News from October 25, 2025

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អភិបាលខេត្តពោធិ៍សាត់ បានដឹកនាំក្រុមការងារចុះពិនិត្យ បង្ហាត់បង្ហាញពីរបៀបថែទាំដើមឈើដល់ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋនិងអាជ្ញាធរមូលដ្ឋាន

អភិបាលខេត្តពោធិ៍សាត់ បានដឹកនាំក្រុមការងារចុះពិនិត្យ បង្ហាត់បង្ហាញពីរបៀបថែទាំដើមឈើដល់ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋនិងអាជ្ញាធរមូលដ្ឋាន

ពោធិ៍សាត់÷ នៅព្រឹកថ្ងៃទី ២៥ ខែ តុលា ឆ្នាំ ២០២៥ លោកខូយ រីដា អភិបាលនៃគណះអភិបាលខេត្តពោធិ៍សាត់ បានដឹកនាំក្រុមការងារចុះពិនិត្យ បង្ហាត់បង្ហាញ ពីរបៀបថែទាំដើមឈើ ដល់អាជ្ញាធរមូលដ្ឋាន ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ និងបែងចែកការងារ សម្អាតអនាម័យ បរិស្ថាន សោភ័ណភាព នៅតាមបណ្តោយផ្លូវជាតិលេខ៥ ក្នុងភូមិសាស្រ្តស្រុកបាកាន ខេត្តពោធិ៍សាត់ ដោយមានការអញ្ជើញចូលរួមពីសំណាក់លោក ឆាយ គឹមម៉ុង អភិបាលនៃគណះអភិបាលស្រុកបាកាននិងមន្ត្រីរាជការមួយចំនួនទៀតផងដែរ។ ក្នុងឱកាសនោះ លោក ខូយ រីដា អភិបាលនៃគណះអភិបាលខេត្តពោធិ៍សាត់ ក៍សូមអំពាវនាវដល់រដ្ឋបាលក្រុង/ស្រុក និងអាជ្ញាធរគ្រប់លំដាប់ថ្នាក់ ត្រូវបន្តដឹកនាំចលនាប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ ឱ្យចូលរួមរៀបចំសោភ័ណភាព សណ្តាប់ធ្នាប់ របៀបរៀបរយសាធារណៈ និងអនាម័យបរិស្ថាន នៅតាមដងផ្លូវ ទីសាធារណៈ កន្លែងធ្វើការ និងតាមគេហដ្ឋាន ដើម្បីឱ្យខេត្តពោធិ៍សាត់ស្អាត គ្មានសំរាម និងស្រស់បំព្រងឡើងថែមទៀត៕ ប្រភព&រូបភាព÷រដ្ឋបាលខេត្តពោធិ៍សាត់ ដោយ÷ហ៊ុន ធឿន(ដើមអម្ពិល) Related Items

My son moved back in with me after college. I don't know what role I should play: roommate, friend, or mom.
Technology

My son moved back in with me after college. I don't know what role I should play: roommate, friend, or mom.

