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Crews responding to wildfire on Mescalero Apache Reservation

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Crews are responding to a wildfire on the Mescalero Apache Reservation. The U.S. Forest Service says the Sago Fire was reported Thursday, March 26 about 19 miles east of Mescalero, New Mexico. They say crews are actively responding in a coordinated effort alongside additional agencies to help extinguish the fire. Air resources have been dispatched to help suppression efforts. Fire officials say the fire is approximately 250 acres with zero percent containment.No closure orders are in effect, but members of the public are being asked to avoid Sago Canyon Road and Turkey Canyon Road.The cause of the fire is still under investigation. There is a Temporary Flight Restriction in the area. Drone use is not allowed.The Gila Las Cruces Zone Type 3 Incident Management Team has taken command of the Sago Fire as of 5 p.m. Friday.This story will be updated as more information becomes available.

Crews are responding to a wildfire on the Mescalero Apache Reservation.

The U.S. Forest Service says the Sago Fire was reported Thursday, March 26 about 19 miles east of Mescalero, New Mexico. They say crews are actively responding in a coordinated effort alongside additional agencies to help extinguish the fire.

Air resources have been dispatched to help suppression efforts. Fire officials say the fire is approximately 250 acres with zero percent containment.

No closure orders are in effect, but members of the public are being asked to avoid Sago Canyon Road and Turkey Canyon Road.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation. There is a Temporary Flight Restriction in the area. Drone use is not allowed.

The Gila Las Cruces Zone Type 3 Incident Management Team has taken command of the Sago Fire as of 5 p.m. Friday.

This story will be updated as more information becomes available.



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Thomas Rhett Says This One Thing Keeps His Marriage Strong

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Thomas Rhett and his wife Lauren will celebrate 14 years of marriage this year, and after welcoming their fifth child, it’s safe to say things are hectic in their household.

So, how to do they make their marriage work?

Thomas Rhett and Lauren Akins Talk Marriage on the WHOA That’s Good Podcast

Rhett and his wife visited the WHOA That’s Good podcast recently.

While chatting with host Sadie Robertson Huff, the topic of marriage came up early on, with both Rhett and Lauren sharing their advice.

Lauren spoke to remaining each other’s best friend, while Rhett talked about intentionality.

He admitted that his advice on marriage changes year to year as life changes, but ultimately, intentionality is key.

“I do think it’s really easy, especially once kids start coming into the picture, to become roommates,” he shares with Robertson-Huff. “Or just joint, parenting partners.”

Thomas Rhett Believes Intentionality Is the Key to Marriage

Rhett says part of keeping the romance and connection alive in a marriage is to be intentional and ask questions that can help you show up for your partner.

Those questions include asking what your partner needs from you, where you may be lacking and how you can show up better in the future.

“I think just learning how to be intentional because it is so easy, you know, after you — for us — after you put four kids to bed… 8:45… 9 o’clock,” he explains. “You’re either waxed and you don’t really want to get into the conversation you started earlier in the day that ended in an argument or whatever.

“It’s so much easier to turn on a Netflix show and just numb out the world, got to bed and then kind of forget the conversation ever happened,” he adds.

Thomas Rhett Shares the Hardest Thing Lauren Asks Him to Do

The “Half of Me” singer says this year, Lauren has been asking him to do something for her that is very challenging for him.

“I was like, ‘What do you need from me in this season of life?'” Rhett recounts. “And she’s like, ‘I just want you to get up at 6 o’clock in the morning so that we can read our Bibles together and we can have 30 minutes before the chaos begins.’

“What’s so funny is that waking up for me is the hardest thing on the planet,” he concedes.

“It’s like the one thing he’s like, why,” Lauren adds.

“I’d rather go paint the whole house, you know what I’m saying,” Rhett jokes.

Rhett and Laure have five children now; Willa Gray, 9, Ada James, 8, Lennon Love, 5, Lillie Carolina, 3, and Brave Elijah.

