Gophers football vs. Michigan St.: Keys to game, how to watch, who has edge

posted in: All news | 0

MINNESOTA vs. MICHIGAN STATE

When: 2:30 p.m. Saturday
Where: Huntington Bank Stadium
TV: Big Ten Network
Radio: KFAN, 100.3 FM
Weather: 44 degrees, mostly cloudy, 6 mph south wind
Betting spread: Gophers, minus-3.5

Records: With a shot at the pig, Minnesota (5-3, 3-2 Big Ten) got slaughtered by Iowa in a 41-3 blowout loss with Floyd of Rosedale on the line Saturday. Michigan State (3-5, 0-5) lost to rival Michigan 31-20 in the Battle for the Paul Bunyan Trophy.

History: The Gophers have won two straight over the Spartans (2022 and ’23). Before that, the U had lost five consecutive to Michigan State and the Spartans lead overall series at 30-19 since it began in 1950.

Storyline: Former Gophers defensive coordinator Joe Rossi returns to Minnesota after taking the same role in East Lansing two years ago. His defense is struggling, but there is respect in Minnesota. Current DC Danny Collins said Rossi’s attention to detail rubbed off on him. “We always magnified things,” he said.

Big question: Can Gophers bounce back after its humbling loss in a rivalry game? Picking themselves up will be easier to do at  home and against a team in the basement of the Big Ten.

Key matchup: Gophers front seven vs. Spartans quarterback Aidan Chiles. Minnesota did a great job containing Nebraska’s mobile quarterback Dylan Raiola two weeks ago and Chiles has similar athleticism with six rushing scores this season.

Who has the edge?

Gophers offense vs. Michigan State defense: Minnesota mustered a season-low 133 total yards against Iowa, but Michigan State has been allowing 380 per game, so the U should be able to move the ball and score. The Spartans are dead last in the Big Ten in scoring defense, giving up 32.5 points per game. … But Gophers RB Darius Taylor is (again) dealing with an injury and his availability is in doubt. If he can’t go, Fame Ijeboi is likely to get the bulk of the carries. Taylor’s pass-catching ability is missed most when he can’t go. … QB Drake Lindsey had three interceptions in 208 attempts in the first seven games and three picks in 28 attempts against Iowa. But the Spartans are 113th in the nation with only six takeaways in eight games. … Minnesota’s offensive line gave up nine pressures and four sacks to the Hawkeyes. The Spartans have been decent with 14 total sacks this season, which is 82nd in the nation. … The Gophers continue to start slow against FBS completion: no touchdowns, one field goal and six punts on opening possessions. EDGE: Gophers

Gophers defense vs. Michigan State offense: QB Aidan Chiles led the Big Ten with 11 interceptions last season, but has only three picks this year. Chiles has split time this year with Alessio Milivojevic and the Gophers are preparing for both signal callers. … The Spartans are 118th in the nation in sacks allowed (2.8 per game). Left tackle Conner Moore and Caleb Carter, who has played both guard spots, have given up at an average of three pressures apiece in Big Ten play. DE Anthony Smith should be able to get home at least once Saturday. … WR Nick Marsh has become the Spartans’ top target with 42 receptions for 479 yards and five touchdowns. The U’s secondary remains banged up with John Nestor going down against Iowa last weekend.  … Head coach Jonathan Smith is a California native and his name was mentioned for UCLA opening back in September, but an 0-5 start to Big Ten play has snuffed that out for now. EDGE: Gophers 

Special teams: Gophers punter Tom Weston struggled with directional punting and Iowa’s Kaden Wetjen returned one for a touchdown. … Both kickers, Brady Denaburg and Martin Connington are perfect inside 40 yards and less than 50% beyond that distance. EDGE: Michigan State  

Prediction: Before the season, Smith pegged Michigan State’s expectations “at minimum” of getting back to a bowl game. They would need to win three of four to eek into one — and it isn’t starting this week. Look for Minnesota to continue to win ugly. Gophers, 22-19

Related Articles


Gophers football: Deven Eastern, Jalen Logan-Redding gutting out final year


Former Gophers assistant Joe Rossi struggling with Michigan State


Gophers football: Utah lineman Mataalii Benjamin de-commits from U


Loons vs. Seattle: Keys to the match, storylines and prediction


Gophers want to be a ‘tough out,’ but Iowa discarded them with ease

Quick Fix: Teriyaki Glazed Pork with Chinese Noodles

posted in: All news | 0

By Linda Gassenheimer, Tribune News Service

I like teriyaki pork, but it usually needs time for the meat to marinate in the sauce. Using a store-bought teriyaki sauce and this easy cooking method, I was able to have this meal ready in less than 10 minutes.

