Chief Justice says Constitution remains 'firm and unshaken' with major Supreme Court rulings ahead

WASHINGTON (AP) — Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday that the Constitution remains a sturdy pillar for the country, a message that comes after a tumultuous year in the nation's judicial system withpivotal Supreme Court decisionson the horizon.

Roberts said the nation's founding documents remain "firm and unshaken," a reference to a century-old quote from President Calvin Coolidge. "True then; true now," Roberts wrote in his annual letter to the judiciary.

The letter comes after a year in which legal scholars and Democrats raised fears of a possibleconstitutional crisisas Republican President Donald Trump's supporters pushed back against rulings that slowed his far-reaching conservative agenda.

Roberts weighed inat one point, issuing a rare rebuke after Trump called for the impeachment of a judge who had ruled against him in a case over the deportation of Venezuelan migrants accused of being gang members.

The chief justice's Wednesday letter was largely focused on the nation's history, including an early 19th-century case establishing the principle that Congress shouldn't remove judges over contentious rulings.

While the Trump administration faced pushback in the lower courts, it has scored a series of some two dozen wins on the Supreme Court's emergency docket. The court's conservative majority has allowed Trump to move ahead for now withbanning transgender people from the military, clawing back billions of dollars of congressionally approved federal spending, moving aggressively on immigration and firing the Senate-confirmed leaders ofindependent federal agencies.

The court also handed Trump a few defeats over the last year, including in his push to deploy theNational Guardto U.S. cities.

Other pivotal issues are ahead for the high court in 2026, including arguments over Trump's push to end birthright citizenship and a ruling on whether he can unilaterally impose tariffs on hundreds of countries.

Roberts' letter contained few references to those issues. It opened with a history of the seminal 1776 pamphlet "Common Sense," written by Thomas Paine, a "recent immigrant to Britain's North American colonies," and closed with Coolidge's encouragement to "turn for solace" to the Constitution and Declaration of Independence "amid all the welter of partisan politics."

Chief Justice says Constitution remains 'firm and unshaken' with major Supreme Court rulings ahead

WASHINGTON (AP) — Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday that the Constitution remains a sturdy pillar for the country...
Michele Eve Sandberg/Shutterstock  Celebrity Cruises

Michele Eve Sandberg/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • 95 passengers and nine crewmembers fell ill during a Celebrity Cruises voyage in late December

  • Symptoms reported included vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal cramps

  • The Celebrity Eclipse made a round-trip voyage

Dozens of passengers fell sick on a Celebrity Cruises voyage in late December.

According to the CDC, 95 of the 3,042 passengers aboard theCelebrity Eclipsecruise ship reported becoming sick during the voyage, which lasted from Saturday, Dec. 20 to Sunday, Dec. 28.

Nine crewmembers also reported being ill during the trip, which was a round-trip voyage from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., making stops in the Caribbean, per data tracked byCruise Mapper.

After departing the Florida port, the ship made stops at St. Johns, Antigua, Philipsburg, St. Maarten, San Juan, Puerto Rico and Puerto Plata-Amber Cove, Dominican Republic before returning to Florida.

Arterra/Universal Images Group via Getty Celebrity Cruises

Arterra/Universal Images Group via Getty

The outbreak was reported to the Vessel Sanitation Program on the final day of the trip.

The predominant symptoms experienced by the ill passengers and crew members were vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal cramps. The exact cause of the outbreak remains unknown.

In response to the wave of illness, Celebrity Cruises "increased its cleaning and disinfection procedures" along with consulting VSP about "sanitation cleaning procedures and reporting ill cases."

The crew also "collected stool specimens from gastrointestinal illness cases" to be tested, and isolated the sick passengers and crew.

Per the CDC, VSP "remotely monitored the situation, including review of the ship's outbreak response and sanitation procedures."

PEOPLE reached out to Celebrity Cruises and did not receive an immediate response.

The CDC reported22 outbreaks on cruise ships in 2025. Sixteen of these outbreaks were reported as norovirus. Before the Celebrity Cruises outbreak, the CDC reported anorovirus outbreak infecting over 100 passengerswho were aboard a 133-day cruise around the world.

The ship's stops included the U.S., England, Mexico, Japan and South Africa after departing from Germany in November.

