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Sunday, December 31, 2023

Aaron Gordon explains dog bite injury: 'I probably had a little bit too much eggnog' - CBS Sports

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The NBA, like other professional sports leagues, sees its fair share of strange injuries annually. Whether we're talking about the collapse of Kendrick Perkins' bed or Lionel Simmons suffering tendinitis in his wrist from playing too much Nintendo Game Boy, basketball players are at risk of injury whether they're on the court or off of it. In the case of Aaron Gordon, it was his own pet that has kept him out of Denver's last two games.

On Christmas night, Gordon suffered injuries to his hand and face when his dog, a rottweiler, bit him. The injuries were initially given no timetable, but Gordon told The Denver Post's Bennett Durando that he feels ready to play on Monday when the Nuggets face the Charlotte Hornets. He explained that he has played with stitches in his hands before, and he doesn't care about the ones in his face. "We're not running a pageant here," he quipped. As for the incident itself? He told Durando that a bit of Christmas fun just got out of hand.

"I guess it's a little bit embarrassing, but not too embarrassing to where I can't talk about it," he said. "I don't drink a lot during the season. I probably had a little bit too much eggnog. I was kind of roughhousing with my dog, and I think my dog got a little excited and just basically chomped down. Gave me a bite. And I was basically wrestling him off of me, and then he bit my hand.

"For lack of better words, I was (messing) around with my dog, and when you (mess) around, you find out."

The Nuggets won their first game without Gordon, but lost their second. For the time being, it doesn't seem as though he'll miss a third. As for Gordon's dog? The Nuggets forward acknowledged he might need a bit more training. He lives with Gordon's father much of the time because of the hectic travel schedule that comes with playing in the NBA. For now, Gordon's family is caring for the dog. All things considered, things could have been much worse for all parties involved. 

"He's a good boy. He's a good dog," Gordon said. "… Very attached. Very sweet. Very strong. Great dog."

Nuggets head coach Michael Malone called Gordon "one of the more underrated players in the league." Denver has been better on both ends with him on the court than off it this season, and its starting five -- Jamal MurrayKentavious Caldwell-PopeMichael Porter Jr., Gordon and Nikola Jokic -- has outscored opponents by 17.7 points per 100 possessions in 311 minutes.

Gordon is averaging 13.6 points, 6.9 rebounds and 3.4 assists in 32 minutes this season. His 3-point percentage has fallen to a career-low 25%, though he's dunking at an impressive rate. 

The reigning NBA champions currently sit in third place in the Western Conference with a 23-11 record. They're just 2.5 games from the West's top seed, currently occupied by the 24-7 Minnesota Timberwolves

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January 01, 2024 at 08:02AM
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Aaron Gordon explains dog bite injury: 'I probably had a little bit too much eggnog' - CBS Sports

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Man arrested after robbing Little Caesars in Pembroke Pines - NBC 6 South Florida

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A man has been arrested after robbing a Pembroke Pines Little Caesars on Saturday night.

According to authorities, the suspect, 34-year-old Jake Ryan Lemanski, entered the restaurant located at 8902 Taft Street wearing all-black clothing and a black ski mask on his face around 10:20 p.m.

Police say Lemanski brandished a firearm and pistol-whipped a Little Caesars employee in the head as he pushed him towards the cash register, demanding money.

Lemanski ran out of the business with an undetermined amount of cash and fled the scene in a white vehicle.

The media release mentions that Pembroke Pines Police officers were patrolling the area when they noticed the suspect fleeing and a short pursuit ensued, which ended when Lemanski crashed into a median wall at County Line Road and the Florida Turnpike.

Lemanski was not injured, but was transported to the hospital for precautionary medical evaluation after the crash. He was later transported to the BSO jail.

Police called Lemanski “a dangerous and violent individual” in the media release.

Lemanski appeared in court Sunday morning. He is facing different charges, including aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, robbery with a firearm and fleeing without regard for the safety of others.

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January 01, 2024 at 05:38AM
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Man arrested after robbing Little Caesars in Pembroke Pines - NBC 6 South Florida

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Vladimir Putin makes little mention of Ukraine in new year speech - BBC.com

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December 31, 2023 at 11:08PM
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Vladimir Putin makes little mention of Ukraine in new year speech - BBC.com

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Vladimir Putin makes little mention of Ukraine in new year speech - BBC.com

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Copyright 2023 BBC. All rights reserved.  The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.

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December 31, 2023 at 11:08PM
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Vladimir Putin makes little mention of Ukraine in new year speech - BBC.com

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Saturday, December 30, 2023

Perspective: Children born poor have little margin for mistakes or bad decisions, regardless of race - The Associated Press

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ALEXANDRIA, La. (AP) — Alfred King was lying in the parking lot of a small apartment building, mortally wounded when police in Alexandria, Louisiana, got to the intersection of 12th and Magnolia streets shortly before 1:30 a.m., Jan. 20.

