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Miami football staffer avoids disaster after Hurricanes player barrels over her
A Miami Hurricanes staffer was inches from disaster after she was accidentally plowed into by a player during Saturday’s game against the Virginia Tech Hokies.
The incident occurred in the second quarter of Miami’s 34-17 win over Virginia Tech. Hurricanes quarterback Carson Beck found wide receiver Malachi Toney in the middle of the field. Toney took the ball and ran it across midfield into Hokies territory.
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The end of the play is where the disaster nearly occurred. Toney was pushed out of bounds and his momentum carried into a woman who was on the sideline. She was standing next to punter Dylan Joyce when Toney stumbled at full speed and hit her.
The woman fell backward and nearly hit her head on a railing behind her. The woman bounced back up, and players and other Miami staffers checked on her to make sure she was OK.
College football fans reacted on social media.
OREGON'S DAN LANNING MAKES DUCKS' CASE FOR COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF AFTER BIG WIN OVER USC
The Hurricanes improved to 9-2 on the season and 5-2 against ACC opponents, helping their case to make the College Football Playoff.
Beck was 27-of-32 with 320 passing yards and four touchdown passes. Toney led the Hurricanes with 12 catches for 146 yards and a 20-yard touchdown catch from Beck in the fourth quarter.
Miami entered the game ranked No. 11 in the latest College Football Playoff reveal. The team is fifth in the ACC standings and have a huge matchup against Pittsburgh on the road to close the season.
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Oregon's Dan Lanning makes Ducks' case for College Football Playoff after big win over USC
The Oregon Ducks improved to 10-1 overall and 7-1 against Big Ten Conference opponents on Saturday night as they handed the USC Trojans a 42-27 defeat.
With the win, Oregon head coach Dan Lanning endorsed his team for the College Football Playoff. The Ducks were ranked No. 7 in the latest reveal, moving one spot up from the previous week. Oregon would have been pitted against No. 10 Alabama, according to the latest release.
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It would mean that the Big Ten gets three teams in the College Football Playoff.
"I think proof's in the pudding," Lanning told reporters, via ESPN. "We can beat you in multiple ways, right? We can outscore you at times, right? We can hold you to the 18-, 16-(point) type of game, win in tough environments, any weather, put the ball down, let's go play football. That's the kind of team that we have."
Lanning also pointed to the difficulty of the team’s schedule, contrasting it with some of the SEC schools. Oregon will take on the Washington Huskies to finish the year.
ARCH MANNING MAKES TEXAS FOOTBALL HISTORY IN LONGHORNS' WIN OVER ARKANSAS
Ducks quarterback Dante Moore was 22-of-30 with 257 passing yards, two touchdown passes and an interception in the win. Oregon had a 28-14 lead over USC at halftime.
"At the end of the day, I kind of just kept telling the team it was going to be an emotional game, because it was senior night, but also you can't let emotions take over because with the emotions come negativity. So it's been a lot within this game," Moore said. "But I feel like we pushed out ourselves Monday through Friday to get the result we wanted."
USC head coach Lincoln Riley lamented the team’s struggles as their College Football Playoff hopes were seemingly dashed.
"We're disappointed, didn't play our best. We had some penalties that we haven't been having that showed up and definitely hurt us," Riley said. "We were gutsy, made a lot of plays, but in the end we were just a couple of plays short."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Vindman’s call to release Trump-MBS transcript reopens old questions in US-Saudi relationship
Rep. Eugene Vindman, D-Va., is demanding that President Donald Trump release a 2019 call with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, saying the American people "deserve to know what was said" in the aftermath of Jamal Khashoggi’s murder.
Vindman, a retired Army colonel who once served on Trump’s National Security Council, said the call was one of two that deeply concerned him — the other being the 2019 conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy that triggered Trump’s first impeachment.
