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24-hour sandwich-making marathon underway at N.J. culinary school
Volunteers at the Promise Culinary School in New Brunswick, New Jersey, kicked off the weekend with a 24-hour sandwich-making marathon.
Trump administration scraps proposal to make airlines pay travelers for delays
Loved ones gather at wake for FDNY firefighter killed in line of duty
Video shows suspect running with gun before Upper East Side shooting
New video shows a suspect pull a gun on police moments before Thursday night's deadly shootout on a busy Upper East Side block. CBS News New York's Adi Guajardo reports.

Denny Hamlin Silences Retirement Rumors, Comments on Change in NASCAR Format

Lakers rookie Adou Thiero available to make NBA debut

Rodney Rice has triple-double to lead USC past Illinois State

Cam Newton Admits He “Didn’t Protect the Football” With the Patriots While Praising Drake Maye
Even though Week 11 just started, the New England Patriots have already managed to hit the over on their win total for the 2025 regular season. Thanks to a lopsided 27-14 home win against the New York Jets on Thursday Night Football, Drake Maye and Mike Vrabel are officially in possession of a 9-2 record. To many, it doesn’t seem fair that the Patriots are back to being AFC Championship competitors so soon after the departure of Tom Brady and Bill Belichick, but to those like Cam Newton, they are painfully aware of the let downs that New England had to experience prior to Maye’s breakout campaign. “I know one thing about Josh McDaniels, while I had my tenure there in New England,” Newton prefaced before jokingly noting that “They value the football. Ball security is job security. If you can protect the football, that puts the team in the best situation possible… I definitely didn’t do that while I was there.” Much like Maye, Newton’s first season in New England saw him throw for 10 interceptions, but seeing as the Patriots ultimately invested nothing more than a pair of one-year deals in him, they weren’t obligated to keep him around after the former Carolina Panther finished the 2020 season with a 7-8 record. Maye, on the other hand, was selected with the third overall draft pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, so even after his rookie season resulted in an equally unimpressive 3-9 record, the team was obligated to stick by him, and boy are they glad that they did. The former Tar Heel has 40 pass completions of 20+ yards throughout the first 11 weeks of his sophomore year, and even though this Sunday’s slate still lays ahead of us, Maye is still leading the league in passing yards as well. Apart from the Buffalo Bills and the Baltimore Ravens, there’s not many challenging match ups left on the Patriots schedule. Week 12 will see him travel to Cincinnati to take on a historically bad Bengals defense, and Week 13 will present a porous New York Giants defense. Throw in the fact that New England will close out the regular season with a pair of divisional match ups against the lowly Miami Dolphins and the same Jets team that they just dismantled on Thursday Night Football, and it seems as if Maye has the perfect opportunity to join Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Dan Marino, and Kurt Warner, as the only quarterbacks to win an MVP award as a sophomore. In other words, those being the ones of Newton, “Drake Maye, you’re playing some good ball, man. Keep it up.” After having played two games in the span of five days, the Patriots will now enjoy a few extra days of rest before preparing for their Monday night road game against the Bengals, where they are already being listed as -5.5 point favorites. The post Cam Newton Admits He “Didn’t Protect the Football” With the Patriots While Praising Drake Maye appeared first on The SportsRush.

Germany’s Julian Nagelsmann won’t settle for draw vs. Slovakia

Nick Woltemade preferred three points over two goals in Germany’s World Cup Qualifying win

Crew of four face charges after burglaries in Nassau County, per police

Marjorie Taylor Greene questions if Trump is still the ‘America First' president
Ten months into Donald Trump’s second term, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has positioned herself as a surprising critic of the administration’s policies — and as a torchbearer for the “America First” agenda that she believes the president has drifted from, she told NBC News in recent interviews. Greene, who has long been one of his most outspoken allies, said that Trump personally inspired her run for Congress in Georgia in 2022 and described her political identity as rooted in his promise to represent what she calls “the forgotten man and woman of America.” “That was me,” she told Tucker Carlson recently, recalling how she saw Trump’s campaign as a “referendum to the Republican Party on behalf of the American people … that were just so sick of Washington, D.C.” Now, Greene finds herself at the center of a divide inside the Republican Party over how deeply the U.S. should involve itself abroad, as surveys show the state of the economy is top of mind for many Americans and following a round of elections that focused on affordability. “No one cares about the foreign countries. No one cares about the never-ending amount of foreign leaders coming to the White House every single week,” Greene told NBC News. The dispute underscores a broader rift over whether Trump’s presidency still reflects the populist message that powered his rise. And it reflects a MAGA movement preparing for a future without Trump at the top of the ticket, with the next generation of leaders figuring out where to take the base he built. Donald Trump Nov 10 Trump responds to criticism from Marjorie Taylor Greene: ‘She's lost her way' Donald Trump 24 hours ago Trump defends his MAGA bona fides amid backlash from his base On Friday night, just hours after NBC News published this story, Trump decided he had had enough. He went on social media and said he was withdrawing his endorsement of her. He said while the U.S. is now the “‘HOTTEST’ Country anywhere in the World…all I see ‘Wacky’ Marjorie do is COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN!” Trump also accused her of going “Far Left” and suggested that her criticism of him was personal, because he didn’t think she should run for senator or governor. He also said he was open to supporting another Republican primary challenger to Greene. Since taking office in January, Trump has made 14 foreign trips, with stops in Italy, the Middle East, Canada, Asia and the U.K., among others, according to an NBC News analysis. In the same period, he’s visited 15 U.S. states. That includes a trip to Alaska to meet Russia’s Vladimir Putin to discuss ending the war in Ukraine. By the same point in Trump’s first term, he had visited 27 states. Trump also said that he expects to travel to China early next year to meet with President Xi Jinping. And Bloomberg reported Thursday that he may attend the World Economic Forum, a gathering of the political and business elite, next year in Davos, Switzerland. “We didn’t elect the president to go out there and travel the world and end the foreign wars,” Greene said. “We elected the president to stop sending tax dollars and weapons for the foreign wars — to completely not engage anymore. Watching the foreign leaders come to the White House through a revolving door is not helping Americans.” “One of the big campaign issues is Americans were fed up with foreign wars,” she added. “It’s like, get us out of this.” While Trump did promise on the campaign trail to quickly end the wars in Ukraine and the Gaza Strip, the latest national NBC News poll shows Republicans overwhelmingly believe he has lived up to their expectations on foreign policy (82%), including 66% of Republicans who do not identify with the MAGA movement. But for Greene and others, it’s a matter of priorities; they argue that the economy should be the clear focus. “It’s not that I want a very different foreign policy,” said one Trump ally with a lens on foreign policy, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “He just needs to be messaging more…
