- Clippers 112-99 Pistons (Dec 28, 2025) Game Recap ESPN
- NBA roundup: Kawhi Leonard’s game for the ages lifts Clippers past Pistons KNBR
- Los Angeles hosts Sacramento after Leonard’s 55-point game Bluefield Daily Telegraph
- Kawhi Leonard GOES OFF…
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Clippers 112-99 Pistons (Dec 28, 2025) Game Recap – ESPN
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Year of Reforms 2025 sees India strengthen defence capabilities under leadership of PM Modi
The year 2025 stands as a defining chapter in India’s development journey. It saw policies translate into progress and intent into impact.
In 2025, India marked a decisive consolidation of its national security framework under the…
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PANTHERS TV: MATT ALFARO INTERVIEW
Mon 29 Dec 2025 – 06:30AM
🎟 CLICK HERE TO BUY TICKETS FOR PANTHERS HOME GAMES 🎟
Nottingham Panthers captain Matt Alfaro spoke to Panthers TV after the festive double-header with Sheffield Steelers.
Panthers secured three points…
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‘Weaponisation of water neither sane nor acceptable,’ Sherry says after India approves hydel project on Chenab – Dawn
- ‘Weaponisation of water neither sane nor acceptable,’ Sherry says after India approves hydel project on Chenab Dawn
- Indus Water Treaty put on hold, government clears another Chenab hydel project Times of India
- India approves 260MW Dulhasti…
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Somerset charity has helped women in Africa for 25 years
After founding the charity in 2000, they got involved in community tree planting projects in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.
“I realised this unmet need for family planning was a thing which kept people in poverty and was having an impact on the…
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Cotswolds 60th year as AONB to be celebrated with film
The Cotswolds is the largest of 46 AONBs in the UK, and received its designated back in 1966.
The Cotswolds National Landscape stretches from Warwickshire and Worcestershire in the north, to Wiltshire and Bath in the south.
Land with AONB status…
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YouTuber Rajab Butt physically assaulted at sessions court in Karachi – Dawn
- YouTuber Rajab Butt physically assaulted at sessions court in Karachi Dawn
- Lawyers assault YouTuber Rajab Butt following appearance at Karachi court Geo News
- Pakistani YouTuber attacked inside court premises in Karachi Deccan Herald
- Rajab Butt…
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PM announces Bondi review details and resists call for royal commission
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has announced the terms of an independent review of the Bondi Beach terror attack, resisting calls for a royal commission by victim’s families.
The review, led by Dennis Richardson AC, will examine the actions of…
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The Ashes: England bowler Gus Atkinson injured and out of fifth Test in Sydney
While England will definitely make one change for the series finale, Australia will also ponder alterations to their side after surrendering an 18-match unbeaten streak in home Ashes Tests.
Spinner Todd Murphy could come in for a pace bowler at…
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The Concorde spy who sold secrets to Russia
Mr Doyle was not the only person to potentially sell inside secrets on the development of Concorde.
In 1999, it was revealed a spy codenamed “Agent Ace” had also betrayed Britain.
The agent was an aeronautical engineer recruited in 1967, according to papers smuggled out of Russia by dissident KGB officer Vasili Mitrokhin.
It is thought Ace handed over more than 90,000 pages of detailed technical specifications.
The agent was one of more than a dozen spies operating within Britain and passing commercial and technological secrets to the Russians at the height of the Cold War, the papers revealed.
The secrets that made it out of Filton helped Russia build the Tupolev-144, nicknamed Concordski, and which was strikingly similar to Concorde.
It remains unclear whether Mr Doyle did, in fact, pass on the details he claimed to have done in the interview to the KGB or any other secrets about the Concorde programme.
For one, questions marks remain over why Mr Doyle was never prosecuted – despite admitting spying for Russia.
UK Parliament records seen by the BBC raised that very question on the 18 October 1971.
The Attorney General at the time said he had been consulted about the possibility of a prosecution under the Official Secrets Act, but a prosecution would be unlikely to succeed, based on the evidence, and criminal proceedings should not be started.
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