Suryakumar Yadav: It was not easy to defend the World Cup at home, Suryakumar said – Happiness on one side and happiness on the other…

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It was not easy to defend the World Cup at home, Suryakumar said – happiness on one side..

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Suryakumar Yadav cnbc tv18 india business leader awards 2026: Suryakumar Yadav said from the stage of CNBC TV18 India Business Leader Awards that he was happy to play the T20 World Cup at home but the team was also nervous. Under the captaincy of Suryakumar Yadav, the Indian team lifted the T20 World Cup trophy for the third time by defeating New Zealand by 96 runs in the final match of the tournament held in Ahmedabad. India is the first team to win this tournament three times.

It was not easy to defend the World Cup at home, Suryakumar said - happiness on one side..Zoom
Suryakumar said that there was some nervousness about playing the T20 World Cup at home.

New Delhi. The Indian team is the first team to win the T20 World Cup at home. As soon as Team India defeated New Zealand in the final of the tournament played at Narendra Modi Stadium on March 8, it created history. Captain Suryakumar Yadav has told that there was happiness of playing T20 World Cup at home, but there was also nervousness along with it. Suryakumar Yadav gave this statement from the stage of CNBC TV18 India Business Leader Awards. Suryakumar Yadav was honored with the Sports Leader of the Year Award.

Suryakumar Yadav said that as much as it was a pleasure for the team to play the tournament at home, there was also a little pressure, but he said that this pressure makes the game more fun. During a special conversation at CNBC-TV18’s India Business Leader Awards 2026, he said, ‘When we came to know that the tournament will be held in India, we were very happy. But there was some nervousness also. If there is no pressure then the game will not be fun. As soon as we came to know that the matches would be held in India, there was an atmosphere of happiness in the entire team and dressing room. There was pressure, but all the players were very excited about playing in India.

Suryakumar said that there was some nervousness about playing the T20 World Cup at home.

What did you say about your captaincy?
When asked about the captaincy mantra, Suryakumar said, ‘It is very important for every player to have the freedom to express his views in the dressing room.’ He also said, ‘Talks on the field should be kept to the field only and should not be taken into home or personal life.’ He said, ‘According to me, whatever happens on the field, it should end there. When you come off the field, you are just a normal human being. Whether you play well or not, it should not be taken home, to friends or family. It’s the little things that matter the most. It is very important to listen to everyone in the dressing room and everyone should have the freedom to express their views. In the end our goal is the same.

What did you say about the atmosphere in the dressing room?
He further said, ‘Sometimes it is a bit difficult to listen to everyone’s different opinions, but this is also a good thing. Everyone has different ideas and plans, but in the end we have to move in the same direction because the goal is the same. There is a lot of joking, talking and good decisions in the dressing room. Sometimes some players are not happy, but still our dressing room is very happy. In the end, Suryakumar Yadav said that his next big goal is to make India win the gold medal in the 2028 Olympics.

About the Author

Shivam Upadhyay

Working as Sub Editor in Network 18 Group since November 2025. 3 years experience in journalism. Debuted in sports journalism with Zee News. Interested in writing about cricket as well as hockey and badminton. mother…read more

Gina Gershon recalls ‘creepy’ encounter with Dorothy Stratten’s killer

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This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

Gina Gershon will never forget her brief encounter with Paul Snider, the “creepy” small-time hustler who later murdered his wife, Playboy Playmate Dorothy Stratten, before killing himself.

The actress has a new memoir out, “AlphaPussy: How I Survived the Valley and Learned to Love My Boobs,” chronicling her rise to Hollywood stardom and the many famous faces she met along the way. The “Bound” and “Showgirls” star told Fox News Digital that her meeting with Snider continued to unsettle her for years.

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“How did it stay with me? Well, because it was creepy to begin with,” said the 63-year-old. “I was just out there dancing with my friend, and then very soon after that, you heard about the horrible murder in which he killed his wife, Dorothy Stratten. And honestly, it really creeped me out.”

“It scared me, thinking, ‘Oh my God, I was just talking to that guy just a few weeks ago. What if I said ‘Sure?’ It scared me, but I listened to my instincts. He was really a creep. I don’t think [you need] great instincts for that.”

Gina Gershon wearing all black and smiling in New York City.

Gina Gershon attends “The Testament Of Ann Lee” New York screening at Crosby Street Hotel on Dec. 9, 2025. (Theo Wargo/WireImage/Getty Images)

It was 1980 when Gershon went dancing at a Los Angeles nightclub with Jodie Foster, whom she befriended in college, according to her book.

Gina Gershon on the runway.