The 34-year-old was the first fatal shooting of 2023 in the small city where I grew up and a large portion of my family lives.

Alfred’s death was similar to some I have covered since my first in 1985, a 38-year period when hundreds of thousands of people of all races and ethnicities have died violently in the U.S.

I know the details of too many of those incidents, from school shootings to a drug hit in a phone booth. I’ve heard the scream of a mom coming home from work and seeing her son in the street, encircled by yellow police tape. I’ve watched more than one mother gently touch the face of her teenage son then close the lid on the casket.

Some stories are burned into memory, like the Washington, D.C., teenager who asked his mom to send him out of the region to escape the violence. He spent years away only to come home one weekend to plan his high school graduation party and be randomly stabbed to death by a stranger.

While I know some of those back stories, Alfred’s is the one I can personally trace from a decision made years ago by adults to gunshots near the end of a rundown street.

Alfred is my first cousin.

When he was 13 my wife and I tried to get legal custody of him after his mom was murdered, but his guardian said no.

I think about him often and the decision that kept him from reaching escape velocity, the things you need to go right to lift the weight of your birth circumstances off of you. Those include family, education, jobs, friends, neighborhoods, adult interventions, hard work and good luck.

We say people can be whatever they want to be. To a degree that is true, but moving through the socioeconomic levels of America’s economics-based caste system is like the Apollo moon missions of my youth. Millions of parts have to work perfectly to get you there, and back.

According to “ Race and Economic Opportunity in the United States: An Intergenerational Perspective,” part of the groundbreaking Opportunity Insights project based at Harvard, only 2.5% of Black kids born to a parent or parents in the bottom quintile move to the top quintile of household income. For white kids, the figure is 10.6%. What is more likely for both is they will stay in the poorest quintile or, at best, move up one level to lower middle class. For white kids, that figure is 53.4%, and for Black kids, 75.4%.

The focus on the statistics tends to be on the racial disparity. I see the disparity, but what I also see is that Black or white, less than half of the kids born poor move up much. Even if they make it one step, a car repair, a missed day at work or a high utility bill can begin a downward spiral.

And there are millions born into that world, although we treat it like a moral failing. One measure of Census data shows more than 10.7 million children younger than 18 lived below the poverty level in 2022, and that figure is undoubtedly higher because millions more lived in places where the incomes couldn’t be determined.

Millions of young people live in homes where social security payments, WIC, SNAP and TANF, various food, nutrition and income assistance programs, are the order of the day.

Poverty isn’t the purview of one race. Neither is violent death. Socioeconomics is a good predictor for victimhood and criminal justice involvement, as well as deficient health care and educational outcomes.

Alfred came into the world on the bottom economic rung and when he was 13 the critical decision was made that likely kept him there. His mom had been shot to death months before in Alexandria. My uncle, his dad, had done what he could but was broken down from working hard labor jobs, usually several at once and was living on limited income himself. He couldn’t promise his son much future.

The first time I met him Alfred was a thin, gangly, very shy kid who kept his head down, avoiding eye contact. He spoke softly and slowly and was the target of bullies.

I don’t remember him smiling — ever. Around me, at least, his nature was melancholy.

For Alfred, I was the cousin who had a charmed life. The truth is, for reasons I will never comprehend, I had nearly everything go right.

We love to talk about people pulling themselves up by their boot straps. A lot of people contributed to my boots and showed me how to use the straps. There were teachers, friends, family, neighbors and luck stirred together. That mixture was added to the foundation, a ninth-grade drop out unwed mom who truly valued education who married a good man who helped her raise me.

Alfred’s grades were not good. Something about the way he looked at me made me ask when he’d last had an eye exam. One optometrist visit and a pair of glasses later he could see the blackboard.

My wife and I decided then. We wanted to bring him back to Maryland where we live. We wanted legal custody so my work benefits could cover him. We also wanted to be able to make decisions on his behalf without unforeseen bureaucratic or legal barriers that might arise.

My now dead uncle said yes but his message to me was Alfred’s now late-grandmother said no. Alfred was getting a government check of some sort. I don’t know how much it paid or what program it was. This year I asked the Social Security Administration what it might have been and there were a couple of possibilities. As a minor, he could have been eligible for benefits because of his dead mom. It also might have been Supplemental Security Income for some health problem he had.

In a place where minimum wage was $5.15 an hour at the time and people lived on the edge of financial ruin, it did not matter how much, or for what. If you are born into a certain economic class everything goes towards basics: food, rent, utilities, clothing.

Alfred stayed in Louisiana.

Over the years, he reached adulthood and when I came home I would give him what cash I had, especially when he had kids of his own. By then he had a criminal record but he treated me the same and he checked on my mom: Aunt Shirley.

