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  • Maratha morcha disrupts cargo movement; shipments stuck in Mumbai

    Maratha morcha disrupts cargo movement; shipments stuck in Mumbai



    The ongoing Maratha Morcha has brought cargo movement across Maharashtra to a grinding halt. With all major connectivity routes to South Mumbai – including Atal Setu, Navi Mumbai routes, Panvel, and the Eastern Freeway – completely shut for heavy vehicles and ODC consignments, cargo and other stuff which was meant to be shipped has been halted, reported ANI. 

    The All India Motor Transport Congress (AIMTC) issued a statement saying that the services had been severely disturbed on Monday.

    Exporters, importers, and project cargo operators are facing massive losses as time-bound shipments are stranded en route to Mumbai Port, AIMTC said in a statement. 

    One such critical example is heavy equipment machinery bound for the vessel Jabel Ali Nine, that was scheduled to sail on Tuesday morning. 

    AIMTC said the machinery was supposed to reach the port on Monday evening, but because of the ongoing protest, loaded vehicles have been denied access towards the port. 

    AIMTC further stated that if the shipment misses the sailing, it will invite heavy penalties, contract cancellations, and a severe blow to India`s credibility in global markets.

    Former president of the All India Motor Transport Congress Bal Malkit Singh highlighted, “This is not a single case – hundreds of consignments are stranded. Export-import cargo worth thousands of crores, critical for infrastructure and development projects, is being delayed. Idle containers, demurrage, detention charges, and penalties are mounting, while drivers are left stranded without basic amenities. This situation is leading to financial disaster, mental stress, and harassment of operators.”

    He further warned, “If urgent corrective measures are not taken, the situation will result in global reputational damage to Maharashtra and India, as shipments are being missed and contracts cancelled. While we respect the right to protest, essential cargo and export-import consignments must not be brought to a standstill.” 

    Mumbai`s Azad Maidan has been witnessing a large gathering of members from the Maratha community who have been protesting to press their demands for 10 per cent OBC reservation in government jobs and education. The city witnessed significant disruptions in traffic movement, especially in the South Mumbai area near Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST), creating chaos for commuters. 

    (With inputs from ANI)



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  • Kings captain Anze Kopitar retiring after 2025-26 season

    Kings captain Anze Kopitar retiring after 2025-26 season


    Los Angeles Kings captain Anze Kopitar will retire after this season, his 20th in the NHL, he announced Thursday.

    Kopitar, who helped lead the Kings to Stanley Cups in 2012 and 2014, turned 38 last month. The two-way center is entering the final season of a two-year extension he signed in July 2023 after playing his entire career with Los Angeles.

    One of the most respected, defensive-minded forwards in the league, Kopitar has won two Selke Trophies (2016, ’18) and three Lady Byng Trophies for gentlemanly play (2016, ’23, ’25).

    According to those close to the captain, Kopitar wanted to make the announcement before the season so he could fully focus on the 2025-26 Kings, a team with Stanley Cup aspirations. The Kings have not won a playoff series since winning their last Stanley Cup in 2014, losing to the Edmonton Oilers in the first round each of the past four seasons.

    The Kings, under new general manager Ken Holland, made several additions this summer to help with that title push, including signing veterans Corey Perry (who played last season with the Oilers), Joel Armia, Cody Ceci and Brian Dumoulin.

    Kopitar will retire as a franchise legend. He already sits atop the Kings’ record book for games played (1,454) and assists (838) and is 29 points away from tying Marcel Dionne’s mark of 1,307 points as the team’s all-time leading scorer. Kopitar is also two back from Jeff Carter’s record for most overtime goals (11) in team history.

    Kopitar is coming off another sound season, finishing second among Kings forwards in points (67) and ice-time (18:57), trailing only linemate Adrian Kempe. Kopitar also tied for the team lead last season with seven game-winning goals.