Gina Gershon walks the runway during the Lingua Franca NYFW Autumn/Winter 2025 Runway Show at The Bowery Hotel on Feb. 4, 2025, in New York City. (Udo Salters/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)

“We had to be 21 to get into the club, but I guess since Jodie was famous, they let us in,” she wrote. “Definitely a perk.”

Book cover for AlphaPussy

Gina Gershon’s memoir, “AlphaPussy: How I Survived the Valley and Learned to Love My Boobs,” is available now. (Akashic Books, Ltd.)

As they were having fun, “some weird guy with a mustache” approached Gershon.

“Would you ever consider posing for Playboy?” he asked. “I know Hef. I could introduce you.”

Gina Gershon in a black gown being escorted from the Met Opera.

Gina Gershon at the Met Opera opening on Sept. 21, 2025, in New York City. (Alyssa Greenberg/WWD via Getty Images)

Gershon declined, but the man insisted, saying she was “perfect” for the magazine and “just what they’re looking for.”

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Gina Gershon wearing a pink boa in a scene from "Showgirls."

Gina Gershon went on to star in the 1995 cult classic “Showgirls.” (© 1995 United Artists/Murray Close/ALAMY)

“No, thank you,” Gershon replied firmly. “I want to be an actress, so I don’t think that would be a good idea.”

A close-up of Gina Gershon.

Gina Gershon attends a special screening for “Borderlands” at TCL Chinese Theatre on Aug. 6, 2024, in Hollywood. (Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty Images)

“My wife, Dorothy, is an actress,” said Snider, as quoted in the book. “And being the centerfold totally helped her. She’s now starring in a Peter Bogdanovich movie. Think about it.”

Snider handed Gershon a business card before he “sauntered away.”

A young Gina Gershon at a dance class.

Actress Gina Gershon on the set of the Tri-Star movie “Red Heat” in 1988. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

“He was so slimy he practically left a trail of ooze in his wake,” Gershon wrote. “Jodie and I looked at the card, which had ‘Paul Snider’ written on the front. Creepy. I threw it away, and we got out of there.”

Three weeks later, Gershon read in the newspaper that Snider had murdered Stratten, 20, before turning the gun on himself. He was 29.

A scene from Star 80.

Mariel Hemingway as Dorothy Stratten and Eric Roberts as Paul Snider in a scene from the film “Star 80,” circa 1983. (Paramount/Getty Images)

“In 1981, Bob Fosse, one of my favorite directors, made ‘Star 80,’ a film about the tragedy,” Gershon wrote. “I was very happy not to have been a subject in that movie.”

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Gina Gershon acting out a scene from "Bound."

Gina Gershon also starred in 1996’s “Bound” opposite Jennifer Tilly. (Maximum Film/ALAMY)

Gershon still shudders when she recalls meeting Snider.

“There was something very sleazy and icky about him,” she told Fox News Digital. “And honestly, I wasn’t interested in posing for Playboy. I wanted to be a very serious actress. And especially at that time, you just didn’t do that.”

Gina Gershon at the anniversary event for "Sophie's Choice."

Gina Gershon told Fox News Digital she’s always trusted her gut instincts in Hollywood. (Dia Dipasupil/WireImage/Getty Images)

Snider scouted Stratten when she was a teenager serving ice cream at a Dairy Queen in Vancouver, Canada, People magazine reported. Stratten was helping her mother make ends meet while Snider, a local pimp, had big dreams of Hollywood fame.

Dorothy Stratten

Dorothy Stratten was Playboy Magazine’s 1980 Playmate of the Year. (Getty Images)

Snider arranged and paid for a nude photoshoot that helped Stratten get noticed by Playboy at age 18. Described as shy, she initially hesitated to strip down, but Snider persisted until she gave in. 

The pair married in 1979, a few months before she turned 19. That year, Stratten was named Miss August and later became Playmate of the Year for 1980.

Dorothy Stratten signing autographs.

Dorothy Stratten is seen at the Playboy Mansion in 1980. (Fotos International/Getty Images     )

As Stratten’s fame rose, a jealous Snider found himself left behind. 

Candice DeLong, a retired FBI profiler, recently explored the case in her true crime podcast, “Killer Psyche.” DeLong told Fox News Digital that Snider was a “psychopath” who “used, abused and eventually murdered Dorothy Stratten.”

Candice DeLong at a podium speaking.

Candice DeLong speaks onstage during “Wondery Exhibit C: A True Crime Experience Live” at Gotham Hall on Oct. 24, 2023, in New York City. (Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images for Wondery)

“He was never a partner,” DeLong stressed. “He was an abuser from the moment he met her. Before he knew her name, he said to a man, ‘That girl’s going to make me a lot of money.’ That’s how the relationship started. In his mind, he saw her as a cash register.”