Standing beside Hanan Elatr Khashoggi, the slain journalist’s widow, Vindman said Trump "sidelined his own intelligence community to shield a foreign leader" and that transparency is owed to both the Khashoggi family and the country.
"The Khashoggi family and the American people deserve to know what was said on that call," Vindman said Friday. "Our intelligence agencies concluded that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the murder of Mr. Khashoggi’s husband. When the president sidelined his own intelligence community to shield a foreign leader, America’s credibility was at stake."
TRUMP SECURES RELEASE OF AMERICAN TRAPPED IN SAUDI ARABIA FOR YEARS OVER ONLINE POSTS
Vindman’s name already is polarizing in Trump-era politics.
He and his twin brother, Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, became central figures in the first impeachment attempt against Trump, when their internal reporting of Trump’s Ukraine call led to accusations from conservatives that they had undermined an elected president. To Trump’s allies, Eugene Vindman’s demand to release the 2019 Saudi call feels like a replay of that fight — another attempt by a former National Security Council insider to damage the president under the banner of transparency.
Still, his comments land at a revealing moment. Washington’s embrace of bin Salman underscores a familiar trade-off in U.S. foreign policy: strategic security and economic interests over accountability and human rights.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said: "The U.S.-Saudi friendship is now a partnership for the future. President Trump's historic agreements with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, from defense to investment, will create quality jobs for Americans and will grow our economy. No virtue-signaling. No lecturing. Only results for the American people."
Trump’s latest visit with bin Salman brought sweeping defense and investment deals, even as questions over 9/11 and Khashoggi’s murder continue to test that balance. The United States granted Saudi Arabia major non-NATO ally status, formally elevating the kingdom’s defense and intelligence partnership with Washington and clearing the way for expedited arms sales and joint military programs.
Bin Salman also pledged nearly $1 trillion in new Saudi investments across U.S. industries, including infrastructure, artificial intelligence and clean energy. The commitments were announced alongside a Strategic Defense Agreement that includes purchases of F-35 fighter jets, roughly 300 Abrams tanks and new missile defense systems, as well as joint ventures to expand manufacturing inside Saudi Arabia.
Administration officials said the initiatives would create tens of thousands of American jobs and strengthen the U.S. industrial base.
During his appearance with Trump at the White House, reporters shouted questions about Saudi Arabia’s alleged role in the Sept. 11 attacks and the 2018 killing of Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul — marking a rare moment of public pressure on the crown prince, who typically avoids unscripted exchanges with the press.
Trump accused the press of trying to "embarrass" his guest, but the crown prince offered what sounded like regret for the killing of Khashoggi, even as he denied involvement.
"A lot of people didn’t like that gentleman that you’re talking about," Trump said. "Whether you like him or don’t like him, things happen, but he knew nothing about it … We can leave it at that. You don’t have to embarrass our guest by asking a question like that."
ABC reporter Mary Bruce had told bin Salman that U.S. intelligence determined he’d signed off on the killing and that 9/11 families were "furious" about his presence in the White House. "Why should Americans trust you?"
"It’s been painful for us in Saudi Arabia," bin Salman said of the killing, calling it "a huge mistake." "We’ve improved our system to be sure that nothing happens like that again," he added.
TRUMP DESIGNATES SAUDI ARABIA AS MAJOR NON-NATO ALLY DURING CROWN PRINCE WHITE HOUSE VISIT
A 2021 report by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence stated: "We assess that Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman approved an operation in Istanbul, Turkey, to capture or kill Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi."
Bin Salman has repeatedly denied approving the killing, though he said in 2019, "It happened under my watch, I take full responsibility as a leader."
The question of Saudi Arabia’s involvement in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks remains one of the most sensitive and unresolved issues in the U.S.-Saudi relationship. While 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi nationals, the U.S. government has never concluded that the Saudi state or senior Saudi officials had prior knowledge of or directed the attacks.
