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Monday’s college roundup: Former Maine coach Kirk Ferentz promotes his son on Iowa’s staff

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NewsHubIOWA CITY, Iowa — Iowa Coach Kirk Ferentz named offensive line coach and son Brian Ferentz as his new offensive coordinator Monday, less than a week after Greg Davis announced his retirement.
Brian Ferentz played for the Hawkeyes before getting into coaching. He later spent four seasons in various roles on the coaching staff of the New England Patriots, serving as a tight ends coach in 2010-11.
Now 33, Ferentz returned to Iowa in 2012 as its line coach, and he added running game coordinator to his duties in 2015. Iowa’s offensive line last year won the Joe Moore Award, given to the nation’s best unit.
“It’s been like a dream to me, and I just feel so excited and so happy to have been a part of this program for such a long time,” Brian Ferentz said. “That being said, my history helps me appreciate the responsibility as the offensive coordinator.”
Brian Ferentz has reported to Athletic Director Gary Barta, not his father, since being hired at Iowa in order to avoid charges of nepotism. Kirk Ferentz, who coached at UMaine for three seasons (1990, ’91 and ’92) said Monday that his son will continue to report to Barta.
“I don’t think it’s a huge deal. If anything, it probably works against him in this position. Everyone has an opinion about what he’s going to do,” Kirk Ferentz said about hiring his son to run his offense. “It’s just one more thing that’s going to be wrong the first time we go three-and-out.”
Iowa will also likely hire a new quarterbacks coach, since Davis was both the coordinator and the QB coach.
“He’s had a tremendous career at the University of Iowa … he appreciates what’s important here,” Kirk Ferentz said of his son. “Spending significant time in New England, starting from ground zero and working up to being a position coach and being around Bill Belichick and (Houston Texans Coach) Bill O’Brien has been really beneficial for him. They’re great guys to have as mentors.”
Brian Ferentz doesn’t have much experience working with quarterbacks. But his first major decision will be to find a new one for 2017 – and sophomore-to-be Nathan Stanley will be the player in the best position to fill it.
The school announced the deal that extends MacIntyre’s agreement for three more years. MacIntyre, who just led the Buffaloes to a 10-4 record, a Pac-12 South title and their first bowl appearance since 2007, will make $3.1 million in 2017. The value of his deal over the next five seasons is $16.25 million, the school announced.
Gamecocks Coach Will Muschamp announced the hire. Wolford takes over for Shawn Elliott, who was South Carolina’s offensive line coach before leaving last month to become Georgia State’s head coach.
The rest of the new Hall of Fame class of 13 players and coaches includes Southern California Heisman Trophy winner Matt Leinart, San Diego State running back Marshall Faulk and Danny Ford, who coached Clemson to its only national championship.
Reynolds’ 16 points led Bowdoin (8-6). Jack Simonds and Hugh O’Neill each added 12 points for the Polar Bears.
Kim Collins scored 17 for UMPI (5-8).
The Bears (15-0) have made a meteoric rise in the poll, going from a team that didn’t receive a vote in the preseason poll to one that received 55 first-place votes from the 65-member national media panel.
Villanova, which received one first-place vote, had been No. 1 for the last five weeks, but the Wildcats (15-1) dropped to third after losing at Butler last week.
Kansas (14-1), which was No. 1 on eight ballots, moved up from third to second, giving the Big 12 the top two teams in the poll.
UCLA (16-1), which got the other first-place vote, stayed fourth.
Gonzaga (15-0), the only other unbeaten Division I school, and Kentucky remained fifth and sixth, and Duke, Creighton, Florida State and West Virginia rounded out the top 10.
Acting head coach Jeff Capel said Jefferson’s foot will be re-evaluated after that game.
Jefferson averages 13.6 points and a team-best 10.1 rebounds for No. 7 Duke.
He was hurt in the first half of a victory over Boston College on Saturday when he landed awkwardly after a shot in the paint.
The Wildcats fell out of the Top 25, ending a streak of 132 consecutive weeks in the poll. It was the fifth-longest active streak and eighth longest overall. Kentucky split a pair of games last week, edging Missouri before losing to Texas A&M.
Kentucky’s streak started Feb. 1, 2010, and the Wildcats reached as high as fifth in the rankings.
While Kentucky dropped out of the poll, Connecticut remained No. 1.
The Huskies have the longest current run, being ranked for 441 straight weeks. That trails only Tennessee’s all-time record of 565 consecutive appearances in the poll.
Following the Huskies in the poll again were Baylor, Maryland, Mississippi State and South Carolina.
Notre Dame and Florida State switched places at Nos. 6 and 7, with Washington, Louisville and Oregon State rounding out the top 10.
The university said in a statement that Hankins’ body was found Monday afternoon. The statement from spokesman Carsten Parmenter said there is no indication of foul play or “any danger or threat to other members of the Northwestern community.”
The nature and cause of Hankins’ death will be determined by the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office.
Women’s basketball coach Joe McKeown is calling Jordan, a sophomore, a “remarkably dynamic young woman,” adding her death is a “devastating loss for our basketball family.”
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Saturday Snow