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WATCH: CANDICE DELONG CALLS PLAYBOY PLAYMATE DOROTHY STRATTEN’S KILLER A ‘PSYCHOPATH’

“Paul Snider is a psychopath, not to be confused with psycho,” DeLong explained. “We hear the term psycho and think, ‘woo woo, somebody’s crazy.’ Psychopath does not mean that. It’s a clinical term for someone who is afflicted with antisocial personality disorder. They don’t care about other people. But the most important thing to remember about them is they’re users and abusers of the rest of us.”

Snider and Stratten’s relationship quickly deteriorated, and they separated. Friends of the couple said Snider had become increasingly controlling and abusive.

Hugh Hefner posing with Playboy Playmate Dorothy Stratten

Hugh Hefner is seen here with Dorothy Stratten as she holds a plaque naming her 1980 Playmate of the Year.  (Julian Wasser/Online USA Inc./Getty Images)

During their separation, Stratten began a relationship with filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich, whom she met at the Playboy Mansion, People reported. Bogdanovich wrote a part for her in his 1981 romantic comedy, “They All Laughed.” Believing Stratten was having an affair, Snider hired a private investigator.

Dorothy Stratten and Peter Bogdanovich walking together.

Director Peter Bogdanovich and Dorothy Stratten are seen on the location of their film, “They All Laughed,” circa 1980. (The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images )

Stratten filed for divorce. She and Snider agreed to meet at their former home to discuss the financial terms of their split. Reports say friends warned her not to go.

“She didn’t want to be with him anymore,” said DeLong. “She was in love with Peter Bogdanovich, who was infinitely better for her than Paul. [But] Paul could not handle her leaving him. And so, he destroyed the source of his pain. He took a young woman away from the rest of us because he couldn’t stand her not being there to open her wallet for him.”

Dorothy Stratten and Paul Snider in a smiling portrait.

Playmate Dorothy Stratten and husband Paul Snider, circa 1978. (Associated Press )

On Aug. 14, 1980, the day of their meeting, Snider shot Stratten to death with a shotgun, then turned the gun on himself. Their bodies were later found by friends.

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Poster for "Killer Psyche" true crime podcast.

Candice DeLong, the host of “Killer Psyche,” spoke to Fox News Digital about the case of Dorothy Stratten. (Audible Original)

“I can understand why he killed himself right afterward,” said DeLong. “Maybe he was horrified at what he did. I don’t think so. I think he probably knew he was going to San Quentin for the rest of his life or possibly death row in San Quentin.”

Bogdanovich wrote a book published in 1984 titled “The Killing of the Unicorn,” in which he criticized Hefner and the Playboy empire for its alleged role in events he said ended in Stratten’s death. 

Smiling Dorothy Stratten

Dorothy Stratten worked at Dairy Queen before she became a star on the rise.     (Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Getty Images     )

Nine years later, at age 49, he married her younger sister, Louise Stratten, who was 20. They divorced in 2001, but continued living together with her mother in Los Angeles, The Associated Press reported.

Peter Bogdanovich looks glum/frowns in a photo wearing a black bandana scarf and textured jacket

Peter Bogdanovich attends a special screening of “Cake” on Nov. 23, 2014, in West Hollywood. He died in 2022. (Araya Diaz/Getty Images for cinema prive)

Bogdanovich told Fox News Digital in 2017 that his love for the late model has never faded.

“[I miss her] wisdom, her laugh, her warmth, her beauty, her humor, her charm, her elegance [and] her empathy. Everything about her I miss, she had.”

The director died in 2022. He was 82.



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Home Office U-turn will let some dual nationals use EU passport to enter UK | Immigration and asylum

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British dual nationals who are EU citizens with post-Brexit settlement status in the UK will not have to use a British passport to return to the UK, the Home Office has said in a significant U-turn on its controversial dual national border rules.

The change, which critics say was “hidden away” on a government web page, comes weeks after controversy erupted over the new rules that came into effect on 25 February. They require British dual nationals to present a British passport or certificate of entitlement, costing £589, before they board a plane to the UK.

Thousands of people have been affected by the rules, including EU citizens with settlement status in the UK who had successfully applied for citizenship but had not yet received British passports. They were effectively locked out of the country, but are now free to return on their EU passport.

An updated Home Office citizenship web page states: “If you got British citizenship after settling in the UK under the EU settlement scheme, you can travel to the UK using a valid: passport of your other nationality; [or] national identity card from the EU, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein or Switzerland.”

