign. The primary process distinguishes Tusk's party from its main rival, the national conservative Law and Justice party, known by its acronym PiS, whose candidate will be handpicked by leader Jarosław Kaczyński. The candidate is expected to be announced at a party convention in Krakow on Sunday. “In PiS, one vote matters, while we value every vote, and that’s how we differ,” Trzaskowski told party members in his acceptance speech. “I’m convinced that we’re coming out of this primary stronger, we’re all stronger, and I have a very strong mandate and a lot of energy, determination and courage to beat PiS.” Sikorski congratulated Trzaskowski and promised his support. Trzaskowski has long been considered the obvious candidate for Tusk’s party but was recently challenged by Sikorski, who argued that his experience in security and defense issues made him the better choice at a time of war in neighboring Ukraine and political change in the United States. But party members overwhelmingly stuck with Trzaskowski — and were in a good mood as they gathered over coffee and cookies after cheering the outcome. One, Małgorzata Kobus, told The Associated Press that she voted for Trzaskowski because he has been an excellent mayor, preserving green spaces and historical monuments in the capital. She also appreciates that he is highly educated and fluent in several foreign languages. Another, Hanna Szulczewska, thinks Trzaskowski is well suited to the difficult times in a region near Ukraine. She was persuaded by polls that show Trzaskowski would have a better chance of beating out candidates from other parties. “I am really convinced that he will make a fantastic president,” she said. “And strategically we really need a strong candidate.” Trzaskowski, 52, has been mayor since 2018 and has overseen a rapidly changing city of nearly 2 million people that has absorbed large numbers of Ukrainian refugees. He ran for president in 2020, barely losing to Duda. A first round of the presidential election is due to be held in May, and a possible runoff two weeks later if no candidate gets an outright majority in the first round. President Duda will complete his second five-year term in August 2025 and is prevented by the constitution from running again. It is a priority for Tusk to have an ally win the presidency because it will determine whether he can fulfill his agenda. He is currently unable to complete some of his campaign promises because Duda wields veto power over legislation, but also because of opposition within his own three-party coalition. The Civic Coalition is led by Tusk’s party Civic Platform and also includes smaller parties including the Greens.
Saquon Barkley ninth player with 2,000-yard rushing season
ENTRUSTED with our readers’ deep secrets, the Dear Deidre team really have a unique insight into what dilemmas the nation is grappling with. Of course, there are some constants — cheating, differing sex drives, low self-esteem and loneliness. But some issues loom larger in certain years as new problems come to the fore. As 2024 nears an end, we take a look at what exactly our readers have been writing in about. Every year, we help thousands of people by answering every single dilemma with a personalised answer, and we’ve kept a record of the issues we’ve tackled. Relationship issues consistently come out on top, with 23 per cent of the emails Dear Deidre receives focused on romantic problems. READ MORE DEAR DEIDRE Sex came a close second, with 19 per cent of readers writing in with a sexual dilemma. Interestingly, half of every single relationship message addressed cheating. Sometimes, the unfaithful party would be writing in, otherwise a suspicious or heartbroken partner worried about their relationship . Among the emails about cheating on partners, home surveillance and doorbell cameras featured more prominently, with some partners forgetting to turn off cameras before inviting flings to come back to their homes . Most read in The Sun A growing number of readers also wrote in because, although they were separated, financial constraints meant they could not move out of the marital home. The reluctant house sharers were frustrated at being unable to move on — a trend that reflects economic uncertainty in the UK. Notable developments this year have been new requests for support with quitting vaping . Another new issue came in the form of pensioners worrying about losing their winter fuel allowance. Social media has been a common theme in all the categories. It is impossible to quantify but has had a huge impact. So many of the relationship problems relate to partners ogling scantily clad influencers or flirting with others they have met online. Plenty don’t see this as cheating but the feeling of betrayal is real for those on the receiving end. And it’s not just cheating that worries people. Time spent watching endless videos encourages weird infatuations, with one woman complaining her husband had become obsessed with the French election. Opportunity for temptation He insisted they spend