    He is also regarded as a national hero in his native Slovenia. As the No. 11 overall pick of the 2005 draft, Kopitar became the first Slovenian to play in the NHL when he debuted in 2006-07. While Kopitar has appeared for the Slovenian national team on various stages, including the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Slovenia did not qualify for the 2026 Milan Olympics, where NHL players are once again participating.



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  • What TikTok reveals about the next phase of China-U.S. negotiations

    What TikTok reveals about the next phase of China-U.S. negotiations




    <img src='https://news.cgtn.com/news/2025-09-16/What-TikTok-reveals-about-the-next-phase-of-China-U-S-negotiations-1GIc9ecJtzW/img/e854e8baef6644f7aa80345c61d44939/e854e8baef6644f7aa80345c61d44939.jpeg' alt='The TikTok logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen, September 15, 2025. /VCG'

    Editor’s Note: Sun Taiyi is an associate professor of political science at Christopher Newport University in the United States. He is also the executive editor of the Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists’ main publication, Global China. The article reflects the author’s opinions and not necessarily those of CGTN.

    The most recent round of talks between China and the United States, held in Madrid, placed TikTok at the center of the discussions. This was not because TikTok is the most pressing or consequential issue in bilateral relations, but rather because many of the easier areas of consensus had already been resolved in earlier rounds. 

    The more intractable disputes – such as significant reductions in tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers, restrictions on exports of key products and resources, and broader questions of strategic competition – remain far from agreement. As a result, TikTok emerged as one of the few remaining areas where both sides could realistically explore progress.

    For the Trump administration, the TikTok question has taken on symbolic importance. Officials have treated it as a litmus test of Beijing’s willingness to engage seriously in the next stage of negotiations. The White House even linked potential progress on this front to President Trump’s upcoming trip to Asia in October, thereby raising the political stakes. As a result, Beijing decided to pay closer attention to the issue, viewing it not merely as a technical matter of a single company’s operations, but as a bargaining chip with larger implications. The negotiators have sought to identify a solution that could satisfy both sides without appearing to compromise on core interests.

    Although TikTok was the subject at the negotiating table, its significance extends beyond the platform itself. Trump had already taken the unusual step of openly defying congressional legislation on TikTok by delaying the implementation of relevant requirements, postponing enforcement deadlines three times. The latest deadline falls on Wednesday of this week, and it is entirely possible that it could be postponed a fourth time. 

    The timing of renewed talks is no accident. Recent U.S. economic data have revealed worrying signs of weakness: inflationary pressures are rising, while job creation in the labor market has consistently fallen short of expectations. In this environment, the Trump administration is eager for a confidence boost. Any signal that the world’s two largest economies are finding common ground is a welcome stimulus for markets. Unsurprisingly, U.S. stock indices climbed even higher after news of the Madrid talks, reflecting renewed investor optimism.

    The scheduling of the talks also reflected practical considerations. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is accompanying President Trump on a state visit to the United Kingdom on Wednesday. With the enforcement deadline for TikTok looming, it would have been impossible to hold last-minute discussions with Chinese counterparts. By bringing the Madrid negotiations forward by several days, both sides sought to create momentum before the deadline passed.

    Despite focusing on a single platform, the Madrid round yielded important achievements. First, it followed closely after exchanges between the two countries’ defense and foreign ministers, signaling that the economic dialogue is part of a broader, coordinated effort to stabilize bilateral relations. Second, the talks helped pave the way for an upcoming summit between the two heads of state, removing at least some obstacles to higher-level engagement.

    Equally important, the process itself offered a model for how future negotiations might be structured. In this framework, senior officials meet initially to frame the discussion, technical teams follow up with detailed bargaining, and final confirmation comes through a phone call or face-to-face meeting between the two leaders. This step-by-step mechanism suits the political institutions and practical realities of both countries. It has also emerged gradually through earlier rounds of negotiation, providing a workable template that can be applied to more complex issues.

