Tag Archives: Represent

Robert Downey Jr’s Multiple Roles In ‘The Sympathizer’ Represent “America As A Whole,” Director Park Chan-Wook Reveals – Deadline

  1. Robert Downey Jr’s Multiple Roles In ‘The Sympathizer’ Represent “America As A Whole,” Director Park Chan-Wook Reveals Deadline
  2. ‘The Sympathizer’ Confronts Hollywood’s History of the Vietnam War The Ringer
  3. The Sympathizer on HBO: A little Robert Downey Jr. goes a long way in the new show. Slate
  4. ‘The Sympathizer’ Executive Producers Break Down Book-to-Screen Adaptation Variety
  5. In war saga ‘The Sympathizer,’ Vietnamese voices are no longer stuck in the background The Associated Press

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‘American Idol’ Winner Iam Tongi Opens Up About His Father’s Impact and Wanting to “Represent My People” in Music – American Songwriter

  1. ‘American Idol’ Winner Iam Tongi Opens Up About His Father’s Impact and Wanting to “Represent My People” in Music American Songwriter
  2. American Idol fans thrilled after winner Iam Tongi scores major new project alongside judge Luke Bryan and… The US Sun
  3. Iam Tongi ‘Loves’ Accusations that American Idol ‘Rigged’ His Win mjsbigblog
  4. That song you liked on ‘American Idol’ finale? A Kansas City area musician wrote it Kansas City Star
  5. One-on-One with Iam Tongi on winning, ‘Monsters’ and what’s next KHON2
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Folarin Balogun set to represent USMNT over England after FIFA approves switch – The Athletic

  1. Folarin Balogun set to represent USMNT over England after FIFA approves switch The Athletic
  2. Balogun eligible for USMNT after FIFA approve request – ESPN ESPN
  3. Folarin Balogun picks USMNT over England, and instantly becomes a top U.S. striker Yahoo Sports
  4. Forward Folarin Balogun Commits To Represent The United States In International Competition | U.S. Soccer Official Website U.S. Soccer
  5. A HUGE win for USMNT as Folarin Balogun allegiance battle with England appears to be over as FIFA approves striker’s eligibility request Goal.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Judge approves Gardner’s request to have former Greitens co-counsel represent her during removal proceedings – KSDK.com

  1. Judge approves Gardner’s request to have former Greitens co-counsel represent her during removal proceedings KSDK.com
  2. Kim Gardner engages former Harvey Weinstein lawyer to fight AG’s attempt to remove her St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  3. Deadline for Kim Gardner to respond to ousting effort today KTVI Fox 2 St. Louis
  4. Soros-backed Kim Gardner needs to be impeached ‘yesterday’: Leo Terrell Fox News
  5. Kim Gardner hires former Harvey Weinstein lawyer Ronald Sullivan in case brought by Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey – St. Louis Business Journal The Business Journals

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Waukesha Christmas parade trial: Man accused of driving into dozens of people is set to represent himself



CNN
 — 

The man accused of intentionally driving his SUV through a crowd of Christmas parade attendees in Waukesha, Wisconsin, last year, killing six people and wounding dozens more, is set to represent himself at his homicide trial Thursday amid concerns over his mental health.

Darrell E. Brooks, 40, was identified as the driver of a red SUV who plowed into a crowd of people celebrating the city’s Christmas parade on November 21, 2021, turning a joyous afternoon into a massacre.

Brooks had been released from jail less than two weeks prior in a domestic abuse case, on a $1,000 bail that prosecutors recommended and have since said was “inappropriately low.” In that case, he allegedly ran over a woman who said she’s the mother of his child, according to court documents.

Brooks is charged with six counts of intentional homicide with the use of a dangerous weapon, and more than 60 counts of first-degree recklessly endangering safety and six counts of fatal hit and run, according to an amended complaint.

The trial is particularly unusual because Brooks will be representing himself in court.

He previously pleaded not guilty by insanity, but his public defenders withdrew the insanity plea in September. The attorneys later filed a motion to withdraw from the case, and the judge ruled to allow Brooks to represent himself at trial.