their family holiday in France watching speeches — and had previously had no interest in politics . The issue of phone addiction came up, particularly for parents fretting about not only what their children were being exposed to, but also how their mobile activity was affecting their own behaviour. They asked our team for help on how to manage this. And a huge number of adults wrote in fed up with their partner, who had little interest in them but spent all hours playing online games or scrolling through their socials. It’s clear that while technology enables us to do far more and do it efficiently, left unchecked it threatens our real-world connections and provides more opportunity for temptation. Next year, I will be recording when social media, phone usage and the internet are mentioned as part of the problem, and I predict this will be a huge growth area. Below is a reader’s letter about ogling, followed by one about winter fuel allowance. I also break down what percentages of our mail different types of letter make up. Mortified after ex saw me having sex on security cam (Letter from November 14) DEAR DEIDRE: MY ex saw me having sex with a one-night stand using the camera security system he’d installed as a favour to me. I was completely unaware that he was watching this, until he turned up the next morning and got very upset with me. Originally, I was grateful for his help setting up the system, but now I feel really uncomfortable. He said he’d received an alert on his phone and checked it by chance, but I can’t help worrying he’s keeping an eye on me. He insists he hasn’t been watching and that was a one-off, but the whole experience has really unsettled me. I’m 36, my ex is 39, and we were together for eight years before we broke up five months ago. Our split was both mutually agreed, and amicable, and we decided to remain friends. We still met up and sometimes even had sex, but as we didn’t discuss what this meant I thought we were simply friends with benefits . I really appreciated still having him in my life. When I was moving house, he offered to help, knowing how useless I am at DIY. He helped put up shelves, and installed security cameras which he set up online so I could view them through an app. I knew he had access to it all while he set it up but assumed he’d log out. So when I brought a man home, I didn’t think twice. Now I feel mortified. He says he didn’t mean to breach my privacy, but I feel so conflicted. DEIDRE SAYS: Watching you have sex with another man was a huge breach of your privacy, and you shouldn’t take it lightly. As a priority, please ensure that you are the only one with access to your security system. Make sure you’re the primary account holder and change your password so that he doesn’t have access. It’s completely understandable that this experience has made you question the sort of person he is. Unless you decide you can trust him completely, you would be wise to stay away. At the very least, it’s clear that the lines are blurred between you and your ex and some boundaries need to be re-established. As for your relationship with him, you need to decide if there’s any hope of a future together. If you decide there’s not, it would be best to step away so you can both move on. My support pack Moving On will help. Left freezing since losing fuel payment (Letter from December 18) DEAR DEIDRE : SINCE the Government cut my Winter Fuel Payment , I’ve been struggling to afford my bills . Now I’m forced to choose between putting my heating on or buying food, and the stress is making me unwell. I’m a 76-year-old pensioner, and live alone. Until this year, I was receiving £200 payments to cover the cost of my heating bills, and I heavily relied on it. So when the Government announced the change, I went into a complete panic. My pension is already low as it is, so without the extra payments I knew it was going to be a hard couple of months. When I contacted the council for help, they told me that, while I was eligible to apply, I had missed the deadline so now I’d have to go without. Ever since, my life has been an absolute nightmare. Now I wake up every morning to a freezing house – and no matter what I do, I can’t keep warm. The constant dread is getting me down, and I’m now struggling to cope. DEIDRE SAYS: I can only imagine how distressing this must be for you. While the qualifying week for this year’s Fuel Payment has now passed, you may still be eligible if you successfully apply for Pension Credit by December 21. READ MORE SUN STORIES Please note that you only have two days to do this, so please take action today. You may also be eligible for a £150 Warm Home Discount. You can find out more about this on the government website ( gov.uk/the-warm-home-discount-scheme ). TOP TOPICS: Relationships 23% Sex 19% Family 8% Parenting 7% Friendships 4% Workplace issues 5% Mental health 11% Health 5% Addictions 8% Bereavement 5% Sexuality 4% Other 1% SEX WOES Sex drive 43% Fetishes 16% Threesomes 12% Erection problems 11% Fantasies 7% Climaxing 4% Menopause 3% Other 4% LOVE Cheating 49% Domestic abuse 12% Addictive love 10% Broken heart 14% Online romance 6% Age gaps 5% Other 4% ADDICTION Alcohol 42% Porn 22% Drugs 13% Smoking 8% Vaping 5% Gambling 9% Shopping and spending 1%Jimmy Carter, the 39th US president, has died at 100