    Yet while the mechanism is encouraging, it does not make the substantive issues any easier. Looking ahead, Washington has indicated its desire to focus the next round on rare earth minerals and magnets – materials critical to high-tech industries and clean energy transitions. For Beijing, such resources represent strategic leverage. Any significant concessions on this front are unlikely unless the United States is prepared to offer reciprocal compromises in sensitive sectors such as semiconductors. Whether Washington is ready – or politically able – to make such trade-offs remains uncertain. Domestic political battles could severely constrain U.S. flexibility, particularly with elections approaching and bipartisan hawkishness toward China running strong.

    Thus, the Madrid talks illustrate both progress and limitations. On the one hand, they showed that even amid strained relations, the two powers can still identify specific issues where cooperation is possible and where symbolic breakthroughs can send positive signals to markets and publics alike. On the other hand, they remind us that the fundamental challenges in the relationship – technology rivalry, trade imbalances, security concerns and competing visions of global order – remain unresolved.

    In that sense, TikTok is more than an app caught between two superpowers. It is a proxy for larger strategic dynamics, a bargaining chip in negotiations that will shape the trajectory of Sino-U.S. relations for years to come. Whether future talks can move beyond symbolic gestures to substantive agreements will depend on both countries’ political will and their ability to balance domestic pressures with international responsibilities. For now, Madrid marks one step forward in a long and uncertain journey.



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  • US president fails to vow strong action on Ukraine despite Keir Starmer’s urging

    US president fails to vow strong action on Ukraine despite Keir Starmer’s urging



    Starmer sought to encourage Trump to use his power to help American allies. Including, tacitly, Australia. One day after King Charles used his state banquet address to describe the AUKUS submarine pact as a “vital” collaboration, Starmer highlighted it again.

    “We have the deepest, most advanced defence relationship in the world,” the prime minister said as he stood alongside Trump.

    “Our warriors train together and they fight together. Our industries build together – everything from fast jets to new AUKUS-class submarines.” Another signal to Trump to back AUKUS despite the sceptics in the Pentagon.

    On Ukraine, the prime minister tried to remind the president that American power matters. “We have to put extra pressure on Putin,” he said. “And it’s only when the president has put pressure on Putin that he’s actually shown any inclination to move.”

    That sounded like an admission of impotence for Europe when Britain and the European Union are hardly powerless. Their combined economy is at least 10 times the size of Russia’s. But they have tried economic sanctions, and personal sanctions against Putin’s cronies, but this is clearly not enough.

    What else can be done? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wants NATO members to help defend the skies over Ukraine against Russian missiles and drones – something the allies have avoided for more than three years. Poland, however, is listening.

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    “Protection for our population – for example, from falling debris – would naturally be greater if we could combat drones and other flying objects beyond our national territory,” said Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski three days ago.

    “If Ukraine were to ask us to shoot them down over its territory, that would be advantageous for us. If you ask me personally, we should consider it.”

    This is a concrete example of a new course of action at a time when leaders are focused on another package of economic sanctions against Russia – due from the EU within days – and more spending on military hardware for Ukraine.

    The “close the skies” request from Ukraine is loaded with risk, however, because it could bring NATO and Russian forces into direct conflict. It would not be on the agenda if Russia had not sent drones into Polish and Romanian airspace in recent weeks.

    Trump had no answers at the end of his state visit. He said, yet again, that NATO allies should stop buying Russian oil. This is a fair request because Turkey, Hungary and Slovakia are still sending hard currency to Russia in exchange for oil. But it is no excuse for inaction.

    Trump’s complaint is not a plan: it is merely a way to demand that others do something when he seems so unsure about what to do himself. On Ukraine, he reverts to a pattern of tough talk, indecision and missed deadlines.

    The King raised a glass to Trump at Windsor Castle on Wednesday night, and he praised the president’s commitment to securing peace. The next day, however, Trump seemed to have no commitment at all.