"Who's paying for this?" asked my 22-year-old son when I drove him to the mechanic to pick up his car after an oil change."You are," I said without hesitation.As I watched him walk into the office after I dropped him off, I shook my head in confusion. Why had he asked me who would pay? It was his car, after all, and he had been working full-time since graduating from college this spring and moving back home.However, my husband and I had paid for car repairs when he was in college and wasn't working. As I thought about it, he was still on our car insurance, too. With his entry-level job, it just made more financial sense than getting his own insurance, allowing him to save more money for his future.I guess his question of who was paying for that oil change was more of a gray area than I first thought.Since my son moved back home after graduation, I've been surprised by how confusing my role as a parent has become.Some days it feels like we're roommates sharing a house. My son comes and goes on his own schedule, and entire days can go by without me seeing him.I find this odd since he's living in his childhood bedroom, and I expected our paths would cross daily. Instead, sometimes all I see is indirect evidence that he lives here, like a load of damp laundry abandoned in the dryer or snacks that disappear from the pantry with alarming speed.Other times, it feels like we're peers. We can be a couple of adults catching up after a long day at work, swapping stories about workplace shenanigans, or discussing world events. I like engaging with my son in this capacity, sharing life side by side as adults, and I know my husband does, too. He added our son to his trivia night team at the local pub, where he's just another teammate. They watch and discuss all kinds of sports just like any pair of buddies would.Then there are times I slip back into full-on parenting mode with my son. I've been nagging him for a couple of months to make a doctor's appointment. The other day I asked him if he needed more toothpaste, and when he said yes, I bought him some at the store.A simple question from him, such as what's for dinner, can trigger an existential crisis. Of course, I'll feed him, but didn't I already pay my dues by making dinner for my family every night for the last 20 years?My friend told me that she and her husband sometimes eat over the sink now that their kids are grown and out of their house. While that doesn't sound gourmet, it does sound appealing and liberating to have no obligation to make dinner. And her story makes me question why I'm not moving on to the next phase of my life yet.It's not that living with my son is difficult; my happy-go-lucky kid is a joy to be around. It's that I'm figuring out how our lives intersect as adults living in the same house.I realize this stage is temporary and that once I adjust to this new normal, he'll probably be ready to move out. Then I'll miss him, our chats over dinner, watching him grow into the man he's becoming, and even the damp load of laundry abandoned in the dryer.

Beloved royal family member dies after 'suffering several illnesses'
Technology

Beloved royal family member dies after 'suffering several illnesses'

One of the most beloved members of a Royal family has passed away at the age of 93, after succumbing to a lethal blood infection. The former Queen of Thailand, Sirikit, mother to the current monarch King Vajiralongkorn, died on Friday (October 24). Besides being the mother to the reigning king, she was also the wife of Thailand's longest-serving monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej. Their marriage spanned an impressive 66 years, making them one of the longest-married Royal couples in history, akin to Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip . The announcement of her death has sent shockwaves across the nation, as the country grieves for their beloved queen. In a statement issued by the Thai Royal family , it was confirmed that Sirikit had passed away, leaving millions in shock due to the monarchy's immense popularity. Across the country, portraits of Sirikit adorn the walls of homes and public buildings, as the monarchy is seen as having a semi-divine right to rule. As reported by Al Arabiya, the palace disclosed that Queen Sirikit had "suffered several illnesses" since her hospitalisation in 2019. This included a blood infection flagged by doctors earlier this month, with the statement continuing: "Her majesty's condition worsened until Friday and she passed away... at Chulalongkorn hospital at age 93.", reports the Daily Star . Sirikit was considered a leading figure in Thai fashion during her 66-year reign as queen, whilst also dedicating herself to charitable work supporting the impoverished and disadvantaged. She drew numerous parallels in Western press, with many comparing her to former US First Lady Jackie Kennedy and Britain's Princess Diana . Thai citizens have been left devastated by the announcement, with many questioning how the nation will cope without her presence. Housekeeper Sasis Putthasit revealed on Saturday morning (October 25) that Sirikit's passing would prove a profound moment for the Thai people. "I had heard that she had been unwell and, given that she was in her 90s, I knew this day would come, but I didn't expect it to be today," Sasis confessed. "I feel sad because she was a mother figure to the country, and now she's gone." Following Queen Sirikit's death, King Vajiralongkorn has commanded the Royal family to commence a year of national mourning. Throughout the nation, television presenters have been instructed to don black attire during news programmes as a tribute to the deceased monarch. Queen Sirikit initially rose to prominence when her husband ascended to the throne in 1946, leading the country through the aftermath of World War 2 . She remained an active public figure in Thailand until King Bhumibol Adulyadej's rule concluded in 2016. Following her son's ascension to the throne, she withdrew from public life, choosing a more secluded existence in her elderly years due to numerous health problems. Her privacy was legally protected by stringent lese majeste laws that restrict what can be disclosed about the Royal family.

