Getty A person holding a jug of milk (stock image)

NEED TO KNOW

  • Prairie Farms issued a voluntary recall for its Prairie Farms Gallon Fat Free Milk product on Nov. 25

  • The company said that the milk may contain food-grade cleaning agents, which may cause illness if consumed

  • Prairie Farms also shared the specific product codes that consumers should check for on their milk products

Prairie Farms, an Illinois-based dairy company, has issued a voluntary recall on one of its products.

The company announced the recall via aNov. 25 press releasethrough the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The recall is for Prairie Farms Gallon Fat Free Milk produced at its Dubuque, Iowa, facility and distributed to Woodman's stores in Illinois and Wisconsin.

The recall is specifically for Fat Free gallons — with the DEC08 code date along with PLT19-145 plant code — produced during the impacted timeframe of 17:51 to 21:23.

"Some of the productmay containfood-grade cleaning agents, which may cause illness if consumed," the company said.

FDA Prairie Farms Gallon Fat Free Milk

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Customers in possession of milk with these codes should not consume it and may return it to the store for a refund, according to the company.

The company noted that it became aware of a "potential quality issue" with the product on Nov. 24.

"[The] affected product was removed from stores and a recall was initiated," Prairie Farms said. "Approximately 320 gallons were sold before the issue was discovered."

Read the original article onPeople

Milk Recalled Due to Potential Contamination from Cleaning Agents: Here’s What to Know

NEED TO KNOW Prairie Farms issued a voluntary recall for its Prairie Farms Gallon Fat Free Milk product on Nov. 25 The company said that t...
Reuters

Heavy rainfall has unleashed widespread flooding and landslides across Asia, killing more than 1,000 people and creating treacherous search and rescue operations for hundreds more still missing.

Millions of people are dealing with intense flooding after cyclone-fueled downpours battered parts of Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia.

Sri Lanka was struck by a separate storm, leaving some areas submerged and creating the most difficult rescue operation the country's ever seen, according to President Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

"This is the first time the entire country has been struck by such a disaster," he said in an address to the nation, Reuters reported, suggesting the breadth of devastation has surpassed that caused by the Asian tsunami in 2004.

Across Asia, the severe weather has so far claimed the lives of at least 604 people in Indonesia, 355 in Sri Lanka, 176 in Thailand and two in Malaysia, according to officials – taking the total to 1,135.

In Indonesia

Indonesian rescue teams are struggling to reach the hardest-hit areas of Sumatra, where Cyclone Senyar caused catastrophic landslides and flooding.

A man wades through the floodwaters following flash floods in Meureudu, in Indonesia's Aceh province, on November 28. - Chaideer Mahyuddin/AFP/Getty Images

President Prabowo Subianto visited evacuees in the north of the island on Monday, noting challenges with fuel supply and roads, according to Antara, Indonesia's government-run news agency.

At least 604 people have died, government data on Monday showed, and more than 460 are still missing. Military and police have been deployed to help victims, local media reported.

Video footage shows helicopters delivering supplies to Sumatra, renowned for its lush rainforests, active volcanoes and a critically endangered orangutan population.

"During the flood, everything was gone," a resident of Bireuen, in Sumatra's northernmost province Aceh, told Reuters.

"I wanted to save my clothes, but my house came down."

Maulidin, a 41-year-old resident of North Aceh, fled her home with her family when she woke to the sound of flooding.

"My house is already destroyed, all my belongings are ruined, and mud is inside," she told AFP.

Rescuers have been trying to reach residents stranded by the floodwaters since Tuesday when monsoon rains caused rivers to overflow.

Some people have turned to stealing food and water in order to survive, according to local authorities.

"The looting happened before logistical aid arrived," police spokesperson Ferry Walintukan said, according to AP. "(Residents) didn't know that aid would come and were worried they would starve."

In Thailand

Across the strait, at least 176 people have died due to extreme weather in southern Thailand, the country's disaster agency told CNN.

