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  • 8 Powerball tickets worth $50,000 sold in Massachusetts for Christmas Eve drawing. Here’s where.

    8 Powerball tickets worth $50,000 sold in Massachusetts for Christmas Eve drawing. Here’s where.


    There was only one winner for the Powerball’s Dec. 24 jackpot worth more than $1.8 billion, and that valuable ticket was sold at a gas station outside Little Rock, Arkansas. But several lottery players in Massachusetts woke up Thursday morning to a nice Christmas gift.

    There were eight Powerball tickets worth $50,000 sold in Massachusetts, according to the state lottery. To win $50,000, players need to match four numbers and the Powerball. The odds of doing so are 1 in 913,129.

    The winning numbers were 4, 25, 31, 52, 59, with a Powerball of 19.   

    The $50,000 tickets were sold in:

    Attleboro (Cumberland #0135)
    Dedham (7-Eleven 34499-1)
    Essex (Schooner’s Market)
    Methuen (Ted’s Stateline Mobil)
    Rockland (Go Go Gas)
    Peabody (Stop & Shop #005)
    Provincetown (Cumberland #2232)
    Salem (Castle Hill Mini Mart)

    Winners in Massachusetts have up to a year to claim their prize before they expire. Payments can be claimed at one of the state’s regional lottery offices.

    The $1.817 billion grand prize was the second-largest U.S. lottery prize ever. One of the largest-ever Powerball prizes was claimed in Massachusetts in 2017 by Mavis Wanczyk of Chicopee, who was the sole winner of a $758.7 million jackpot.

    There is another record jackpot still up for grabs in Massachusetts. There was no big winner in the Megabucks drawing Wednesday night. The jackpot for the $2 game is now up to $9.35 million, the largest since the game was redesigned in 2023. The next drawing is Saturday night.

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  • Packers list seven questionable, rule out two vs. Ravens

    Packers list seven questionable, rule out two vs. Ravens

    GREEN BAY – Packers quarterbacks Jordan Love (concussion protocol/left shoulder) and Malik Willis (illness/right shoulder) are among seven questionable for Saturday night’s game against the Baltimore Ravens.

    Others questionable…

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  • ‘Everything Is Coming To Fruition’ For DeMarcus Lawrence In First Season With Seahawks

    ‘Everything Is Coming To Fruition’ For DeMarcus Lawrence In First Season With Seahawks

    When DeMarcus Lawrence signed with the Seahawks in March, the 12th-year veteran made it known that, despite what some people might have thought, he had “a lot more in the tank, so there’s isn’t any need to stop now.”

    He also said he…

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  • Life-Threatening Haemodynamic Instability During General Anaesthesia in a Child With Renal Tubular Dysgenesis: A Case Report

    Life-Threatening Haemodynamic Instability During General Anaesthesia in a Child With Renal Tubular Dysgenesis: A Case Report

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  • Cosmic Christmas tree shows star formation 2,700 light-years away

    Cosmic Christmas tree shows star formation 2,700 light-years away

    Astronomers are drawing attention to a Christmas Tree-shaped cluster of stars glowing inside one of the Milky Way’s most active stellar nurseries.

    Known as the Cosmic Christmas Tree, the cluster sits within NGC 2264, roughly 2,700…

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  • This week in science: Swearing, bird bills and the pandemic, and whale breath samples

    JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:

    It’s time now for our science news roundup from Short Wave, NPR’s science podcast. And I’m joined now by Emily Kwong and Berly McCoy from the show. Hi to both of you.

    BERLY MCCOY,…

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  • New virtual fencing laws could promise safer bushfire response by allowing farmers to move stock remotely

    New virtual fencing laws could promise safer bushfire response by allowing farmers to move stock remotely

    South Australian farmers will soon be able to use virtual fencing to move livestock out of the path of bushfires after the technology was formally legalised in the state last week.

    The system, which allows livestock to be moved remotely via electronic collars, can guide animals out of danger and prevent them becoming trapped as a fire approaches.

    The state’s approval makes it the last jurisdiction in Australia to sign off on the technology, paving the way for rollout next year.

    The announcement has been welcomed by Livestock SA, with the organisation expecting strong demand from primary producers to transition to virtual fencing.

    Virtual fencing will help reduce the demand for physical fencing on farms to divide livestock.  (ABC South East SA: Elsie Adamo)

    “The benefits are multi-dimensional,” Livestock SA chief executive officer Travis Tobin said.

    “The obvious ones are capital and labour costs that you can reduce … it enables you to improve the way you manage stock and manage the land.

    “Heaven forbid if they do come, but in natural disasters it gives you that flexibility where you’re not losing kilometres of fence lines, and the animals can get away so they’re not trapped.”

    New technology could help in emergencies

    Specific details on how the new technology will be licensed and governed are yet to be released, but businesses are working with the state government to be rollout ready.

    Halter is one of the businesses that will apply for a permit to sell and install virtual fencing in the state.

    Virtual fencing Ellinbank (7)

    Virtual fencing allows farmers to control where their animals go, using a phone. (Supplied: Halter)

    Director of strategic relations Brent Thomas said the benefits of the technology surpass day-to-day operations.

    He said if a flood or bushfire was to strike, virtual fencing can help protect human as well as animal lives.

    “In traditional farming systems, you’ve got to staff out … and it can be quite risky,”

    Mr Thomas said.

    “With this technology, farmers are able with the palm of their hand, to move their cattle to safer ground.

    You can use a collar to move an animal from an unsafe area to a safe area, but you can also remotely disable the collars so they can freely move.

    Mr Thomas said many South Australian farmers were keen for the announcement, having added their names to the company’s waitlist months ago.

    “They had been really hopeful this news would come out for a long time,” he said.

    “I think they’re very, very excited … it’s going to be a game-changing technology for their farms.”

    SA farmers enthusiastic about transition

    One of the farmers who has been signed up on the wait list for virtual fencing equipment is Adam Mann, co-manager of Donovan’s Dairy in the South East.

    A man smiles a the camera standing in front of dairy cows.

    Adam Mann had been waiting for virtual fencing to be approved in South Australia.  (ABC South East SA: Elsie Adamo)

    Mr Mann had been advocating for virtual fencing throughout the year, expecting the new technology to save time and money on his farm.

    “It’s nice to be on an even playing field with the rest of the states,” he said.

    “We’ll be trying to get it on as soon as possible, early 2026 will be a pretty good goal for us.”

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  • ‘Kirsty Wark DJed at our club – but we missed Nicola Sturgeon’

    ‘Kirsty Wark DJed at our club – but we missed Nicola Sturgeon’

    Other highlights over the years included a proposal (the couple are still together, adds Aarti proudly) and a night when a group of sailors walked in, and ended up partying away with some emo-loving regulars.

    There was also the odd disagreement…

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  • Zhou, J. et al. Global burden of lung cancer in 2022 and projections to 2050: Incidence and mortality estimates from GLOBOCAN. Cancer Epidemiol. 93, 102693 (2024).

    Google Scholar 

  • Li, C. et al. Global burden…

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  • Luepke sets up big 4th down

    Luepke sets up big 4th down

    LANDOVER, Md. – In a game that included plenty of third-down and fourth-down tries, not to mention the longest play in NFL history on Christmas Day, there were a few plays that are forgettable but played a role in the outcome.

    Here…

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