Families of 9/11 victims condemned bin Salman after he invoked Usama bin Laden during his White House remarks, saying the al Qaeda leader used Saudi nationals to drive a wedge between Washington and Riyadh.
"We have to focus on reality," the crown prince said. "Reality is that Usama bin Laden used Saudi people in that event for one main purpose: to destroy the American–Saudi relationship. That’s the purpose of 9/11."
"The Saudi crown prince invoking Usama bin Laden this afternoon in the White House does not change the fact that a federal judge in New York ruled a few short months ago that Saudi Arabia must stand trial for its role in the 9/11 terrorist attacks that murdered 3,000 of our loved ones," said Brett Eagleson, president of 9/11 Justice, a group representing victims’ families.
In August 2025, U.S. District Judge George B. Daniels issued a landmark ruling bringing Saudi Arabia under U.S. federal jurisdiction for a 9/11 trial. The court found evidence of a network of Saudi officials inside the U.S. who allegedly provided logistical support to the hijackers, citing "prior planning" and "constant coordination."
Among the materials described in the ruling was a drawing seized from a Saudi government operative showing an airplane with flight-path equations — evidence prosecutors said suggested advance knowledge of the attacks.
Saudi Arabia has denied any role, calling the allegations "categorically false."
But for bin Salman, who came to Washington seeking to highlight new security and economic ties, the families’ sharp rebuke was a reminder that the 9/11 case still looms large in the public eye, even as the Trump administration deepens its partnership with Riyadh.
Steelers' Aaron Rodgers to miss game vs Bears over broken wrist
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers will miss Sunday’s game against the Chicago Bears with a broken left wrist, and Mason Rudolph will start in his place, head coach Mike Tomlin said.
Rodgers suffered the wrist injury in the Steelers’ win over the Cincinnati Bengals. He was tackled and came down hard on his left hand. He left the game early and Rudolph replaced him as the Steelers’ defense clamped down to hang on for the 32-14 victory.
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Tomlin revealed the decision in an interview with CBS.
"He fought his tail off all week," Tomlin said. "That's the prudent play to make for us as a collective. We'll let Mason start. He's absorbed most of the reps this week."
It will be the first action Rodgers has missed since he tore his Achilles in Week 1 of the 2023 season with the New York Jets.
Tomlin and Rodgers both stressed that the quarterback’s status would be determined on whether he could protect himself.
AARON RODGERS READY TO 'LET BYGONES BE BYGONES' IN LONGTIME RIVALRY WITH BEARS
Rookie quarterback Will Howard, who spent most of the season on the injured reserve with his own hand injury, said earlier in the week it was impressive that Rodgers was even in the conversation to start.
"The fact that he’s out there and going through reps (today), it says a lot about his pain tolerance," Howard said. "He’s a tough dude, man."
Rodgers is 24-5 all-time against the Bears. This season, he has 1,969 passing yards, 19 touchdown passes and seven interceptions.
Pittsburgh is 6-4 this season and retained a small lead on the Baltimore Ravens for first place in the AFC North. Chicago is 7-3 this season and have control of the NFC North going into Week 12.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Common food may boost heart health without changing your lifestyle
A new scientific review suggests that mushrooms may offer more than just low-calorie nutrition. A group of authors analyzed human studies to see whether eating mushrooms could improve markers of heart, metabolic and immune health.
Mushrooms are fungi but often counted as vegetables. They are also an important source of nutrients and bioactive compounds. Eating them increased several micronutrients, while having minimal or no impact on overall calories, sodium or saturated fat, according to previous studies.
The researchers in this study conducted a narrative review of 22 existing human studies to understand how mushrooms affect measurable health outcomes.
DAILY ORANGE JUICE HAS 'THERAPEUTIC POTENTIAL' FOR GENES AND HEART HEALTH, STUDY FINDS
Their goal was to clarify the potential role of mushrooms in improving cardiometabolic and immune biomarkers. These included cholesterol levels, blood sugar, blood pressure and inflammation markers, and immunoglobulin A (IgA).