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NewsHubDeicing jets at Charlotte Douglas International Airport
Wrecker driver Mark Blackwell pulls truck from ditch on West Blvd
Snow falls in Cornelius, N. C., on Saturday morning, Jan. 7, 2017.
A much hyped winter storm disappointed many folks in Charlotte.
Icy scenes Saturday morning near Sharon Lane
Bread was a hot ticket at area grocery stores as the first winter storm of the season approaches.
Brian Davis, Senior Mecklenburg County Maintenance Engineer, speaks about preparations for the upcoming storm in a press conference Friday at the NCDOT Rozzelles Ferry Rd. facility.
The Carolina Panthers teamed up with Goodwill Industries on Friday as the team donated tables, chairs, couches and photos to the nonprofit that will help fund job training programs.

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Why you should watch the World Darts Championship final – even if you don’t like darts What would Captain America make of Donald Trump?

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NewsHubThere are few things on this planet which never disappoint. The World Darts Championship is one of them. Every year on the year, it bestows an unstoppable fortnight of dramatic brilliance, amplified by a bloody lot of bloody fun. There is nothing like it.
The game itself is simple, repetitive, comforting and compelling; sending a dart from hand to board is a rhythmic, hypnotic, idiosyncratic treat – the bass beat on contact complemented by the intellectual thrill of calculating scores and predicting outshots (the finishing sequences). Because it is immediately obvious what is going on, it is immediately absorbing, and because so many of us know how easy it is to play but how impossible it is to play well, we have a handy frame of reference to swiftly make it about ourselves.
Nor does it stop there. Darts is about far more than chucking a pointy thing at a flat thing; it tells a story of humanity that is animated and crystallised in close-up and high-definition. No other sport shows, simultaneously, action and reaction; on stage and on camera, there is nowhere to hide.
Brooking neither luck nor tactics, darts facilitates neither refereeing errors nor stalemates; excuses do not exist. Players can do nothing to affect one another. If things are going badly, no teammate will be along to save them, and there is no option to roll into the reds, deadbat a few or cover up on the ropes. Their only option is to throw better.
As such, there is no more exacting test of pressure, no examination of vertebrae more thorough. Under lights, on camera and in front of a crowd, perform a fine motor skill predicated on a steady hand and an empty mind – good luck with that.
“But is it a sport?” ask the kind of funsters who, in other scenarios, prattle on about the differences between indica, sativa, serotonin and empathogens. The correct answer, of course, is: “Who gives a shit?”
One of the most beautiful things about sport is that it allows us to share the most exhilarating, demoralising moments of people’s lives, entwining them with our own and supplying an intensity otherwise lacking – and darts takes that to another level. We see every expression of tension, fear, devastation and ecstasy – you might call it love – so feel that we know the players, and accordingly, can imagine that they know us too.
Because of that, darts offers a study in humanity to captivate not just those who like darts but those who like anything – its themes the same as those found in literature, theatre, cinema and art. Or, put another way, enjoying it is not a matter of taste; rather, there are those who do and those yet to discover that they do.
And, at the moment, darts is the best sport in the world. This is partly because others are regenerating; there are very few great teams and great individuals currently at their peaks. Darts, on the other hand, has never been played better. Michael van Gerwen won 25 tournaments last year, and 18 tournaments in 2015. He also set a new record for the highest three-dart average ever recorded on television, 123.40 .
Van Gerwen is not just the best dart player in the world but the best anything in the world; one of the best anythings in the history of everything. And he is only 27.
But, as with any great sportsperson, to assess van Gerwen by his numbers is to miss the point entirely. A wondrous bolus of uncut genius, his competitive charisma is startling – a mix of passion, intimidation, egomania, and the most distinctive phizog of all-time. He throws darts like flaming javelins, celebrates like a psychopath, and because it is impossible not to know how good he is, he makes no attempt not to know how good he is. He is perfect.
But he has won only one World Championship, in 2014 – the two since then taken by Gary Anderson, his good friend and polar opposite. A laidback, likeable Scot, Anderson is prone to miscounting and, until very recently, to mis-seeing. Only recently did he start wearing the glasses that he’s needed for years. Early in his career, Anderson was the man who faltered at crucial moments, but after working through family tragedy and adding another son to the two he already had, he convinced himself that it wasn’t important whether he won or lost and suddenly became the man who peaks at the right time.