Century-Long Legacy: Assam's Rice RevolutionInvestor Warren Buffett renewed his Thanksgiving tradition of giving by announcing plans to hand more than $US1.1 billion ($1.7 billion) of Berkshire Hathaway stock to four of his family’s foundations, and he offered new details about who will be handing out the rest of his fortune after his death. Buffett has said previously that his three kids will distribute his remaining $US147.4 billion ($226.8 billion) fortune in the 10 years after his death, but now he has also designated successors for them because it’s possible that Buffett’s children could die before giving it all away. He didn’t identify the successors, but said his kids all know them and agree they would be good choices. Warren Buffett with son Peter and daughter Susie. Credit: AP “Father time always wins. But he can be fickle – indeed unfair and even cruel – sometimes ending life at birth or soon thereafter while, at other times, waiting a century or so before paying a visit,” the 94-year-old Buffett said in a letter to his fellow shareholders. “To date, I’ve been very lucky, but, before long, he will get around to me. There is, however, a downside to my good fortune in avoiding his notice. The expected life span of my children has materially diminished since the 2006 pledge. They are now 71, 69 and 66.” Buffett said he still has no interest in creating dynastic wealth in his family — a view shared by his first and current wives. He acknowledged giving Howard, Peter and Susie millions over the years, but he has long said he believes “hugely wealthy parents should leave their children enough so they can do anything but not enough that they can do nothing.” Buffett built Berkshire Hathaway into an investing powerhouse. Credit: Bloomberg The secret to building up such massive wealth over time has been the power of compounding interest and the steady growth of the Berkshire conglomerate Buffett leads through acquisitions and smart investments like buying billions of dollars of Apple shares as iPhone sales continued to drive growth in that company. Buffett never sold any of his Berkshire stock over the years and also resisted the trappings of wealth and never indulged in much — preferring instead to continue living in the same Omaha home he’d bought decades earlier and drive sensible luxury sedans about 20 blocks to work each day. “As a family, we have had everything we needed or simply liked, but we have not sought enjoyment from the fact that others craved what we had,” he said. If Buffett and his first wife had never given away any of their Berkshire shares, the family’s fortune would be worth nearly $US364 billion — easily making him the world’s richest man — but Buffett said he had no regrets about his giving over the years. The family’s giving began in earnest with the distribution of Susan Buffett’s $US3 billion estate after her death in 2004, but really took off when Warren Buffett announced plans in 2006 to make annual gifts to the foundations run by his kids along with the one he and his wife started, as well as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Capitals' Ovechkin out 4-6 weeks with broken legPedulla, Murrell score 19, Ole Miss pulls away in the second half to defeat Oral Roberts 100-68Whether you wanted to dance to a top DJ or down a few pints with your mates, Kent has been home to some first-class pubs and clubs over the decades. Sadly, some of our most loved venues have closed down, leaving us with just our memories of the times we spent there. Here, we take a look at some of the biggest, best places to be over the years - where we’d love to return for one more night out. Amadeus/Passion, Rochester No nostalgia piece about Kent’s most iconic venues could go without Amadeus, the £5 million club at Medway Valley Leisure Park which opened in a blaze of glory in 1997. There’s a good chance a lot of people visiting it in its current form as a Hollywood Bowl have no idea of the mayhem that used to take place behind those walls, whether it be jamming to garage music, hooking up with fellow punters or throwing up after one too many shots. Every weekend, hundreds of glammed-up dancers would head to the club, make the most of £1 drinks before 11pm, buy grub from the burger bar and battling to keep track of your friends – it was a huge venue. Lovingly labelled "Amadangerous", there even used to be a bus service taking people from pub to pub. It was sold in 2003 but the tunes kept coming for eight more years, ending life under the name Passion before it was finally time to say goodbye. All we have now are those memories, with punters often taking to social media to relive those heavy nights . Atomics, Maidstone In 1991, Maidstone DJ Mick Clark converted an old warehouse on Hart Street into