Signal Gold Shareholders Overwhelmingly Approve Transaction With NexGold MiningUS farm groups want Trump to spare their workers from deportationWEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — President-elect Donald Trump said Saturday that he wants real estate developer Charles Kushner, father of Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, to serve as ambassador to France. Trump made the announcement in a Truth Social post, calling Charles Kushner “a tremendous business leader, philanthropist, & dealmaker.” Kushner is the founder of Kushner Companies, a real estate firm. Jared Kushner is a former White House senior adviser to Trump who is married to Trump’s eldest daughter, Ivanka. The elder Kushner was pardoned by Trump in December 2020 after pleading guilty years earlier to tax evasion and making illegal campaign donations. Prosecutors alleged that after Charles Kushner discovered his brother-in-law was cooperating with federal authorities in an investigation, he hatched a scheme for revenge and intimidation. Kushner hired a prostitute to lure his brother-in-law, then arranged to have the encounter in a New Jersey motel room recorded with a hidden camera and the recording sent to his own sister, the man’s wife, prosecutors said. Kushner eventually pleaded guilty to 18 counts including tax evasion and witness tampering. He was sentenced in 2005 to two years in prison - the most he could receive under a plea deal, but less than what Chris Christie, the U.S. attorney for New Jersey at the time and later governor and Republican presidential candidate, had sought. Christie has blamed Jared Kushner for his firing from Trump’s transition team in 2016, and has called Charles Kushner’s offenses “one of the most loathsome, disgusting crimes that I prosecuted when I was U.S. attorney.” Trump and the elder Kushner knew each other from real estate circles and their children were married in 2009. Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC. Click to Read More and View Comments Click to Hide
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The average rent in Toronto is $3,091 for a two-bedroom apartment, according to Rentals.com, and the wait for social housing is 10 years after getting on the waiting list. Chris Young/The Canadian Press Women’s advocates say provincial and federal governments need to step up efforts to create housing for people escaping gender-based violence because too many women are forced to remain in unsafe situations after being abused. A study released last week by Women’s Shelters Canada says the country’s housing crisis is preventing many people from finding affordable and safe housing after leaving their abuser. Of the 381 shelters and transition houses that responded, 94 per cent of emergency shelters and 83 per cent of transition homes said victims were staying longer than they had in the past while searching for housing. The report also said when people do leave the facilities, about half return to their abusers because they have no other options. More than two-thirds of the women end up in housing situations considered precarious, which meant they were living with friends or families or trading work for rent. A full 36 per cent experience homelessness at some point. Anna Morgan, manager of programs and services at Ernestine’s Women’s Shelter in Etobicoke, Ont., says her organization has seen enormous demand for services as rents in the Greater Toronto Area soar. Her shelter is meant to provide short-term accommodation for women escaping violence, but it has become more like a transition house as people struggle to find a new place to live. “We’re over capacity,” Morgan said in a phone interview this week. “The shelter system is becoming basically transitional housing for people, and they (the shelters) are really not set up to be housing.” She said the shelter had to turn away 312 people in the fiscal year that ended March 31, and it is on track to turn away a high number again this year. The shelter helps women and gender-diverse people from all racial and ethnic backgrounds. Many people come from the GTA and neighbouring communities, but Morgan says sometimes people arrive from out of province or even as refugees. The vast majority of people coming to the shelter are “deeply poor,” she says, either on social assistance or working minimum wage jobs. The average rent in Toronto is $3,091 for a two-bedroom apartment, according to Rentals.com, and the wait for social housing is 10 years after getting on the wait-list. Morgan said the report’s findings ring true. In her experience, it’s common for people leaving the shelter system to either couch-surf or get back together with their abusers or into “other precarious, exploitative situations.” “They’re getting stuck in that cycle of experiencing gender-based violence and housing instability and precarity,” she said. As well, private landlords sometimes discriminate against people looking to rent based on their race, gender or sexual orientation. Morgan says many landlords also don’t want to rent to people with children, adding further barriers. Outside of Canada’s major urban hubs, smaller communities are also seeing high rates of gender-based violence and increased demand for help. In Moose Jaw, Sask., Jenn Angus of the Moose Jaw