Related Articles


This 3-course vegan meal is great for Vegetarian Awareness Month


Recipe: Roasted pears exude the taste of autumn


Five weeknight dishes: Kids love this cheesy gnocchi with corn and pesto


Recipe: Kids can help make these tasty Halloween mini cupcakes


Gretchen’s table: Easy roux-less gumbo features Creole spices, chicken and sausage

The steamed Chinese noodles are partially cooked and take only a minute to cook in boiling water. They are available in most supermarkets. If difficult to find, use any type of thin pasta and follow package cooking instructions.

HELPFUL HINTS:

Snap peas or green beans can be used instead of snow peas.

Olive oil can be used instead of sesame oil.

COUNTDOWN:

Place water for noodles on to boil.

Prepare ingredients.

Boil noodles and place on 2 dinner plates

Make pork dish.

SHOPPING LIST:

To buy: 3/4 pound pork tenderloin, 1 bottle low-sodium teriyaki sauce, 1/4 pound snow peas, 1 bunch scallions, 1 container sesame seeds, 1 bottle sesame oil, 1 can vegetable oil spray, 1 package steamed Chinese noodles

Teriyaki Glazed Pork

Recipe by Linda Gassenheimer

3/4 pound pork tenderloin
Vegetable oil spray
1/4 pound snow peas 1 3/4-cups
1/4 cup low-sodium teriyaki sauce
2 scallions thinly sliced, about 1/3 cup
1 tablespoon sesame seeds

Cut pork tenderloin into 1/2-inch slices and press them to about 1/4 inch thick with the flat side of a spatula. Heat a medium-size nonstick skillet over medium-high heat and spray with vegetable oil spray. Add pork and sauté 2 minutes per side. Add the teriyaki sauce and snow peas to the skillet. Mix well. Continue to cook, spooning the sauce over pork slices as they cook. A meat thermometer should read 145 degrees. Divide in half and place on two dinner plates. Sprinkle sliced scallions and sesame seeds on top.

Yield 2 servings.

Per serving: 275 calories (27 percent from fat), 8.2 g fat (1.7 g saturated, 3.6 g monounsaturated), 108 mg cholesterol, 39.4 g protein, 9.9 g carbohydrates, 2.4 g fiber, 416 mg sodium.

Chinese Noodles

Recipe by Linda Gassenheimer

1/4 pound fresh or steamed Chinese noodles
2 teaspoons sesame oil
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

Fill a medium-size pot three quarters full of water and bring to a boil over high heat. Add noodles to boiling water. Cook 1 minute or according to package instructions. Drain return to pot and add oil and salt and pepper to taste. Divide in half and place on the dinner plates with the pork.

Yield 2 servings.

Per serving: 251 calories (19 percent from fat), 5.4 g fat (0.8 g saturated, 1.9 g monounsaturated), no cholesterol, 7.4 g protein, 42.6 g carbohydrates, 1.8 g fiber, 3 mg sodium.

©2025 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

An age-old fear grows more common: ‘I’m going to die alone’

posted in: All news | 0

By Judith Graham, Oona Zenda, KFF Health News

This summer, at dinner with her best friend, Jacki Barden raised an uncomfortable topic: the possibility that she might die alone.

Related Articles


Patients go without needed treatment after the government shutdown disrupts a telehealth program


A ticking clock: How states are preparing for a last-minute Obamacare deal


Federal health officials push effort to spur cheaper biotech drugs


What to know as the annual sign-up window for health insurance arrives


Despite the hoopla, vaccines should be in reach this cough-and-cold season

“I have no children, no husband, no siblings,” Barden remembered saying. “Who’s going to hold my hand while I die?”

Barden, 75, never had children. She’s lived on her own in western Massachusetts since her husband passed away in 2003. “You hit a point in your life when you’re not climbing up anymore, you’re climbing down,” she told me. “You start thinking about what it’s going to be like at the end.”

It’s something that many older adults who live alone — a growing population, more than 16 million strong in 2023 — wonder about. Many have family and friends they can turn to. But some have no spouse or children, have relatives who live far away, or are estranged from remaining family members. Others have lost dear friends they once depended on to advanced age and illness.

More than 15 million people 55 or older don’t have a spouse or biological children; nearly 2 million have no family members at all.

Still other older adults have become isolated due to sickness, frailty, or disability. Between 20% and 25% of older adults, who do not live in nursing homes, aren’t in regular contact with other people. And research shows that isolation becomes even more common as death draws near.