Atomics, which became a legendary dance music venue. Among those to grace the decks were Boy George, Carl Cox, Paul Oakenfold and Judge Jules and the county town’s now-famous son Nic Fanciulli cut his teeth there. Home to the infamous Club Class nights, Atomics looked different every week, decorated with banners, inflatables and lasers. It welcomed clubbers from as far away as France and Germany, as well as all over the south east, who danced to hardcore, happy house, drum ‘n’ bass and house over the years. It wasn’t to last though. Atomics closed after 11 years and the building was eventually converted into apartments. Warehouse, Maidstone Of course, you can’t mention Atomics without giving fellow Maidstone club Warehouse a shoutout. Described by some as the birthplace of British dance music, the club easily rivalled London venues in the 1970s, 80s and 90s. Warehouse opened in 1979 in a former industrial warehouse, opposite where the Fremlin Walk car park now stands, and DJs led clubbers on a musical journey over the years, playing cheesy 80s, jazz funk, soul, disco and house. When it closed 12 years later, it was a rave club. Music would be lighthearted until 11pm when the DJ would drop a track such as acid techno favourite Spice by Eon and it would be hard rave for the next three hours. Bridge Country Club, Canterbury From a £100 Led Zeppelin gig to its legendary 'grab-a-granny' nights, few places had quite the hedonistic reputation as Bridge Country Club between the 60s and 90s. The historic mansion on the outskirts of Canterbury was the most popular rock and roll and disco venue in the county, embracing the music of the era. Among the bands who performed there were the Moody Blues, the Kinks, the Yardbirds and Manfred Mann, as well as jazz legends Acker Bilk and Kenny Ball. It has since been transformed into a luxury hotel - The Pig at Bridge. Onyx/The Priz, Folkestone Whether your era was La Parisienne, Club Indigo or Onyx, a night out at ‘the Priz’ was a rite of passage for generations who grew up in Folkestone. The seafront nightclub was the heartbeat of the town’s party scene for almost three decades, but eventually, the sound system fell silent and the dancefloor cleared for the final time in October 2015. Then, just months after the party was over for good, the building was hit by a suspected arson attack. Now, the foundations of the nightclub are nowhere to be seen, hidden under shingle on Folkestone beach. Whether throwing shapes to dance tracks in the main room, or revelling in the cheesiest hits of the decades next door, it was always a top night. Stage Three, Leysdown Leysdown venue Stage Three used to be a major attraction for lovers of jazz, funk and soul music in the late 70s and early 80s – as long as you didn’t mind the drive to the far side of the Isle of Sheppey. Founded by Robert and Mark Wilson in 1979, it took influences for its lighting and sound from famous New York haunts like Studio 54 and Paradise Garage. World-famous DJs including Pete Tong used to perform sets there, but it was forced to shut after a fire in September 1989. The site is now a car park that sometimes hosts a market. The much-loved former club had a popular reunion night in 2014. Dusty’s/Liquid, Ashford The 123-year-old flour mill in East Hill has had many names and spent a long time as an iconic late-night venue after it closed as a working mill in 1972. It hit the headlines in 1974 when a catastrophic fire devastated part of the building but was soon transformed into Ashford's first nightclub, Dusty's and the Jolly Miller, in 1981. The club closed in 1990, when the owner of the mill reportedly abandoned the business owing thousands of pounds, then became Cales Nightclub and Flatfoot Sam's for 11 years before undergoing a £500,000 facelift and being rebranded as Liquid in 2002. It shut in 2014 and has since fallen into more serious dereliction with multiple attacks of vandalism and trespassing over the years. M20, Ashford What is now a place to enjoy a plate of peri peri chicken was once an exciting raving destination. The M20 nightclub opened in the early Noughties in Eureka Park, in what would become Nando's. It became the first club in Britain to receive a Superclub award in 2004 but shut in 2005 and remained empty for three years until reopening as Strawberry Moons. It then became Rain, and finally Arena Live before the restaurants moved in. Excalibur, Gillingham This one was a legendary clubbing destination within the King Charles Hotel. The club in Gillingham was demolished to make way for houses in 2019 but in the 80s and 90s it welcomed rap duo Salt-N-Pepa, cult icon Rick Astley and heartthrobs Bros. It was known as The Regency in 1982 before its final incarnation as Excalibur - which enjoyed a hugely successful run from 1989 until its close in 1998. In 2018, a 90s themed goodbye night was hosted before the building was demolished to make way for houses. JJ's, Sittingbourne JJ's has had a few names, including Base and Fat Sam's and was found within the Bell Shopping Centre in