I can’t and won’t judge the decision that was made for the 13-year-old. I sadly understand the necessity of it. But I can wonder what would have happened if we had gotten him. I can’t say for certain everything would have been OK but I believe we could have given him more options to a different path. What I want remembered is changing his path would also have changed the lives of anyone he may have wronged, too.

There are abandoned houses and empty lots in the neighborhood where he lived and died. I have been there multiple times this year.

I have seen a few young kids there, born into circumstances they didn’t ask for, lives without margin for errors or bad luck. I pray for them and the millions of kids like them, regardless of race or ethnicity, that everything goes right and they reach escape velocity.

___

Gary Fields, an award-winning, veteran journalist, writes about democracy for The Associated Press.

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December 30, 2023 at 03:02AM
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Perspective: Children born poor have little margin for mistakes or bad decisions, regardless of race - The Associated Press

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Texas is sending asylum seekers to major cities by bus with little notice. These mayors want to pump the brakes - CNN

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CNN  — 

Frustrated by “rogue buses” from Texas dropping off migrants by the thousands, the mayors of New York, Chicago and Denver are trying to slow the surge by requiring the bus operators to coordinate arrivals under the threat of impound, fines and even jail time.

Last week, 14 busloads of migrants from Texas made their way to New York City – the highest total recorded since spring 2022, Mayor Eric Adams said, citing the city’s Asylum Seeker Arrival Center.

At the direction of Texas’ Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, the Lone Star state has bused over 90,000 migrants to “sanctuary cities” run by Democrats like Washington, DC, New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Denver and Los Angeles since April 2022, according to numbers released by the governor’s office Friday.

In justifying the busing of migrants who cross the southern border, Abbott in a statement last year said “it was just Texas and Arizona that bore the brunt of all the chaos and problems that come with it.”

“Now, the rest of America can understand exactly what is going on,” he said.

Leaders of those cities experiencing an influx of migrants have been grappling with how to accommodate them upon their arrival.

On Wednesday, Adams signed an executive order requiring all charter buses carrying asylum seekers into the city to comply with guidelines that regulate when and where migrants can be dropped off, and requires advance written notice of their arrival.

“It’s about collaboration and turning this disorder into order,” Adams said on “CNN This Morning” Friday. “We have to orderly run our cities.”

The mayor’s order comes on the heels of a surge in southern border crossings that has stretched thin a number of already overwhelmed agencies in the US. Border authorities encountered more than 225,000 migrants along the US-Mexico border in December, marking the highest monthly total recorded since 2000, according to preliminary Homeland Security statistics shared with CNN.

Violating New York City’s busing rules will result in a class B misdemeanor, the order says, which is punishable by up to 3 months in jail and fines of up to $500 for individuals and up to $2,000 for corporations. In addition, bus companies could have their buses impounded by the New York City Police Department.

Cities like Chicago - and even its suburbs - have already implemented and enforced a similar ordinance. Earlier this month, a bus carrying asylum seekers was impounded and towed because the bus operators didn’t have the necessary paperwork and a permit.

Many of those migrants being bused up north “are arriving with just a single T-shirt and without much protection to regions in the United States where it’s really cold,” Pedro Rios, San Diego program director of the American Friends Service Committee’s U.S./Mexico Border Program, told CNN Friday. AFSC is an organization working toward peace and bringing social justice to those in the US and around the world.

“Border Patrol will tell people that they can only wear one piece of clothing, so they strip themselves of their jackets and their warm clothing,” he said. “And that’s how from the point of contact with Border Patrol, to the point of being released in Chicago, or New York, or wherever it might be, that’s how they are traveling, oftentimes without shoelaces, because they’re told that they have to remove them.”

With their belongings stuffed into one bag – because they’ve been told to reduce their life to a single container – they are in a “very vulnerable state of mind” already, Rios said.

“Physically vulnerable, emotionally distraught, and then for politicians to be playing with their lives, it’s just unconscionable,” Rios said.

Migrant in water
Texas National Guard denies that video shows them ignoring migrant's call for help
00:58 - Source: CNN

Coalition of mayors seeks assistance

For Adams and his big city counterparts, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Denver Mayor Mike Johnston, there’s much more to the issue than coordinating bus drop-offs.

The three mayors are collectively calling for additional federal support to manage the influx of migrants, calling it a national humanitarian crisis that demands a national solution.

“Our cities are working shoulder-to-shoulder to support newcomers, but it’s time for the federal government to increase work authorization, create a coordinated entry strategy, and provide more federal dollars to ensure cities can manage this crisis and help newcomers thrive,” Johnston said in a joint online statement this week.

The mayors are “going to extreme lengths to avoid fulfilling their self-declared sanctuary city promises,” Renae Eze, a spokesperson for Abbott, told CNN. “Instead of attacking Texas’ efforts to provide relief to our overwhelmed border communities, these Democrat mayors should call on their party leader to finally do his job and secure the border – something he continues refusing to do.”