Who will be there for these solo agers as their lives draw to a close? How many of them will die without people they know and care for by their side?

Unfortunately, we have no idea: National surveys don’t capture information about who’s with older adults when they die. But dying alone is a growing concern as more seniors age on their own after widowhood or divorce, or remain single or childless, according to demographers, medical researchers, and physicians who care for older people.

“We’ve always seen patients who were essentially by themselves when they transition into end-of-life care,” said Jairon Johnson, the medical director of hospice and palliative care for Presbyterian Healthcare Services, the largest health care system in New Mexico. “But they weren’t as common as they are now.”

Attention to the potentially fraught consequences of dying alone surged during the covid-19 pandemic, when families were shut out of hospitals and nursing homes as older relatives passed away. But it’s largely fallen off the radar since then.

For many people, including health care practitioners, the prospect provokes a feeling of abandonment. “I can’t imagine what it’s like, on top of a terminal illness, to think I’m dying and I have no one,” said Sarah Cross, an assistant professor of palliative medicine at Emory University School of Medicine.

Cross’ research shows that more people die at home now than in any other setting. While hundreds of hospitals have “No One Dies Alone” programs, which match volunteers with people in their final days, similar services aren’t generally available for people at home.

Alison Butler, 65, is an end-of-life doula who lives and works in the Washington, D.C., area. She helps people and those close to them navigate the dying process. She also has lived alone for 20 years. In a lengthy conversation, Butler admitted that being alone at life’s end seems like a form of rejection. She choked back tears as she spoke about possibly feeling her life “doesn’t and didn’t matter deeply” to anyone.

Without reliable people around to assist terminally ill adults, there’s also an elevated risk of self-neglect and deteriorating well-being. Most seniors don’t have enough money to pay for assisted living or help at home if they lose the ability to shop, bathe, dress, or move around the house.

Nearly $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid planned under President Donald Trump’s tax and spending law, previously known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” probably will compound difficulties accessing adequate care, economists and policy experts predict. Medicare, the government’s health insurance program for seniors, generally doesn’t pay for home-based services; Medicaid is the primary source of this kind of help for people who don’t have financial resources. But states may be forced to eviscerate Medicaid home-based care programs as federal funding diminishes.

“I’m really scared about what’s going to happen,” said Bree Johnston, a geriatrician and the director of palliative care at Skagit Regional Health in northwestern Washington state. She predicted that more terminally ill seniors who live alone will end up dying in hospitals, rather than in their homes, because they’ll lack essential services.

“Hospitals are often not the most humane place to die,” Johnston said.

While hospice care is an alternative paid for by Medicare, it too often falls short for terminally ill older adults who are alone. (Hospice serves people whose life expectancy is six months or less.) For one thing, hospice is underused: Fewer than half of older adults under age 85 take advantage of hospice services.

Also, “many people think, wrongly, that hospice agencies are going to provide person power on the ground and help with all those functional problems that come up for people at the end of life,” said Ashwin Kotwal, an associate professor of medicine in the division of geriatrics at the University of California-San Francisco School of Medicine.

Instead, agencies usually provide only intermittent care and rely heavily on family caregivers to offer needed assistance with activities such as bathing and eating. Some hospices won’t even accept people who don’t have caregivers, Kotwal noted.

That leaves hospitals. If seniors are lucid, staffers can talk to them about their priorities and walk them through medical decisions that lie ahead, said Paul DeSandre, the chief of palliative and supportive care at Grady Health System in Atlanta.

If they’re delirious or unconscious, which is often the case, staffers normally try to identify someone who can discuss what this senior might have wanted at the end of life and possibly serve as a surrogate decision-maker. Most states have laws specifying default surrogates, usually family members, for people who haven’t named decision-makers in advance.

If all efforts fail, the hospital will go to court to petition for guardianship, and the patient will become a ward of the state, which will assume legal oversight of end-of-life decision-making.

In extreme cases, when no one comes forward, someone who has died alone may be classified as “unclaimed” and buried in a common grave. This, too, is an increasingly common occurrence, according to “The Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City of Angels,” a book about this phenomenon, published last year.

Shoshana Ungerleider, a physician, founded End Well, an organization committed to improving end-of-life experiences. She suggested people make concerted efforts to identify seniors who live alone and are seriously ill early and provide them with expanded support. Stay in touch with them regularly through calls, video, or text messages, she said.

And don’t assume all older adults have the same priorities for end-of-life care. They don’t.

Barden, the widow in Massachusetts, for instance, has focused on preparing in advance: All her financial and legal arrangements are in order and funeral arrangements are made.

