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EA FC 25 Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC tasks, solutions, and more

EA FC 25 Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC tasks, solutions, and more

Time of India2 days ago

Image via EA
There is a new EA FC 25 Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC live in the game, and you can complete it to get a solid defensive midfielder for your Ultimate Team. To obtain him, you will simply have to complete the two required tasks.
The German international has been a great performer for Arminia Bielefeld, who made an underdog run to reach the DFB Pokal finals.
You wouldn't have to spend much on the Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC. It will cost you approximately 25 thousand coins, which is quite decent for a 92-rated player in the game.
Here are all the details about the latest EA FC 25 Marius Worl SBC.
EA FC 25 Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC tasks
As mentioned, you will have to complete a total of two tasks as part of the recently commenced EA FC 25 Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC.
Both of them are pretty simple, and you must build teams according to the requirements set by the developers.
The following are the specifics of the two tasks:
Task 1 – Germany
Min. team rating: 82.
No. of players from Germany in the squad: Min. 1
Reward: 1x Silver Pack
Task 2 – 85-Rated Squad
Min. team rating: 85.
No. of players in the squad: 11
Reward: 1x Small Electrum Players Pack
With both of these tasks costing around 25 thousand coins, you must not miss out on this opportunity to get a 92-rated midfielder in EA FC 25. If you have additional fodder players, you can also use them as part of this SBC.
EA FC 25 Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC cheapest solutions
Listed below are the cards that will be the cheapest solutions for the new EA FC 25 Marius Worl TOTS Honourable Mentions SBC:
Task 1 – Germany
Fullkrug 82
Tielemans 81
Rafaelle 82
Esther 81
Schick 82
Hegering 82
Kulusevski 82
Lohmann 82
Bachmann 82
Savinho 82
Lukaku 82
Task 2 – 85-Rated Squad
Griezmann 88
Ilestedt 84
Mbock 84
Akanji 84
White 84
Cascarino 84
De Ligt 84
Rice 87
Vlahovic 84
Kulusevski 82
Chawinga 84
Using these players will allow you to complete the Marius Worl SBC for a minimal cost in EA FC 25. You can then use him as a defensive midfielder for your Ultimate Team. Besides the primary position of CDM, the player is also an adept central midfielder that you can use inside the game.

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A voice for democracy: Thomas Mann's lasting literary legacy
A voice for democracy: Thomas Mann's lasting literary legacy

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

A voice for democracy: Thomas Mann's lasting literary legacy

Thomas Mann (Image credit: Nobel Prize website) One of the greatest writers of the 20th century, Thomas Mann 's literary genius reflected a life spent wandering between diverse worlds, especially after escaping Germany in the early 1930s. Mann rose to global fame when in 1929 he won the Nobel Prize for Literature — primarily for for his great social novel, "Buddenbrooks" (1901), but also for his fiction masterpiece, "The Magic Mountain" (1924). But during and after the Nazi dictatorship from which he escaped, Mann wrote political essays and delivered radio speeches to his compatriots about the German "catastrophe" that led to the Holocaust. These strident views were often reflected in his work. Early rise to literary prominence: Thomas Mann was born on June 6, 1875 in Lübeck, northern Germany, to a merchant family. He was raised with four siblings, and as a schoolboy wrote his first prose sketches and essays — even if he once repeated a grade and was deemed as only a "satisfactory" student of German. His artistic aspirations did not fit in well in the middle-class mainstream, and his passion for literature saddened his merchant father. This sensitive bohemian's struggle to carry on the family's time-honored business partly inspired Mann's first work, "Buddenbrooks." by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch vàng CFDs với mức chênh lệch giá thấp nhất IC Markets Đăng ký Undo When his father died in 1891, Mann left school before completing his A-levels and moved to Munich with his family. Living off his father's inheritance, he soon began to work as a freelance writer and had ambitions to become a journalist. At the age of 22, after spending time in Italy with his brother Heinrich, Mann started to pen "Buddenbrooks," which was subtitled "a family's decline" in German. The semi-autobiographical debut novel about the downfall of a wealthy merchant family was such a success that Mann was able to henceforth live off his writing. War and sibling rivalry: Other works soon followed, initially the novella collection "Tristan" (1903), which also includes "Tonio Kröger," a story about the contrast between artist and citizen, spirit and life. In 1905, the novelist married Katia Pringsheim, the daughter of a wealthy Munich family of scholars. He was also attracted to young men, though this did not seem to bother Katia. The couple had six children. Some of them later followed in their father's footsteps and became writers. The First World War (1914-1918) began and Thomas fell out with his brother Heinrich, by then also a successful author, over Germany's role in the war. Heinrich published an anti-war pamphlet, while Thomas defended the empire and its war policy. It was not until 1922 — by which time Germany had lost the war and democracy arrived with the Weimar Republic — that Thomas Mann changed his stance and supported democratization. Mann's Nobel Prize for Literature in 1929 was a huge success for the writer, but long before the outbreak of the following world war, Mann sensed danger. He expressed opposition to the rising Nazi party and made a fiery plea against authoritarianism and in favor of social democracy in 1930. Thus in the spring of 1933, barely a month after Adolf Hitler became German chancellor, Mann did not return to Germany from a lecture tour of Europe. He settled in Switzerland, his family following after the Nazis confiscated the Mann house in Munich along with the writer's bank accounts. The first volume of "Joseph and His Brothers" was subsequently published after it was smuggled out of Germany — the four-part novel describes the incarnation of the biblical figure Joseph. After Mann denounced Nazi policies in a public letter in 1936, his German citizenship was revoked, along with his honorary doctorate from the University of Bonn. The Nazis had robbed him of his fortune, and fame. Emigration to the US and return to Europe: Thomas and Katia Mann emigrated to the US in 1939, after Germany's invasion of Czechoslovakia. Mann took up a guest professorship at a university in Princeton. When a reporter asked him on his arrival how he felt about going into exile, Mann replied: "Where I am is Germany! I carry my culture within me." From 1940 onwards, Thomas Mann called on the Germans to resist. The British radio station BBC broadcast his monthly radio speeches to his former homeland, bypassing German censorship. In over 60 broadcasts, he spoke to the conscience of his compatriots, and did not shy away from the mass murder of the Jews. Mann's public letter of 1945, "Why I will not return to Germany," held all Germans responsible for the atrocities of the Nazi era. But some critics denied him the right, as an exile, to pass judgment on life under Hitler. Some could not comprehend Mann's comment that the fire bombing of German cities was justified. "Everything must be paid for," he said. The writer continued this theme in his novel "Doctor Faustus," published in 1947. It tells of the composer Adrian Leverkühn's pact with the devil, and is a metaphor for the social conditions that made National Socialism possible. But not everything was going well in the USA either: as a "suspected communist," Mann had to testify to the House Un-American Activities Committee, which called him "one of the world's foremost apologists for Stalin and company." The writer left America again in 1952, but he was not drawn to either of the two German states and instead returned to Switzerland, where he died in Zurich Cantonal Hospital on August 12, 1955 at the age of 80. With his literature, but also with his steadfastness in the face of fascism, Thomas Mann set a courageous example and a legacy that remains.