Utah Mammoth Forward Out Long-Term with Injury
Technology

Utah Mammoth Forward Out Long-Term with Injury

Alexander Kerfoot Set to Miss 8-10 Weeks with Injury This has been a difficult time for Kerfoot as the centre has not featured in a game yet this season. He will now have to wait even longer before making his season debut. The 31-year-old missed just one game in his first season in Utah, registering 11 goals and 17 assists. Kerfoot primarily played in a bottom-six role, whether that be on the third or fourth line. His ability to play centre and wing, up and down the lineup, makes him a versatile player. That’s something the Mammoth will surely miss having. Kerfoot had a 52.4% faceoff rating last year, which was one of the best on Utah. What it Means The Mammoth are losing a depth piece of their forward group. They managed to sign Brandon Tanev and bring Michael Carcone back in the fold, but they can’t play up the middle like Kerfoot. So if Utah suffers more injuries at centre, it would be difficult to fill the position. Fellow forward Jack McBain has been filling the role as the third line centre since the season started, and that will continue with Kerfoot out. The two would flip around the lineup in 2024-2025. Now McBain will have the spot to himself in Kerfoot’s absence. The Mammoth are heading on the road to take on the Minnesota Wild and Winnipeg Jets, Saturday and Sunday. Utah is off to a roaring start to the season, currently sitting at second in the Central Division (6-2-0).

Mutual Fund overseas schemes gain traction as investors look to tap buoyant US markets
Technology

Mutual Fund overseas schemes gain traction as investors look to tap buoyant US markets

The sharp rally in the US markets in recent months has provided an avenue for well-heeled investors to diversify their bets from lacklustre domestic markets. Investors have pumped in ₹1,660 crore in Fund of Funds investing in the overseas markets in the September quarter against the net outflow of ₹305 crore logged in the June quarter. The turnaround in overseas FoF investments reflect the investor sentiments as the inflows were just Rs 87 crore in the March quarter against net outflow of ₹59 crore logged in December quarter. In September quarter, the industry has added 1.08 lakh folios of largely high networth investors who typically invest in this high-risk high-return MF offerings. A large chunk of MF overseas schemes are focused on the US markets. SEBI halted MF investments in overseas markets three years back as it inched closer to the overall industry cap of $7 billion and $1 billion for passive funds. It was subsequently eased after volatility in global markets provided leg-room for MFs to accept fresh investments with strict adherence to the prevailing limit. Amid the growing debt concern, the US markets have been rallying ever since US President Donald Trump kicked off a tariff war to bridge the trade deficit and make America Great Again. Currently, the US levies an effective average tariff of over 10 per cent on imported goods, up from 2 per cent at the start of the year, and has generated $192 billion in tariff revenue so far. In a bid to tackle corporates concern on high cost, Trump enacted One Big Beautiful Bill Act which provides series of relief to corporates and individual tax payers. The standard deduction for tax payers has been increase from $750 to $15,750 for single filers and from $1,500 to $31,500 for joint filers. In last six months, the Nasdaq has gone up by 35 per cent while S&P 500 and Dow Jones indices have returned 24 per cent and 18 per cent. In the same period, Sensex and Nifty indices have returned 6 per cent each. Sunil Subramaniam, Director of independent think tank Sense and Simplicity said despite the tariff impact on the US economy in terms of sticky inflation and weakening labour markets, the US stock markets have performed extremely well on the back of incentives given by the government to both corporates and individual tax payers and expectations of another rate cut by the US Fed. For Indian investors, the rupee’s depreciation against dollar in the last one year has been the icing on the cake and has added 5 per cent to the stock market return, he said. However, the US markets are more nimble and may react quickly to any adverse developments and investors should evaluate the risk-reward dynamic before taking calculated risk while investing in overseas markets, he added. Published on October 25, 2025