Jelena, a Latvian-British dual national who learned of the rule change on a social media post by the campaign group the3million said she was “absolutely devastated and angry” that the rule change was only being made now.

The first rule change meant Jelena had to return from South America to Latvia instead of the UK, where she has lived for 16 years with her British husband. Photograph: Jelena

Last September, she and her British husband had booked a “trip of a lifetime” to South America for the end of March and her plans had already been disrupted at great financial and emotional cost.

A chartered surveyor, she completed her British citizenship test in November and has yet to get a passport, but did not want to miss the trip.

After discussing it with her firm, where she is an associate director, the couple decided to go ahead with the holiday but she would return to Latvia rather than the UK and wait there for up to 24 weeks for her British passport to arrive.

“I was meant to be excited about the upcoming holiday, but instead I had to stress about this and rearrange travel,” she said.

“I have already spent £2,000 on the naturalisation process, and the certificate is an extra £600, and as it stood, after South America I wouldn’t be able to return to my flat which we own in a country I have lived in for nearly 16 years,” she said.

Jelena received an email two days ago saying she no longer needed to show a British passport to enter the UK.

“I don’t really understand how people were meant to know about these changes,” she said, adding she was pleased the Home Office had seen sense but that the experience had left a “bitter aftertaste”.

The3million welcomed the rule change but criticised the Home Office for not communicating it widely. The campaign group was notified of the change in an email on 10 March.

It said the rule change was “hidden away” on a gov.uk site about citizenship but not on the main page detailing the new border rules for dual nationals.

“We are really pleased that this change will help those who faced an effective travel ban following their naturalisation ceremony,” said Monique Hawkins, the head of policy and advocacy. “But it is so disappointing that these changes come without any consultation, and several weeks too late.

“The changes are hidden away on obscure Home Office pages. People are hearing about it from us, rather than from the government.”

Hawkins pointed out the rule change did not apply to British nationals in the EU who had naturalised post-Brexit, or EU citizens in the UK who had naturalised rather than applied for settled status, or people with Windrush independent leave to remain status.

Another woman, Florence, missed out on a trip on 28 February to see her elderly and frail father in France because she had naturalised but was waiting for her passport.

“My husband went without me to France to see the family while I applied for the British passport. The ferry ticket had to be amended and obviously cost more. I stayed here and went to work instead,” Florence said.

“Now, I hear that the government has made a U-turn. Why now? There was plenty of evidence back on the 25th [of February] that people would be stuck,” she said.

The migration minister Mike Tapp called the criticism of the Home Office’s communications “absurd” during an urgent question debate the day after the dual national change was introduced.

The Home Office has been approached for comment.



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Former CISA chief accuses Iran of using AI to create false war narratives

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The Iranian regime is using artificial intelligence to generate a false “global narrative” that it is winning the war with the U.S., Bridget Bean, the former acting director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), told Fox News on Friday.

“They can’t win on the battlefield, so they’re going to try and win through AI and through a global narrative,” Bean said on “The Ingraham Angle.”

“And their old playbook was very discernible – funny faces or out-of-time lip sync – but they’ve gotten very good on some of their AI manipulation. And we’ve seen that.”

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placards with an image of Iran's new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei with late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

People hold placards with an image of Iran’s new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, alongside the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during a gathering to support Mojtaba Khamenei in Tehran, Iran, on March 9.  (Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) Via Reuters)

Bean said those scrolling quickly on their phones might not notice that something is off about the regime’s AI-generated content and urged people to be “careful about what’s happening.”

“Their goal is to weaken our will, our resolve and to really push a narrative that is not true,” she added.

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Mojtaba Khamenei

Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is seen in Tehran, Iran, on Dec. 14, 2016. People are accusing the Iranian regime of using AI-altered images of the new supreme leader. (Photo by Reza B / Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images)

The New York Post reported Thursday that Iran published AI-altered images of the new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, which comes on the heels of reports that he is too injured to make a public appearance.

Shayan Sardarizadeh, a senior journalist at BBC Verify, told the outlet that photos recently published by Iranian state media and on Khamenei’s X account had been edited using online AI tools.

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Bean said the regime is “taking real pictures, real videos and adding just a touch of AI” so that it “passes the gut test.”

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“What we’re seeing is not surprising. They have played this exact same playbook since June of 2025. During the 12-day war, they did this, and it really was the first time for a global conflict where we saw AI-generated disinformation outpace traditional propaganda.”



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Why is Iran’s Kharg Island important? | US-Israel war on Iran

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US President Donald Trump shared a video of strikes on Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil export hub, while saying he spared the oil infrastructure “for reasons of decency”. Analysts warn any attack on the island could cripple Iran’s oil revenue and disrupt global energy markets. Here’s what we know.



