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  • Paul Smith to Design Christmas Tree for London’s Royal Opera House

    Paul Smith to Design Christmas Tree for London’s Royal Opera House

    LONDON — Paul Smith has inked a festive partnership with the Royal Opera House, launching Nov. 6.

    Billed as a celebration of the spirit of creativity and cultural heritage, the partnership involves a Christmas tree…

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  • Preliminary study shows intraoperative radiation’s success against pancreatic cancer spread

    Preliminary study shows intraoperative radiation’s success against pancreatic cancer spread

    Using targeted radiation during surgery – referred to as intraoperative radiation – to eliminate pancreatic cancer cells that have spread to areas around the pancreas, investigators at Johns Hopkins have been able to reduce the…

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  • Gigantic iceberg breaks free in Antarctica, revealing ghostly mega-nest beneath

    Gigantic iceberg breaks free in Antarctica, revealing ghostly mega-nest beneath

    Researchers in Antarctica have discovered a strange collection of icefish nests.

    The scientists were on expedition in the Weddell Sea looking for Sir Ernest Shackleton’s lost ship, the Endurance – which sank in 1915 and was discovered in…

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  • Withings’ urine scanning health tracker is now available for $350

    Withings’ urine scanning health tracker is now available for $350

    Withings first announced its U-Scan, a non-invasive device you install in your toilet to track various health metrics, at CES 2023 two years ago. Unlike Kohler’s Dekoda, which uses a camera to analyze your poop, the U-Scan detects and samples…

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  • Hong Kong grave sweepers brace against chikungunya but preserve Chung Yeung traditions

    Hong Kong grave sweepers brace against chikungunya but preserve Chung Yeung traditions

    Hong Kong grave sweepers at a major cemetery have taken preventive measures to protect themselves from mosquito bites, but remain determined to pay respects to their ancestors on Chung Yeung Festival despite visiting an area near the city’s…

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  • Asian Headlines at 4:14 a.m. GMT – Yahoo

    Asian Headlines at 4:14 a.m. GMT – Yahoo

    1. Asian Headlines at 4:14 a.m. GMT  Yahoo
    2. Introducing Galaxy XR, the first Android XR headset  blog.google
    3. “It Does Take You Closer” Sparks Developer Debate In 2025 What Changes Next  Glass Almanac
    4. Are Smart Glasses the Future? Samsung and Apple Think…

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  • Too bad I can’t run, but we’ll see what happens, says Trump on unconstitutional third term | Donald Trump

    Too bad I can’t run, but we’ll see what happens, says Trump on unconstitutional third term | Donald Trump

    Donald Trump said “it’s too bad” he is not allowed to run for a third term, conceding the constitutional reality even as he expressed interest in continuing to serve.

    “If you read it, it’s pretty clear,” Trump told reporters on board…

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  • Israel launches strikes on Gaza, claiming Hamas violated truce – The Washington Post

    1. Israel launches strikes on Gaza, claiming Hamas violated truce  The Washington Post
    2. Israeli strikes kill 33 in Gaza, Hamas-run civil defence says, as Trump insists ceasefire remains  BBC
    3. LIVE: Israel kills 91 in Gaza; Trump insists nothing will…

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  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

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  • Ben & Jerry’s co-founder says Unilever blocked Palestine-themed ice cream

    Ben & Jerry’s co-founder says Unilever blocked Palestine-themed ice cream

    The co-founder of ice cream maker Ben & Jerry’s says that its parent company Unilever blocked it from launching an ice cream flavour that expressed “solidarity with Palestine”.

    Ben Cohen announced that he will independently create the new flavour as part of a personal series highlighting causes the company has been barred from addressing publicly.

    Ben & Jerry’s is known for its activism on social issues and has consistently spoken out on political, environmental and humanitarian matters – including the Israel-Gaza conflict.

    The BBC has contacted Unilever for comment.

    Mr Cohen’s statement deepens the long-drawn dispute between the world-famous ice cream maker and Unilever, the British packaged goods giant which has owned Ben & Jerry’s since 2000.

    The co-founders said Unilever and its ice cream arm Magnum, which is being spun off from its parent company, had unlawfully blocked their company from “honouring its social mission”.

    Mr Cohen said in an Instagram video on Tuesday that he is creating a new watermelon-flavoured sorbet, calling for ideas for the product’s name and what ingredients should be added.

    The watermelon has become a symbol for solidarity with Palestinians due to its colours, which are similar to those of the Palestinian flag – red, green, black and white.

    The American entrepreneur said Ben & Jerry’s were prevented by Unilever from creating the dessert.

    “I’m doing what they couldn’t,” Mr Cohen says from his set in a kitchen. “I’m making a watermelon-flavoured ice cream that calls for permanent peace in Palestine and calls for repairing the damage that was done there.”

    In 2021, Ben & Jerry’s refused to sell its products in areas occupied by Israel. Its Israeli operation was sold by Unilever to a local licensee, allowing its ice cream to continue being sold in the occupied West Bank.

    The dessert series will be developed under Ben’s Best, Mr Cohen’s activist ice cream brand, he said in a statement to the press. The flavour is being produced independently of Ben & Jerry’s, the statement said.

    Ben’s Best was first setup in 2016 to support former US presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, with the flavour “Bernie’s Back”.

    Mr Cohen said he will develop other ice cream flavours that speak to the issues Ben & Jerry’s was silenced from addressing publicly by Unilever.

    In September, co-founder Jerry Greenfield stepped down from Ben & Jerry’s after decades at the company, citing concerns that its independence had been compromised following Unilever’s decision to curb its social activism.

    At the time, Ben Cohen said that “Jerry has a really big heart and this conflict with Unilever was breaking it.”

    “My heart leads me to continue to work inside the company to advocate for its independence so that it can actualise the social mission, the values that it was founded on and has maintained for over 40 years,” he told the BBC’s PM programme.


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