The World Championship format is to his advantage. Generally, matches take place over legs, a succession of races from 501 to zero. But here, each forms part of a set, offering a margin of error to the inconsistent and absent-minded – playing legs against someone as relentless as van Gerwen is almost impossible.
And tonight, the pair meets in the dream final. Anderson, almost disquietingly relaxed, has sailed through his half of the draw, while van Gerwen recorded the competition’s highest ever average in last night’s win over Raymond van Barneveld. It is not unreasonable to anticipate as gripping a contest as has ever been played.
Yet Anderson and van Gerwen are simply part of a sprawling ensemble cast, the limelight shared not just with their opponents but the crowd. The simple genius of an affordable piss-up stretching the length of the piss-up season has created an experience unlike any other, part fancy dress party, part community singalong.
Nauseatingly cringeworthy though that sounds, the ethos of abandon cool all ye who enter here makes an enveloping, uplifting change from the self-conscious self-regard that compromises most other places of enjoyment. The atmosphere is partisan, but in support of everything; the feeling is tribal, but as one. At the start of 2017, we have never needed darts more.
Daniel Harris is a writer, and co-directed House of Flying Arrows, a documentary about darts, for Universal Pictures. Watch the trailer , and buy the film here. Harris tweets @DanielHarris.
What would Captain America make of Donald Trump? That’s not as fatuous a question as it might seem. Marvel CEO Ike Perlmutter is getting a place on the President-Elect’s team , and also donated money to his campaign. But what about one of Marvel’s best-known characters? Captain America is an inherently political figure. After all, someone assumed to represent a country could never not be. But Cap is far from the mouthpiece of government-sanctioned conformity many assume.
The cover of Captain America Comics #1 shows Cap punching Hitler. From a twenty-first-century perspective, that image fits neatly into America’s sense of itself in the mid-twentieth century. There’s nothing politically controversial, even strictly political at all, there. Right?
The first ever Captain America comic had the character fighting Hitler. All pictures: Wikimedia Commons
But Captain America Comics #1 was published in March 1941, months before Pearl Harbour and America’s entry into World War II. Before, even, the signing of the Lend-Lease Act, which provided for American financial/military support to allies when its interests were threatened. That’s a time when thinking that the US becoming involved in “Europe’s War” was a political position, a divisive one, and at odds with government policy.
This makes Captain America, aka Steve Rogers, a figure who takes positions on controversies in domestic American politics from literally the first image of him ever released. This should not be surprising. Cap was the creation of Jack Kirby (1917-94) and Joe Simon (1913-2011), a pair of New York-born Jewish cartoonists, who were making a statement about America’s role in the world, and what America should be, during a global conflict with an antisemitic criminal state in which America was neutral.
Once America entered World War II, Cap became a more straightforward figure politically-speaking, aligned with the age of moral certainty created by fighting fascism.
It’s worth noting that Captain America was neither the only, nor even the first, patriotic American superhero created in response to World War II. Will Eisner’s Uncle Sam predates him by over a year, and MLJ Comics’ The Shield beat Cap to the newsstands by a few weeks. Nedor Comics’ Fighting Yank is almost his exact contemporary.
The Fighting Yank, a contemporary of Captain America.
But it’s Steve Rogers who endures, partially because of Kirby’s brilliant design (compare Cap’s costume with that of Fighting Yank) and partially because his creators endowed him with layers that other examples of his archetype lack.
By the 1950s, Captain America was portrayed – by hands other than those of Simon and Kirby – as an uncomplicated “Commie Smasher”. His creators responded with “The Fighting American”, a bizarre, whimsical and satirical series for another comics company, which took pot-shots at Cap’s then adventures and almost McCarthyite mindset.
Two decades later, Captain America’s comic was earmarked for cancellation. Steve Englehart, then a young comic book writer, was assigned to the flailing title. Englehart thought the character had been badly served of late. A character “wrapped in the flag”, who had been conceived to be pro-WWII, worked badly amid the counterculture revolution and Vietnam War protests. (Englehart himself had been a conscientious objector when called up.) But it was not that Cap had failed to move with the times, more that the character’s essence was not being applied properly to the Seventies.