This year, the Biden-Harris administration, in collaboration with states and cities, launched work authorization and Temporary Protected Status clinics to help non-citizens obtain work permits and decompress shelter systems, a White House spokesperson told CNN Friday.

“To date, these clinics have served approximately 10,000 individuals and thanks to USCIS’ efforts, the median processing time for work permit applications is 30 days,” the spokesperson said.

DENVER, CO - JANUARY 13 : A migrant lies on the sleeping pad at a makeshift shelter in Denver, Colo., on Friday, Jan. 13, 2023. Hyoung Chang/Pool via REUTERS

“President Biden is committed to addressing this problem, that’s why he submitted a supplemental funding request to Congress which includes additional resources to secure the border with more law enforcement, more grant funding for jurisdictions hosting migrants, and funding to accelerate the processing of work permits for eligible noncitizens.”

In Chicago and New York City, meanwhile, one problem with accommodating this surge of asylum seekers is that they are being dropped off at random locations, at random times, city leaders say.

In New York City, these unplanned drop-offs are “interfering with the city’s ability to manage this humanitarian crisis and provide emergency services,” New York City Corporation Counsel Sylvia O. Hinds-Radix said in an online statement.

Wednesday’s executive order aims to put a stop to that.

“We’re saying that between a certain period of time you are allowed to drop off migrants in the city, but you’re going to do it at the location that we specified, so we don’t overtax our resources, our manpower, and create this orderly environment,” Adams said on CNN.

New York City’s order mandates:

• Charter buses carrying 10 or more migrants will be required to provide 32 hours notice to city officials prior to arrival.
• A manifest of its passengers, including the number of single adults and family members traveling, provided to the city commissioner.
• Drop-offs be done at designated locations in Manhattan, Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to noon.
• Dropping off asylum seekers in NYC during official city-observed holidays is prohibited.

And while the ordinance ensures that asylum seekers are set up for some level of success upon arrival in New York City, it doesn’t go far enough, unless Adams eliminates the 30- and 60-day shelter stay rules, Suvasini Patel, vice president of communications and strategy at New York Immigration Coalition, an advocacy organization that represents immigrant and refugee rights groups throughout New York, told CNN Friday.

“Building a safe and stable home environment is the first step for any family to get on the road to self-sufficiency,” Patel said. “Without that, the mayor is doing a disservice to these new arrivals and, in fact, hurting their prospects to really build their lives here.”

In Chicago, where 28,000 asylum seekers have arrived since August 2022, a similar busing ordinance is already being enforced to streamline drop-offs and stop buses from leaving migrants “in the middle of traffic, on random street corners and at O’Hare International Airport,” according to the Chicago city officials.

Large numbers of migrants have been cleared out of several Chicago police stations in recent days, including the 1st District station where a new group of migrants arrives Nov. 20, 2023. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

“As temperatures continue to fall, the City is enacting stricter penalties to discourage bus companies from flouting these protocols,” the city said. “The inhumane treatment further endangers the safety and security of asylum seekers, and adds additional strain to city departments, volunteers and mutual aid partners tasked with easing what is already a harsh transition.”

The migrant drop-offs are not just happening by bus: On December 20, Abbott sent a plane of 120 migrants from El Paso to Chicago, the governor’s press secretary Andrew Mahaleris told CNN and shared on X.

Surrounding Chicago communities are also trying to control the influx, requiring buses to obtain a permit before dropping off migrants, like in the village of Elburn, an hour outside the city. Earlier this month, 38 migrants arrived at the Elburn stop on the commuter rail system in the Chicago metropolitan area, and were accompanied by a security guard, liaison and bus driver, according to the minutes from the village board meeting December 27.

Elburn Village Administrator John Nevenhoven told CNN the single bus drop-off was orderly, as migrants waited on the bus until the train arrived, but said officials are highly concerned buses may drop off migrants when trains aren’t running, leaving them stranded in an unfamiliar place.

“He (Abbott) is now sending buses outside of the City of Chicago, in some instances, a hundred miles away where people are being dropped off … they’re being told they are in the City of Chicago, literally dropped off in the middle of nowhere,” Johnson said on “CNN This Morning” Friday. “I find that to be inhumane and unconscionable.”

Elburn’s ordinance, passed on December 27, requires buses to submit a permit application at least five business days prior to dropping off migrants and requires operators to conduct background checks on passengers over the age of 18, providing copies to the required authorities.

Violations can amount to a $750 fine per passenger, according to Elburn’s ordinance.

Denver’s mayor, Johnston, said on “CNN This Morning” Friday that Congress needs to address the crisis.

His city received more than 5,000 migrants in December so far, which includes 115 buses from Texas, Jordan Fuja, Johnston’s press secretary, told CNN Thursday. The city is averaging more than 250 newcomers arriving per day and currently sheltering 4,100, she said.