Sittingbourne. It was eventually lost to the town, and the shopping centre collapsed in 2013. Plans had been in the works to transform the derelict site into 165 flats, a medical centre and a pharmacy but the site is now up for sale. The Front, Herne Bay The Front was part of Talk of the Town right on the seafront and shared the building amusement arcade and casino. It has had various names over the years, including New York and Show Bar. The owners sold the venue in 2018 after contending with rising taxes and the costs of the casino. After the sale, Talk of The Town became an events venue called Vibe and a cocktail bar called Captain Jack's. The Funky Monkey, Dover One that was still recently with us, the Funky Monkey closed in December two years ago. The building is part of an ambitious plan to transform that "neglected" part of Dover. It was one of the town’s most popular venues and "created a lot of memories" for those who graced its dancefloor. After running for 16 years, work to demolish it started last year. Moo Moo, Gillingham This Canterbury Street nightclub wasn’t always known by the cow-sound name, having previously lived life as Bliss and Preach. Dating back to the 1970s, the club was known under many guises: Joanna's, The Zone, Ritzy, Preach, and Bliss. Renamed Moo Moo in 2016, it became famous in its later years for freshers' events, and UV parties with foam, paint and ball pits – becoming a rite of passage for students from the University of Kent's Medway campus. The club closed down in 2019 and was demolished earlier this year . Franks, Cliftonville This clubbing venue in Ethelbert Crescent, was previously run by Frank Thorley who sadly passed away last year. It was once a popular spot with two-for-one offers, ladies' nights and under-18s events. In 2009, it closed down and was sold. The Margate location's ground floor is now home to a community space and was formerly Rendezvous restaurant, while the top floor is the Faith in Strangers events space. AMP/SOS, Tonbridge At the time of its closure on Christmas Eve 2017, AMP, which was previously known as Source of Sound, was Tonbridge's only nightclub. There was heartbreak among regulars as plans revealed the disco would be turned into 14 new flats and a gym. After closing, it was a community creative space called Hub for a while. The site has not been transformed as of yet, despite two separate planning applications for the development of apartments. The Jolly Sailor, Canterbury A pub first stood on the corner of Northgate Street as early as 1619. Sadly, almost 400 years later, it was serving its final pint. It was then known as the Black Swan, before changing its name to the Jolly Sailor between 1780 and 1830. The pub was popular with students and had been taken over by Ian Blackmore, a former uni student in the city, in 2008 before he had to give it up 10 years later. It was bought by the Kings School in 2019 after its closure, with the latest plans to do something with the site causing controversy . The Court House/Wig and Gown, Dartford Having shut twice in the past 10 years, this Spital Street boozer was sold earlier this year after its operating costs doubled. When it shut for the first time in 2016, the Court House had been going since the late 1990s. The building was first erected in 1850 as part of the methodist church opposite but was converted into a Crown Court within 10 years. A short-lived revival saw the name change after reopening in 2018, but the pandemic and cost-of-living crisis plunged it back into trouble. The Saracens Head, Deal Closing in March last year, this 19th-century pub has been the centre of a planning row after a bid to turn it into a home was launched. Despite the pub originally thriving, its last tenants, Matthew and Martine Brett, left after 13 months saying it had been “ impossible to make a profit ”. Strawbs frontman Dave Cousins joined a fight to protect it from developers in 2016 when it was made an asset of community value. The building is thought to date back as far as 1806 when it housed a carpenter’s shop and several apartments before becoming a pub 15 years later. Cross Keys, Canterbury This 17th-century Oaten Hill pub was forced to close in December 2019 when a huge hole and 20ft deep shaft opened up in the toilet floor . There were hopes of seeing it reopen within a couple of years but as of now, it remains an eyesore. It was originally referred to as the Trumpet in 1687 before changing its name less than 10 years later, and in the 1950s also housed a bakery. Older customers will remember when Charringtons and Co and Whitbread Fremlin included the Cross Keys in a pub swap in 1972. The Railway Tavern, Teynham When it closed in 2015, the writing had been on the wall for some time for this pub between Sittingbourne and Faversham. The owner had said a year before it was no longer commercially viable and his efforts to turn it back into a house once prompted Swale Borough Council to visit him out of fears he was suicidal. But dating back to 1857, the tavern had a proud history with