    Get a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for our weekly What in the World newsletter.



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  • Piyush Goyal launches women’s health campaign in Dahisar

    Piyush Goyal launches women’s health campaign in Dahisar



    The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has launched a citywide initiative to conduct 350 health camps under the ‘Swasth Naari, Sashakt Parivaar’ campaign. The drive, which will run from September 17 to October 2, was inaugurated on Wednesday by Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal at Rawalpada Maternity Home in Dahisar East.

    On the first day alone, over 3,000 women participated in 34 camps across the city, while more than 200 pregnant women received nutrition kits as part of the government’s ongoing effort to address maternal malnutrition.

    ‘Health checkups are important, but timely treatment is critical,’ says Piyush Goyal

    Speaking at the launch, Minister Goyal highlighted the need for early diagnosis and timely treatment, urging families to prioritise the health of the women in their households.

    “A woman’s health is not just her responsibility, it’s a family’s collective duty. Timely treatment and regular checkups are essential for ensuring a healthier future,” he said.

    He also emphasised the importance of nutrition during pregnancy, noting that undernourishment in expectant mothers often leads to underweight and at-risk newborns.

    About the campaign

    The ‘Swasth Naari, Sashakt Parivaar’ campaign is part of a nationwide initiative spearheaded by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and was officially launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Dhar, Madhya Pradesh. The Mumbai chapter aims to bridge healthcare gaps among urban women and children.

    Key highlights of the Mumbai initiative

    350 camps across Mumbai and the suburbs

    222 general health screening & awareness camps

    102 specialist camps at maternity homes and suburban hospitals

    Services offered

    Screening for hypertension, diabetes, oral and breast cancer

    TB screening for high-risk individuals

    Anaemia testing for adolescent girls and women

    ANC checkups, haemoglobin testing, and immunisations

    Nutrition counselling and menstrual hygiene awareness

    ABDM and PMJAY registration

    Blood donation camps (October 1)

    Nikshay Mitra volunteer enrolment for TB elimination

    Participating institutions

    230 urban primary health centres

    27 maternity homes

    15 general hospitals

    BMC Commissioner: `Healthy women, stronger nation`

    BMC Commissioner and Administrator Bhushan Gagrani reiterated the civic body’s commitment to women’s health.

    “A healthy woman can participate in nation-building. We urge women to take full advantage of the facilities made available through this initiative,” he said.

    He assured that BMC would continue to provide the infrastructure, resources, and specialist care required to ensure the success of this public health campaign.

    The launch event saw participation from several public representatives and officials, including MLA Prakash Surve, MLA Manisha Choudhary, MLA Pravin Darekar, Additional Commissioners Sanjay Kurhade and Sharad Ughade, Executive Health Officer Dr Daksha Shah, and Assistant Commissioner (R North Ward) Naynish Vengurlekar.

    The campaign includes a dedicated district coordinator and women’s coordinator for effective implementation. As part of ‘Poshan Maah’, 33 nutrition experts will also conduct public lectures aimed at mothers, adolescents, and children.

    The Nikshay Mitra registration drive—key to India`s goal of becoming TB-free—is also being carried out at every camp location to boost volunteer participation.



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  • Muhammad Ali’s unsigned Vietnam draft card to be auctioned

    Muhammad Ali’s unsigned Vietnam draft card to be auctioned


    Muhammad Ali’s refusal to sign his Vietnam-era military draft card upended the boxing champ’s life and added a powerful voice to the anti-war movement. Now that piece of history is coming up for sale.

    There’s a blank line on the card where Ali was supposed to sign in 1967 but refused to do so — a polarizing act of defiance as the Vietnam War raged on. It triggered a chain of events that disrupted his storied boxing career but immortalized him outside the ring as a champion for peace and social justice.

    “Being reminded of my father’s message of courage and conviction is more important now than ever, and the sale of his draft card at Christie’s is a powerful way to share that legacy with the world,” Rasheda Ali Walsh, a daughter of Ali, said Thursday in a statement issued by the auction house.