Chronic diseases like heart disease, diabetes and stroke remain leading causes of death worldwide, the study pointed out, and the researchers wanted to determine whether incorporating mushrooms into the diet might provide a simple, food-based way to support metabolic health.
EATING MEAT COULD PROTECT AGAINST CANCER-RELATED DEATH, STUDY SUGGESTS
The review found promising results, though they're not definitive.
Among the most consistent findings was a reduction in triglycerides when mushrooms were added to participants’ regular diets without major lifestyle changes.
Triglycerides are a type of fat found in your blood, and are the main form of stored energy in the body.
COCOA EXTRACT COULD SLOW AGING PROCESS IN OLDER ADULTS, 'PROMISING' NEW STUDY FINDS
Having some is normal because your body depends on them for fuel. But high triglyceride levels can raise your risk of heart disease, stroke and pancreatitis.
Some studies also suggested possible improvements in blood glucose when mushrooms are part of an overall healthier eating pattern.
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Blood pressure readings showed mild improvement in a few trials, but results were mixed. For other measures, such as cholesterol, most studies found no significant effect, indicating that mushrooms may not strongly influence these markers on their own.
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A few studies did show increases in salivary IgA, hinting at potential immune-supporting properties, though the study explains that more research is needed to confirm this.
Importantly, none of the studies reported harmful effects from mushroom consumption.
"No evidence indicated negative effects of consuming mushrooms on any outcome of interest," the study states.
Still, the authors emphasized that much of the current evidence is preliminary.
Many of the reviewed trials were small, short-term and inconsistent in the type or preparation of mushrooms used. Average mushroom intake in the United States is around four grams per day, which is far below the amounts tested in most experiments. This makes it unclear whether typical consumption levels would have the same benefits.
The researchers call for larger, longer studies using standardized doses and clearly defined mushroom varieties.
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Their findings were published in Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition in 2025.
Heavily redacted voting records for school superintendent nabbed by ICE spark outrage
A legal fight is brewing over a Maryland county board of elections’ heavy redactions to the voter registration records of an illegal immigrant who served as superintendent of Iowa’s largest school system until he was arrested by federal authorities this year, Fox News Digital has learned.
"This was shocking," Justin Riemer, CEO and president of the conservative legal group Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (RITE), told Fox News Digital in a Zoom interview on Friday. "When I saw the news reporting, and they showed screenshots of the registration applications with all this information redacted, I was just shocked."
Riemer was reacting to Prince George's County's Board of Elections' recent release of voter registration documents belonging to illegal alien Ian Andre Roberts, which included blacking out Roberts' sex, whether he checked the citizenship box, his date of birth and other information. The election attorney is representing RITE and conservative research group the American Accountability Foundation (AAF) in their efforts to receive the voter registration documents with fewer redactions.
Roberts, who is originally from Guyana and first entered the U.S. in 1994, was working as the superintendent of the Des Moines public school district when Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested him in September. Roberts was not legally permitted to work in the country after an employment authorization card expired in 2020, Fox News Digital previously reported.
The arrest of an illegal immigrant working in such a high-profile position shocked conservatives and others. Additional details surrounding his lengthy rap sheet surfaced as journalists and other investigators looked into his history. It was soon discovered that he was listed as a registered Democratic voter in Maryland, where he previously lived, and that he had a conviction for reckless driving in 2012, the Department of Homeland Security reported in October.
The Maryland State Board of Elections previously said Roberts did not vote in elections.
"I'm an election law expert, not an immigration expert, but it doesn't take one to see just how… broken the system has been," Riemer told Fox Digital. "He has multiple criminal charges. He has worked in multiple school districts where, if they were doing the proper citizenship and work authorization checks, this should have been caught. It's really just unbelievable how this guy has managed to jump around the country, working in school districts where he's around children."