many locals visiting the Lower Road over the years. It was originally built as a farmhouse and had been a Barclay’s, Courage and Enterprise Inns establishment. Duke of Kent/Braces, Ramsgate This quirky-looking inn has gone through many names including Cobblers, Duke of Kent and Swiss Cottage. It was more recently called Braces and closed in 2009 and then became a favourite haunt of trespassers. In 2017, permission was granted for Braces to be demolished, but nothing happened and the building went up for sale in 2019. Finally, in 2020 it was demolished, and flats were built in its place. Millers Cottage, Gravesend This once-charming inn in Shrubbery Road made headlines in 2009 when its bar staff got their kit off for a charity calendar. Built in 1695, the original building has since undergone many changes and was still grinding wheat to serve its original purpose until the last miller to occupy the cottage, one Michael Slaughter Woolett, left in 1842. It was then opened as a public house where the drinks flowed until 2018, two years after it went up for sale. The building was soon converted into a property, though the nearby Windmill Tavern remains. The Greyhound, Rochester The Greyhound was a traditional backstreet boozer and was found on Rochester Avenue. For decades, landlady Wendy Stenhouse served up sound advice, good grub and pints. She even took one regular out clothes shopping when she didn't approve of his fashion sense, and she and her late husband Bill used to go on holidays abroad with their customers. After Bill died, Wendy kept running the business for a few years but eventually pulled the last pint in 2002. The King’s Arms, Headcorn This High Street property opened as a boozer in the 1830s but was the setting for Catholic intrigue before then. Local Jacobites - supporters of the deposed James II and his descendants in their claim to the British throne after the Revolution of 1688 - used the house as a secret rendezvous while it was also seen as a “seedy joint” thanks to its ties with the Hawkhurst Gang. After closing in 2016, it became an Indian restaurant and then an opticians. The Elephants Head, Sevenoaks This pub was once visited by an actual elephant, which had been forced to walk from Wales to Maidstone when the cricus she was travelling in was taken off the road. Lizzy, as she was known, sadly died of a heart attack soon after. The watering hole started serving in 1867 but sadly closed in 2009. The site is now occupied by Sevenoaks Veterinary Surgery. The Mounted Rifleman, Luddenham The Mounted Rifleman near Faversham has a vibrant history. Most interestingly, it had no bar. There was just a cellar below and the landlord, John Austin, would bring up drinks on a tray. There was huge uproar from locals when the closure of the pub was announced in the early 1990s and the news reached local TV. The pub had been owned by the same family for well over 100 years before it was sold and became a private house. However, the painted sign on the front of the building has been kept.
Former President Jimmy Carter has died at the age of 100. The 39th president of the United States was a Georgia peanut farmer who sought to restore trust in government when he assumed the presidency in 1977 and then built a reputation for tireless work as a humanitarian. He earned a Nobel Peace Prize in 2002. He died Sunday, more than a year after entering hospice care, at his home in Plains, Georgia. At age 52, Carter was sworn in as president on Jan. 20, 1977, after defeating President Gerald R. Ford in the 1976 general election. Carter left office on Jan. 20, 1981, following his 1980 general election loss to Ronald Reagan. Here's the latest: The longest-lived American president died Sunday, more than a year after entering hospice care , at his home in the small town of Plains, Georgia, where he and his wife, Rosalynn, who died at 96 in November 2023 , spent most of their lives. “Our founder, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, passed away this afternoon in Plains, Georgia,” The Carter Center said in posting about his death on the social media platform X. It added in a statement that he died peacefully, surrounded by his family. In his 1975 book “Why Not The Best,” Carter said of himself: “I am a Southerner and an American, I am a farmer, an engineer, a father and husband, a Christian, a politician and former governor, a planner, a businessman, a nuclear physicist, a naval officer, a canoeist, and among other things a lover of Bob Dylan’s songs and Dylan Thomas’s poetry.” A moderate Democrat, Carter entered the 1976 presidential race as a little-known Georgia governor with a broad smile, outspoken Baptist mores and technocratic plans reflecting his education as an engineer. After he left office and returned home to his tiny hometown of Plains in southwest Georgia, Carter regularly taught Sunday School lessons at Maranatha Baptist Church until his mobility declined. Those sessions drew visitors from around the world.None
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