Englehart’s Captain America #156 sees the series abandon the character’s Fifties incarnation, revealing him to have not been Steve Rogers, but an imposter called William Burnside. Burnside is portrayed as explicitly racist and increasingly deranged, and later becomes the leader of a Far Right group called National Force. Far from Cap being an approving symbol of unthinking nationalism, Englehart’s stories used the character as a device to interrogate it.
Captain America battles his far-right imposter.
For an encore, Englehart embarked on “Secret Empire”, in which Cap fought “Number One”, a Klan-like hooded figure leading a conspiracy lodged at the heart of American government. The story was Englehart’s baroque reaction to Watergate, and as far as he was concerned “Number One” was literally Richard Nixon. As the writer later explained:
“I was writing a man who believed in America’s highest ideals at a time when America’s President was a crook. I could not ignore that. And so, in the Marvel Universe, which so closely resembled our own, Cap followed a criminal conspiracy into the White House and saw the President commit suicide.”
This storyline led to Rogers’ disillusionment with America, and abandonment of the Captain America identity, becoming “Nomad” or “The Man without a Country”. When Rogers later readopted the Captain America identity, he did so with the specific mission statement that he would represent the ideals of America, rather than its present reality or current administration. This explicit framing of the character has proved influential ever since, and political events have prompted Rogers to abandon being Captain America on more than one subsequent occasion.
In 2003, writer Robert Morales (1959-2013) took on the main Captain America comic. Morales had encountered controversy with his and cartoonist Kyle Baker’s brilliant miniseries Truth: Red, White and Black , which posited links between the super soldier programme that created Captain America and the racist Tuskegee experiments , using that as a metaphor for the treatment of African Americans throughout history. It also established that an African American, Isaiah Bradley, had been Captain America before Rogers. (Which made some corners of the internet VERY ANGRY.)
Morales’ initial story “Homeland” (art by Chris Bachalo) saw Rogers sitting on a military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay, where an American citizen, a history professor, is being tried on manufactured charges. The story ends with the suggestion that a senior American military officer – who announces he believes in “obeying orders, whatever they are” – is all but admitting that he sent federal agents to kill Cap, as his determination to see due process done had become an embarrassment.
Rogers concludes that civil liberties are the US’s immune system against authoritarianism, and ponders accepting the Vice Presidential spot on a liberal senator’s planned third-party run for the White House. Sadly, neither this nor his second arc “Requiem” (art by Eddie Campbell), which built on Truth , were considered a success and Morales left the title after eight months.
Civil War (2006-7), written by Mark Millar and drawn by Steve McNiven, saw Captain America drawn into conflict with the US government, and several erstwhile friends, over civil liberties issues. Written against a background of the ongoing Iraq War, the story’s central conceit doesn’t really work, and was heavily revised for the 2016 film adaptation. But it served to indicate the curiously anti-establishment nature of this man wrapped in red, white and blue – particularly when Rogers was assassinated for his convictions in the story’s aftermath.
Writer Ed Brubaker and artist Luke Ross’ Two Americas (Captain America, #602-605) resurrected William Burnside as the head of a barely disguised Tea Party and set him against Rogers’ successor as Cap, Bucky Barnes (the character played in MCU films by Sebastian Stan). Complaints from conservative pressure groups saw Marvel’s editor-in-chief apologise, while Brubaker publicly pondered :
“Left-wing fans want Cap to be giving speeches on the street corner against the Bush Administration, and all the really right-wing fans all want him to be over in the streets of Baghdad, punching out Saddam.”
What has all this to do with Trump? Just that a fictional character who opposed mandatory identity registration and refused to sanction Guantanamo Bay is unlikely to remain quiet at the construction of “a beautiful wall” between Mexico and the United States, or acquiesce to an unconstitutional national register of Muslims.
Captain America works best when he’s used as a device to illuminate the distance between the ideals of America and their execution in the real world. If that gap becomes a chasm in the coming years – as many believe it will – there is no better fictional device for casting light on what that chasm contains.