Denver is working to put emergency rules into place that limit drop-offs from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, Fuja said, to ensure city staff is available to support migrants as they arrive and help them get to shelter.

“The frustrating thing for us is we know this problem is solvable … It’s actually clear for us there is a path to solve it,” Johnston said. “And that’s why we need Congress to take action. I think the White House sees the same path to solve it.”

CNN’s Gloria Pazmino, Norma Galeana, Camila Bernal and Whitney Wild contributed to this report.

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December 30, 2023 at 11:06PM
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Texas is sending asylum seekers to major cities by bus with little notice. These mayors want to pump the brakes - CNN

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Friday, December 29, 2023

35 Little Items To Toss Into Your Cart - BuzzFeed

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My colleague Emma Lord (pictured above) is ready to divulge why this stuff is so great: 

"Okay, I bought this on a whim because there's a sushi place down the street from me that makes truffle avocado sushi rolls and I was like, I need these in my life, but I also need money to live. I decided to DIY it with a regular $4 avocado roll and this seasoning and the umami bliss of it all basically exploded my brain. Since then I've tried it on eggs, on burritos, on potatoes, on chocolate mug cakes, pretty much every sweet and savory thing I can think of. The best part is you really get an excellent bang for your buck — it's so flavorful that I've been using this for months now and have barely made a dent in the container!" 

Promising review: "Yes, I'm a truffle lover to begin with. And, of course, only a truffle is a truffle. But I gotta tell ya this delectable heaven-sent powder is one heck of a more versatile option. Utterly AMAZING on popcorn, in eggs, added to soups and sauces to layer flavors, veggies, PASTA...the list is endless (I think the only thing I haven't tried was sprinkling it on ice cream...although LOL). It is a bit salty, so I advise testing the waters first. But I just ordered my 9th and 10th bottle of the Truffle Zest." —Greengirl

Get it from Amazon for $13.99.

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December 30, 2023 at 08:31AM
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35 Little Items To Toss Into Your Cart - BuzzFeed

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Door, window of Little Village restaurant shattered - FOX 32 Chicago

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A Little Village restaurant was vandalized this week.

At about 8 p.m. Thursday and 10 a.m. Friday, the front glass door and one of the front windows of The Black Vegan Restaurant in the 2300 block of South Kedzie were shattered.

The restaurant posted on its Facebook stating that no one was hurt, but that the damage was not enough for the company's insurance to cover.

No offenders are in custody. Area detectives continue to investigate. 

If you are looking to donate, you can go to the restaurant's website.

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December 30, 2023 at 10:04AM
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Door, window of Little Village restaurant shattered - FOX 32 Chicago

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Bruins get a little boost at practice - Boston Herald

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Jim Montgomery has given some tough reviews of practices this season. When he hasn’t liked the energy of the sessions, the Bruins’ coach hasn’t been shy about letting people know about it.

That wasn’t the case on Thursday.

The fact that the B’s snapped their four-game losing streak on Wednesday in Buffalo might have had a little something to do with it. A bigger reason might have been that a Christmas vacation week crowd of families packed Warrior Ice Arena for the 40-minute practice, oohing-and-ahhing with every deke, every snipe, every cherry-picking save they saw.

The Bruins have reached the pinnacle of their hockey playing profession, but having a few extra eyeballs on you never fails to motivate players, at any level.

“That’s our best practice in a long time,” said Montgomery. “I thought the energy of our fans being there and with the guys wanting to put on a show or whatever it was, we practiced with really good pace and intensity today.”

Weymouth native Charlie Coyle was once a kid who caught a few practices up in Wilmington and at the Garden when his cousin and NHLer Tony Amonte came to town. Now that he’s on the other side of it, Coyle didn’t deny that the crowd was a motivating factor.

“It’s almost a little more pressure to perform well in practice, which is a good thing,” said Coyle with a smile. “It’s great to see kids come out and have a good time, you see the signs and sometimes they get little chants going. It just adds a little bit to practice whereas sometimes it can be a little dull if there’s not a lot of people there, so I think it gets our energy up a little bit and it’s great to see them come out.”

While the B’s snapped their skid with the 4-1 win over the Sabres, it’s not like they didn’t have things to work on. They still only managed one 5-on-5 goal in Buffalo and Montgomery felt like the team’s play tailed off after the first period.

“In general, our defensive game, being over on the right side of pucks, getting above pucks, whether it’s forwards or defensemen, eliminating unnecessary risk in our game really allowed us to control that game defensively. I thought our offensive game was just average,” said Montgomery of the Buffalo game. “I thought we could have built our game and grinded them down a little bit more. We did that early in the first and I thought we got away from that, consistently. We did it in moments after that.”

This team is a far cry form the 65-win team of a season ago, and Montgomery is leaning into the idea of building something new with this year’s squad, however painful the steps may be.