    Christie’s said it will hold the online sale Oct. 10-28, adding that the card came to it via descendants of Ali. A public display of the card began Thursday at Rockefeller Center in New York and will continue until Oct. 21. The document could fetch $3 million to $5 million, the auction house estimated.

    “This is a singular object associated with an important historical event that looms large in our shared popular culture,” said Peter Klarnet, a Christie’s senior specialist.

    Ali, the three-time heavyweight boxing champion, died in 2016 at age 74 after decades of living with Parkinson’s disease. An estimated 100,000 people chanting, “Ali! Ali!” lined the streets of his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, as a hearse carried his casket to a local cemetery. His memorial service was packed with celebrities, athletes and politicians.

    The draft card, typewritten in parts, conjures memories from when Ali wasn’t universally beloved but instead stood as a polarizing figure, revered by millions worldwide but reviled by many.

    For refusing induction into the U.S. Army, Ali was convicted of draft evasion, stripped of his boxing title and banned from boxing. Ali appealed the conviction on grounds he was a Muslim minister. He famously proclaimed: “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong.”

    During his banishment, Ali spoke at colleges and briefly appeared in a Broadway musical. He was allowed to resume boxing three years later.

    He was still facing a possible prison sentence in 1971 when he fought Joe Frazier, his archrival, for the first time in what was labeled “the Fight of the Century.” A few months later the U.S. Supreme Court overturned his conviction on an 8-0 vote.

    The draft card was issued the day the draft board in Louisville ordered Ali to appear for induction, Christie’s said Thursday in a news release. The card was signed by the local draft board chairperson but pointedly not by Ali.

    The card identified him by his birth name — Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr. — but misspelled his given middle name as “Marsellus.” Upon his conversion to Islam, he was given a name reflecting his faith, the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville says on its website. Meanwhile, the top of the draft card reads: “(AKA) Muhammad Ali.”

    The Ali Center features exhibits paying tribute to Ali’s immense boxing skills. But its main mission, it says, is to preserve his humanitarian legacy and promote his six core principles: spirituality, giving, conviction, confidence, respect and dedication.

    Now an artifact reflecting how Ali personified some of those principles will be up for auction.

    “This is the first time collectors will be able to acquire a vital and intimate document connected to one of the most important figures of the last century,” Klarnet said Thursday.



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  • Dozens killed as Israel mounts major ground offensive in Gaza City

    Dozens killed as Israel mounts major ground offensive in Gaza City




    <img src='https://news.cgtn.com/news/2025-09-16/Dozens-killed-as-Israel-mounts-major-ground-offensive-in-Gaza-City-1GIEDjngPWo/img/a5ff8c9abb3a451b874c126e7abd01a4/a5ff8c9abb3a451b874c126e7abd01a4.png' alt='Displaced Palestinians flee northern Gaza along the coastal road toward the south after Israel's military says its expanded operation has begun, Gaza Strip, September 16, 2025. /VCG'

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Tuesday it launched a “large-scale ground operation” in Gaza City on the night of September 15, as local officials reported heavy strikes in the biggest urban center that left dozens dead or missing.

    The army said it had urged civilians to leave in recent days, but hundreds of thousands of the city’s roughly one million residents – many already displaced multiple times – are believed to remain. Many residents indicated that the high cost of moving, the perilous journey, and immobility caused by illness or disability were the main reasons they remained in the city instead of fleeing.

    WAFA, the official Palestinian news agency, said at least 53 Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire and airstrikes across the Gaza Strip since dawn, most of them in Gaza City.

    According to an IDF spokesperson, troops advanced “gradually, with heavy fire to support the forces.” Around 10 p.m., units from the 98th and 162nd Armored Divisions entered Gaza City under the cover of extensive airstrikes, with the 36th Division expected to join in the coming days to “encircle Gaza City from all sides.”