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Giants want Beckham to cool it, on and off the field

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NewsHubEAST RUTHERFORD, N. J. — New York Giants General Manager Jerry Reese has told star receiver Odell Beckham Jr. that he needs to look at some of his antics on and off the field and be more responsible.
Beckham has been under the microscope for the past week after taking a one-day trip to Miami with some fellow receivers after the regular-season finale with a wild-card playoff game at Green Bay less than a week ago.
Beckham dropped a career-high three passes in the Giants’ 38-13 loss to the Packers on Sunday, and more controversy followed: It was alleged that he punched a hole in a wall outside the Giants’ locker room at Lambeau Field.
He was not in the locker room at the Giants’ headquarters Monday to answer questions.
Coach Ben McAdoo said he became aware of the hole Monday, but he did not say who did it, adding he takes responsibility.
Reese said the Giants are investigating any potential vandalism and they would hold the appropriate party responsible for the damage.
He did not identify any suspects, but said he had a heart-to-heart talk Monday with Beckham, who was voted second team All-Pro after catching 101 passes this season for 1,367 yards and 10 touchdowns.
Reese has an outstanding relationship with Beckham, whose emotional play and passion annoys opponents and gets him into some ugly situations, highlighted by his run-in with Josh Norman in a game against Carolina in December 2015. He was suspended for a game by the NFL for being flagged for three personal fouls.
“I see a guy who needs to think about some of the things he does,” Reese said. “Everyone knows he’s a gifted player, but there’s some things he’s done that he needs to look in the mirror and be honest with himself about it. I think he’ll do that. We’ll help him with that, but he has to help himself.”
Beckham was fined numerous times by the league this season, including more than $72,000 in the first four games of 2016, with the biggest chunk a $36,000 penalty for an illegal hit on Saints safety Kenny Vaccaro.
“We’ve all grown at different times in our lives, and it’s time for him to grow,” Reese said. “He’s been here for three years now, and I think he’ll do that. He’s a little bit of a lightning rod because of the things he does on and off the football field. He’s gotta be responsible. I believe he understands that he has a responsibility being one of the faces of this franchise, and that he’ll accept that responsibility.”
McAdoo had no complaints about how Beckham practiced last week, and he felt Beckham played with tremendous effort Sunday. He said it was possible the receiver might have been pressing in dropping a touchdown pass and believes he will learn from it.
When asked if Beckham might have hurt his hand putting a hole in the wall, McAdoo said he had already answered a question on that topic.
“I don’t condone putting holes in the wall,” McAdoo said of the team’s response to the issue. He said he had a conversation with Beckham about the hole on Monday.
“The team takes full responsibility, I take full responsibility,” McAdoo said. “That’s no way to carry yourself after a ball game. Let’s move on.”
As far as the drops, McAdoo said Beckham will deal with them.
“That’s something that is going to stick with him for a long time,” said the rookie coach who led the Giants to an 11-5 record and their first playoff berth since 2011. “He’ll learn from it. He’ll grow from it. He’ll bounce back.”
Eli Manning has no concerns about Beckham.
“I think Odell is passionate. He’s passionate and he wants to win,” the Giants’ quarterback said. “This was important for him. He wanted to go out there and have the best game of his career. Maybe he put too much pressure on himself, and emphasis. Unfortunately, going to the playoffs is different.”
A Packers spokesman said the team would not comment on any questions related to the hole in the wall.
The NFL did not immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press asking whether it was looking into the damage to the wall, and whether Beckham would be disciplined or have to pay for the damage if he was responsible.
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Reports: Jaguars Hire Coughlin As VP, Marrone As Head Coach

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NewsHubNEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — Tom Coughlin didn’t land the Jaguars’ head coaching job, but he is returning to his former team.
Jacksonville has hired Coughlin as its executive vice president of football operations, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported Monday. The Jaguars also have reportedly hired Doug Marrone as their head coach, a position for which Coughlin interviewed.
Coughlin coached the expansion Jaguars from 1995-2002, leading the team to the AFC championship game in just its second season. He then spent 2004-15 with the Giants, where he won two Super Bowls.
He resigned after the 2015 season, the franchise’s third straight losing campaign and fourth consecutive year without a playoff appearance.
In 20 NFL seasons, Coughlin has a record of 170-150. He ranks 14th all-time in the NFL in wins.
Coughlin has spent this season as the NFL’s senior adviser to football operations, but the 70-year-old has said repeatedly he hoped to coach again. He interviewed last season for the Philadelphia Eagles’ and San Francisco 49ers’ head coaching vacancies.
A Bronx native, Marrone, 52, spent most of the past two seasons as the Jaguars’ assistant head coach and offensive line coach. He took over as interim head coach for the final two games after head coach Gus Bradley was fired.
Marrone was the Buffalo Bills’ head coach from 2013-14. He went 6-10 his first season and 9-7 his second before opting out of his contract.
Marrone coincidentally interviewed to replace Coughlin with the Giants after last season.
The Jaguars also gave general manager Dave Caldwell a two-year contract extension, the Associated Press reported.