Daniel Knighton/Getty Celebrity Cruises

Daniel Knighton/Getty

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In order to stay safe and healthy when aboard a cruise ship, the CDC recommends washing your hands often, drinking water to stay hydrated, and taking care of yourself.

If you do fall sick while on a cruise, tell the ship's medical center and follow their instructions.

Read the original article onPeople

95 Passengers Sickened by Unknown Illness on Celebrity Cruises Sailing

Michele Eve Sandberg/Shutterstock NEED TO KNOW 95 passengers and nine crewmembers fell ill during a Celebrity Cruises voyage in late Dece...
Finnish authorities took control of a vessel suspected of damaging a submarine telecommunications cable

Police from Finland have detained theRussiancrew of a tanker suspected of cutting a telecommunication cable in the Baltic Sea.

Finnish authorities seized the Fitburg, a St Vincent and Grenadines-flagged cargo ship, on Wednesday. It had been travelling from St Petersburg to Haifa,Israel.

The ship's crew consists of Russian, Georgian, Kazakh and Azerbaijani sailors, according to police, who are investigating the case as aggravated criminal damage and suspected sabotage.

The Fitburg, which was detained while anchored in Finnish waters, is suspected of being "responsible for damage to [a] cable" running between Helsinki and Tallinn in the Gulf of Finland.

The incident occurred in the Baltic Sea, which has seen a huge increase in suspected sabotage attacks on undersea cables since the start of theRussia-Ukraine war.

Western officials suspect the attacks are being carried out as part ofVladimir Putin's hybrid war campaign, which is designed to punish the West for its military support of Kyiv.

Elisa, the Finnish telecoms operator and owner of the cable, said the damage had "not affected the functionality of [its] services in any way".

The company said it had informed Finnish authorities as soon as it detected a fault in the cable earlier on Wednesday.

A Finnish police spokesman said: "At this stage, the police are investigating the incident ‍as aggravated criminal damage, attempted aggravated criminal damage, and aggravated interference with telecommunications."

The Estonian justice ministry said a second telecoms cable connecting the country toFinlandfailed temporarily on Wednesday, although it was not confirmed that it was connected to the Elisa incident.

Alar Karis, the Estonian president, said on social media: "I'm concerned about the reported damage ... hopefully it was not a deliberate act, but the investigation will be clarified."

Finnish officials at a press conference in Helsinki

Alexander Stubb, the Finnish president, said: "Finland is prepared ⁠for security challenges of various kinds, and we respond to them as necessary."

The case under investigation is reminiscent of an incident in December 2024,when Finnish authorities boarded the Eagle S, an oil tanker linked to Russia. They suspected that its anchor had damaged five cables in the Baltic.

Finland's attempt to prosecute the Eagle S's crew collapsed. A court in Finland ruled that prosecutors had not been able to prove that the crew intentionally damaged the cables. The fact that the ship had been stopped in international – rather than Finnish – waters, led to a dispute about jurisdiction.

The Baltic Sea is crossed by as many as two thousand ships a day and has become one of the most fraught flashpoints between Nato allies and Russia.

In an interview with The Telegraph earlier this year, a top German naval officer said it could be very difficult to prove that a rogue crew had dropped and dragged an anchor on purpose.

Seized vessel Fitburg rests in harbour in Kirkkonummi, Finland

"If you don't have a well-trained crew, it might drop the anchor because they've been told to wait three days, or because there is a lack of orders, or because there is bad weather, and not realise there is a cable underneath them," said Stephan Haisch, a Rear-Admiral in the Bundeswehr, the German armed forces.

"It's stupid, because the cables are marked on the nautical chart, but they just don't know. It can happen – but it is really stupid and short-sighted," he added.

Another problem is confirming whether a ship has any ties to Russia, as in many cases the vessels will sail under the flag of an obscure country with no obvious Russian links.

The Fitburg, for example, was sailing under the flag of St Vincent and Grenadines, a former UK Overseas Territory and island nation in the eastern Caribbean.

According to London Stock Exchange Group data, the owner of the Fitburg is Fitburg Shipping Company Ltd and the manager is Albros Shipping and Trading Ltd.

In addition to cutting cables, Russia-linked ships are suspected of carrying out surveillance on Nato ships and warplanes. They are typically part of Moscow's infamous shadow fleet, a group of rusty, poorly maintained ships that sail under foreign flags to evade sanctions.

