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Igbm Paramount extends its Skydance go-shop period to consider acquisition bid from Edgar Bronfman
 Republican Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina announced Sunday he is dropping out of the 2024 presidential race.Scott announced the unexpected decisio stanley cup n, just two months shy of the Iowa caucuses, on Fox News   Sunday Night In America with Trey Gowdy.  His departure f stanley cup rom the GOP race followed the abrupt cancellation of all his campaign stops in Iowa this weekend after he came down with the flu. I m looking forward to getting back on the campaign trail without question. But when I go back to Iowa, it will not be as a presidential candidate. I am suspending my campaign,  Scott told Fox News on Sunday.                                        Moments before Scott made his announcement, his campaign shared a fundraising email, asking voters to  contribute this weekend and support Tim in reaching his campaign goal.  I think the voters, who have been the most remarkable people on the planet, have been rea stanley cup lly clear. They re telling me  not now, Tim,   Scott told Gowdy.        Scott said he currently has no intentions of endorsing another candidate. When questioned about the possibility of becoming a running mate, he stated,  I ran for president to be president. Being vice president has never been on my to-do list for this campaign. Sources familiar with the campaign revealed that the announcement took many of Scott s staff members aback.He made the announcement live on Fox News, then immediately held a call with his surprised campaign staff to inform them of his decision.  It was a sho Kxui Fewer candy Sweethearts for sweethearts this Valentine s Day
 ALBANY, N.Y. -- Medical examiners don t have to return to families all organs from autopsied bodies or even tell them parts are missing, the state s highest court ruled Wednesday.The case involves a New York City couple who buried th adidas campus eir 17-year-old son after a 2005 car crash, not knowing his brain had been removed. Two months after the funeral, Jesse Shipley s high school class saw his brain in a labeled jar during a morgue field trip.The Shipleys got it back and had a second funeral. A jury awarded them $1 million for emotional distress. A midlevel court upheld the city s liability in 2010 but reduced the award to $600,000.                                        The Court of Appeals, divided 5-2, reversed that decision Wednesday, dismissing the family s claim and concluding that state law and burial rights don t require returning parts that can be legally removed during an autopsy. At most, a medical examiner s determination to return only the body w af1 ithout notice that organs and tissue samples are being retained is discretionary,  Judge Eugene Pigott Jr. wrote for the majority.  Therefore, no tort liability can be imposed for either the violation of the common-law right of sepulcher or public health law.         In a dissent, Judge Jenny Rivera wrote that the statutory authority to do autopsies doesn t permit medical examiners to kee converse p organs once they ve used them for the legitimate purpose of determining how someone died unless they notify and get consent from the next of k