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Sports Digest: Ronaldo, Lloyd earn FIFA best player awards

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NewsHubCristiano Ronaldo received FIFA’s best player award for the fourth time on Monday, after Portugal and Real Madrid won both major European titles in 2016.
He beat runner-up and great rival Lionel Messi and Antoine Griezmann to complete a sweep of top individual awards.
Leicester Manager Claudio Ranieri earned the men’s coaching prize for a stunning English Premier League title.
Carli Lloyd of the United States won the women’s FIFA player prize for the second year in a row.
Lloyd won despite Germany midfielder Melanie Behringer playing on the Olympic gold medal-winning team. Five-time winner Marta was runner-up and Behringer was third.
Hollingshead will be in a neck brace for 6 to 8 weeks. The MLS club said he is not at risk of spinal cord damage or loss of function.
Ayers, a 6-5, 205-pound guard, played seven games for the Reno Bighorns this season, averaging 3.3 points per game before being waived on Nov. 30. Last season, Ayers averaged 11.3 points, 3.1 rebounds and 1.9 assists for the Bighorns. He played college ball at Bucknell, finishing his four-year collegiate career in 2014 by being named Patriot League Player of the Year.
Wozniacki, who finished back-to-back years at No. 1 in the rankings in 2010 and ’11, has never won a major and is determined to make up for a first-round exit at the Australian Open last year.
Third-seeded Dominika Cibulkova, last year’s WTA Finals champion and a finalist at the Australian Open in 2014, opened in Sydney with a 6-2, 6-0 win over Laura Siegemund, advancing along with No. 6-seeded Johanna Konta and No. 9 Roberta Vinci.
Police in New South Wales state charged Nick Lindahl with intentionally losing a tennis match on which friends had placed bets at an ITF futures tournament in September 2013.
The Russian track federation says Dyldin was given the sanction by the Court of Arbitration for Sport for “evading, refusing or failing to submit for sample collection.”
CAS did not immediately confirm Dyldin’s ban and it was not clear when the offense occurred.
Dyldin won a European gold medal in the 4×400-meter relay in 2010.
Russia’s track and field team has been suspended from all international competition since November 2015 over widespread doping.
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Meryl Streep's Golden Globes Speech Boosts Donations to Press Freedom Group

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NewsHub2:21 PM PST 1/9/2017
by
Gary Baum
The most explicit call to action in Meryl Streep’s memorable, now-viral speech about Hollywood, media and President-elect Donald J. Trump at the Golden Globes on Jan. 8 was her plea to join in support of The Committee to Protect Journalists.
The 35-year-old, New York-based nonprofit primarily defends reporters at risk of imprisonment or death for their work in repressive countries and conflict zones. But lately it’s raised concerns about press freedom in the United States.
The Hollywood Reporter talked to CPJ head Joel Simon the morning after Streep spoke.
Did you know Streep was going to mention the CPJ?
We had no idea.
What’s the response been so far?
Amazing – we got 500 new donations overnight and a couple hundred more during the day. They continue to come in and it’s mostly average people based on the size of the donation, so that’s really encouraging. Obviously, separately, it’s just enormous visibility and resonance about what’s at stake here. The thing about Meryl Streep is that we’re used to journalists championing this issue. She said the press needs to go out there and do what it needs to do and needs to be defended by all of us.
This was the first time most people had heard of the organization – it’s not a household name.
We’re primarily a front-line organization, protecting journalists who are doing this day-to-day work that’s incredibly dangerous and difficult. When we were founded, the U. S. media was really strong and there was a sense that we needed to look outward from our privilege and help others. And now that gap has narrowed and we are facing a press freedom challenge at home. While we of course recognize the challenges are different – it’s not Syria – the U. S. has been in a position of global leadership, the example we set for the press in this country has resonated all over the world, and so we expect to be very engaged during the Trump administration.
The CPJ harshly criticized the Obama administration over its own leak investigations and use of surveillance.
I think it’s laid a legal framework, and a kind of rationale, that’s very threatening in terms of what might come. When Trump tweeted out his displeasure that some of the information from the [Russian hacking] intelligence briefing leaked before he got it, that was a very menacing message. But that’s also a message the Obama administration sent pretty frequently in its own way. What’s fundamentally different is the overt hostility with Trump, the attacks on individual reporters, the threats to weaken libel laws. There’s a heightened rhetoric that is different.
How has the rise of social media weakened accountability reporting?
I think what keeps the press safe, what allows it to challenge powerful forces, is its utility. The press serves a vital role in terms of its ability to reach a mass audience with information that these powerful forces want to disseminate. But what’s happened is that technology has created a disintermediation, where if you’re ISIS you don’t need to talk to journalists, and you also can kill journalists. And if you’re a powerful politician, you previously needed to grapple with journalists, and now you can use your Twitter feed to do an end-run and disparage them and mock them. So essentially the media has less power.
What has the CPJ seen elsewhere that causes it to sound its alarm domestically now?
One of the things we’ve seen, without a direct analogy, is that if you look at the way autocratic leaders consolidate power, they challenge media as corrupt or that it doesn’t represent the views of the people. You see that rhetoric in Russia and Venezuela and Turkey. It’s not even ideological. If you can reduce the influence of the press, then if the public encounters reporting that might be threatening to you, and the general confidence in information is already low, it’s already much easier to dismiss it.
What’s the biggest open question of the Trump administration pertaining to the press?
Trump does not like to be criticized in the media. The media will criticize him and expose him in ways he doesn’t like. He’ll be angry, no question. Will it just be angry rants and tweets, or will it be translated into policies that are detrimental to how the media functions? We’ll see.
Will White House correspondents exist at the front lines of this dynamic?
The White House press corps has a role, but there was a time when it was more significant. The symbolism of the spokesperson for the administration submitting to harsh, hostile questions – difficult, probing questions from the media – is almost the most important thing itself. That’s a visible manifestation of that accountability role.
The White House Correspondents’ Association dinner has taken on an outsized, polarizing cultural role in Washington in the past couple of decades. Reporters hobnob with officials and Obama roasted Trump, seated nearby, in 2011. Will the party change?
That event does the media no favors. I would not be sad to see its demise.
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Are Donald Trump and the GOP keeping too many secrets?