Bucs’ Pass Rush Faces Big Test Without Haason Reddick vs. Saints
Technology

Bucs’ Pass Rush Faces Big Test Without Haason Reddick vs. Saints

“[We] still need more,” Foote said. “[It is] just the juice; when you watch those guys and you talk to those guys and mention it to them, ‘Hey, energy [and] juice.’ All of the top sack leaders in this league are the best conditioned guys and you [have] to be able to go all day. [If] that quarterback [has] the ball [for] three seconds, you [have] to be hitting him. “That is just the standard in that room, but I am looking for energy [and] they [have] to play on fire. As pass rushers, you have to be the best conditioned guys, and you have to be able to go all day. That takes a lot of energy out of you. You have to bull and power [those] big guys, but that is the standard.” By the way he closed his Thursday press conference, it sounds like one such player who meets that criteria is Mo Kamara. Added to the team’s practice squad after final roster cuts, Kamara is hungry and will be brought up. The next question with him, as with the rest of the outside linebackers, is how much he will play and who will make the most of their opportunity? “He has been giving us great looks to a point where [they] are a little chippy in there, some of the old guys,” Foote said about what Kamara has brought over the past two months. “He is bringing a ton of energy, especially on punt block team. Those guys have to buckle up with him, he is a big guy, explosive guy, but he has been giving us a great look that [is] what we need. I am excited to see him this week.” If Anthony Nelson can hold it down and make a splash play and Chris Braswell flashes the physicality the Bucs have been waiting for, the pass rush will not lose its edge. On the other hand, if the Saints’ offensive line keeps Spencer Rattler clean, Haason Reddick’s absence could expose how thin this edge group really is.

Patriots-Browns preview: How Drake Maye, Mike Vrabel can extend their winning streak
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Patriots-Browns preview: How Drake Maye, Mike Vrabel can extend their winning streak

It’s time for some home cooking. After three straight road games, the Patriots will kick off in Gillette Stadium for the first time since their four-game win streak began with a blowout of the Panthers in late September. Since then, the Pats have established themselves as one of the better teams in the league and an AFC playoff contender. For that, they can thank Drake Maye, who leads the league in completion percentage and deep passing, and has announced himself as an early-season MVP candidate. But bigger tests loom, starting with a top-5 Browns defense this Sunday. Despite its 2-5 record, Cleveland can throw some punches through one of the fiercest defensive lines in football. Myles Garrett and Co. clowned Miami last weekend, 31-6, and should now force Maye to play smart, disciplined football or otherwise risk turnovers that might invite an upset. Opposite Maye, the Browns are starting third-round rookie Dillon Gabriel, whose completion percentage is a tick below 60% despite throwing the shortest completions in the league by air yards. While that sounds inviting, Gabriel hasn’t thrown an interception yet this year, and the Patriots’ short pass defense currently ranks third-worst in the league by DVOA. Can they fix that and score another blowout Sunday? Here’s what to watch for in Foxboro: When the Patriots run A repeat 175-yard rushing performance from last week? Unlikely. But all the Patriots must do is tread water against the NFL’s best run defense to give Maye enough time and reason to use play-action. Rhamondre Stevenson broke seven tackles last weekend in Tennessee, running more freely than he had been the previous two weeks. The Browns’ defense is the best tackling unit in the league, per Pro Football Focus, but if the coaching staff has more confidence in rookie TreVeyon Henderson, perhaps he can finally break free and simply pull away from would-be tacklers. Henderson’s elite speed has yet to be fully weaponized in this offense due to his own mistakes and lack of touches. He has just 56 rushing yards this month. Offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels hinted this week the second-round pick would be more involved, after playing just nine offensive snaps last weekend. “Runners get into a rhythm,” McDaniels said Thursday. “And sometimes that happens. I know TreVeyon has led us in carries in other games, and certainly Rhamondre did last week. So, there’s nothing specific. I think all those guys are continuing to work really hard. They play an active role in us improving ourselves in the running game.” When the Patriots pass If Drake Maye checks the ball down a little faster Sunday, this is why. The Browns’ most direct path to an upset involves a strip sack or two, and Maye, who got hit a few too many times in Tennessee, will be extra aware of the pass rush this week. Garrett has five sacks this season, despite facing more chips and double-teams than any other pass rusher in the league. Browns defensive tackle Maliek Collins is also among the league leaders in pressure rate at his position. Both Garrett and Collins should see plenty of 1-on-1 opportunities against rookie offensive linemen Will Campbell and Jared Wilson on Sunday, a major battleground Sunday. The Patriots can try to offset that pressure with screens, misdirection and quick passing. But ultimately it’s up to Maye to pull the right lever and get rid of the ball before trouble arrives. “Just be cognizant of the point of the play, (be) good in quick game, (be) good when we are trying to hold it a little longer. Just know the outlets,” Maye said. “We talk about outlets, scramble, throwaways and just being smart with the football. They do a good job of going after the football, especially Myles in his career. Just go two hands on it, knowing the outlets and knowing when the play may be over.” One fun battle on the outside: Stefon Diggs and Kayshon Boutte versus Pro Bowl cornerback Denzel Ward. If the Browns continue to play a high rate of man-to-man coverage, as they have most of the year, Diggs and Boutte will have opportunities to make plays 1-on-1 downfield. And you better believe Maye will give them a chance to go deep and catch one. When the Browns run Few running backs are breaking as many tackles right now as bruising Browns rookie Quinshon Judkins. Judkins is forcing three and a half misses per game, according to PFF, and will test the Patriots’ newly refortified tackling. The Pats have whiffed just five times the last two weeks combined, and know that slowing the 221-pound Judkins will be critical against one of the NFL’s least explosive offenses trying to methodically kill clock through small gains. “I know that they’ll have a good plan for how they want to run it. It’s a physical group of linemen and their tight ends are blocking well,” Vrabel said this week. “And Quinshon is running hard, physical. So, they’ve done a nice job.” On the season, Judkins has rushed for 467 yards and five touchdowns while averaging 4.3 yards per carry. No other Browns player has taken more than 25 carries this season or rushed for 75 yards. When the Browns pass It’s all about the middle of the field. The Browns’ top targets have been their tight ends, between rookie Harold Fannin (32 catches, 290 yards) and David Njoku (23 catches, 223 yards). While Njoku was limited this week in practice, the Browns should test the Patriots’ 30th-ranked short pass defense by DVOA through their tight ends and veteran receiver Jerry Jeudy. Gabriel also has the second-fastest snap-to-throw time in the NFL at an average 2.6 seconds, meaning the Pats must break quickly on short routes to make tackles. Look for their linebackers and safeties to tell the story of this game. That said, the Patriots’ overall defensive talent far outweighs Cleveland’s skill group, and the Browns’ pass offense ranks second-worst in the NFL. Barring a breakout Gabriel performance or a few trick plays that generate a touchdown or two, the Pats should control the air by playing simple, sound football. And that will especially hold true if Christian Gonzalez (one pass breakup this season) finally returns to form, as his position coach suggested Thursday. Patriots 20, Browns 16