Transition House says the lack of affordable housing has driven up the length of stays for clients in her shelter every year for the last five years. “It’s disheartening,” Angus said in a phone interview this week, adding that it is becoming more common for people to stay between 50 and 70 days, when in previously people could find housing within three weeks. Women with children experience the longest stays, Angus added. Angus added she’s noticed a growing trend of people seeking affordable shelter leaving Moose Jaw – a city of about 40,000 people with what she called a good slate of social services – for rural areas, where there are fewer support services. Saskatchewan had the highest rate of police-reported domestic violence among the provinces in 2023 according to Statistics Canada. Jessica Montgomery of the Jessica Martel Memorial Foundation in Morinville, Alta., said finding affordable housing can be difficult for women leaving their abusers because they often leave with little more than “the clothes on their back” and a suitcase. “A lot of survivors coming to us have also experienced economic abuse,” she said, explaining their abusers either had control over their finances or didn’t allow them to work. “It makes them harder to leave because they don’t have the resources to establish a new life.” Montgomery and Angus said the cost of setting up a new home – hooking up utilities, stocking the pantry, finding furniture – is an obstacle for victims trying to make a fresh start. They both said there’s an urgent need for governments at the federal and provincial levels to add funding to housing projects specifically for survivors of gender-based violence and to cut down on wait times for people applying for social assistance programs. In Nova Scotia, the commission of inquiry into the 2020 mass shooting – which began with the gunman brutally assaulting his spouse – called for “epidemic-level funding” to deal with domestic violence. And in September, the province’s legislature adopted a bill naming domestic violence an epidemic. Caira Mohamed of YWCA Halifax says there isn’t necessarily a dollar figure that represents epidemic-level funding. Instead, it involves a consistent level of assistance from the provincial and federal governments for shelters, transition houses and non-profits looking to end gender-based violence. “More programs which are targeted towards survivors of gender-based and intimate-partner violence will start to address some of these gaps (in services) we’re seeing and hopefully meet that threshold of epidemic-level funding,” she said.
Last Christmas , the song almost as much a part of Christmas as mince pies, turkey, and pigs in blankets became the number one song for the second consecutive year, according to Andrew Ridgeley of the duo. ET Year-end Special Reads Gold outshines D-St with 20% returns, but 2025 may be different The year of the pause: How RBI maneuvered its policy in 2024 2024, the year India defeated China's salami-slicing strategy Wham!'s Last Christmas is the UK Christmas No. 1 for the second consecutive year, forty years after Band-Aid kept it off the top spot, as quoted in a report by The Guardian. One-half of Wham was Andrew Ridgeley! Celebrated with the late George Michael , they said that it took 37 years to reach No. 1, 39 years to reach Christmas No. 1, and then, like London buses, they all appear at once! I'm particularly happy for George because he would have been overjoyed. His wonderful Christmas composition has become a classic and is practically as synonymous with Christmas as mince pies, turkey, and pigs in blankets. Perhaps the most iconic song of modern Christmas, "Yuletide Heartache," has become so commonplace that it has spawned a game called " Whamageddon ," in which players attempt to avoid hearing it for as long as possible every year. 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View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) AI for Everyone: Understanding and Applying the Basics on Artificial Intelligence By - Ritesh Vajariya, Generative AI Expert View Program It is still very popular not only in the UK but all over the world. It is currently at No. 4 in this week's US singles chart and receives 7.7 million plays daily on Spotify. In the 40th anniversary edition of Band Aid's charity classic Do They Know It's Christmas, George Michael also makes an appearance at No. 12 on the chart. Ed Sheeran and others criticised the new version, which was a mashup of the three earlier official versions, for reinforcing stereotypes about the suffering of Africans. However, co-writer Bob Geldof defended it, stating that a little pop song is probably responsible for the lives of hundreds of thousands of people if not millions. Last Christmas's nearest rival in the contemporary Christmas canon is Mariah Carey's All I Want for Christmas Is You, which is at No 3. Tom Grennan's new song, It Can't Be Christmas, is part of Amazon's push to dominate the Christmas charts. The retailer has commissioned Christmas songs which it hosts exclusively on its Amazon Music service, with many listeners telling Alexa devices to play Christmas songs, ensuring a rise up the charts. FAQs How did Last Christmas do on the charts this year? Last Christmas became the UK Christmas No. 1 for the second year in a row, nearly 40 years after its original release, cementing its status as a holiday favourite. Why is Last Christmas so popular around the world? The song remains a timeless Christmas classic, with over 7.7 million daily Spotify plays and a current ranking of No. 4 on the US singles chart. ET Year-end Special Reads An Indian's guide to moving abroad as the world looks for 'better' immigrants The year of the HNIs: How India's rich splurged in 2024 (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel )Why Domo (DOMO) Stock Is Trading Lower Today