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NewsHubThe first casualty of the new government taking over Washington may be information about the government itself, ethics watchdogs say.
The new Republican-led Congress is moving toward confirming several nominees to run executive branch departments even though they have not yet had their financial disclosures vetted and cleared by ethics officials. The first act by the House of Representatives was a vote – later rescinded under fire – to dilute the power of an independent ethics office, notably its authority to share information about members with the public.
At the same time, President-elect Donald Trump continues to refuse to release his tax returns. He’s asked for an investigation to find out how NBC News got intelligence information. And he has not yet said how or whether he’ll divorce himself from his business interests.
“There seems to be a new kind of culture coming in, different from what we’ve seen the past,” said Jordan Libowitz, spokesman for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington .
Republicans downplay the controversies as partisan whining. “Little procedural complaints,” was how Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, described the complaints about the lack of information from Cabinet nominees.
To ethics watchdogs, the trend is clear and troublesome. Trump made draining the Washington swamp a major theme of his campaign, yet the public is probably more confused and skeptical than ever, independent groups maintained.
“It’s hard for the public to keep track of all that’s going on,” said Karen Hobert Flynn , president of Common Cause, a nonpartisan public interest group.
Wednesday, for instance, looms as overwhelming to constituents trying to make sense of the controversies. Trump plans his first news conference since his election, while at roughly the same time, five nominees are due for Senate confirmation hearings.
The turn-away from transparency began Jan. 2, the night before the new Congress was sworn in.
“Maybe they thought it was a federal holiday and no one was paying attention,” Flynn said.
Nearly half of the House’s Republicans voted in a private meeting to curb the influence of the independent Office of Congressional Ethics. They wanted it under the jurisdiction of the House Ethics Committee , which would give House members more control over its proceedings.
Watchdog groups and social media exploded with outrage. “The American people will see this latest push to undermine congressional ethics enforcement as shady and corrupt,” said Tom Fitton, president of Judicial Watch , a conservative research group. Trump in tweets questioned the timing of the initiative, and the GOP dropped the idea.
But other veils of secrecy remained.
The government’s ethics watchdog expressed “great concern” that a lack of information has left Trump administration nominees with “potentially unknown or unresolved ethics issues” before their confirmation hearings.
On Friday, Walter Shaub, director of the Office of Government Ethics , wrote Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., that nominees must have their financial disclosure data certified by the office before hearings. Not all nominees have “completed the ethics review process,” he said. He did not name those nominees.
The Senate is to begin confirmation hearings Tuesday, and it hopes to have several nominees confirmed shortly after Trump takes office Jan. 20. Shaub did not say which nominees had not provided information.
The office has released material for some key nominees due for hearings this week, including Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., attorney general; Rex Tillerson, secretary of state; Gen. James Mattis, defense secretary; and Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kan., Central Intelligence Agency.
To ethics experts, as well as Democrats, Shaub’s warning was another chapter in an ongoing, disturbing saga.
“I really am worried about where this administration is headed,” said Craig Holman , government affairs lobbyist for Public Citizen, a nonpartisan watchdog group.
Trump is setting a tone. He has never held a government office, and doesn’t feel “the norms of public service apply to him,” said Libowitz. Since Trump won the election, Libowitz added, many Republicans think the public is fine with skirting ethics norms.
GOP interests maintain that the controversy is manufactured by Democrats seeking a partisan advantage.
“Walter Shaub is an Obama appointee with a partisan agenda. His eruptions since Election Day show that beyond a shadow of a doubt,” said a statement by America Rising , a Republican research organization. Obama appointed Shaub as director in 2013. Shaub had worked for the agency during the George W. Bush administration.
“They want to put a bunch of political peeping Toms into the tax records of people,” Kellyanne Conway, Trump senior adviser, told “Fox & Friends” on Monday.
Judicial Watch’s Fitton was not overly concerned about the ethics delay. Confirmation hearings, he noted, are often quick and hardly go into much depth, and candidates are often not heavily scrutinized.
“Both parties do that,” he said.
Trump’s refusal to release his full tax returns was an issue throughout the presidential campaign. Presidential nominees for the past 40 years have routinely released their tax returns or summaries.
Trump said he wouldn’t release his until an Internal Revenue Service audit was completed, but nothing in IRS rules prevents him from doing so.
He also has not said how he will handle his business interests once he takes office, though he’s expected to discuss those matters Wednesday at a news conference. He is not barred by federal law from retaining those interests, though presidents historically have put their assets into blind trusts or turned over their businesses to others.
It all worries the ethics watchers.
“This is highly unusual,” said Holman of all the secrecy. “Republicans look at Trump and say, ‘If he can get away with it, so can we.’ ”