“The thing about this year that’s good is we’ve struggled now. When you struggle, you learn how to get out of the struggle and hopefully that’s what we’re learning right now,” said Montgomery. “When you do that, it helps your team develop some resiliency down the line. I think the struggle that we’ve gone through is only going to help us. It’s only going to be a good thing in the long run. It sucks when you’re going through it. Sometimes you’re like ‘I’m never going to get out of this.’ Because we’re getting overwhelmed. We used to just overwhelm people all the time. And that’s not happening now. And that’s a good thing, because you have to learn how to fight out of it and get back to your habits that allow you to build your team game to overwhelm other teams, whether its with defensive of offensive principles.” …

Loose pucks

The B’s could be getting some offensive help soon. Mark Allred, who covers the Providence Bruins, reported that hot prospect Georgii Merkulov will be getting the call-up, possibly as soon as Friday. Merkulov’s old USHL team even went as far as to congratulate Merkulov on the promotion on their social media account. The B’s didn’t announce anything. But they don’t play until Saturday night at the Garden against New Jersey and, in this tight-to-the-cap season, it’s not unusual for the B’s to wait till the last minute to call up players.

It’s not like Merkulov hasn’t earned at least a look-see. In his second pro season, he leads Providence with 14-16-30 totals in 31 games. He’s been playing center in the AHL. It’ll be interesting to see where they put him if/when he does come up.

Montgomery said the reviews from Providence coach Ryan Mougenel on the 23-year-old Russian were good.

“The most promising things we’re hearing is how he’s closing in the D-zone and how his 200-foot game is really up-ticked,” said Montgomery. “It’s not surprising that you hear someone’s 200-foot game getting better and he’s second in the league in scoring. (Wednesday) we had seven odd-man rushes. Five of them came from good defense. Good defense leads to offense.” …

After missing the last three games, Matt Grzelcyk (upper body) practiced with the team, though his availability for Saturday’s game has not yet been determined. Montgomery had no update on Derek Forbort, who has been on LTIR with a groin injury. Forbort, who last played Dec. 3, could be eligible to come off LTIR after Saturday’s game but it appears he’ll need more time.

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December 29, 2023 at 02:55AM
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Bruins get a little boost at practice - Boston Herald

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Thursday, December 28, 2023

‘Little People, Big World’ returns for 2024 season, amid reports of family feuds - OregonLive

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Even as media reports that the fate of the Roloff farm in Oregon has prompted tension in the family, Matt, Amy, Zach and more members of the Roloff clan are scheduled to return once more to TV screens, as TLC has announced a new season of “LIttle People, Big World” will premiere in February, 2024.

According to a press release from TLC, here’s some of what to expect from the new “Little People, Big World” season: “Just as the Roloffs settle into a rhythm, family surprises and continued tension give rise to new struggles and questions. After an unexpected proposal, Matt and Caryn excitedly look to the future while building their dream home on the farm, but the constant strain on the family makes them wonder what that future will look like.”

Among the many changes that have happened since “Little People, Big World” began airing on TLC, Amy Roloff and Matt Roloff got divorced, and Amy married a man named Chris Marek.

Which explains why the new season description goes on to say: “While Amy continues to enjoy married life with Chris, she remains unsettled by the family strife. To help bring the family together and support a cause near and dear to her, she decides to throw a fundraiser and enlists Chris, Matt, and Caryn’s help. But it doesn’t take long before the stress rises to the surface. Meanwhile, Zach and Tori are enjoying their busy lives with three kids. However, everything is turned upside down when Zach is rushed to the hospital for emergency surgery.”

In case you haven’t been following the behind-the-scenes drama, as The Oregonian/OregonLive and other sources have reported, in 2022, Matt Roloff said in May 2022 that he wanted to sell part of his century-old farm, in Helvetia. At the time, Roloff posted on the Roloff Farms website that he was “downsizing in acres to expand my adventures.” The 16-acre parcel was listed for a price of $4 million.

But the tale took another twist from there. As People magazine reported later in 2022, Roloff announced in an Instagram post that the section of the farm he originally put on the market in May would be turned into “an Airbnb-style travel destination,” as the People story said.

On Instagram, Roloff wrote, in part, “I have decided to pull the small farm off the open market,” and to instead open the farm “to everyone and anyone who wants to spend a few nights in the Roloff family home. Fees will be determined by demand and seasons. More information will be forthcoming soon … but needless to say we are scrambling hard behind the scenes (plus running the busy Pumpkin patch) to convert (re-furnish) the home to be ready.”

However, as “Little People, Big World” viewers have seen, Matt Roloff’s decision sparked tension between him and one of his sons, Zach Roloff, who had expressed interest in buying part of the farm.

In a 2021 Instagram post, Zach Roloff’s wife, Tori, wrote that the family had moved from Portland, to a new home in Washington.