    The military said about 130,000 reservists are being mobilized, a process due to be completed within days.

    Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking at the opening of his corruption trial in Tel Aviv, called the operation “intense” and said, “The state of Israel is at a critical stage in this struggle, and there are consequences.” His plan to seize control of Gaza City, announced last month, has drawn international criticism.

    Israel has massed forces for weeks in preparation for what Netanyahu and other officials have described as a major ground and air offensive to “conquer” Gaza City.

    Military spokesman Avichay Adraee on social media platform X called Gaza City “a dangerous combat zone,” warning civilians that staying “puts you at risk.” He said the IDF had begun dismantling Hamas infrastructure and noted that more than 40 percent of residents had fled in recent weeks.

    Defense Minister Israel Katz added on Tuesday, “Gaza is burning,” vowing that the military would strike Hamas “with an iron fist. We will not relent, and we will not turn back until the mission is completed.”

    U.S. offers support, EU plans new sanctions

    In launching the assault, Israel’s government defied European leaders threatening sanctions and ignored warnings from some of its own military commanders that the operation could be a costly mistake. Meanwhile, Washington appeared to offer its backing, conveyed by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

    Hours before the escalation, Rubio offered backing at a press conference alongside Netanyahu. While the U.S. wished for a diplomatic end to the war, “we have to be prepared for the possibility that’s not going to happen”, he said.

    In Brussels, a spokesperson for the European Commission said the EU would agree on Wednesday to impose new sanctions on Israel, including the suspension of certain trade provisions.

    “The EU has consistently urged Israel not to intensify its operation in Gaza City,” EU spokesperson Anouar El Anouni said. “A military intervention will lead to more destruction, more death and more displacement, and we have been clear that this will also aggravate the already catastrophic humanitarian situation and also endangers the lives of hostages,” he said.

    British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper called the assault “reckless and appalling” and called for an immediate ceasefire. Britain and France are expected this month to become the first major Western powers to recognize Palestinian independence.

    The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk on Tuesday condemned Israel’s ground assault on Gaza City as “totally and utterly unacceptable” and demanded an end to the “carnage.”

    Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid criticized Netanyahu’s decision to launch the invasion, calling his conduct “amateurish and sloppy.” In an interview with Ynet, Lapid questioned the lack of a clear plan for Gaza’s future, the fate of Israeli hostages, and an exit strategy from the war.

    Separately, the Palestinian Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) on Tuesday criticized U.S. President Donald Trump’s remarks on the situation in Gaza and Israeli hostages, calling them “blatant bias toward Israeli propaganda” and “double standards.”

    (With input from agencies)



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  • Would you wear a toad’s intestines? This young jeweller says you should

    Would you wear a toad’s intestines? This young jeweller says you should




    Young creatives are competing for Australia’s richest design prize. The work they have produced has surprised everyone.



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  • Horoscope today, Sept 19: Check astrological predictions for all zodiac signs

    Horoscope today, Sept 19: Check astrological predictions for all zodiac signs



    Do you know what the stars hold for you in terms of love life, career, business and personal wellness today? Well, read on to know your astrological predictions as per your zodiac sign for September 19.

    Aries   
    March 21 – April 20
    Receiving expected news is slightly different, but this will do just as well for the moment. Enjoy a day of varied experiences and meetings. 
    Cosmic tip: Enjoy this karmic cycle of all going well.

    Taurus   
    April 21 – May 20
    Being uptodate in work makes it easier to host a visiting friend (being Agony Aunt is a part of the friendship).
    Cosmic tip: Continue making self-respect the most important personality trait.

    Gemini
    May 21 – June 21
    Keep conversation practical and to the point. A relationship seething with irritation settles down after a talk. 
    Cosmic tip: Don’t try to be better than someone else, but be better than what you were yesterday.