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Trump not only president upset with Meryl Streep. UFC’s Dana White’s not happy either.

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NewsHubActress Meryl Streep stole the headlines with her acceptance speech at Sunday night’s Golden Globes in Los Angeles.
Streep, accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement, slammed President-elect Donald Trump — without mentioning him by name — for his apparent mocking of a disabled reporter during the campaign. (Trump has repeatedly said he was not mocking the reporter’s physical disability, including in a tweet on Monday morning .)
But tucked in her remarks was another comment that some have taken as a subtle jab. In defending “Hollywood” and the “foreigners” among the actors who were being honored, Streep said, “So Hollywood is crawling with outsiders and foreigners, and if we kick them all out, you’ll have nothing to watch but football and mixed martial arts, which are not the arts.”
The line drew applause in the room. But UFC President Dana White took exception to the 67-year-old Streep’s comments.
“The last thing I expect is an uppity 80-year-old lady to be in our demographic and love mixed martial arts,” White told TMZ Sports .
White disputed the notion that his sport is not an art. Mixed martial arts combines different fighting disciplines, including boxing, jiu-jitsu and judo. UFC is the most popular mixed martial arts organization in the country.
“Of course, it’s an art,” he said. “These fighters, these men and women, are so talented. People who get into the UFC are the elite of the elite.”
The UFC is filled with fighters of many nationalities, including many Brazilians.
“We have fighters from all over the world,” White said. “… She’s not educated about the sport and it’s a completely uneducated comment.”
Scott Coker, the president of Bellator , another mixed martial arts organization, invited Streep to attend the company’s next event.
White spoke at the Republican National Convention last year. William Morris Endeavor Entertainment bought the UFC from White and his partners in July, and among the executives of WME is Ari Emanuel.
“Ari Emanuel is definitely Hollywood. He makes movies and TV shows and he wasn’t a Trump supporter either,” White said during his TMZ interview.

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Use Streep uproar to get real on disability

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NewsHubDavid M. Perry is an associate professor of history at Dominican University in Illinois. He writes regularly at his blog: How Did We Get Into This Mess? Follow him on Twitter. The opinions expressed in this commentary are his.
(CNN) After legendary actress Meryl Streep focused her criticism of Donald Trump on his mocking of Serge Kovaleski (a well-respected New York Times reporter who has a physical disability) — calling it the 2016 “performance” that broke her heart — an all-too-familiar debate followed.
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