A woman cleans a wholesale store following deadly flooding in Hat Yai, in Thailand's Songkhla province, on November 29. - Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters

Almost 2.8 million people have been affected, with authorities airlifting patients and flying critical supplies, including oxygen tanks, to submerged communities, Reuters reported.

Amphorn Kaeophengkro and her family of eight rushed to the second floor of their home when floodwaters swept in last Saturday, spending 48 hours perched atop a table, washing machine and on a window frame.

"We weren't thinking about anything else except surviving," the 44-year-old told Reuters by candlelight, as her family began to clean their dwelling after the water had receded.

People are seen cleaning up damage in the commercial district in downtown Hat Yai as the flood waters receded on November 29, 2025 in Hat Yai, Thailand. - Sirachai Arunrugstichai/Getty Images

"Sometimes we sat at the edge of the window and had to lift our legs to avoid keeping them too deep in the water."

Hat Yai city was Thailand's hardest-hit region, recording the type of heavy rain that occursonce-in-300-years, bringing floodwaters more than eight feet high on Tuesday and cutting off access to a maternity ward holding 30 newborn babies, staff and officials said.

The city is part of Thailand's Songkhla region, where the government declared an emergency on Tuesday due to severe flooding, an official said on X.

Wassana Suthi owns a family-run nursing home in Hat Yai. "It rained like crazy, just like it was angry at someone. It just wouldn't stop," the 35-year-old told CNN.

Suthi and her husband moved the patients to the second floor after the first floor flooded quickly, she said, adding that they had to rely on food dropped from helicopters.

"I cried a lot, seriously. I was so afraid of this crisis," Suthi said. "I was afraid that we wouldn't be able to save the patients in time. Me, personally, I don't mind what happens to me, but I was afraid of not being able to save the patients in time."

Ten tourists, from Australia, Britain, China, Malaysia, Singapore and South Africa, were rescued in Songkhla province on Friday, the Ministry of Tourism told CNN.

"The situation has improved significantly. Water levels have almost completely receded, with only some areas remaining flooded," a spokesperson said.

In Sri Lanka

More than 1.1 million people felt the wrath of Cyclone Ditwah, which triggered mud slides and flooding on Friday, Reuters said.

At least 355 people were killed and another 366 remain missing, according to Sri Lanka's Disaster Management Center.

A woman carrying a child wades through a flooded street in Wellampitiya on the outskirts of Colombo. - Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images Army personnel ride a truck carrying boats to rescue stranded people in Wellampitiya. - Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images

More than 25,000 homes have been destroyed and 147,000 people have been forced into state-run temporary shelters, AP reported.

Some families have been stranded for four days, with no power or phone reception to call for help, Moses Akash De Silva, director of the Voice for the Voiceless Foundation, told CNN Monday.

The charity has so far provided 4,000 meals to families who have lost their homes near Colombo. De Silva and volunteers shopped for ingredients on boats in the floodwaters, cooking meals of fish, meat or egg with curry and rice.

When the water subsides and families return home, the foundation will provide dry rations, like rice and flour, and household items like gas cookers and mattresses to support their rebuilding efforts, De Silva said.

"There is a huge demand and many people have to start again from zero," he told CNN. "The last time we had severe floods was in 2016 and this is 10 times worse."

"It is sunny today but there is still a big risk of landslides."

Ruvinda Bernard, a travel agent who volunteers at the charity, added: "Yesterday, we got a call from three families still stuck on a roof with no way of getting down."

"The Colombo rowing club said they had one so we called the police's special taskforce to arrange a lorry to transport it to the water to rescue them."

Meanwhile, Mallika Kumari was among more than 78,000 people moved to relief centers, mostly set up in schools, after her home was quickly submerged, according to Reuters.

"I first heard about the flood warning on TV but we never expected the river to overflow so quickly. We just rushed out of the house without anything," Kumari told reporters.

"We haven't even had breakfast. Two of my sons have caught the flu. I have to get them medication. I've brought a few garbage bags to collect their clothes."