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Kaine, Warner dig in against DHS funding despite shooting at ODU

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Virginia’s Democratic senators aren’t budging from their position against funding the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) without reforms, despite a deadly shooting involving a suspect with links to ISIS.

Sens. Mark Warner, D-Va., and Tim Kaine, D-Va., have both consistently voted with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and their colleagues against the GOP’s attempts to reopen the agency in their push for stringent reforms to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

Senate Republicans have warned of the necessity to reopen DHS out of concern about an increase in terrorist activity in the U.S. following Operation Epic Fury in Iran.

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Mark Warner and Tim Kaine split

Sens. Mark Warner, D-Va., and Tim Kaine, D-Va., are both sticking by Democrats’ DHS funding demands despite a deadly shooting at ODU with a suspect linked to ISIS and the alleged murder of a Virginia resident by an illegal immigrant.  (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images; Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

That became a reality on Thursday when the FBI announced it was investigating the shooting at Old Dominion University, which left one person dead and two others wounded, as an act of terrorism after identifying the alleged shooter as Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, a former member of the Army National Guard who was convicted of supporting ISIS.

Kaine argued that Senate Democrats have repeatedly tried to reopen chunks of the agency, either through a bill that carved out funding for ICE and CBP or through standalone funding bills that Republicans have blocked.

“Senate Democrats have repeatedly moved to fund — and Senate Republicans have repeatedly blocked — TSA, CISA, the Coast Guard and other entities within DHS that help keep us safe,” Kaine said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

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Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, the individual identified as the alleged shooter at ODU

Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, the individual identified as the alleged shooter at ODU on Thursday, March 12, 2026.  (John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images; The Intercept)

Warner said in a statement to Fox News Digital that he was “heartbroken by the loss of Lt. Col. Brandon A. Shah” and lauded the Old Dominion University students who subdued Jalloh.

But he pointed the finger at FBI Director Kash Patel for playing a role in the incident and demanded that Patel “answer for how the FBI lost track of a known, convicted terrorist sympathizer who was then able to get his hands on a gun and murder an American citizen.”

“Following Director Patel’s mass firings of experienced FBI agents and counterterrorism experts, this tragedy emphasizes serious concerns about whether his leadership has left Americans more vulnerable to threats,” Warner said.

DEMS VOTE TO KEEP DHS CLOSED DESPITE AIRPORT CHAOS, IRANIAN SLEEPER CELL THREAT

Stephanie Minter, 41, and Abdul Jalloh, 32

Abdul Jalloh, 32, is accused of killing Stephanie Minter, 41, at a Virginia bus stop.  (Fox 5 DC)

Separately, the lawmakers panned ICE’s handling of Abdul Jalloh, who was charged with the murder of Virginia resident Stephanie Minter earlier this year.

When asked if Virginia counties should have cooperated with ICE to detain Jalloh, an illegal immigrant with a rap sheet of 30 arrests dating back to 2014, Kaine countered, “How about ICE cooperating with counties?”

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“ICE had this guy repeatedly and let him go,” Kaine said. “And so should counties do more? Yeah, but what about ICE? Why would ICE, beginning in, like, 2017, 2018 — and that was during Trump’s presidency — not take cases like this seriously?”

Warner called her murder a tragedy and said, “No one can doubt the fact that somebody who has been arrested 30 times should not be in this country.”



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Una News: Deputy CM Mukesh Agnihotri said – ‘Students should set goals and work hard’

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Along with education, it is very important to connect children with religious and cultural values. So that students can become familiar with their culture, traditions and heritage. Deputy Chief Minister Mukesh Agnihotri told this to Prof. Simmi Agnihotri said this while presiding over the fifth annual prize distribution ceremony of Government Degree College, Haroli. During this, he honored the meritorious students of the college for their academic achievements and wished them a bright future.

While addressing the students, the Deputy Chief Minister said that students should set a goal in their life and focus on that goal and work hard continuously. The goals set in life can be achieved only by discipline, proper use of time and continuous efforts in student life. Along with this, he urged the teachers to take the students on educational tours to temples and other historical and cultural places from time to time so that they can get an opportunity to understand their cultural roots.

State government is committed to the overall development of the area – Mukesh Agnihotri

Deputy Chief Minister Mukesh Agnihotri said that the state government is fully committed to the overall development of the area. He said that together we are making continuous efforts to take forward Haroli assembly constituency as a developed, educated and prosperous area for the coming generation and the pace of development will be further accelerated in future also.