'Go and be brave' - Michael O'Connor's rally cry to follow up spectacular end to Irish League 11-game losing run with 'standards they've set'
Technology

'Go and be brave' - Michael O'Connor's rally cry to follow up spectacular end to Irish League 11-game losing run with 'standards they've set'

That’s the ambition of Glenavon manager Michael O’Connor in the aftermath of marking his first Premiership game in charge by bringing to an end the 11-game losing streak. A memorable 1-0 win over Carrick Rangers must now become more than the ‘new manager bounce’ as the Lurgan Blues bid to mount a rise out of the relegation zone that sits after 12 fixtures with O’Connor’s squad chasing an eight-point deficit having played two games more than those above. O’Connor, a former Northern Ireland international can draw on significant playing experience in England and a concentrated plan since returning home to climb the coaching ladder towards a role as main man in the dug-out. That defeat of Carrick was constructed off a single team session in the aftermath of O’Connor’s appointment and now, armed with a full week’s training schedule, Glenavon make the short journey to tackle Dungannon Swifts. "That's the standards they've set themselves and we cannot let it drop below now,” said O’Connor, who feels “I’ve earned my stripes” off a coaching path towards his first senior boss role. "When you've lost 11 (league) games you're low on confidence, you want to keep the ball away from your goal. "But as we go on and, hopefully, pick up more points we'll start getting more around in possession with how we want to play. "I watched the other week's Portadown game and as soon as they (Portadown) scored everyone's heads dropped...they looked scared, they looked nervous. "I told them (before facing Carrick) I don't care if you give the ball away as along as you do the right things. "Go and be brave, go get on the ball, go run in behind, go win your battles...they did everything. “I ​did think we looked dangerous (against Carrick), a few moments where the final ball couldn't make it look like a big chance...that will come with confidence and more wins will start players believing. "I've been involved in teams where you've lost seven, eight, nine, 10 games on the bounce. "The only way you can get out of it is by sticking together and keep working hard.”