As concern mounted surrounding Roberts, the American Accountability Foundation filed a public records request with Prince George's County to obtain his voter registration application. The county's board of elections complied with the request, but redacted key information, sparking what could turn into a legal showdown.
"The American Accountability Foundation called the county out on it and said, '… you're not allowed to redact this information,'" Riemer said, adding that it's understandable for the county to redact information such as an individual's Social Security number or driver's license number, but not a person's gender or whether they answered in the affirmative that they are a U.S. citizen.
RITE published copies of the redacted documents, which show 18 black boxes blocking out information across just two pages' worth of documents. Riemer explained the request was made under the National Voter Registration Act – a federal law that simplified voter registration processes when an eligible individual renews their driver's license – which includes a provision allowing public access to such records.
Riemer sent a letter to the Prince George's County Board of Elections on Tuesday demanding the county turn over the records to his clients with fewer redactions as allowed by law. The election attorney, who previously served as chief counsel to the Republican National Committee, gave the county board until Dec. 1 while noting legal action could be in the future if the election board fails to comply.
LAWMAKER REVEALS HOW DES MOINES SCHOOLS CHIEF REGISTERED TO VOTE DESPITE ILLEGAL STATUS
"Please provide my clients with the records no later than Monday, December 1, 2025. If you redact or withhold any portion of the requested records beyond the limited exceptions above, we will immediately follow up with a written notice of your violation of 52 U.S.C. § 20507(i). If you do not remedy such violation within 90 days, my clients will sue you in Maryland federal district court and collect reasonable attorneys’ fees, litigation expenses and other costs," Riemer's letter to the county board of elections stated.
Riemer said he has not yet heard from the board of elections, and speculated that the county board is in the midst of speaking with the state board of elections and the state attorney general's office about next steps.
"If they noticed that Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections was part of this effort to get this information, they should have, because we sued Maryland last year for violating the National Voter Registration Act for restricting public access to registration records just like they're doing here and won that lawsuit in March. And so they just continuously are doing these practices that are not transparent, they're not what federal law requires, it's not what the public deserves," he added.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Prince George's County Board of Elections for comment on the letter and redactions on Friday afternoon but did not immediately receive a reply.
DEMOCRATS SILENT ON ILLEGAL ALIEN REGISTERED TO VOTE IN BLUE STATE
Riemer said that the case is one of many that show concern over non-citizens being on voter roles is not "political theater" as Democrats have claimed amid conservatives rallying around stronger voter integrity laws nationwide.
"We know it happens in the thousands. Oregon, for example, reported registering a couple thousand non-citizens through their DMV," he said.
Roberts was taken into the U.S. Marshals' custody following his September arrest and is set to be prosecuted, DHS said in October. The federal agency has released the suspect's lengthy history of run-ins with the law that stretch back to 1996, when he was charged with criminal possession of narcotics with intent to sell in New York, a charge for third-degree unauthorized use of a vehicle in Queens, New York, in 1998 that was later dropped and the 2012 conviction for reckless driving in Maryland.
More recently, Roberts faced charges in 2020 for second-degree criminal possession of a weapon and other weapons charges and a 2022 conviction for unlawful possession of a loaded firearm in Pennsylvania.
Roberts is also now facing charges related to his arrest in September, which included him attempting to flee law enforcement officers, according to DHS. He was found to be in possession of $3,000 in cash, a Glock 9mm pistol and a hunting knife at the time of his arrest. Roberts was criminally charged on Oct. 2 with being an illegal alien in possession of firearms, according to DHS.
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The Iowa Board of Educational Examiners revoked Roberts' license following his arrest and he is no longer permitted to serve as a superintendent in the state.
Bunnie XO roasts husband Jelly Roll’s clean-shaven face, says he 'looks like Beetlejuice!’
Bunnie XO is still getting used to her husband Jelly Roll's clean-shaven face.