Their youngest — and only son — arrived on Feb. 27.

Country Artists Who Are Having Babies in 2026

The country music family is growing once again! 2026 will bring new additions to several artists and their families.

Keep scrolling to see which artists are welcoming bundles of joy this year.

Gallery Credit: Jess Rose





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GlobalFoundries Sues Tower Semiconductor for Patent Infringement

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The lawsuits allege that Tower infringed on 11 GlobalFoundries’ patents in the U.S.



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Alex Karaban drives UConn to Elite Eight, keeps Dan Hurley sane along the way

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — At this point, you almost needn’t look. The ball went inside to Tarris Reed Jr. Carson Cooper helped off a half-step too many. The ball popped out to Alex Karaban, who had raised his hand as soon as Cooper had turned his head. It didn’t matter that Reed’s pass took Karaban to the outskirts of the midcourt logo, or that Cooper, with his 6-foot-11 height and a wingspan even longer, closed out nearly perfectly.

When the ball left Karaban’s hands, he knew it, his teammates knew it and Michigan State might have known it, too. The ball hit nothing but nylon, and Huskies faithful erupted. Karaban pumped a fist — ecstatic yet composed — in the direction of Dan Hurley. It wasn’t the dagger, but it put UConn up by four with roughly 30 seconds to play. The Huskies made their free throws, and Karaban — who else? — intercepted Michigan State’s last desperation pass to secure a 67-63 rollercoaster win and advance to the Elite Eight, where it will face No. 1 seed Duke.

“I refuse to lose and really do anything to help this team win,” Karaban said. “The main thing in the huddle that really stuck with me is coach saying, ‘Go out there and fire, have no regrets at the end of this,’ when Michigan State started making their run. That just really stuck with me.

“If I see a glimpse of an opening, I’m going to let it fly.”

It’s Karaban’s 16th NCAA Tournament win as a starter. The only players with more are Christian Laettner and Bobby Hurley, Dan’s brother, per CBS Sports research. All 16 have come at UConn with Dan Hurley as his coach.

“It’s like having an associate head coach that is in the locker room, that lives in the apartments, that is in the dining [room], that is in the weight room, that’s peer pressuring his teammates to do extra,” Hurley said. “It’s like having a top assistant that’s on your team and always around your players.”

The off-court leadership is nice. The on-court production is better. Karaban scored 17 points, gathered seven rebounds, dished out three assists and blocked two shots. He and Reed (20 points) have carried the Huskies this NCAA Tournament; that duo, fittingly, scored the Huskies’ final 11 points of the game and 24 of the team’s 32 in the second half.

“That’s what this time of year is all about,” Hurley said. “You’ve got to have great upperclassmen.”

Karaban is the rare one who did it as an underclassman, too. A good but not elite recruit — he was outside the top 100 in the 247Sports 2022 class rankings — he stepped right in and started all but one game as a freshman. The Huskies demolished everything in their NCAA Tournament path en route to a title. They did it the next year, too, and Karaban added a second national title to his burgeoning yet already historic list of accomplishments.

It nearly came to a crashing halt months later. Hurley strongly considered the Lakers job in what would have been a stunning but not unreasonable departure. Thursday, Hurley even admitted he wishes he could have taken a gap year after two straight titles.

“Whatever he wanted to do, whatever would make him happy, his family happy, that’s ultimately what we all wanted,” Karaban said. “For him to come back and want to stay at UConn was a blessing for us. We greatly appreciated that. We just want to repay him with how we play on the basketball court.”

NBA or stay? What Jon Scheyer and Dan Hurley can learn from March Madness opponents Tom Izzo and Rick Pitino

Zachary Pereles

NBA or stay? What Jon Scheyer and Dan Hurley can learn from March Madness opponents Tom Izzo and Rick Pitino

The lone returning starter from the second title team, Karaban became a leader. Previous teams had Adama Sanogo, Tristen Newton, and Andre Jackson — upperclassmen who had been through the ropes in Storrs.