“Little People, Big World” has aired on TLC since 2006. In the early days, the series focused on Matt and Amy Roloff, who have dwarfism, and their children, Zach, who also has dwarfism, Jeremy, Molly and Jacob, who don’t have dwarfism.

The 2024 season of “Little People, Big World” premieres at 9 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 20 on TLC. The show can be streamed on fubo, Sling TV and Max.

— Kristi Turnquist

503-221-8227; kturnquist@oregonian.com; @Kristiturnquist

Our journalism needs your support. Please become a subscriber today at OregonLive.com/subscribe

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‘Little People, Big World’ returns for 2024 season, amid reports of family feuds - OregonLive

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Bruins get a little boost at practice - Boston Herald

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Jim Montgomery has given some tough reviews of practices this season. When he hasn’t liked the energy of the sessions, the Bruins’ coach hasn’t been shy about letting people know about it.

That wasn’t the case on Thursday.

The fact that the B’s snapped their four-game losing streak on Wednesday in Buffalo might have had a little something to do with it. A bigger reason might have been that a Christmas vacation week crowd of families packed Warrior Ice Arena for the 40-minute practice, oohing-and-ahhing with every deke, every snipe, every cherry-picking save they saw.

The Bruins have reached the pinnacle of their hockey playing profession, but having a few extra eyeballs on you never fails to motivate players, at any level.

“That’s our best practice in a long time,” said Montgomery. “I thought the energy of our fans being there and with the guys wanting to put on a show or whatever it was, we practiced with really good pace and intensity today.”

Weymouth native Charlie Coyle was once a kid who caught a few practices up in Wilmington and at the Garden when his cousin and NHLer Tony Amonte came to town. Now that he’s on the other side of it, Coyle didn’t deny that the crowd was a motivating factor.

“It’s almost a little more pressure to perform well in practice, which is a good thing,” said Coyle with a smile. “It’s great to see kids come out and have a good time, you see the signs and sometimes they get little chants going. It just adds a little bit to practice whereas sometimes it can be a little dull if there’s not a lot of people there, so I think it gets our energy up a little bit and it’s great to see them come out.”

While the B’s snapped their skid with the 4-1 win over the Sabres, it’s not like they didn’t have things to work on. They still only managed one 5-on-5 goal in Buffalo and Montgomery felt like the team’s play tailed off after the first period.

“In general, our defensive game, being over on the right side of pucks, getting above pucks, whether it’s forwards or defensemen, eliminating unnecessary risk in our game really allowed us to control that game defensively. I thought our offensive game was just average,” said Montgomery of the Buffalo game. “I thought we could have built our game and grinded them down a little bit more. We did that early in the first and I thought we got away from that, consistently. We did it in moments after that.”

This team is a far cry form the 65-win team of a season ago, and Montgomery is leaning into the idea of building something new with this year’s squad, however painful the steps may be.

“The thing about this year that’s good is we’ve struggled now. When you struggle, you learn how to get out of the struggle and hopefully that’s what we’re learning right now,” said Montgomery. “When you do that, it helps your team develop some resiliency down the line. I think the struggle that we’ve gone through is only going to help us. It’s only going to be a good thing in the long run. It sucks when you’re going through it. Sometimes you’re like ‘I’m never going to get out of this.’ Because we’re getting overwhelmed. We used to just overwhelm people all the time. And that’s not happening now. And that’s a good thing, because you have to learn how to fight out of it and get back to your habits that allow you to build your team game to overwhelm other teams, whether its with defensive of offensive principles.”…

The B’s could be getting some offensive help soon. Mark Allred, who covers the Providence Bruins, reported that hot prospect Georgii Merkulov will be getting the call-up, possibly as soon as Friday. Merkulov’s old USHL team even went as far as to congratulate Merkulov on the promotion on their social media account. The B’s didn’t announce anything. But they don’t play until Saturday night at the Garden against New Jersey and, in this tight-to-the-cap season, it’s not unusual for the B’s to wait till the last minute to call up players.

It’s not like Merkulov hasn’t earned at least a look-see. In his second pro season, he leads Providence with 14-16-30 totals in 31 games. He’s been playing center in the AHL. It’ll be interesting to see where they put him if/when he does come up.

Montgomery said the reviews from Providence coach Ryan Mougenel on the 23-year-old Russian were good.

“The most promising things we’re hearing is how he’s closing in the D-zone and how his 200-foot game is really up-ticked,” said Montgomery. “It’s not surprising that you hear someone’s 200-foot game getting better and he’s second in the league in scoring. (Wednesday) we had seven odd-man rushes. Five of them came from good defense. Good defense leads to offense.”….

After missing the last three games, Matt Grzelcyk (upper body) practiced with the team, though his availability for Saturday’s game has not yet been determined. Montgomery had no update on Derek Forbort, who has been on LTIR with a groin injury. Forbort, who last played December 3, could be eligible to come off LTIR after Saturday’s game but it appears he’ll need more time.