In the rush, Kumari left behind her cat, which was later picked up by a navy boat and brought to dry land.

Selvi, a 46-year-old resident of Colombo's Wennawatte suburb, fled her home with four bags of clothes and other possessions. "My house is completely flooded. I don't know where to go, but I hope there is some safe shelter where I can take my family," she told AFP.

At the Dalugala Thakiya Mosque, volunteers prepared rice parcels with chicken and dhal curry for flood victims.

"We are getting more requests for food because people who work daily jobs cannot find work and are running low on savings," meal organizer Risham Ahmed told Reuters.

"They are worried about how to piece their lives back together."

In Malaysia

In Malaysia, two people were confirmed dead after Senyar, then a tropical storm, made landfall shortly after midnight on Friday, Reuters said.

Homes were surrounded by flood waters in Kangar, part of Malaysia's Perlis state, on November 28, as severe flooding affected thousands of people in the region following days of heavy rain. - Mohd Rasfan/AFP/Getty Images

Around 34,000 people were evacuated ahead of the storm, but Gon Qasim and her husband were less fortunate, stranded in a field in northern Perlis state last weekend when rising floodwaters cut off their escape.

The elderly couple were eventually rescued by one of their children and brought to an evacuation center in the state capital of Kangar, where hundreds of families sheltered in tents provided by the national disaster management agency, Reuters reported.

"I was inside, and I couldn't go out. When I was out, there was nowhere to stay but the field," the 73-year-old Gon said told its reporters, recalling her ordeal in an interview on Wednesday.

"The water was like the ocean. That's what it looked like."

A vulnerable region

Current weather extremes in the region may stem from the interaction of two active systems, Typhoon Koto in the Philippines and a rare tropical cyclone that formed in the Malacca Strait, Cyclone Senyar, meteorologists told Reuters.

Residents return to what remains of their homes after Typhoon Kalmaegi devastated communities along the Mananga River in Talisay City in the Philippines on November 5. - Jacqueline Hernandez/AP

It will take time to quantify the exact role climate change may have played in these deadly storms, but scientists are clear that global heating supercharges storms, which gain fuel from warmer oceans. A warmer atmosphere is also able to hold more water, which can be wrung out in the form of more intense rain.

Southeast Asia, which includes Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia, is one of the areasmost vulnerable to climate change, scientists have warned.

This deadly flooding is just the latest extreme weather to hit the region. Earlier in November,deadly floodsdevastated parts of Vietnam, killing dozens of people, and the Philippines endured two deadly typhoons in a week —KalmaegiandFung-wong— and forcing more than 1.4 million to evacuate.

CNN's Kocha Olarn contributed reporting.

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More than 1,000 killed as deadly storms cause flooding and landslides across Asia

Heavy rainfall has unleashed widespread flooding and landslides across Asia, killing more than 1,000 people and creating treacherous search...
A repair worker walks past burnt buildings after the deadly fire at the Wang Fuk Court housing complex, in Tai Po, Hong Kong, on November 29, 2025. - Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

The remains of some of those killed in last week's inferno at a Hong Kong apartment complex may never be recovered, a city official said Monday, as a painstaking search effort continues at the site.

The death toll has risen to 151 people and at least 30 remain missing, officials said Monday, after the city's worst fire in decades, which tore through seven high-rise towers of the Wang Fuk Court complex. The housing complex, which was undergoing renovations, was home to more than 4,000 people, many of which were elderly.

"Since some of the bodies have been reduced to ashes, we don't rule out that we may not be able to bring all the missing people out," said Chief Superintendent Karen Tsang, head of the casualty inquiry unit, who fought back tears during a press conference on Monday afternoon.

The number of people arrested over the fire has risen to 14 and more arrests may follow, authorities said, as they accused construction companies of buying and using materials that were not fire-safe.

Most of those arrested are consultants, contractors and subcontractors connected to the construction work, and 13 of them are being investigated on suspicion of "manslaughter by way of gross negligence," officials said.

