Breaking: Arkansas freshman star Darius Acuff Jr. has landed a signature shoe with Reebok, becoming the first NCAA men’s athlete to receive one from a major U.S. brand while still in college, Reebok’s head of basketball, Jide Osifeso, tells @ShamsCharania.
Sgt. John C. Cole, a United States Marine Corps veteran who served in both World War II and the Korean War. He was a rifleman with the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment (3/5), part of the 1st Marine Division. Cole was born in 1927 in Texas but grew up in Colorado. He enlisted in the Marines in 1944, following his brother and uncle into service. He passed away in early 2025 at age 97, and his obituary highlights his lasting legacy as a decorated hero.
USMC, Korean War HeroService: WWII & Korea
Unit: 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines (1st MarDiv)
Key Battle: Chosin Reservoir (1950)
Wounds: Shot in arm; 3 Purple Hearts
Evac: Last flight out of Chosin
Awards: Purple Heart ×3, Presidential Unit Citation
Legacy: Honored fallen comrades; awarded South Korea’s Ambassador for Peace Medal in 2022
Home: Roy, Utah
A rifleman who fought hand-to-hand in freezing hell. One of the “Chosin Few.”
AARON SIRI: “For every product on the market, you can SUE the manufacturer for harm… There’s only ONE product in America you CANNOT sue the manufacturer to claim it could have been made safer—and that’s VACCINES.”
@AaronSiriSG explained how the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act gave pharmaceutical companies sweeping immunity—not just for three vaccines, but for every new childhood shot added since.
The result? A CDC schedule that ballooned from 3 shots to 29 in the first year of life and zero liability for injuries.
“They don’t have the financial incentive to make them safer,” Siri said.
“In fact, they have the disincentive.”
This kid wanted to participate in “College Colors Day” at his school but didn’t have shirt to wear.
He created his own shirt, got bullied, and then this happened…