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December 29, 2023 at 02:55AM
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Bruins get a little boost at practice - Boston Herald

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A Little Sugar and a Lot of Spice! Did Taylor Swift Give Boyfriend Travis Kelce a Hickey? - Yahoo Entertainment

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A little sugar and a lot of spice! At least, that’s what Swifties think Taylor Swift got boyfriend Travis Kelce for Christmas. The Kansas City Chiefs tight end was spotted with a mark that looked suspiciously like a hickey on his neck during his game against the New England Patriots in December 2023. But did Taylor really give Travis a hickey?

Did Taylor Swift Give Travis Kelce a Hickey on His Neck?

After photos surfaced of Travis during his game against the Patriots, fans of the “Getaway Car” singer zoomed in on a portion of his neck which showed a vaguely circular red splotch. Swifties immediately believed it was a hickey left by Taylor.

“Is this what we think this is?” one fan wrote on X (formerly known as Twitter) along with a screenshot of Travis on the field during the game.

However, not everyone was convinced.

“The mark was from 1-1/2 weeks ago. She flew in right before the game, AND he didn’t have it when the game started. Have you never seen a football game? It gets pretty physical - the game gave him the ‘hickey’,” someone else added.

Taylor and Travis Aren’t Shy About PDA

If Taylor was responsible for the love bite on Travis’ neck, it wouldn’t come as much of a shock. The Grammy award winner has been very open about her relationship with Travis, and photos have shown the two kissing and holding hands, a stark contrast from her years-long relationship with Joe Alwyn.

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce pose with a fan at a Christmas party.
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce pose with a fan at a Christmas party.

“When you say a relationship is public, that means I’m going to see him do what he loves, we’re showing up for each other, other people are there and we don’t care,” Taylor told Time when she was named 2023’s Person of the Year. “The opposite of that is you have to go to an extreme amount of effort to make sure no one knows that you’re seeing someone. And we’re just proud of each other.”

When ​Did Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Start Dating?

The couple’s romance took the world by storm in the summer of 2023 when Travis revealed he tried to give Taylor his number when he attended her concert at Arrowhead Stadium in July. While that particular moment didn’t work out, Travis later admitted that he had “someone playing Cupid” for him and the two ended up on a date. Taylor made headlines again when she arrived to cheer on Travis at his game in September 2023, and the relationship captivated fans from there on out.

Even though they both had busy schedules with his time in the NFL and her Eras tour, they’ve made time to see one another with him traveling to see her show in Buenos Aires and her staying with him at his house in Kansas City during her tour break.

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A Little Sugar and a Lot of Spice! Did Taylor Swift Give Boyfriend Travis Kelce a Hickey? - Yahoo Entertainment

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Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Stock market news today: Stocks drift higher as S&P inches toward record - Yahoo Finance

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Stocks inched higher on Wednesday amid a shortened week of trading and few major catalysts to drive market action.

The S&P 500 (^GSPC) neared an all-time high close of 4,796.56 on Wednesday but couldn't muster gains to close at a new record. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) led gains, adding 0.3% while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 added more than 0.1%.

For the year, all three major averages are up double digits. The S&P 500 has risen more than 24% while the Dow Jones is up over 13%. The Nasdaq has led gains, adding about 44% thus far this year.

Investors were looking to the markets to extend two months of gains. As of Wednesday afternoon, the S&P 500 is headed for its ninth straight week of increases, which would mark its best run since 2004. The major average has gained roughly 13% since Nov. 1.

The surge higher in stocks over the past two months has come as investors have increased bets that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in March and inflation falls closer to the central bank's 2% target with few signs that the US economy is set for a full-on slowdown.

The news flow so far this week has done little to change that narrative as equity prices have drifted higher.

In individual stock moves, shares of The New York Times Company rose more than 2% (NYT) after the newspaper chain sued Microsoft (MSFT) and OpenAI for copyright infringement.

Meanwhile, Apple won a bid to pause a ban on sales of its Apple Watch Series 9 and Watch Ultra 2 in the US. The court had previously paused sales over a patent dispute with medical technology firm Masimo (MASI). Shares of Masimo fell more than 4% on the news while Apple stock was near flat on the day.

Treasury yields continued to hover near levels not seen since July. The 10-year Treasury yield (^TNX) fell almost 10 basis points to 3.79% on Wednesday.

Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance.

Click here for the latest stock market news and in-depth analysis, including events that move stocks

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Stock market news today: Stocks drift higher as S&P inches toward record - Yahoo Finance

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Nikki Haley's super PAC spent big to fuel her rise. It started 2024 with little left. - NBC News

little.indah.link The super PAC backing former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley entered the election year in January with just $3.5 million in...

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