When the Eagle S was boarded in Danish waters, the crew was unable to explain why it was carrying specialist equipment designed for such surveillance.

An ongoing Nato mission to crack down on suspicious Russia-linked ships in the Baltic Sea is being led by Germany, which last year opened a new headquarters in Rostock, on the country's northern coast.

Known as CTF Baltic, [Commander Task Force Baltic], the facility has angered Moscow, which claims it violates a 1990s-era treaty that banned the stationing of new Nato forces in the former communist state of East Germany.

"I could say that people are bothered by [the task force] in Russia, and that is a good sign, if people are bothered in Russia, because then we have achieved a certain effect," said Rear-Adml Haisch.

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Russian crew detained after undersea cable cut in ‘sabotage’

Police from Finland have detained theRussiancrew of a tanker suspected of cutting a telecommunication cable in the Baltic Sea. Finnish aut...
Miami has more at stake than a CFP win vs. Ohio State in Cotton Bowl

Twenty-three years ago this week,Miami lost the Fiesta Bowlin double overtime to Ohio State and never recovered.

Ohio State and Miami were like two ships passing in the night — theBuckeyes have since kicked their dynasty to new heightsas the Hurricanes dropped several rungs down the Power Four ladder as one of the Bowl Subdivision's perennial underachievers.

That's not much of an overstatement: Miami might remain reputationally relevant, but a checkered run in the wake of that controversial loss features just one conference championship as a member of the now-defunct Big East, two division championships since joining the ACC and as many losing seasons, four, as years with double-digit wins.

Meanwhile, each of the past three permanent Ohio State coaches have won a national championship, while current coach Ryan Day has won a remarkable 87.8% of his games since replacing Urban Meyer in 2019.

Held against this backdrop, the quarterfinals of theCollege Football Playoffat theCotton Bowlbetween the No. 10 seed Hurricanes and the No. 2Buckeyesprovide an opportunity for revenge along with the chance to reverse the program's decades-long swoon and potentially jumpstart a renaissance.

Miami running back Mark Fletcher Jr. breaks free on a run against Texas A&M during the first round of the 2025 College Football Playoff at Kyle Field.

After years of unrealized expectations, Miami could be poised to break through and capture a landscape-shifting win against the defending national champions.

"Certainly, we've progressed a lot as a program, and these guys have worked really hard to keep earning that progress, and now we find ourselves with an opportunity here in the College Football Playoff," said fourth-year coach Mario Cristobal. "So we're really excited about that opportunity."

Looking at this season, steady progress under Cristobal yielded a team that was simply too talented and too accomplished to leave out of the playoff despite two midseason conference losses.

While a win in the opener against Notre Dame was the eventual tiebreaker inthe final playoff rankings, the Hurricanes established their case with a furious four-game winning streak to end the regular season before pulling out an ugly but effective10-3 road win against No. 7 seed Texas A&Min the opening round.

"All three phases of the game, working together to ultimately pull out a win in what a lot of people say is one of the hardest places to play in the country, and in a playoff atmosphere, elevates that even more," said senior quarterback Carson Beck.

Miami reaches CFP with transfer portal assist

As much as any team in the playoff, Miami has been transformed by the transfer portal. The offseason headliner was Beck, who came in from Georgia and struggled through his own midseason decline but has rebounded with 12 touchdowns against just one interception in his past five games.

Overall, roughly half of the Hurricanes' starting lineup was obtained through the portal, a list that includes wide receivers CJ Daniels and Keelan Marion, linebacker Mohamed Toure and defensive lineman Akheem Mesidor. Among traditional recruits, Miami unearthed a gem in three-star receiver Malachi Toney, who leads the team with 89 receptions for 992 yards and eight touchdowns.

These newcomers have joined a roster that has been built from the inside out, with offensive and defensive lines that rank among the best in the Power Four; as predicted, Cristobal has turned Miami into one of the most physical teams in the country.

Miami is "big and strong and powerful," said Day. "They've done a really good job of recruiting and adapting to the new structure of college football. They do a good job of coaching them, and you can see as the season's gone on, they've gotten better. And we know it's going to be a great challenge for both sides of the football."

Said Beck, "Our trenches on offense and defense have led this team. We go as they go. And any good football team, that's how it's going to be. And we understand the talent that they bring in their trenches as well."