He said that at present the students of Haroli Halke have set new records by getting education from the educational institutions established in Haroli and have brought glory to the region at the national level, which is a matter of pride for the entire region. He told that many daughters who have completed their nursing studies from Badhera are serving in prestigious medical institutions of the country. At the same time, the youth studying law are today making the name of Haroli proud by becoming judges and advocates.

There have been extensive positive changes in the field of education – Deputy Chief Minister

The Deputy Chief Minister said that all these achievements are proof that there have been massive positive changes in the field of education in Haroli, which point towards a bright future for the region and are a matter of pride for the entire region. Apart from this, the Deputy Chief Minister said that work is in progress on various drinking water schemes worth about one thousand crore rupees in Haroli assembly constituency. With the completion of these schemes, drinking water supply in the area will be further strengthened and better facilities will be available to the people.

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CCTVs are being installed to strengthen the security system

The Deputy Chief Minister said that with the aim of further strengthening the security of the people in Haroli assembly constituency, CCTVs are being installed at various important places. Under this, a comprehensive network of CCTV is being prepared in the entire area, so that in case of any incident, the criminals concerned can be quickly identified and legal action can be taken. He said that with the installation of CCTV cameras, the security system in the area will be further strengthened.

The Deputy Chief Minister announced to give Rs 51 thousand as incentive to the students for the colorful cultural program presented by the students. Along with this, it was also announced to provide Rs 12 lakh for the library in Haroli College. So that better study resources can be available to the students and their academic progress can be further strengthened.

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The ‘Jolene doctrine’: retired US army general likens Trump foreign policy to Dolly Parton song | Stanley McChrystal

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The retired US army general who once led Nato forces in Afghanistan says the bellicose foreign policy Donald Trump has pursued during his second presidency can be summed up as “we should do because we can” – invoking the lyrics of the Dolly Parton classic Jolene to emphasize the point.

Stanley McChrystal delivered those remarks on Friday at Tulane University’s New Orleans book festival during a fireside chat hosted by the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, who asked in part about US military strikes Trump has ordered in Nigeria, Venezuela and Iran since Christmas.

“I’m a big fan of Dolly Parton – do you remember her song Jolene?” McChrystal replied, referring to the country star’s Grammy-nominated 1973 hit. “This poor wife says, ‘Jolene, please don’t take my man; don’t take him just because you can.

“And that’s what worries me – I think we might be in a period where we think what we can do, we should do because we can. And I think the world is starting to view us that way.”

McChrystal’s commentary about what he dubbed Trump’s “Jolene doctrine” is bound to carry weight in many political circles, as the retired general spent his entire career in the US army upon graduating from its West Point academy in 1976.

Later, as a special forces officer, he was credited with prominent roles in the US’s capture of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003 as well as the 2006 killing of the al-Qaida leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

McChrystal subsequently commanded US and Nato military alliance troops in Afghanistan for a little more than a year beginning in June 2009 during Barack Obama’s presidency. He ultimately had to resign from that post after making disparaging remarks to a Rolling Stone magazine journalist profiling him about the US’s civilian leadership, including Obama and his eventual Democratic White House successor, Joe Biden, the vice-president at the time.

Obama replaced McChrystal with Gen David Petraeus, who later resigned as director of the US’s Central Intelligence Agency over an extramarital affair with his biographer.

The Atlantic reported later on Friday that a White House spokesperson responded to McChrystal’s comments by saying the president had restored the US’s “place as leader of the free world”.

Among others, the publication also quoted the University of Missouri’s Jay Sexton, a historian of American foreign relations, as saying: “I think the Trump team is acting like an unbridled Jolene – they’re doing things because they can.

“But the bummer is to carry the metaphor: Jolene is likely to regret doing what she thinks she can.”

The US’s Christmas strikes in north-west Nigeria were aimed at what the Trump administration described as fighters for the Islamic State terror group, though there were questions over which group was specifically targeted and the operation’s impact.

Then, on 3 January, the US attacked Venezuela and seized its ruler, Nicolás Maduro, whom Trump’s justice department had charged with drugs, weapons and narco-terrorism charges.

Israel and the US then jointly attacked Iran on 28 February, killing the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The ensuing conflict has been marked with mixed signals about what Trump would consider victory, confusing his constituency, allies and foes. The president has also spent time trying to deflect responsibility for the bombing of a girls’ school in southern Iran, which killed at least 175 people, mostly children.

Amid all that, Trump renewed threats to seize Greenland for the US with military action if necessary. He ultimately walked those threats back but was widely seen to have strained the US’s relations with its Nato allies.

Goldberg on Friday told McChrystal that he feared the world has not heard the end of Trump’s fixation with Greenland.