“I’ve been very blessed in life: We have to look back on what we have to be grateful for and not dwell on the bad part,” she told me. As for imagining her life’s end, she said, “it’s going to be what it is. We have no control over any of that stuff. I guess I’d like someone with me, but I don’t know how it’s going to work out.”

Some people want to die as they’ve lived — on their own. Among them is 80-year-old Elva Roy, founder of Age-Friendly Arlington, Texas, who has lived alone for 30 years after two divorces.

When I reached out, she told me she’d thought long and hard about dying alone and is toying with the idea of medically assisted death, perhaps in Switzerland, if she becomes terminally ill. It’s one way to retain a sense of control and independence that’s sustained her as a solo ager.

“You know, I don’t want somebody by my side if I’m emaciated or frail or sickly,” Roy said. “I would not feel comforted by someone being there holding my hand or wiping my brow or watching me suffer. I’m really OK with dying by myself.”

©2025 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

US stocks slip as Wall Street sees both good and bad in Big Tech profits, US-China relations

posted in: All news | 0

By STAN CHOE, Associated Press Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. stock market is pulling back from its record heights on Thursday, as Wall Street sifts through mixed developments on everything from the U.S.-China trade war to profits for Big Tech behemoths.

Related Articles


China agrees to purchase 25 million metric tons of U.S. soybeans annually, treasury secretary says


Halloween is a challenge for chocolatiers as high prices bite


A look at consumer prices 9 months into the second Trump administration


Cannabis shop at Joseph’s restaurant in Oak Park Heights approved


Starbucks halts 2-year sales slide, but costly improvements hurt its profits

The S&P 500 slipped 0.6% and edged a bit further from its all-time high set on Tuesday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 40 points, or 0.1%, as of 9:35 a.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was 1.1% lower.

Stocks also dipped in Europe, following a mixed finish in Asia, coming off a much anticipated meeting between the leaders of the world’s two largest economies. U.S. President Donald Trump hailed his talk with China’s leader, Xi Jinping, as a “12” on a scale of zero to 10, and Trump said he would cut tariffs on China. But while the talks may offer some stability for the near term, major tensions remain between the two countries.

Plus, stocks had already run to records earlier this week on expectations for potentially big improvements coming out the Trump-Xi talks.

“The result was fine, but fine isn’t good enough given the expectations going in,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management. “The results were more like small gestures instead of a grand bargain.”

Also feeling the burden of high expectations were some of Wall Street’s most influential stocks.

Meta Platforms tumbled 12%, cutting into what had been a 28.4% jump for the year so far. Analysts said investors were likely perturbed by how much Facebook’s parent company said it’s planning to spend in 2026. Companies across the industry have been on an investment spree to build out their artificial-intelligence capabilities, and the concern is whether it will all pay off.

Microsoft sank 1.9% even though it reported stronger profit and revenue for the latest quarter than analysts expected. Analysts pointed to how it also expects to spend more on investments in 2026 than in 2025, while growth for its Azure business may have fallen a bit short of some investors’ expectations.

On the winning side of Big Tech was Alphabet. Shares of Google’s parent company climbed 3.7% after its profit and revenue for the latest quarter easily topped analysts’ expectations.

How such companies do matters incredibly for investors. The trio of Alphabet, Meta and Microsoft alone account for 14.5% of the total value of all the companies in the S&P 500 index, which dictates the movements for many 401(k) accounts. That means they and a handful of other Big Tech stocks can easily overshadow what hundreds of other companies are doing.

Elsewhere on Wall Street, Chipotle Mexican Grill tumbled 19% after the restaurant chain cut its forecast for an important underlying measure of sales growth. CEO Scott Boatwright said Chipotle is seeing “persistent macroeconomic pressures.”

Eli Lilly, meanwhile, rose 1.8% after delivering stronger profit and revenue for the latest quarter than analysts expected. It credited strong growth for its blockbuster Mounjaro and Zepbound. drugs for diabetes and obesity, and it raised its full-year forecasts for revenue and profit.

In the bond market, Treasury yields climbed some more as traders continue to pare expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut its main interest rate in December.

Traders are still betting on it as likely, according to data from CME Group, but no longer as a near certainty. That’s after Fed Chair Jerome Powell admonished markets the day before, saying a December cut “is not a foregone conclusion — far from it.”

The Fed has lowered its main interest rate twice this year in hopes of boosting the slowing job market. But officials have also said they may have to halt cuts if inflation accelerates beyond its still-high level, because lower rates can worsen inflation.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.10% from 4.08% late Wednesday.

AP Business Writers Teresa Cerojano and Matt Ott contributed.