Ohio State is Miami's toughest challenge of season

This program-building philosophy helped Miami pull out a win in College Station despite just three third-down conversions, three missed field goals and a potentially costly turnover in the fourth quarter.

"It was one of those games where we felt, all right, we're holding up good and we're knocking them back," said Cristobal. "I guess what I'm trying to say is the confidence that they bring to us and being able to call and manage the game is off the charts, and certainly they were the difference today."

But the Hurricanes will face by far their toughest test to date — tougher than Notre Dame, Texas A&M or anything they took on in the ACC — against an opponent in Ohio State with no discernable weakness.

Despite losing in the Big Ten championship game to Indiana, Ohio State is considered the favorite in this year's tournament after a nearly flawless regular season that saw just one win, against Texas in the opener, decided by fewer than 18 points. The highlight was the 27-9 win against Michigan to snap the Wolverines' four-game winning streak in the rivalry.

Statistically, these are opponents breathing the same rarefied air among the elite teams in the Power Four. Ohio State ranks 24th nationally in yards per game and 12th in yards per play; Miami ranks 34th and 27th nationally, respectively. On defense, the Buckeyes lead the country in giving up 213.5 yards per game and 3.9 yards per play; the Hurricanes are allowing 281.5 yards per game and 4.5 yards per play.

"Yeah, you know, they're really a fast defense," said Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin. "They're coached really well. They have really good players. And they're a very good defense. So we have a really tough challenge against us. We have to focus on our execution as an offense."

The comparison is even more striking when looking at each team's performance against opponents with a winning record. Offensively, both have averaged 6.4 yards per play in these matchups — seven games for Miami and eight for Ohio State.

Miami win would be 'transformational'

And like the Buckeyes last season, the Hurricanes look to benefit from an opening-round matchup against an SEC opponent before turning to a Big Ten powerhouse. After losing to Michigan to end the regular season and missing the conference championship game, No. 8 seed Ohio State bulldozed Tennessee and then avenged an earlier loss to Oregon in the quarterfinals.

"I think the first thing is not having the mindset of just being here," Cristobal said. "I think that's probably the opposite of our mindset. If we're blessed enough to earn the opportunity to keep playing, our only goal was to keep getting better every single week, and we feel like we did that in our last game."

A win would be transformational. Looking back at the program's rise and fall, Miami's time in the wilderness exceeds the roughly two-decade run as perhaps the sport's defining program, which included national championships in 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991 and 2001. But beating the Buckeyes would make a thunderous statement: We're back, and maybe back to stay.

"Yeah, we're very blessed to have this opportunity," said offensive tackle Francis Mauigoa. "At this point, we're coming to take it all. To play against Ohio State at the Cotton Bowl, it's pretty much a blessing to be here."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Miami needs Ohio State win in CFP to return to college football elite

Miami has more at stake than a CFP win vs. Ohio State in Cotton Bowl

Twenty-three years ago this week,Miami lost the Fiesta Bowlin double overtime to Ohio State and never recovered. ...
Bills DE Ed Oliver hurts knee, further delaying his return from IR

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Buffalo Bills starting defensive tackle Ed Oliver had minor surgery for a knee injury this week, further delaying his return off injured reserve for playoff-bound Buffalo.

Coach Sean McDermott provided the update on Wednesday, by saying the injury happened while Oliver was rehabbing from a torn left bicephe sustained in late October. Oliver was originally projected to return before the end of the season.

McDermott did not have a timetable on Oliver's recovery, by saying the knee injury adds a level of uncertainty. He, however, didn't rule out the player returning should the Bills make a deep playoff run.

Buffalo (11-5) closes the regular season by hosting the New York Jets (3-13) on Sunday. The Bills are currently the AFC's No. 7 seed, with an opportunity to climb as high as No. 5, meaning they'll open the wild-card playoff round on the road.

McDermott said he has yet to determine whether to rest some of his starters on Sunday. And the players include quarterback Josh Allen, who was not scheduled to practice on Wednesday because of a sore right foot.Allen first hurt his footin a 23-20 win at Cleveland two weeks ago, and then aggravated the injury in a 13-12 loss to Philadelphia on Sunday.