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Players of Pokémon Go may not have realized it, but they've been training more than their Pokémon. Niantic, the developer behind the popular mobile game Pokémon Go, announced last week it is building an AI model to map the physical world. This "large geospatial model" would utilize data collected from players to the company said in a blog post. , first released in 2016, is an augmented reality game where players use their mobile phones to find and catch virtual Pokémon in the real world. In the game, which has had more than since release, players can also collect items at PokéStops and battle at gyms, which are both located at real-world landmarks. Niantic's model is training and processing data using geolocation information from scans players submit of those real-world locations while playing Pokémon Go and other Niantic games. "Over the past five years, Niantic has focused on building our (VPS), which uses a single image from a phone to determine its position and orientation using a 3D map built from people scanning interesting locations in our games and Scaniverse," the company said in the announcement. The company said it currently has 10 million scanned locations from around the world for with about 1 million new scans each week. The model will process these geolocated images and create a 3D map, while also filling in information about geographic locations, "implementing a shared understanding of geographic locations, and comprehending places yet to be fully scanned," according to the blog post. Companies looking for more ways to utilize customer data is becoming the "new normal," , the executive director of the Information Security Institute at Johns Hopkins University, told USA TODAY. Niantic said the data is unique since it is taken from a "pedestrian perspective," unlike other mapping systems that rely on images captured by vehicles and may not include places inaccessible to cars. According to Niantic's , the company collects location data, and other personal data, such as name and email address. The privacy policy outlines what is and isn't shared with third-party vendors, but not what the company does with the data. Niantic has a separate who play the developer's games, and a portal where parents can set up and manage their child's profile. "It's a typical problem with data privacy and the state of technology today," Dahbura said. "In fact, it's almost par for the course that companies are looking for ways to use their data, and it's even expected by investors." It's understandable for users to worry about how their collected personal data is being stored or shared. "Even with the best intentions, having troves of data that contain so much personal information can be dangerous," he said. "It can fall into the wrong hands, there can be a major data breach, and so on." For users who are worried about their privacy, Dahbura suggests players think carefully about their usage. "Use it exclusively in very public places, not places that you consider to be private, such as the interior of your home," he said. Users should also minimize having other people in images, "especially your loved ones," he said. Players should also be aware of location and how it is interwoven into so much personal data. "A lot of people really underestimate the importance of location data," Dahbura said. "Our critical infrastructure is much broader than people realize, including transportation systems, pharmaceutical, financial, food manufacturing and so on. If people with bad intentions figure out that you have access to these kinds of facilities, it can be used not only against you but also against national security."
Retiring U.S. Rep. Jake LaTurner shares appreciation for family, seeks aid for starving childrenManitoba Premier Wab Kinew says the location of a planned supervised drug consumption site is not a foregone conclusion. Kinew says the community will be consulted and, if the proposed location is not the right one, there’s a chance the province may go in a different direction. The province has selected 200 Disraeli Freeway in Winnipeg’s core area for the facility that would allow people to inject drugs, with staff on hand to respond to overdoses and guide people toward treatment. Some area residents say they have not been consulted, and critics have said the location is wrong because a high school is directly across a busy six-lane street from the site. Kinew says it’s important that a supervised consumption site be built in order to save lives, and the required application is now before the federal government. The premier says the government is willing to consider a change in location, if there is a strong outcry from the community.