    Cancer 
    June 22 – July 23
    Some have a raise in salary. Dealing with family in an open and calm manner helps find some important solutions.  
    Cosmic tip: Be appreciative about how life is proceeding, making use of an opportunity.

    Leo 
    July 24 – Aug 23
    Travel plans are shelved for now. Enjoying alone time regularly is something worked at to achieve. Documents and papers need to be kept safely.
    Cosmic tip: Don’t consider a worst-case scenario.

    Virgo 
    Aug 24 – Sept 23
    Those wanting to brush-up existing skills can do so on their own/ attend some workshops. There’s so much work to complete; do so with focus. 
    Cosmic tip: Live within the peace of your own heart.

    Libra 
    Sept 24 – Oct 22
    The utmost desire is to spend the day at home, but work calls out. Being considered a master of your craft is an acknowledgment to hard work. 
    Cosmic tip: Take life in your stride. 

    Scorpio  
    Oct 23 – Nov 22
    A partnership heralds a new phase in life. The kind of financial news received is unexpected and surprising. Those job hunting receive an interview call.
    Cosmic tip: Be aware of words used when talking.

    Sagittarius 
    Nov 23 – Dec 22
    Life may seem to be moving too slowly, but it’s a smooth run, too. Two opportunities may seem worthless, but aren’t. 
    Cosmic tip: Change what you can about life and accept the rest.

    Capricorn 
    Dec 23 – Jan 20
    A karmic cycle of closures allows reaching an important career/business goal. Relocation is an option for some. 
    Cosmic tip: Let go of comfortable habits that do nothing for you.

    Aquarius 
    Jan 21 – Feb 19
    Self-employed Aquarians see a definite surge in business. Friends insist on meeting you more often. Take time out for yourself.
    Cosmic tip: Give the benefit of the doubt to one comment.

    Pisces 
    Feb 20 – March 20
    Advice from a friend helps see the truth hidden under waves of emotion. Life takes a slight turn for the better, so be aware of changes. 
    Cosmic tip: Be extra careful if prone to allergies.



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  • Giants’ Justin Verlander wants to pitch at age 43 in 2026

    Giants’ Justin Verlander wants to pitch at age 43 in 2026


    Justin Verlander, who went a team-record 16 starts this season for the San Francisco Giants before registering a win, has fixed whatever wasn’t working, is riding a hot streak and reiterated that he wants to return — after he turns 43 in February — for a 21st season in 2026.

    “I would hope somebody would offer me a contract now,” Verlander told USA Today Sports on Wednesday.

    The three-time Cy Young Award winner was 0-8 through his first 16 starts, but he has given up only three runs over 31 innings (0.87 ERA) in his past five starts. Beginning with his first win on July 23, he is 3-2 with a 2.17 ERA in his past 11 games to lower his season ERA to 3.75.

    “Every day you come to the field for four months, and it’s like, ‘What’s the way out of this?”’ Verlander told USA Today Sports about his first-half struggles. “How do I make the adjustment? What do I need to do? What’s wrong? Because clearly something’s wrong. I just have to try to find it.

    “I had a new thought in the bullpen, I took that into the game, and the game results have been what you see. So I’m glad I didn’t give up.”

    Verlander, who pitched seven scoreless innings against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday but still wound up with a no-decision, has 265 career wins — one behind Hall of Famers Bob Feller and Eppa Rixey for 34th on the all-time list.

    San Francisco had scored three runs or fewer in all but six of his 27 starts this season, and the bullpen has blown a lead in nine of his starts.

    Verlander knows, at age 42, that reaching 300 might not be possible.

    “I mean, I’m human,” Verlander said. “I think we all know. Like everybody in this locker room, all of you guys [reporters], and most of baseball kind of understand where I’m at. So, it would have been nice if possible, but again it’s that point of the year where we’re not playing for individual [stats]. We’re at that course of the season where I don’t care if I win or lose, I want to give us the best chance to win this, the best chance to sneak into the playoffs.”

    ESPN Research and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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