However, his mother, Dawn Woods, wrote to the judge and spoke to CNN affiliate WTMJ about her concerns that her son was not stable enough to defend himself. “I hate to say this,” Woods told the affiliate. “You’re going to see manic, full-blown.”

Indeed, jury selection began Monday and quickly devolved into farce as Brooks repeatedly interrupted the judge, argued with her rulings and stated he did not have enough time to prepare, CNN affiliate WISN reported. Judge Jennifer Dorow ordered Brooks moved to a separate courtroom to participate remotely and kept him muted until it was his turn to speak.

“This court is on day one, it is 2:15 p.m., this court within five minutes of starting court this morning had to remove Mr. Brooks based upon his interruptions at that time,” Dorow said, according to WISN.

In the other courtroom, Brooks could be seen speaking to himself and making hand gestures while on mute. At one point, he put his head on the table and put the top of his suit jacket over his head.

The trial will feature a series of witnesses who will be expected to recount the violence and chaos of the day of the attack.

The victims included an 8-year-old boy and three of Milwaukee’s “Dancing Grannies” group that marched in the parade.

A video of the parade recorded by Angela O’Boyle, who was watching from her fifth-story apartment balcony, shows the SUV hitting an individual in a marching band. The vehicle then continued forward, hitting and running over others in the band and crowd before driving away.

“It hit at least two people right away and rolled over them. And then continued down the road to People’s Park which is at the end of the block – and then kept going, it didn’t stop,” O’Boyle told CNN.

One officer described the vehicle as driving in a zig-zag-like pattern, the complaint states.

Angelito Tenorio, another witness, said at the time the scene was “absolutely chaotic.”

“Nobody knew if this was an attack or if this was an accident or if it was a deliberate attack on the people of the parade,” he said in an interview with CNN. “People just started fleeing, running away from the scene, leaving behind their belongings, grabbing their children, calling, screaming, looking for their loved ones.

“And when the crowd cleared out, that’s when it looked like I saw people, who appeared to be lying in the middle of the street, lying still, lying lifeless.”

After he allegedly ran over people and fled the scene, Brooks went to a stranger’s home, asked for help and said he was homeless, a Waukesha resident said. Police eventually arrived to the home and took Brooks into custody.

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Waukesha Christmas parade trial: Man accused of driving into dozens of people is set to represent himself



CNN
 — 

The man accused of intentionally driving his SUV through a crowd of Christmas parade attendees in Waukesha, Wisconsin, last year, killing six people and wounding dozens more, is set to represent himself at his homicide trial Thursday amid concerns over his mental health.

Darrell E. Brooks, 40, was identified as the driver of a red SUV who plowed into a crowd of people celebrating the city’s Christmas parade on November 21, 2021, turning a joyous afternoon into a massacre.

Brooks had been released from jail less than two weeks prior in a domestic abuse case, on a $1,000 bail that prosecutors recommended and have since said was “inappropriately low.” In that case, he allegedly ran over a woman who said she’s the mother of his child, according to court documents.

Brooks is charged with six counts of intentional homicide with the use of a dangerous weapon, and more than 60 counts of first-degree recklessly endangering safety and six counts of fatal hit and run, according to an amended complaint.

The trial is particularly unusual because Brooks will be representing himself in court.

He previously pleaded not guilty by insanity, but his public defenders withdrew the insanity plea in September. The attorneys later filed a motion to withdraw from the case, and the judge ruled to allow Brooks to represent himself at trial.

However, his mother, Dawn Woods, wrote to the judge and spoke to CNN affiliate WTMJ about her concerns that her son was not stable enough to defend himself. “I hate to say this,” Woods told the affiliate. “You’re going to see manic, full-blown.”

Indeed, jury selection began Monday and quickly devolved into farce as Brooks repeatedly interrupted the judge, argued with her rulings and stated he did not have enough time to prepare, CNN affiliate WISN reported. Judge Jennifer Dorow ordered Brooks moved to a separate courtroom to participate remotely and kept him muted until it was his turn to speak.

“This court is on day one, it is 2:15 p.m., this court within five minutes of starting court this morning had to remove Mr. Brooks based upon his interruptions at that time,” Dorow said, according to WISN.