Rutgers 77, Georgia Southern 60Toronto police have installed books of condolence at three locations for people who wish to leave messages of support for family, friends, and colleagues of the late Det. John Park. A 14-year veteran of the force who has been serving as a member of the hold-up squad, Park experienced a medical episode while executing a search warrant in connection with an ongoing robbery investigation in North York on Dec. 19. He died suddenly. Park, who was 40 and began his career with Toronto Police Service (TPS) at 22 Division, leaves behind his wife Tina and their two children, Madison, age 9, and five-year-old Austin, as well as his parents Lorne and Theresa, his sister Jennifer and her husband Anthony, his grandparents Leslie and Louise. An for Park said that he was a dear son-in-law to Brenda and Orlando, a beloved brother-in-law to Christopher and Vanessa, and the proud of Rocco, Michael, Tiago and Mia. He will also be fondly remembered by his many aunts, uncles and cousins, it read. “John’s life was one filled with love for his family, friends, and colleagues. His memory will forever create smiles, laughter, tears, and inspiration. John will be missed by all who knew him,” the obituary said. The books of condolence will be located at Toronto Police Service Headquarters, 40 College St., from Dec. 23 to 27 from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 pm., 33 Division, 50 Upjohn Rd. in North York, from Dec. 23 to 29 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily, and at 22 Division, 3699 Bloor St. W. in Etobicoke, also from Dec. 23 to 29 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily. Members of the public should note that they will need to go through a security check point to enter TPS Headquarters and sign the book. Park’s unexpected and untimely death has prompted an outpouring of support from other first-responders in the GTA, including Toronto Paramedics Services, York Regional Police, and Durham Regional Police, who have all posted messages of condolences on social media. Several officers also lined the street outside Humber River Hospital when Toronto police held a Dec. 19 news conference announcing his death. Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow as well as Premier Doug Ford also offered their condolences. Further, the CN Tower was dimmed for five minutes at the top of each hour on Thursday night in Park’s honour. Visitation for Park will be held at Kane-Jerrett Funeral Homes at 8088 Yonge St. in Thornhill on Dec. 28 from 1 to 3 p.m. and from 5 to 7 p.m. His funeral service is set for Dec. 30 at Bayview Glen Church, 300 Steeles Ave. E. in Thornhill at 1 p.m. A has also been created to help pay for Park’s funeral and support his widow and children. His family is requesting donations in lieu of flowers.
ESPN's "College GameDay" has become a staple during each college football season. Lee Corso has become a cornerstone of the program since the show began in 1987. However, with Corso nearing the age of 90, his future with "College GameDay" is up in the air. Corso has missed a few weeks of the show due to health issues, so his time on the set could be coming to an end. Recently, ESPN President Burke Magnus discussed Corso's future : “I think we’re going to do what we’ve done now for a couple of years running, which is we’re gonna have a conversation with him after the season and see where things are,” Magnus said. Andrew Wevers-Imagn Images Magnus said they will take time to "figure out" what everyone wants to do after the season ends. Nonetheless, the future of Corso on "College GameDay" is a big question mark, and college football fans have mixed feelings about it. "As far as I’m concerned, Corso and @DickieV should stay at ESPN as long as they want to. They have done so much for college sports and deserve to leave on their terms. They are both legends!" one fan said . "As long as he’s breathing air, I want him on set," said another . "Coach is doing just fine," said another . On the other hand, some fans want Corso to retire for his good. "Lee Corso is an icon on College GameDay but it is time for him to retire. I think it would be wonderful to have the first show of next season, the light on content Week 0 show, be a celebration of and farewell for him. It gives the fan base a chance to properly say thank you," one fan replied. "Please let him retire," wrote another. "Let the man retire. It looks so sad seeing him there and can barely move," said another fan . Corso will be 90 years old when the 2025 college football season begins, so it wouldn't be surprising to see this year be his final run on the "College GameDay" set. However, those conversations will be had after the season ends. Either way, college football fans have mixed feelings about Corso's unclear future. Related: ESPN President Reveals Plans For Lee Corso’s 'College GameDay' FutureYou Can Already See Signs Of Trump's Crony Capitalism In Action
Andrew Luck returns to Stanford as the GM of the football programNone