The season didn’t go as planned, especially given the enormous (and, frankly, unfair) expectations. Replacing four starters isn’t easy. Three-peating isn’t easy. It hasn’t happened since John Wooden was leading UCLA more than 50 years ago. UConn was up-and-down all season and bowed out to eventual champion Florida in the second round.

Karaban’s shooting numbers dipped — from 64% from 2 to 54%, and from 38% from 3 to 35% — year-over-year. He eschewed the NBA Draft for a second straight offseason and got to work.

“Last summer, I remember we were reading stats about shooting,” Reed said. “I think he was shooting like 10,000 shots — something crazy — in the summer. Just knowing his dedication off the court, how much he’s just bought into the team, it’s been ups and downs throughout your career, but to see where he is now and him leading us to the Elite Eight is just so special.”

The shooting numbers speak for themselves, but bouncing back took more than on-court work. So he took up meditating before games.

“I think I didn’t do that enough last year,” Karaban said. “My main focus right now is to really lead this team, help these guys out, make sure everyone is themselves and confident. Picking guys up if they make a mistake or continue to support everybody out there on the court and really just do whatever it takes to win. … When I first came in here, guys were doing that to me. Now it’s just my turn to do that to younger guys and other teammates.”

That doesn’t mean he doesn’t get pumped up. When Reed, a 59% free-throw shooter, knocked down two big ones to put the game out of reach, Karaban was the first person to get right in Reed’s ear and tell him “the preparation truly pays off, and I’m super proud of him.”

Anyone can try to be a leader, or even be bestowed the title. Karaban, though, leads successfully, towing the lines between program record-setter, leader, teammate and, as Hurley put it, de-facto associate head coach.

“[He was] just talking to me about how it was winning here and what they want to get back doing, what the standard is,” said Georgia transfer Silas Demary Jr said of his visit last summer. “At first, from the outside looking in, you think he’s quiet, but once you’re around him, you see how much of a leader he is, see how much he talks, see how much of a great person he is, and he’s a great person to be around. His leadership has always stuck out to me.”

When asked what sets Karaban apart as a leader, Reed racked his brain and then said simply, “Everything.”

“The way he works off the court, the discipline and what he’s motivated by on the court, that guy works his tail off,” Reed said. “Having a guy like that who just knows how to win. He makes the right plays at the right time, he can score at three levels; off the court he’s focused on his body, his meals. It’s like he does everything right. Just having a guy to lead the team like that is so special.”

The numbers are special, too.

16 NCAA Tournament wins as starter

T-3rd all-time

124 career wins

UConn’s all-time leader

148 games played (147 starts)

UConn’s all-time leader

287 3-pointers made

UConn’s all-time leader

196 career NCAA Tournament points

3rd in UConn history

1,849 career points

6th in UConn history

His name is up there with UConn’s all-time greats. Richard Hamilton. Ben Gordon. Ray Allen. Shabazz Napier.

He has the chance to add to it, too. Sunday, he’ll become the first player to start in an Elite Eight game in three different seasons since Devonte’ Graham (2016-18). No player has started in a Final Four game in three different seasons since Luc Mbah a Moute (2006-08). Only four players in the past 50 years have started in a national championship in three different seasons, and they’re all titans of the sport: Laettner, Hurley, Grant Hill and Patrick Ewing.

After Hurley decided to stay, he cited several factors: the chance to chase a three-peat, proximity to family, his family’s love for Connecticut and the ability to help mold college athletes.

He didn’t admit it publicly, but returning to coach Karaban — then a two-time champion in two years, already becoming an extension of the coach himself — certainly played a factor, too. How could it not?

“I’m just glad [about] the decision to come back for this last year, that he’s been able to play as well [as he has], and his last run has been fun,” Hurley said. “Obviously, he’s improving his draft stock, and he’s established himself as the biggest winner and the most decorated player in UConn history. That’s hard to do at a place like ours.”