Other players not scheduled to practice on Wednesday were edge rusher Joey Bosa, safety Jordan Poyer (hamstring), defensive tackle DaQuan Jones (calf) and linebacker Terrel Bernard, who has already been ruled out after hurting his calf on Sunday.

Kicker Matt Prater was schedule to practice fully after missing the past two games with a quadricep injury.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Bills DE Ed Oliver hurts knee, further delaying his return from IR

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Buffalo Bills starting defensive tackle Ed Oliver had minor surgery for a knee injury this week...
Lamar Jackson at practice for the Ravens as Baltimore prepares for Pittsburgh showdown

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Lamar Jackson was at practice Wednesday for the Baltimore Ravens as they prepared for this weekend's showdown at Pittsburgh for the AFC North title.

Jackson missedlast weekend's must-win game at Green Baybecause of a back injury. He hasn't had a full week of practice since early November, but his presence Wednesday suggests that's a possibility now. The two-time MVP quarterback also missed three games earlier this season because of hamstring problems.

The Ravens beat the Packers with Tyler Huntley at quarterback, but they still need a win over the Steelers on Sunday night to make the playoffs.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Lamar Jackson at practice for the Ravens as Baltimore prepares for Pittsburgh showdown

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Lamar Jackson was at practice Wednesday for the Baltimore Ravens as they prepared for this weeke...
Gospel singer Richard Smallwood dies at 77, leaving a legacy that inspired many in music

Richard Smallwood, a gospel singer and recording artist nominated eight times forGrammy Awards, has died. He was 77.

Smallwood died Tuesday of complications of kidney failure at a rehabilitation and nursing center in Sandy Spring, Maryland, his representative Bill Carpenter announced.

Smallwood had health issues for many years, and music gave him the strength to endure, Carpenter said in an interview.

"Richard was so dedicated to music, and that was the thing that kept him alive all these years," he said. "Making music that made people feel something is what made him want to keep breathing and keep moving and keep living."

Smallwood's songs were performed and recorded over the years by artists such as Whitney Houston, Stevie Wonder, Destiny's Child and Boyz II Men. Houston brought his music to film by performing "I Love the Lord" in the 1996 movie "The Preacher's Wife," according to Smallwood's biography at theGospel Music Hall of Fame.

Smallwood "opened up my whole world of gospel music," singer and songwriterChaka Khanwrote on Facebook after his death.

"His music didn't just inspire me, it transformed me," she said. "He is my favorite pianist, and his brilliance, spirit, and devotion to the music have shaped generations, including my own journey."

Smallwood was born Nov. 30, 1948, in Atlanta and began to play piano by ear by the age of 5, according to biographic materials provided by Carpenter. By age 7, he was taking formal lessons. He had formed his own gospel group by the time he was 11.

He was primarily raised in Washington, D.C., by his mother, Mabel, and his stepfather, the Rev. Chester Lee "C.L." Smallwood. His stepfather was the pastor of Union Temple Baptist Church in Washington.

Smallwood was a music pioneer in multiple ways at Howard University in Washington, where he graduated cum laude with a music degree. He was a member of Howard's first gospel group, the Celestials. He was also a founding member of the university's gospel choir, according to an obituary from Carpenter.

After college, Smallwood taught music at the University of Maryland and went on to form the Richard Smallwood Singers in 1977, bringing a contemporary sound to traditional gospel music. He later formed Vision, a large choir that fueled some of his biggest gospel hits, including "Total Praise."

"Total Praise" became a modern-day hymn that touched people from all types of backgrounds and walks of life, Carpenter said by phone Wednesday.

"You can go into any kind of church — a Black church, a white church, a nondenominational church — and you might hear that song," he said. "Somehow it found its footing throughout the whole Christian world. If he never wrote anything else, that would have put him in the modern hymn book."

Wonderperformed "Total Praise"at the funeral of Martin Luther King Jr.'s sonDexter Scott Kingat Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta on Feb. 10, 2024.

In recent years, mild dementia and other health issues prevented Smallwood from recording music, and members of his Vision choir helped care for him.

His legacy will live on "through every note and every soul he touched," Khan said.

"I am truly looking forward to singing with you in heaven," she said.

Gospel singer Richard Smallwood dies at 77, leaving a legacy that inspired many in music

Richard Smallwood, a gospel singer and recording artist nominated eight times forGrammy Awards, has died. He was 77. ...

 

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