Shortly after completing a 31-year tenure as the coach of the Towson men’s lacrosse program, Carl Anthony Runk was celebrated widely for his accomplishments. He was inducted into Towson’s Hall of Fame in 2007, the Intercollegiate Men’s Lacrosse Coaches Association’s Hall of Fame in 2018, the University of Arizona’s Men’s Lacrosse Hall of Fame in 2019 and received the John F. Steadman Lifetime Achievement Award from the Maryland State Athletic Hall of Fame in 2022. But according to his son, Keith Runk, Mr. Runk downplayed the accolades. “He would say, ‘I haven’t cracked an egg in my life, and they’re recognizing me with this,’” his son said. “He never did anything for the recognition. He did it for the love of it.” Mr. Runk, who shepherded the Tigers from NCAA Division II to Division I status and the 1974 Division II national championship, died Sunday of pancreatic cancer at his home in Baltimore. He was 88. From 1968 to 1998, Mr. Runk compiled a 262-161 record that included that national title against Hobart, seven consecutive College Division Tournament berths from 1973 to 1979, an appearance in the 1991 Division I Tournament final against North Carolina, five East Coast Conference championships, and 24 seasons with winning records. Tony Seaman, who succeeded Mr. Runk at Towson and met him as rivals when the former coached at Penn and Johns Hopkins, described his predecessor’s legacy as “long-lasting.” “I’ll always remember how well his teams were coached and how well his players played for him,” Seaman said. “They loved him, and they’d give everything in the world. You knew that you would get a game from beginning to end anytime you played against a Carl Runk team.” One of 13 children raised by George and Anna Runk and Josephine McGill in Highlandtown, Mr. Runk grew up working on tugboats and picking beans on farms on the Eastern Shore, according to his son. “They kicked and scratched for everything they got,” Keith Runk said. “Just making ends meet to get through and help the family out.” After graduating from Patterson Park High, Mr. Runk attended the University of Maryland on a football scholarship for a year-and-a-half, but then transferred to the University of Arizona where he was an offensive tackle. Already married to the former Joan Johns who also graduated from Patterson Park, Mr. Runk squeezed in earning a master’s degree and teaching at an area high school between two stints coaching men’s lacrosse for the Wildcats. After the births of sons Carl, Keith and Curt, Mr. and Mrs. Runk decided to return to Maryland after Curt contracted spinal meningitis and lost his hearing as a result. Upon his return, Mr. Runk joined what was formerly known as Towson State College to coach lacrosse. Mr. Runk added football to his coaching responsibilities when the coach quit prior to the program’s debut in 1969. In three seasons, the Tigers went 11-14-1 under Mr. Runk, who handed the reins to one of his assistant coaches, Phil Albert. Lacrosse is where Mr. Runk made his greatest impact. From 1968 to 1979, Mr. Runk amassed a 115-63 at the NCAA Division II level with only one losing season. His crowning achievement was shaping the 1974 squad into a group that outlasted Hobart, 18-17, in overtime for the NCAA Division II championship. Tom Moore, a midfielder and co-captain of that 1974 team, said Mr. Runk insisted on a culture absent of favoritism. “The ones that didn’t buy into the culture, they had to work harder to get into the starting lineup,” he said. “Some of them did, and some of them decided to quit. The bottom line was we expected everybody to work really hard and we expected everybody to be a team player.” Keith Runk, who played goalkeeper for the Tigers from 1979 to 1982, said his father extended that expectation to his son. “There was no special treatment,” he said. “When I was on the field, I was a player. I wasn’t his son. I was no better or no worse. But on the way home, it was different. He was Dad.” Members of Towson and Hobart and their parents dined together on the eve of the 1974 title game. While the Hobart coach praised his players’ efforts and dedication, Mr. Runk took a different approach. “Coach Runk got up there in front of our parents, and he started making fun of all of us. He was saying, ‘I don’t know how these kids got into school because their SAT scores weren’t really that good,’” Moore said with a laugh. “This was one of the most intense moments we all had because we were looking at the guys we had to fight against the next day, and he’s got everybody in tears and laughing by making fun of us. And we didn’t mind it because we knew he was doing it to just have a good time.” Mr. Runk had a certain command of his teams. Tensions always ran high between Towson and Maryland. So when a skirmish broke out during a scrimmage between the area rivals in 1980, the Tigers players were more than willing to jump into the fray. “Our entire bench started to run out on the field, and Coach Runk turned around and put up his hand, and you never saw 40 guys stop on a dime like that in your life,” said former Baltimore Sun sports editor Gerry Jackson, who was a defenseman for Mr. Runk from 1978 to 1981. “The kind of respect he had from the team was amazing.” After back-to-back 5-7 records in 1997 and 1998, Mr. Runk was not retained by Towson, which hired Seaman after he had been let go by Johns Hopkins. While Seaman quipped that Mr. Runk was too upset with the administration to take out his anger on Seaman, the latter said Mr. Runk was always supportive. “We were such good friends that it never came up,” said Seaman, who had known Mr. Runk since Seaman was a coach at a high school on Long Island where Mr. Runk often visited to recruit players. “He never felt bitter toward me. He knew that I needed the job.” Mr. Runk enjoyed playing musical instruments such as the guitar, banjo and harmonica and was a member of a barbershop quartet while he was a student at Arizona. But next to lacrosse, he prioritized his family. Related Articles In 1978, Mr. Runk took a partial sabbatical to enroll at Gallaudet University and sign up for classes in sign language, audiology and the sociology of