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Peter Alexander announces departure from NBC News

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Weekend warmup with dry storms possible Sunday

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Good morning and happy Saturday! Cooler weather has settled into New Mexico as the weekend begins after yesterday’s strong backdoor cold front rushed through the state. Temperatures have fallen in the 20s, 30s, and 40s throughout the Land of Enchantment. Today, mild high temperatures are forecasted across the state as temperatures warm into the lower […]



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Ex-MANOWAR Guitarist ROSS THE BOSS Dead At 72

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Ross Friedman – known to fans as Ross “The Boss” – has died at the age of 72, a little over a month after revealing he had been diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease.

A founding member of both Manowar and The Dictators, Friedman was widely regarded as a key figure in shaping both early punk and heavy metal.

News of his passing was confirmed in a statement shared by the Metal Hall of Fame: “It is with deep sadness that we confirm the passing of legendary guitarist, our dear friend, and Metal Hall Of Fame inductee Ross ‘The Boss’ Friedman,” the statement read.

Ross was a pioneering force in both punk and heavy metal, best known as a founding member of The Dictators and Manowar.

Ross will always be the Metal Hall Of Fame’s ‘Global Metal Ambassador’ to the world. His powerful playing, unmistakable tone, and uncompromising spirit helped shape generations of musicians and fans around the world.

“Earlier this year, Ross publicly shared his diagnosis with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS),facing it with the same courage and honesty that defined his life and career.

Ross‘s impact on music is immeasurable. From the raw energy of early punk to the epic scale of heavy metal, his work left a lasting mark on the genre and on everyone who experienced it. Beyond his achievements on stage and in the studio, Ross was deeply respected by his peers and beloved by fans across continents. His legacy will live on through his music, his influence, and the countless lives he touched.

“We extend our heartfelt condolences to his family, friends, bandmates, and fans worldwide during this difficult time. Further details will be shared as they become available.”

A separate statement shared via Friedman‘s official channels added: “It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of the Bronx’s own Ross ‘The Boss’ Friedman who died last night after battling ALS.

“A legendary guitarist and beloved father, his music and spirit impacted fans around the world as much as you impacted him.

“We are grateful for the outpouring of love and support you all have shown throughout his career and especially these last few months.

“His music meant everything to him & his guitar was his life’s breath. This insidious disease took that away from him. His legacy with The Dictators, Manowar, Ross The Boss and other collabs will live on forever in our hearts and ears.”

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How Long Before Airport Security Lines Go Back to Normal?

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A busy spring break season collides with TSA workers waiting for backpay from the partial government shutdown.



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The unlikely rise of Iowa’s Ben McCollum, Bennett Stirtz: Division II to Elite Eight

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HOUSTON — Ben McCollum was furious. Saliva sat on the edge of his lip, but he didn’t wipe it off. He was midtirade, and his Iowa team was down 10 points to Nebraska early in Thursday’s Sweet 16 meeting.

Next to him stood Bennett Stirtz, the Hawkeyes’ stoic star who had seen multiple McCollum outbursts. Stirtz wasn’t fazed.

“He slammed his whiteboard and broke his marker on the hardwood floor. Ink everywhere,” Stirtz said after Iowa’s come-from-behind win over Nebraska. “That’s what he likes to do. He’s the negative guy, and then our assistant coaches are the positive people. He was just telling us we sucked and we were soft.”

McCollum had a different interpretation of that pivotal moment against the Cornhuskers.

“They were moving and cutting, and I didn’t even know what was going on. So … we called [the team] into the huddle and just said very nicely, ‘I would like you to play harder, guys,'” McCollum said. “And it seemed to work. Isn’t that right? Isn’t that how that went?'”

Stirtz nodded his head.

“Yes,” he responded.

McCollum is admittedly demonstrative. Look no further than last Sunday’s near clash with Florida coach Todd Golden during Iowa’s upset of the No. 1 seed in the Round of 32.