The world is full of unexploded bombs
The world is full of unexploded bombs

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

The world is full of unexploded bombs

One of the three unexploded bombs from the Second World War is fenced off in Cologne (AP) Fifteen couples had been looking forward to the special moment when they would say "I do" for weeks. But their weddings at Cologne's historic town hall on June 4 were cancelled, since the building was right in the middle of an evacuation zone. But they were still able to get married, in a district town hall instead. Three bombs left over from World War II were responsible for the massive evacuation, the biggest since 1945. They were found during preparations for construction work on the city's Deutz Bridge. The US-made bombs — one 100-pound (45-kilogram) and two 200-pound bombs — both had impact fuses and could not be moved for safety reasons. They had to be defused on site, and thus it was necessary to evacuate several districts of the city in North Rhine-Westphalia, in western Germany. Thousands evacuated Around 20,500 people had to leave their homes on Wednesday. Hospitals and retirement homes were evacuated, with people being moved to other facilities. Almost 60 hotels shut down, with guests being accommodated elsewhere. Bomb disposal is a mammoth logistical task, but Germany is very familiar with it. More than 1,600 bombs were defused last year in North Rhine-Westphalia alone. As construction work increases in the city, for example to put in new fiber optic cables, renovate bridges or improve the road network, excavations are bringing to light unexploded aerial ordnance that dates back to the 1930s and '40s. Major problem in Hamburg, Verdun, Poland Metropolitan regions such as Hamburg and Berlin were some of the main targets of Allied bombing during World War II. These places also saw civilian infrastructure targeted and so are particularly affected. In addition to the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Brandenburg is heavily contaminated. In 2024, explosive ordnance clearers found 90 mines, 48,000 grenades, 500 firebombs and 450 bombs weighing more than 11 pounds, as well as around 330,000 shells. The problem is also omnipresent in many neighboring countries. Unexploded ordnance from the two world wars is often found in France and Belgium, and particularly from World War I in the regions of Verdun and the Somme. Three years ago, the drought in Italy's Po Valley revealed unexploded bombs. In the UK in 2021, a German 2,200-pound aerial bomb was detonated in a controlled explosion in the southwestern city of Exeter and more than 250 buildings were damaged. The situation in Poland and the Czech Republic, where there are tons of unexploded ordnance from the two world wars in the ground, is also critical. In 2020, a 5-ton British-made Tallboy bomb was defused in the northwestern Polish town of Swinoujscie. Recently, there have even been fatal accidents in the Czech Republic. And in the Balkans, lives are in danger from unexploded ordnance that dates back to the wars of the 1990s and evacuations are a frequent occurrence. Deadly hazards in Vietnam, Laos, Gaza On the world's other continents, the situation is also critical. Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, people continue to be killed by US-made cluster bombs that were used in the 1960s and '70s. According to the UN, 80 million unexploded ordnances remain in the ground in Laos, from 500,000 US attacks conducted covertly between 1964 and 1973. There are also tons of unexploded ordnance in Syria and Iraq, where masses of people are at risk of being killed or wounded. In neither country have ordnance disposal structures been developed sufficiently. The UN says that unexploded ordnance in the war-torn Palestinian territory of Gaza has already left behind deadly hazards, even as Israel continues to bomb the strip. A quarter of Ukraine contaminated The situation in Ukraine is dramatic. Since Russia's full-scale invasion of 2022, about a quarter of the country is thought to be contaminated with mines, cluster bombs and other explosive devices. Over half a million explosive devices have already been defused, but millions more remain. The humanitarian and economic consequences are enormous: hundreds of civilians have died, large areas of agricultural land are unusable, and crop failures are exacerbating the economic crisis. When the war ends, demining will be one of the tasks of the coming years. German federal states bear brunt of costs In Germany, where most of the bombs that are defused are from World War II and were made by the Allies, it is the federal states that bear the majority of the costs of their disposal. It is the German state that is responsible for German-made bombs going back to the era of the German Reich (1871 – 1945). Attempts to make it responsible for all the unexploded bombs in Germany have so far been unsuccessful. Last year, explosive ordnance disposal cost North Rhine-Westphalia €20 million ($23 million). While the costs rise, the technology used for bomb disposal has evolved. While in the 1990s, clearers still used their own hands, hammers, chisels and water pump pliers, today abrasive waterjet cutting is used to neutralize explosive devices. A waterjet cutter that is operated at a safe distance can cut through the explosive device and remove its fuse. Experts believe that there are tens of thousands of unexploded explosive devices, weighing up to 100,000 tons, in Germany alone. Even though modern probing and detection techniques and digitized aerial photographs can help to minimize the risk, every bomb disposal operation is a race against time. The older a bomb is, the greater the risk of corrosion and explosion. It is also more difficult to defuse an older bomb because of the chemical changes that occur over time inside the bomb itself, between the casing and the fuse. 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Novak Djokovic becomes oldest French Open semi-finalist in nearly six decades after beating Alexander Zverev
Novak Djokovic becomes oldest French Open semi-finalist in nearly six decades after beating Alexander Zverev