An estimated 600 disaster victim identification specialists have been slowly going door to door to clear each apartment since the fire was extinguished Friday.

"During the search, bodies were found in the building corridors, flats, staircases, and even on rooftops," said police superintendent Cheng Ka-chun, who led the specialist police identification unit.

Hong Kong Police photos show the inside of burnt out apartments in Wang Fuk Court complex on Sunday November 30. - Hong Kong Police Specialist police search the apartments in Wang Fuk Court complex on Sunday - Hong Kong Police

Images released by police showed boiler-suit-clad searchers carefully checking through the ashes of burned belongings inside a fire-ravaged unit. The complex task is made harder by dim lighting conditions and narrow corridors blocked by fallen objects, police said.

Officers had to navigate corridors blocked by burned wooden panels to get to apartments where windows were shattered, with walls blackened and paint peeling off.

"The whole apartment has gone pitch-dark without electricity and lighting," Cheng said Sunday.

By Monday night, the search had concluded at five of the towers, but officials said some apartments in the remaining two damaged blocks were structurally unsafe for searchers to enter.

"Everyone remembers Wang Cheong House was the first to catch fire and was among the last to be put out," said Regional Commander Lam Man-han, adding that "the environment is extremely horrible."

Those killed included a number of elderly residents, foreign domestic workers who lived with their employers – many of which are older people or families with children –– construction workers and a firefighter who had been deployed to the scene.

Police officers from the Disaster Victim Identification Unit (DVIU), dressed in white-coloured full-body protective gear inspect inside Wang Fuk Court in the aftermath of the deadly fire in Taipo district, Hong Kong on November 30, 2025. - Anthony Kwan/Getty Images

Nine of the domestic workers were from Indonesia and one was from the Philippines, their consulates said.

Substandard netting

Substandard mesh netting that was wrapping bamboo scaffolding around the complex towers contributed to the rapid spread of the blaze, officials said Monday.

Seven of 20 samples taken from the complex after the fire had failed fire safety tests, said Hong Kong's Secretary for Security Chris Tang.

A corruption probe into 12 of those arrested is now underway.

Woo Ying-ming, the city's corruption commissioner, said the netting around the building had been damaged during a typhoon in July and accused the group of purchasing non-compliant netting to replace it. "They applied it on the damaged spots," said Woo, who added that officials had calculated they had bought enough to wrap all eight towers at the complex.

Fearing the netting would be examined after a fire at another Hong Kong high-rise in October, the group allegedly purchased more fire-safe netting that they wrapped only around the ground floors one the buildings, said Woo.

"The suspects are very cunning," said Chief Secretary Chan Kwok-ki. "For very little profits, they take the lives of many people."

The city's building department is now collecting samples from 300 building sites where similar netting is being used.

Polystyrene boards that were used by contractors to block windows at the complex have been identified as another factor that contributed to the speed of the inferno's spread. Officials said they had identified three other building sites in the city where the same technique was being used and asked for the boards to be removed.

Hong Kong mourns

On Sunday, hundreds of Hong Kongers came to lay flowers at the site of the blaze, forming a long queue that stretched more than a kilometer into the Tai Po neighborhood.

Among the mourners were families, elderly people and foreign domestic helpers, many of whom left notes attached to columns of the pavilion in a nearby park.

"Truth will reveal itself. God bless Hong Kong," one wrote.

Over recent days, donations amounting to 900 million Hong Kong dollars ($115 million) have poured in from businesses and the community, with people also sending food and necessities to a resource center set up by volunteers in the housing complex.

Volunteers helped distribute food and water at the scene.

National security arrests

Some aspects of the community response have drawn suspicion from authorities, who have warned against a resurgence of anti-government sentiment in Hong Kong, referencingpro-democracy proteststhat broke out in 2019.

Hong Kongis a semi-autonomous part of China and run by its own local government that answers to leaders in Beijing.