“I’m a great believer in allies,” McChrystal said in turn. “To me, that’s the sacred kind of relationships that are essential for any nation. We’ll never be powerful enough to go it alone.”



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Who will give account of 170 days? Former CM Ashok Gehlot spoke on Sonam Wangchuk’s release from jail

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After the detention of environmental activist Sonam Wangchuk was canceled with immediate effect, reactions from leaders are coming continuously. Former Rajasthan CM and senior Congress leader Ashok Gehlot has expressed happiness over the release of Sonam Wangchuk. He also attacked BJP and asked who will give account of the 170 days of his detention? Why was he arrested?

Senior Congress leader Ashok Gehlot wrote on social media platform What kind of irony is this? Sonam Wangchuk, who was once a supporter of PM Modi’s policies, when she raised her voice for the rights of Ladakh and the environment, was booked under stringent sections like NSA (National Security Act) and sent to Jodhpur jail.

Why was Sonam Wangchuk arrested- Gehlot

He further wrote, “The person who was put behind bars a few months ago on the grounds of being a ‘threat to the security of the country’ was suddenly released today, that is, no evidence was found against him.” In such a situation, who will account for the 170 days of his detention? Why was he arrested?

‘Will national security be decided by BJP’s profit and loss?’

Ashok Gehlot asked, “Will the definition of national security now be decided by the political gains and losses of BJP?” Such ‘convenient use’ of laws with dictatorial tendencies is not only condemnable, but is also a deep blow to the credibility of our democratic institutions. The people of the country are seeing this double standards.

When was Wangchuk detained?

There is a debate going on at the political and social level across the country regarding the detention of Sonam Wangchuk and now her release. While the leaders of the opposition parties are calling it a mistake of the government, the central government believes that this step was taken to maintain law and order. It is noteworthy that there were violent protests in Leh on 24 September 2025. Two days after this, on 26 September 2025, Sonam Wangchuk was detained.

Kaylie Ray describes trauma from competing against transgender SJSU athlete

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Former Utah State star athlete Kaylie Ray tried to share her experience as a victim of the San Jose State volleyball scandal with lawmakers.

In response, she was given comments about her body

Arizona Democrat state senator Catherine Miranda told Ray, “I mean, you look pretty healthy… You look very much in shape and strong,” after Ray spoke about having to forfeit a game in protest of a trans athlete, at a senate education hearing on Tuesday. 

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“When she started saying those words, the only thing I was thinking is, ‘where could she possibly be going with this?’” Ray told Fox News Digital. “For whatever reason, my physical appearance or stature should have some type of effect on how competitive I am with men. So I was definitely caught off guard.” 

Ray said she would accept an apology from Miranda, if she is given one. Miranda’s office has not responded to repeated requests for comment. 

Ray showed up to the state house that day to share deep personal trauma from her college volleyball career.

At Utah State, she was an opponent of former San Jose State transgender volleyball player Blaire Fleming for two years in 2022 and 2023, all before having confirmed knowledge that Fleming was male. During that time, Ray said she saw teammates suffer finger injuries from taking Fleming’s signature spikes to the hands. 

“I had teammates who had seriously jammed their fingers, luckily not broken, but a handful of girls who had sustained minor injuries from the male player,” Ray said, adding that it happened way more often from Fleming’s spikes than those from female players.

She added that all of her teammates had their suspicions about Fleming from the moment they watched film ahead of their first matchup on Oct. 1, 2022. 

“When this player was presented to us, even on film, the immediate reaction is ‘whoa,’” Ray said. “It’s so obvious to the naked eye that this athlete has athleticism, explosiveness, and a power that is just not matched by any of the other athletes.” 

Utah State lost that first match against Fleming, three sets to one.

Ray said there were some people on her team that were making comments about Fleming being a male.

“After watching this player compete, it was so obvious to us, but obviously we don’t want to speculate,” Ray said. 

She said her team had to come up with a new strategy that they simply had no need for prior to Fleming’s arrival in the Mountain West.

SJSU VOLLEYBALL SCANDAL LAWSUIT COULD BE IMPACTED BY SUPREME COURT TRANS ATHLETE CASES AFTER JUDGE’S DECISION

“Because Blaire attacked from such a high point of contact… the goal is to just get your hands over the net as far as you can,” she said. “Get your hands low and over, and if Blaire hits over the top of you, it’s a good swing by that player. There was kind of like a helplessness of, ‘let’s just do everything we can to force them to set other players.'”

Kaylie Ray, Blaire Fleming

Ray said there were some people on her team that were making comments about Fleming being a male. (Courtesy of ICONS, Getty Images)

Utah State won the rematch against SJSU in November, three sets to two. Then they met in the 2022 conference final, and Ray’s team emerged victorious for the second of what would be three straight Mountain West titles. But Ray says they were ultimately at the mercy of how well Fleming played that day. 