First Post

timean hour ago

  • First Post

Novak Djokovic becomes oldest French Open semi-finalist in nearly six decades after beating Alexander Zverev

Novak Djokovic kept his quest for a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam triumph alive at the ongoing French Open with a 4-6 6-3 6-2 6-4 victory over Alexander Zverev in their quarter-final meeting on Wednesday. read more Novak Djokovic became the second-oldest player to reach the semi-finals of the French Open following his victory over Alexander Zverev. Reuters Novak Djokovic kept his quest for a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam triumph alive after recovering from a set down in his French Open quarter-final meeting with Alexander Zverev, defeating the German 4-6 6-3 6-2 6-4. The victory over the the world No 3 in the game that lasted three hours and 17 minutes helped the 38-year-old become the oldest semi-finalist at the French Open in 57 years and the second-oldest in the Open Era. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD American tennis player Ricardo 'Pancho' González was slightly older at 40 years old when he had defeated Australia's Roy Emerson 7-5, 6-3, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4 to advance to the Roland Garros semi-finals. He would go on to lose to the legendary Rod Laver the very next game to bow out in the semi-finals. POV: You're sitting court-side as Novak Djokovic becomes the oldest man to reach a #RolandGarros semi-final since 1968! 🤩 — TNT Sports (@tntsports) June 5, 2025 Djokovic registers 101st victory at Roland Garros Wednesday's victory over Zverev, which setup a semi-final clash with world No 1 Jannik Sinner, was also Djokovic's 101st victory at Roland Garros, the venue where he had fulfilled his dream of winning an Olympic gold medal in the Paris Games last year. Former world number one Djokovic is just two matches away from becoming the first player, male or female, to win 25 Grand Slam singles trophies. Earlier on Wednesday Sinner booked his spot in the last four with a straight-sets win over Kazakh Alexander Bublik. 'Obviously there was a lot of tension, pressure but it is normal when you play against Zverev, one of the best in the world, in the last five-six years,' Djokovic said in a post-match interview. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'My game is based on a lot of running. I am 38 years old, it is not easy to keep running like that but, okay, it works.' 'A match like the one this evening is the biggest reason why I continue playing and competing at this level,' he said. Zverev, last year's finalist who is still searching for a maiden Grand Slam title, started out strongly and broke Djokovic in the very first game. Attempting to join the Serb, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer as the only men in the Open Era to reach French Open semi-finals in five consecutive years, the German held on to that advantage to earn the first set. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Knowing he could not match his 28-year-old opponent for fitness, Djokovic tried to keep the rallies as short as possible, playing more and more drop shots – 35 in total – to force the tall Zverev to the net. Djokovic broke his opponent at 2-1 in the second set and was quickly 4-1 up before Zverev had any time to react. He secured the second set with yet another drop shot. The veteran then broke Zverev twice more to bag the third set with his opponent running out of steam, lacking accuracy and having no clear plan B. Another break at the very start of the fourth set put Djokovic 2-0 up and firmly on the winning track before he wrapped it up on his fifth match point to reach a record-extending 51st Grand Slam semi-final. With Reuters inputs

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