During Friday's episode of the "Dumb Blonde" podcast, the country music star's wife admitted she told her husband of eight years that he looks like Beetlejuice after he revealed the shocking transformation.
"This entire time I thought my husband had the biggest head. After he shaved, he’s got a little peanut. Slender. It looks like Beetlejuice," she said.
JELLY ROLL UNVEILS DRAMATIC TRANSFORMATION WITHOUT SIGNATURE BEARD AFTER WEIGHT LOSS
"I told him that today. I said, ‘Baby, your little head is a — you got a peanut head, dude.’ He looks like Noah with tattoos."
Bunnie XO explained why the Grammy-nominated artist took the plunge and shaved his face after 20 years.
"He wanted to do it because he’s finally lost all that weight. So he doesn’t know what he looks like underneath there," she said.
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"Now the way it turned out is a completely different story," she said. "But ya live and ya learn. I don’t even want him to grow the goatee back. I want him to keep the mullet and do the fricken’ weird cop mustache that he had. Oh my God, it was so hot. It looks so good, I’m like, 'Baby, leave that.'"
On Thursday, the 40-year-old "Save Me" singer, whose real name is Jason Bradley DeFord, took to Instagram to share his new look, after shaving off his signature beard.
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"By now you have probably figured out that I look like a Ninja Turtle," he said in the video. "Crazy. One of the reasons I even started growing a beard is I was so obese, it was just easier to cover up what was happening here."
Jelly Roll began his weight-loss journey in December 2022, and has been open with his fans about his progress over the years.
In April, he told fans during Pat McAfee's "Big Night AHT" event that he had lost 183 pounds, telling a cheering crowd, "I started at 540 pounds. I'm 357 pounds this morning, baby." He added that he wants to lose another 100 pounds so that he could go skydiving with his wife, Bunnie XO.
JELLY ROLL CLAIMS LOUIS VUITTON EMPLOYEES TREATED HIM LIKE A ‘CRIMINAL’ DURING SYDNEY TRIP
The "Church" singer then spoke with Fox News Digital at the 2025 Academy of Country Music Awards in May, noting that his biggest challenge when it comes to losing weight is food.
"If you're really battling obesity, you got to start at the dinner table, man. The walking's great, all the other stuff's great, but you got to fight that addiction at the dinner table," he said.
Fox News Digital's Lori Bashian contributed to this post.
Mamdani says he still believes Trump a ‘fascist’ after cordial White House meeting
New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani said Sunday he still believes President Donald Trump is a "fascist," following their high-profile meeting at the White House on Friday.
"That's something that I've said in the past, and I say it today," he told NBC host Kristen Welker on "Meet the Press."
Welker pressed the self-avowed democratic socialist on an incident from a media spray in the Oval Office during which Fox News’ Jacqui Heinrich asked him whether he still believes President Trump is a "fascist."
TRUMP, MAMDANI SET TO FACE-OFF IN FIRST OVAL OFFICE MEETING — WHAT’S ON THE TABLE
Mamdani began to answer, but before he could finish, Trump cut in, saying, "That’s OK," and patted Mamdani’s arm.
"You can just say yes. It’s easier than explaining it. I don’t mind," Trump added.
On Sunday, Welker also pressed Mamdani on whether he still believes the president is a "threat to democracy" or a "despot."
"Everything that I've said in the past, I continue to believe," Mamdani responded.
TRUMP PREDICTS 'CIVIL' MEETING WITH MAMDANI DESPITE PAST COMMENTS ABOUT EACH OTHER
"And I think that's the thing that's important in our politics is that we don't shy away from where we have disagreements, but we understand what it is that brings us to the table," he added.
Mamdani said he "appreciated" his conversation with Trump for being honest about areas of disagreement while open to focusing on the interests of New Yorkers and the affordability crisis.
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Trump and Mamdani met at the White House on Friday to discuss pressing matters such as affordability, housing and public safety after Mamdani's decisive victory in this month's New York City mayoral race.