“We knew that if the male athlete had a phenomenal game, there was nothing we could do to stop that person… and to be quite honest with you, Blaire did not have a great game,” Ray said. “To be fair, I think you go into any match hoping that their best player doesn’t have their best night. I won’t say that it was total helplessness because we had beaten them before and we knew we were capable of doing it again.” 

The following season, Utah State won both matches against SJSU, both in straight sets. Fleming only played in the second of those two games, missing time to injury. In that second game, Fleming led SJSU in points, but Utah State had answers, and won the game en route to a third-straight conference title. 

It was the last time Ray would ever play Fleming.

When the scandal went national in 2024, Ray, as a captain, was trying to lead her team to a fourth straight Mountain West championship. 

“I wanted it so bad,” she said.

But then, official news of Fleming’s birth sex reached their locker room.

“I felt sick. I felt nauseousness in my stomach,” Ray said. 

Her team had to put competition aside. 

“[Utah State administrators] ended up sending an anonymous survey to our girls when we were on a road trip… simply to describe our thoughts and feelings about competing against San Jose, and our administrators took that information and allowed us to forfeit,” Ray said.

It was the first of seven total forfeited matches the Spartans saw that season, with each one bringing more and more scrutiny and risk to the program. But for Utah State, the forfeit also reverberated throughout their season, behind closed doors. 

“Girls were so sick about it… to have that loss on our record, it was really disappointing,” she said. “We were very distracted during the season.” 

Ray joined the lawsuit led by former SJSU co-captain Brooke Slusser against the Mountain West later that season, and they even challenged in court to have the result of the forfeited game reversed. But a Biden-appointed judge did not grant the reversal.

And because of that forfeit, Ray’s team finished behind SJSU in the standings. When the brackets came out, they faced the anxiety of knowing for certain, that if they were to make it back to the championship game, they would have to play SJSU. 

“The only thing that anyone could focus on, was ‘well, if we win, we have to play San Jose, do we have to forfeit again?’” Ray said of the team’s mindset before its first-round game against Boise State that tournament. “That was very much the attitude of my team… we were already defeated coming into the tournament.”

FORMER SJSU VOLLEYBALL STAR OPENS UP ON LIVING WITH TRANS TEAMMATE WITHOUT KNOWING ATHLETE’S BIOLOGICAL SEX

Brooke Slusser and Blaire Fleming

Brooke Slusser #10 and Blaire Fleming #3 of the San Jose State Spartans call a play during the first set against the Air Force Falcons at Falcon Court at East Gym on Oct. 19, 2024, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. (Andrew Wevers/Getty Images)

Ray and her teammates didn’t make it out of the first round. They lost to Boise State, who then went on to forfeit to SJSU in the semifinal.

Ray still hasn’t gotten over not winning that fourth conference title, which she believes her team would have won had circumstances been normal. But it wasn’t normal, in any sense.  

“We wanted it so bad, coupled with the trauma and the anxiety, and just the horrible, horrible emotions that occurred during the season, it was so hard to keep that goal in sight.”

Ray is done with college volleyball now. She played one more season at Weber State last fall and has graduated with a graduate degree. Now, much of her attention is put toward fighting to “save women’s sports,” just as she tried to do at her state’s capital building this past week. 

In January, she spoke alongside Slusser outside the U.S. Supreme Court at a rally during oral arguments for two cases related to males in women’s sports. That day, Ray got her first up-close look at the forces opposing her goal, with a passionate pro-transgender rally taking place right next to theirs. 

“It was the first time in my life seeing that collection of people. What struck me most is that up next to their speakers, they were waiving a flag, a transgender flag, but at the center of the flag there was a satanic symbol, it said ‘The Church of Satan,’” Ray said. 

“It was so clearly a battle between good and evil… When you upset a party of Satanic people, they don’t care what you have to say… when you’re fighting against evil, it’s going to be uncomfortable.”

SJSU is the latest battleground in that fight.

The U.S. Education Department‘s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) determined that SJSU violated Title IX in its handling of Fleming at the end of January. But SJSU and the California University (CSU) system are suing the federal government to challenge that investigation. 

“San Jose State is disgusting,” Ray said of the lawsuit. “It’s so despicable, and it’s so bizarre.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to SJSU and CSU for a response to Ray’s comments.

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U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon responded Wednesday, giving the institutions a deadline of 10 days to come to an agreement or risk federal funding cuts and a referral to the U.S. Department of Justice. 

“President Trump, you know what to do,” Ray added. 

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