In the other courtroom, Brooks could be seen speaking to himself and making hand gestures while on mute. At one point, he put his head on the table and put the top of his suit jacket over his head.

The trial will feature a series of witnesses who will be expected to recount the violence and chaos of the day of the attack.

The victims included an 8-year-old boy and three of Milwaukee’s “Dancing Grannies” group that marched in the parade.

A video of the parade recorded by Angela O’Boyle, who was watching from her fifth-story apartment balcony, shows the SUV hitting an individual in a marching band. The vehicle then continued forward, hitting and running over others in the band and crowd before driving away.

“It hit at least two people right away and rolled over them. And then continued down the road to People’s Park which is at the end of the block – and then kept going, it didn’t stop,” O’Boyle told CNN.

One officer described the vehicle as driving in a zig-zag-like pattern, the complaint states.

Angelito Tenorio, another witness, said at the time the scene was “absolutely chaotic.”

“Nobody knew if this was an attack or if this was an accident or if it was a deliberate attack on the people of the parade,” he said in an interview with CNN. “People just started fleeing, running away from the scene, leaving behind their belongings, grabbing their children, calling, screaming, looking for their loved ones.

“And when the crowd cleared out, that’s when it looked like I saw people, who appeared to be lying in the middle of the street, lying still, lying lifeless.”

After he allegedly ran over people and fled the scene, Brooks went to a stranger’s home, asked for help and said he was homeless, a Waukesha resident said. Police eventually arrived to the home and took Brooks into custody.

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MLB Recognizes MLBPA’s Request To Represent Minor Leaguers

Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred announced today that the league is prepared to voluntarily recognize the MLBPA as the new collective bargaining representatives for minor league players. The announcement comes less than two weeks after the MLBPA sent authorization cards to minor leaguers seeking to represent them, and just days after the union received “significant” majority support and formally requested that the commissioner’s office voluntarily recognize the seismic shift in player representation. According to Evan Drellich of the Athletic (Twitter link), the recognition is pending agreement between the league and union on a card-check resolution — essentially an independent verification of the authorization cards sent last month.

MLBPA executive director Tony Clark released a statement in response to MLB’s announcement (relayed by James Wagner of the New York Times):

We are pleased (MLB) is moving forward with this process in a productive manner. While there are significant steps remaining, we are confident discussions will reach a positive outcome.

Had the league not agreed, the MLBPA would have engaged with the federal National Labor Relations Board to prompt an election among minor leaguers. Assuming a majority of those who voted approved of MLBPA representation, the NLRB could then have forced MLB’s hand in recognizing the unionization. Those extra steps won’t be necessary, following today’s announcement by Manfred.

An MLBPA official told MLBTR last week the proposed unionization efforts would give minor leaguers their own separate bargaining unit under the MLBPA umbrella, adding that any minor league CBA would be negotiated independently of the Major League CBA that was completed earlier this year. The MLBPA recently announced it had hired all members of the group Advocates For Minor Leaguers, a move which bolstered the union’s leadership ranks in preparation for the shift, which will see MLBPA membership grow from 1200 to more than 5000.

MLB’s announcement figures to accelerate the process for eventually getting minor league players under the MLBPA umbrella. League recognition would serve as an implicit acknowledgement that the majority of minor leaguers would likely have voted in favor of unionization had the PA petitioned the NLRB for an election.

It now seems all but certain minor leaguers will soon become members of the MLB Players Association. It’s completely uncharted territory for minor leaguers, who have never previously been part of a union. In a full post earlier this week, Drellich spoke to a handful of minor league players about the process. Drellich noted that players in the rookie level Dominican Summer League will not automatically be included because it’s based outside the United States, but the MLBPA is now likely to represent players from domestic complex ball up through Triple-A and plans to bargain over DSL working conditions despite those players not officially joining the Association.

Drellich wrote this evening that both the league and MLBPA believe it possible to hammer out a CBA for minor league players in time for the start of the 2023 season. Negotiations figure to start not long after MLB grants its formal recognition (assuming it transpires), and Drellich notes it’s possible the card-check agreement could be reached in the near future, barring setbacks.