On Saturday, Beijing's national security office in the city warned against any renewed dissent, calling for the city's government to punish those wishing to use the fire as a pretext to "oppose China and stir chaos in Hong Kong."

Firefighters walk through charred bamboo scaffolding as they exit a fire-damaged residential block at Wang Fuk Court housing complex, following a deadly fire on Wednesday, in Tai Po, Hong Kong, on November 29, 2025. - Tyrone Siu/Reuters

National security police have since arrested three people, including one detained on suspicion of incitement after allegedly distributing materials in support of an online petition calling for an independent enquiry into the fire, among other demands, their lawyers told CNN.

The petition, which has since been removed, had over 10,000 signatures by Saturday afternoon, Reuters reported.

A pro-Beijing newspaper reported that a high-ranking Hong Kong police superintendent in charge of national security also visited the site of the fire.

Authorities have asked volunteers to leave the fire scene, announcing that it would centralize the distribution of resources and require people to register through WhatsApp for their donations.

This article has been updated with additional information.

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Painstaking search for victims of Hong Kong fire continues but some may never be found, official says

The remains of some of those killed in last week's inferno at a Hong Kong apartment complex may never be recovered, a city official sai...
Tulane's Jon Sumrall headed to Florida after postseason run

Florida selected Tulane's Jon Sumrall as its next head coach on Sunday, bringing a fast-rising coaching prospect to Gainesville to try to turn around a floundering blue-blood program.

Florida is finalizing a six-year contract for Sumrall that includes nearly $6.5 million annually in addition to "significant incentives" tied to the College Football Playoff, ESPN reported Sunday.

Unlike the situation at SEC peer Ole Miss, where Lane Kiffin is departing for LSU ahead of the postseason, Sumrall will coach Tulane for the rest of the season before switching jobs. The Green Wave face North Texas in the American Conference championship game next week, where a win would all but assure the program of its first College Football Playoff berth.

"The University of Florida is one of the premier programs in college football, and it's an incredible honor to serve as the head football coach," Sumrall said in a statement. "I believe in building a team rooted in toughness, accountability and a relentless competitive spirit. Florida has everything necessary to compete at the highest level -- the resources, the support, the tradition and the passion of Gator Nation. My family and I are excited to get to work.

"One of my first priorities will be to assemble an incredible staff, including an offensive coordinator who understands that, at Florida, having an explosive offense isn't optional -- it's mandatory!"

Sumrall, 43, owns a 42-11 record in four seasons as a head coach split between Troy and Tulane. He was the 2022 Sun Belt Coach of the Year with the Trojans and guided the Green Wave to a 10-2 record in 2025.

"Not many coaches win big at two different non-Power programs, and even fewer do it as quickly as Jon has done it," Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin said in a statement. "He joins rare company -- coaches like Urban Meyer, Brian Kelly and Willie Fritz -- who've delivered immediate success at multiple stops. Jon's track record of rapid turnarounds speaks directly to his leadership and the culture he establishes."

Sumrall returns to the Southeastern Conference after playing at Kentucky and serving as an assistant coach and co-defensive coordinator at the school.

He will take the position previously held by Billy Napier, who was fired on Oct. 19 and replaced by interim coach Billy Gonzales. The Gators finished the season with a 4-8 record after posting a 40-21 victory over Florida State (5-7) on Saturday.

--Field Level Media

Tulane's Jon Sumrall headed to Florida after postseason run

Florida selected Tulane's Jon Sumrall as its next head coach on Sunday, bringing a fast-rising coaching prospect t...
Kentucky football parts with coach Mark Stoops after 13 seasons at school

Thecollege footballcoaching carousel keeps spinning in the SEC with the latest victim beingKentuckycoach Mark Stoops.

The school is parting way with Stoops after 13 seasons with the school, according to multiple reports on Sunday, Nov. 30. The move comes one day after the Wildcats finished their season at 5-7 with a41-0loss to rival Louisville.