Stirtz is the opposite. He’s perpetually cool.

That fire-and-ice pairing of McCollum and Stirtz — who are at their third school together, following stints at Division II Northwest Missouri State (2022-24) and Drake (2024-25) — has fueled Iowa’s surprise run to the Elite Eight. The Hawkeyes went just 10-10 in the Big Ten, yet are on the brink of their first Final Four appearance since 1980. It’s the fourth time in four years that McCollum and Stirtz have advanced in an NCAA tournament together. It’s also the furthest they’ve advanced at any level.

First, they made it to the second round of the 2023 Division II NCAA tournament, where Stirtz scored seven points in a loss to Southern Nazarene. A year after that, they reached the Division II Sweet 16, where Stirtz scored 12 points against Minnesota State before losing to the eventual national champion on a buzzer-beater. And after making the Division I jump to Drake last season, they won a first-round game as Stirtz carried the 11-seeded Bulldogs to a first-round upset of a 6-seeded Missouri with 20 points before running into an Elite Eight-bound Texas Tech in the second round.

There was no surprise when Stritz followed McCollum to Iowa — or when the 2024-25 Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year continued to thrive in McCollum’s system. The senior guard earned second-team All-Big Ten honors after finishing fifth in the conference in scoring (19.7 PPG) but has saved his best for the NCAA tournament. His 3-pointer with 2:10 to play in Thursday’s win over Nebraska gave Iowa its first lead of the game. The Hawkeyes never trailed again, closing out the win to set up Saturday’s matchup against Illinois (6:09 p.m. ET).

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Bennett Stirtz gives Iowa a lead with a 3

Bennett Stirtz knocks down a huge 3-pointer for the Hawkeyes.

“You see him on the floor, and then you see me on the sideline — so polar opposites in personalities. Not polar opposites in value,” McCollum said. “He’s super competitive. I’m super competitive. I feel like he works with a level of humility. I feel like he’s a really tough kid. I feel like he serves others, all those different things.”

Added Stirtz: “He shoots it straight. Even when it’s tough and even when it’s hard. He pushes you past your limit, and I think that’s where the trust comes in … he just pushes everyone on this team, and honestly, you can see the benefit from that.”

Minnesota State head coach Matt Margenthaler isn’t shocked by the duo’s success this March. He still has nightmares about Stirtz and McCollum’s Northwest Missouri State squad nearly derailing his team’s Division II championship run in 2023.

Their rise, Margenthaler argues, is a beacon for Division II basketball — proof that players and coaches at that level can be stars at the next, too.

“You always question, I think, when you go up a level, ‘Can he do it at that next level in the Missouri Valley Conference?’ And then he proved that in one year,” Margenthaler told ESPN. “And then, ‘Can he do it again in the Big Ten?’ And then he just continues to amaze the coaching world with what he can do.”

“[Stirtz’s] confidence has grown and grown and grown,” Margenthaler said. “He is obviously a Division I basketball player, but one that has made himself better each year. I mean, what a story: those two guys together and what they’re doing.”

And if you ask McCollum and Stirtz, they’re not done yet.

“In 20 years, it will be an insane story. A guy that goes from Division II with his coach and then goes to Drake and then goes to the University of Iowa and actually makes it farther in the tournament in Division I than he did in Division II,” McCollum said. “I think when you’re a player-coach [relationship] sometimes, you obviously care for each other and love each other and all of that, but you don’t get to connect on [this] kind of level. But it’s been a hell of a ride, but it’s far from over.”



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Strikes intensify in Middle East as Strait of Hormuz remains locked down

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Strikes in the Middle East intensified overnight, as Iranian-backed Houthi rebels claimed a missile launch toward Israel and 10 U.S. service members were wounded in an Iranian strike in Saudi Arabia, officials said. Meanwhile, the Strait of Hormuz remains barred to most global oil transports.



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