As he points out, the expected recognition comes just a couple months after Congresspeople from both parties expressed an interest in reconsidering MLB’s antitrust exemption. Low rates of pay for minor leaguers has been one of many legislators’ critiques, but recognition of a union and signing a collective bargaining agreement with minor leaguers would take that issue outside the realm of antitrust law and into labor law territory.

It’s set to be a monumental change for the MLBPA, which also joined the AFL-CIO this week. The union’s efforts at both expanding its membership and increasing its communication with labor leaders in other industries comes on the heels of a few years of labor strife. Clark pointed to the contentious return-to-play negotiations after the 2020 COVID shutdown and last winter’s lockout as reasons for affiliating with the AFL-CIO.



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RB James White retiring from NFL, says it was ‘an honor to represent’ New England Patriots

New England Patriots running back James White announced his retirement from the NFL on Thursday.

White, who re-signed with the Patriots on a two-year deal in the offseason, is on the team’s physically unable to perform list. He suffered a hip injury last September that ended his season and required surgery.

White said in a statement posted to social media that “it has been an honor to represent my family, my teammates and the people of New England as a Patriot!”

“Thank you to Mr. Kraft, Coach Belichick, and the entire Patriots organization for giving me the opportunity to live out my childhood dream. To be able to play my entire career for one franchise, in front of the best fans in the NFL, has been a tremendous blessing and honor,” he added in the statement.

White, 30, has spent his entire eight-year career with the Patriots, who selected him in the fourth round of the 2014 draft out of Wisconsin.

His role as the pass-catching back in the Patriots’ offense has been vital, as he was selected to the franchise’s All-Dynasty and 2010s All-Decade Team.

He holds three Super Bowl records, all from the team’s Super Bowl LI win over the Atlanta Falcons: most receptions (14), most points scored (20) and most touchdowns (3).

A four-time team captain, the soft-spoken White set a career-high and franchise record by a running back for receptions (87) and receiving yards (751) in 2018.

ESPN’s Mike Reiss contributed to this report.



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Represent the state: UNC transfer Dawson Garcia commits to Gophers

Prior Lake’s Dawson Garcia heard how much Ben Johnson wants to get Gophers men’s basketball back in contention, so he was “filled with excitement” to announce Monday he’ll be jumping on board to help kickstart the program.

The 6-foot-11 North Carolina transfer committed Monday afternoon with an Instagram post that said “homegrown” after his second visit to Minnesota’s campus.

The Gophers hosted Garcia on Friday, and he made his decision official while returning to the U after the weekend with his family.

“It’s like the coolest thing ever,” Garcia told the Star Tribune. “Ben’s done an unbelievable job to establish a culture in one year. I can only imagine what he’s going to do in Year 2 and beyond.

“I’m excited to put on the uniform, but also when the time comes to be a proud alum and say I was part of the process of getting Minnesota basketball back.”

Johnson landed one of the highest-rated recruits in recent team history. Garcia’s the first McDonald’s All-American to join the program since former NBA and Hopkins forward Kris Humphries in 2004.

After a surprising start during a 13-17 season replacing 10 players, Johnson hasn’t lost any players to the transfer portal and added a huge piece to a team that could make a significant jump next season.

Garcia could bolster a lineup that returns leading scorer and rebounder Jamison Battle. When he officially signs this week, Garcia will become the seventh scholarship player from Minnesota on the roster, most for the program since 2007-08.

Battle, Parker Fox, and Treyton Thompson are returning. Johnson also signed Pharrel Payne, Braeden Carrington, and Joshua Ola-Joseph in the 2022 recruiting class.

“I’m excited to wear ‘Minnesota’ across my chest,” Garcia said. “It’s something that not too many people get to do, to represent the state.”

The highly-skilled sophomore big man entered the transfer portal last Wednesday after averaging 9.0 points, 5.5 rebounds and shooting 37.5% from three-point range in 16 games this season for first-year North Carolina coach Hubert Davis, including 12 starts.

In late January, Garcia left North Carolina and returned home to Minnesota to support his family while it struggled with COVID-19, including tragic losses during the pandemic.