deafness. The following year, he taught basic sign language at Towson at least once per semester for 20 years. “It was important for him to teach people how to communicate with those who were hard of hearing,” his son said. “It was a tribute to the care that he had for the family and for people in similar positions. It wasn’t just about us or him.” Mr. Runk is survived by three sons, Carl of Burke, Virginia, Keith of Bel Air, and Curt of Jacksonville, South Carolina, one daughter, Brenda Parker of Ocean City, three brothers, Alfred of Forest Hill, David of Tampa, Florida, and Ted of San Francisco, California, two sisters, Joan of Daytona, Florida, and Donna of Port Richey, Florida, 11 grandchildren and seven great grandchildren. The family will hold a private service. A celebration of Mr. Runk’s life is planned for a later date.One Inc , the leading payments network for the insurance industry, announced today a partnership with U.S. Bank aimed at delivering a comprehensive, unified payment experience for Property & Casualty (P&C) and Life insurers. The collaboration will provide the seamless integration of U.S. Bank’s leading money movement and banking capabilities with One Inc’s best-in-class ClaimsPay® and PremiumPay® solutions to optimize claims and premium processing experiences for customers. U.S. Bank is one of the largest commercial banks in the United States. Its strength, stability and deep experience in payments and insurance will improve complex claims and premium payment processes for mutual carrier customers. In addition, with One Inc’s Digital Wallet, insurance carriers can streamline payment processes across multiple channels, from credit/debit cards to Apple Pay®, Google PayTM, PayPalTM, Venmo, and ACH transactions. In the future, the partnership will help accelerate the use of instant payments within the insurance industry. U.S. Bank was part of the first payment on the RTP Network® and a launch partner of the FedNow® Service. By combining U.S. Bank’s instant payment capabilities with One Inc’s insurance-focused Digital Payments Network, the collaboration will allow insurance carriers to deliver faster payment solutions for outbound claims disbursements. “Both U.S. Bank and One Inc are dedicated to elevating the insurance payment experience, making it simpler and more efficient for insurers and their policyholders,” said Ian Drysdale, CEO of One Inc. “Together, we’re eager to empower carriers with streamlined solutions that support their financial objectives and deliver a more connected payment journey. This emphasizes our strengths to modernize the insurance payment landscape while offering a unified platform for both incoming and outgoing payments.” “We’re excited to partner with One Inc, a technology leader delivering innovative solutions for insurance carriers nationwide,” said Mike Jorgensen, Head of Emerging Solutions and Strategy in Global Treasury Management at U.S. Bank. “By bringing the payment capabilities of One Inc and U.S. Bank, we can create even more value for our insurance clients and respond to the evolving needs of their policyholders.”President-elect Donald Trump has once again suggested he wants to revert the name of North America’s tallest mountain — Alaska's Denali — to Mount McKinley, wading into a sensitive and decades-old conflict about what the peak should be called. Former President Barack Obama changed the official name to Denali in 2015 to reflect the traditions of Alaska Natives as well as the preference of many Alaska residents. The federal government in recent years has endeavored to change place-names considered disrespectful to Native people. “Denali” is an Athabascan word meaning “the high one" or “the great one.” A prospector in 1896 dubbed the peak “Mount McKinley” after President William McKinley, who had never been to Alaska. That name was formally recognized by the U.S. government until Obama changed it over opposition from lawmakers in McKinley's home state of Ohio. Trump suggested in 2016 that he might undo Obama's action, but he dropped that notion after Alaska's senators objected. He raised it again during a rally in Phoenix on Sunday. “McKinley was a very good, maybe a great president,” Trump said Sunday. “They took his name off Mount McKinley, right? That’s what they do to people.” Once again, Trump's suggestion drew quick opposition within Alaska. “Uh. Nope. It’s Denali,” Democratic state Sen. Scott Kawasaki posted on the social platform X Sunday night. Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski , who for years pushed for legislation to change the name to Denali, conveyed a similar sentiment in a post of her own. “There is only one name worthy of North America’s tallest mountain: Denali — the Great One,” Murkowski wrote on X. Various tribes of Athabascan people have lived in the shadow of the 20,310-foot (6,190-meter) mountain for thousands of years. McKinley, a Republican native of Ohio who served as the 25th president, was assassinated early in his second term in 1901 in Buffalo, New York. Alaska and Ohio have been at odds over the name since at least the 1970s. Alaska had a standing request to change the name since 1975, when the legislature passed a resolution and then-Gov. Jay Hammond appealed to the federal government. Known for its majestic views, the mountain is dotted with glaciers and covered at the top with snow year-round, with powerful winds that make it difficult for the adventurous few who seek to climb it. ___ Rush reported from Portland, Oregon. Claire Rush, The Associated Press
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