Stoops, the school's all-time winningest coach with 72 official victories, brought unprecedented success to the Kentucky program with eight consecutive bowl appearances from 2016-23. Ten of his victories in 2021 were vacateddue to NCAA rules violations. The Wildcats have gone 9-15 the past two seasons and did not qualify for a bowl game.

According to terms of his contract, Stoops is owed a buyout of just under $34 million.

Stoops started at the bottom at Kentucky, inheriting what was then the SEC's most woeful program. Then won just two games in 2012 under Joker Phillips. Stoops posted losing records his first three seasons with just 12 total victories before the Wildcats returned to the postseason in 2016 in a 7-6 season that culminated in an appearance in the TaxSlayer Bowl.

Cal fired Justin Wilcox on Nov. 23 with one game left in the regular season. The Golden Bears are 6-5 this season but 48-55 in Wilcox's seven seasons in charge. Auburn fired coach Hugh Freeze on Nov. 2 following a home loss to Kentucky. Freeze was 15-19 in two-plus seasons on the Plains. LSU fired Brian Kelly on Oct. 26 after an embarrassing home loss to Texas A&M the night before. Florida fired Billy Napier on Oct. 19 during his fourth season as Gators coach. UF was 22-23 during Napier's tenure. Penn State fired James Franklin on Oct. 12 after a third straight loss. The Nittany Lions were 104-45 in 11-plus seasons under Franklin. UAB fired Trent Dilfer on Oct. 12 after a 2-4 start to the 2025 season. Dilfer was in his third season as head coach of the Blazers. Sam Pittman was fired by Arkansas on Sept. 25, a day after the Razorbacks were blown out by Notre Dame, 56-13. Pittman was 32-34 in his five-plus seasons as Hogs coach. Virginia Tech fired Brent Pry on Sept. 14 after the Hokies started the season 0-3. Virginia Tech was 16-24 overall in Pry's three-plus seasons. UCLA fired DeShaun Foster on Sept. 14 after the Bruins fell to 0-3 following a home loss to New Mexico. The Bruins were 5-10 in Foster's one-plus season in charge. Mike Gundy was in his 21st season as Oklahoma State coach when he was fired on Sept. 23. Gundy was 170-90 as Cowboys coach, but started 1-2 this season after going 3-9 in 2024. Oregon State fired Trent Bray on Oct. 12 after the Beavers started the season 0-7. The Beavers were 5-14 in Bray's season-plus in Corvallis. Colorado State fired football coach Jay Norvell on Oct. 19. Norvell was 18-26 in his four seasons in Fort Collins. <p style=Stanford coach Troy Taylor was fired prior to the 2025 season following allegations of mistreating staff. He was 6-18 in two seasons with the Cardinal and was replaced by interim coach Frank Reich.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Kent State coach fired coach Kenni Burns on April 15 after he posted a 1-23 record of and was placed on administrative leave by the school in March. Mark Carney is serving as interim coach.

College football coaches fired already in 2025 season. See who's on the growing list

During the run of eight bowl games in a row, Stoops had 10-win seasons in 2018 and 2021 to account for two of the four double-digit victory campaigns in school history. An NCAA investigation into impermissible benefits erased one of those seasons.

Troubles at the quarterback position and good defense was the theme for latter seasons of Stoops' tenure. The Wildcats ranked worse than 100th in scoring offense in three of the last four campaigns but their ability to be stingy on defense allowed them to win seven games in 2022 and 2023 before slumping in 2024 and 2025.

Kentucky showed promise in the second half of this season with freshman quarterback Cutter Boley taking over the starting job. The Wildcats played competitively against Texas and beat Auburn and Florida to move within touching distance of a bowl game. But blowout losses to Vanderbilt and Louisville ended those hopes.