Garcia’s last game with North Carolina was Jan. 22 at Wake Forest. The Tar Heels eventually reached the NCAA title game and fell to Kansas in New Orleans, but he was going through a “low point in my life.”

“It was a very tough situation,” Garcia said. “That’s why I can’t thank enough the people who were there for my family and had our back during that time. I’ll never be able to truly repay them.”

At Prior Lake, Garcia was a 2,000-point career scorer and averaged 31.9 points as a senior. Playing for Team USA, he was MVP of the 3-on-3 US 18U championships and World Cup in 2019, which included a gold medal victory in Mongolia.

Garcia, the second-best prospect in the state’s 2020 class behind Minnehaha Academy’s Jalen Suggs, was recruited heavily by former Gophers coach Richard Pitino and his staff. But he signed with Marquette after he built a relationship with the Golden Eagles much earlier.

After averaging 13 points and 6.6 rebounds for Marquette in 2020-21, Garcia was named to the All-Big East freshman team.

But after Golden Eagles coach Steve Wojciechowski was fired following a 13-14 season, Garcia decided to transfer to North Carolina, joining his former AAU teammate and Hopkins guard Kerwin Walton.

In the first 10 games for North Carolina, Garcia averaged 12.2 points, 6.1 rebounds, shot 47.8% from three and 49.4% from the field. The best of his three 20-point performances included a season-high 26 points in a Nov. 20 loss vs. Purdue.

Since this is Garcia’s second transfer, the Gophers will need a hardship waiver granted by the NCAA for him to be immediately eligible. But Garcia could already picture himself with them while watching workouts on Monday.

“It was awesome being down at the practice facility,” Garcia said. “It just felt it was yesterday when I played with some of those guys. I know a lot of them. There’s a lot of home state talent on this team.”

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Refugees Fleeing Ukraine Now Represent Biggest Movement of People in Europe Since World War II

RZESZOW, Poland—More than 1.45 million people have left Ukraine since Russia invaded the country 10 days ago, the International Organization for Migration said on Saturday, sparking what the United Nations agency described as the fastest and largest displacement of people in Europe since World War II.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine last week, large numbers of Ukrainians have fled, most heading west and toward eastern members of the European Union—Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia—that have pledged assistance.

Areas seized as of Tuesday

Direction of invasion forces

Controlled by or allied to Russia

Ukraine territory, recognized by Putin as independent

Chernobyl

Not in operation

Controlled by

separatists

Areas seized as of Monday

Direction of invasion forces

Controlled by or allied to Russia

Ukraine territory, recognized by Putin as independent

Chernobyl

Not in operation

Controlled by

separatists

Areas seized as of Tuesday

Direction of invasion forces

Controlled by or allied to Russia

Ukraine territory, recognized by Putin as independent

Chernobyl

Not in operation

Controlled by

separatists

Areas seized as of Tuesday

Direction of invasion forces

Controlled by or allied to Russia

Ukraine territory, recognized by Putin as independent

Areas seized as of Tuesday

Direction of invasion forces

Controlled by or allied to Russia

Ukraine territory, recognized by Putin as independent

Around half of the refugees have crossed into Poland, whose border-control agency said on Saturday that 827,600 people had entered from Ukraine since Feb. 24, when the Russian invasion began. The first seven hours of Saturday saw 33,700 arrivals, more than the previous day, according to the agency.

In the short time since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, more asylum seekers have crossed into the EU than in all of 2015, when some 1.3 million arrived from the Middle East and elsewhere in a wave of migration that tested the bloc’s solidarity and placed pressure on leaders including former German Chancellor

Angela Merkel.

European rail operators are allowing free travel to anyone carrying Ukrainian identification papers, and the EU agreed on Thursday to grant Ukrainian refugees temporary residence permits, removing the need for them to request asylum.

Poland has been a staunch supporter of Ukrainian independence since before the invasion, with Prime Minister

Mateusz Morawiecki

pledging weapons and humanitarian supplies on visits to Kyiv as Russia built up troops around Ukraine.