On public safety, Mamdani said he intends to maintain roughly 35,000 NYPD officers while shifting more non-urgent calls away from police and toward mental health responders — a note he reiterated Sunday.
Fox News' Hanna Panreck, Jasmine Baher and Jacqui Heinrich contributed to this report.
Arch Manning makes Texas football history in Longhorns' win over Arkansas
Arch Manning did it all in the Texas Longhorns’ victory over the Arkansas Razorbacks on Saturday evening, 52-37.
Manning had six total touchdowns in the game – four passing along with a rushing and receiving touchdown each. With the stat line, he entered Longhorns football history.
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He became the first Texas quarterback with at least one passing, rushing and receiving touchdown in a game. He threw for a career-high 389 yards as he continues to improve at the quarterback position each week.
"Going through the tough games and the struggle, you know, I think you need that as a quarterback," Manning said. "It's not easy, but you try to overcome it.... Going through those tough experiences has helped me a lot."
Manning started the game with a touchdown pass to wide receiver DeAndre Moore Jr. The two hooked up three times during the game. Manning caught his touchdown pass on a reverse from Parker Livingstone. It was a four-yard touchdown.
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"It was kind of sunny out and I lost it for a second," Manning said. "He threw it well (in practice). He's bailed me out a few times, so I had to bail him out."
Livingstone had a 54-yard touchdown catch from Manning. He had two catches for 104 yards in the win.
Texas improved to 8-3 on the year and have a crucial matchup against Texas A&M next week.
Arkansas, which fired head coach Sam Pittman earlier in the year, fell to 2-9. The Razorbacks have yet to win a game against an SEC opponent this season.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Trump trade official says $2K tariff payments won't fuel inflation as revenues climb
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said Sunday that potential one-time payments of $2,000 from tariff revenues would not fuel inflation and could provide welcome relief to families.
"This is real money that's coming in, and we get to decide what to do with it," Greer told "Fox & Friends Weekend."
"The $2,000, that's one option," Greer said, adding that President Donald Trump is "eager to discuss and explore more" proposals.
TRUMP CALLS TARIFF OPPONENTS 'FOOLS,' PROMISES $2K DIVIDEND PAYMENTS FOR AMERICANS
Greer dismissed concerns that the move would stoke rising prices, noting that "this is not some kind of ongoing new welfare program or something that would exacerbate inflation." He added that he expects American families to welcome the checks. "But I don’t think it would change the overall macroeconomic picture," Greer said.
Trump vowed earlier this month that revenue generated from duties could fund a $2,000 dividend for low- and middle-income Americans.
TRUMP SAYS TARIFF-FUNDED DIVIDEND PAYMENTS FOR AMERICANS WILL BEGIN NEXT YEAR
The president first floated the idea on Nov. 9 and has since suggested that any remaining funds could be used to help pay down the nation’s soaring $38 trillion debt. Last week, Trump said Americans could see payment checks as soon as next year.
"We've taken in hundreds of billions of dollars in tariff money. We're going to be issuing dividends probably by the middle of next year, maybe a little bit later than that," Trump told reporters at the White House.
TRUMP SAYS TARIFF REVENUE TO FUND $2K CHECKS FOR AMERICANS, LOWER NATION’S $38T DEBT
Since Trump announced his "Liberation Day" tariffs in April, tariff revenues have climbed sharply from $23.9 billion in May to $28 billion in June and $29 billion in July.
Total duty revenue reached $215.2 billion in fiscal year 2025, which ended Sept. 30, according to the Treasury Department’s "Customs and Certain Excise Taxes" report.
So far in fiscal year 2026, which began on Oct. 1, the U.S. has collected $40.4 billion, according to the latest numbers published by the Treasury Department.
The proposal comes at a pivotal moment, with tariff receipts climbing and the Supreme Court reviewing the legality of Trump’s trade measures, a case that could determine the future of his broader trade agenda.