Following the defeat to the Cardinals on Saturday, Nov. 29, Stoops told the media there's "Zero percent chance I walk" when asked about the possibility of stepping down. He was out of a job one day later, putting Kentucky in position of finding a replacement for the SEC's longest-tenure coach after a whirlwind of hires in the league at Florida, LSU, Auburn and Arkansas.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Mark Stoops out as Kentucky football coach after 13 seasons

Kentucky football parts with coach Mark Stoops after 13 seasons at school

Thecollege footballcoaching carousel keeps spinning in the SEC with the latest victim beingKentuckycoach Mark Stoops. ...
Treylon Burks does his best Odell Beckham Jr. impression with spectacular 1-handed TD grab for Commanders vs. Broncos

Catches don't get much better than this. With 9:58 left in the third quarter of Sunday's game between the Commanders and Denver Broncos, Washington quarterback Marcus Mariota looked to receiver Treylon Burks in the back right corner of the end zone.

Broncos cornerback Riley Moss had blanket coverage. It didn't matter. Burks reached up with his right hand and plucked the ball from midair. He pulled it into his body with that right hand and maintained possession as he fell backward to the turf with Moss on top of him.

Touchdown, Commanders, on one of the best catches that you'll see in this or any NFL season. It was Burks' lone catch of the game, whichended in a 27-26 overtime victory for the Broncos.

Though, as sensational as the reception was, it certainly wasn't one of a kind.

Treylon Burks makes a spectacular, one-handed touchdown catch against the Broncos.

On Nov. 23, 2014, Odell Beckham Jr. shocked the football world with a one-handed, 43-yard touchdown grab from Eli Manning, the likes of which fans had never seen. That catch — also in prime time on "Sunday Night Football" — has lived on as one of the great highlights in NFL history.

November 23, 2014: The Catch.@objpic.twitter.com/IXtAfUuMxv

— This Day In Sports Clips (@TDISportsClips)November 23, 2020

Ten years and one week after his own sensational grab, Beckham chimed in on social media Sunday night with approval for Burks, who just so happens to share his No. 13 jersey.

— Odell Beckham Jr (@obj)December 1, 2025

Thanks to improved skill, inspiration from Beckham andthe aid of advanced grip-enhancing glove technology, players have since made similar, if not-quite-as-spectacular catches as Beckham's.

Few, if any, were better than Burks' on Sunday night.

Treylon Burks does his best Odell Beckham Jr. impression with spectacular 1-handed TD grab for Commanders vs. Broncos

Catches don't get much better than this. With 9:58 left in the third quarter of Sunday's game between the Command...
Airbus says most A320 jets now have software fix, with less than 100 planes still needing update

LONDON (AP) — Airbus said that most of its fleet of 6,000 A320 passenger jets have received an update to fixa software glitchthat could have affected flight controls.

Travelers hadfaced minor disruptionsheading into the weekend as airlines around the world scrambled to push the software updates out to the widely used commercial jetliner. Airbus warned of the problem Friday with U.S. millions of passengers in transit for the Thanksgiving holiday,the busiest travel time in the United States.

The European planemaker said in an update Monday that the "vast majority" of the short-haul passenger jets in service "have now received the necessary modifications."

"We are working with our airline customers to support the modification of less than 100 remaining aircraft to ensure they can be returned to service," Toulouse, France-based Airbus said.

"Airbus apologises for any challenges and delays caused to passengers and airlines by this event," it said.

Airbus said it discovered that "intense solar radiation" could corrupt data that's critical to the functioning of flight controls.

The problem is suspected of contributing to a sudden drop inaltitude of a JetBlue planefrom Cancun, Mexico, to Newark, New Jerseyon Oct. 30, that injured at least 15 passengers, some of them transported to hospitals for medical care.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency required airlines to address the issue with the software update. More than 500 U.S.-registered aircraft were impacted, including jets flown by American Airlines and Delta.

Japan's All Nippon Airways, Air India and Germany's Lufthansa were also affected. The Airbus A320 family of single-aisle aircraft is the primary competitor to Boeing's 737.

Airbus says most A320 jets now have software fix, with less than 100 planes still needing update

LONDON (AP) — Airbus said that most of its fleet of 6,000 A320 passenger jets have received an update to fixa software gl...

 

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