Since then, towns and cities along Poland’s eastern border and in parts of other countries that neighbor Ukraine have mobilized resources to help the influx of migrants, bringing blankets and warm clothing to school sports halls and opening logistics centers to process the new arrivals.

Refugees wait for a bus at the Ukrainian border in Medyka, Poland, Saturday.



Photo:

Kay Nietfeld/Zuma Press

In Germany, to accommodate arrivals from Ukraine, authorities have reopened refugee shelters that were used in 2015-16, at the height of the Syrian war.

At the time, countries such as Poland and Hungary drew ire from some European leaders by opposing migrant quotas from the EU and putting up fences and other restrictions aimed at keeping people out. Those countries are again at the border of another humanitarian crisis, and giving refuge to residents of a post-Soviet neighbor that has long voiced aspirations to become an EU member.

“When Russia opens fire on Ukraine, Poles open up their border and their hearts for them,” Mr. Morawiecki wrote on Twitter on Friday.

Hundreds of volunteers are working at Poland’s border with Ukraine to find shelter and warm clothing for refugees and arrange onward travel.

At the train station in Przemysl, a town near the border, Ukrainians can get free meals, cellphone sim cards and help with arranging free travel to other Polish cities.

Many of the volunteers working in Przemysl are hosting refugees at their homes while they arrange accommodation for them in larger cities such as Krakow and Warsaw.

“This situation poses a very big challenge, a kind of an exam I hope that we will all pass somehow,” said

Anna Leskiw,

a Polish language teacher at the Ukrainian School in Przemysl. Ms. Leskiw has been coming to the train station daily as a volunteer, often joined by students.

On one day, “3,000 people left one train, mainly women with children,” Ms. Leskiw said. “A horrible view—they were exhausted, were crying. My heart didn’t handle that.”

Poland is already home to between one million and two million Ukrainians, many of whom have settled in the country since conflict erupted in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Kyiv in 2014. Many of the new arrivals are connecting with family or friends already in Poland.

Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau, meeting with U.S. Secretary of State

Antony Blinken

on Saturday, said Warsaw’s priority is “organizing effective aid to hundreds of thousands and soon to be millions of refugees.”

A few miles from the border, Mr. Blinken visited the Korczowa refugee processing center, a converted shopping mall brimming with Ukrainians—mostly women and children—along with coats and piles of food and water bottles.

One mother said her house in Kharkiv was destroyed by a shell while she and her daughters, ages 6 and 1, were sheltering in a basement. “They are children, they don’t understand,” she said.

Jasmine Ahmadi, 16, said she traveled from Kyiv to Poland with her family, six dogs and seven cats. “I was scared I would die,” she said.

In Germany, around 20,000 refugees have been registered since the start of the war, according to the government, a number that continues to grow with thousands of daily arrivals at the central train station in Berlin. More than 13,000 people fleeing the war arrived by train in Berlin on Friday evening, Germany’s rail operator Deutsche Bahn said.

“We will of course take in those who come to Germany,” Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said last week.

Evacuees at the Lviv station in Ukraine rushed to board a train to Poland Saturday.



Photo:

daniel leal/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Germans have flocked to Berlin Central Station to offer food and accommodation to refugees pouring in from Poland.

“My dad and my brother stayed behind to help defend our home,” said a woman who arrived Tuesday with three children and her elderly mother. “We cry for them, not for us,” she said while waiting for a train to Italy, hoping to join relatives who live there.

People from across Europe have come to the border to help the refugees. Near the Polish-Ukrainian border crossing at Medyka, Dutch, German and Austrian citizens have arrived to help transport Ukrainians or offer them a temporary roof over their heads.

Danny Rijnenberg,

a 29-year-old Dutchman who works for an insulation company, traveled this week from his home in the Netherlands to offer transportation and accommodations to any Ukrainians who want to temporarily stay at his home.

“This is my human obligation,” said Mr. Rijnenberg, as he stood in the arrivals hall of Przemysl train station holding a placard reading “Holland.”

Write to Matthew Luxmoore at Matthew.Luxmoore@wsj.com and Bojan Pancevski at bojan.pancevski@wsj.com

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