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Mainer on her first airline flight witnesses shootings at Fort Lauderdale airport

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NewsHubWhen Deb Nielsen got a text from her vacationing daughter the Scarborough woman’s thoughts were of the mundane travel headaches the 21-year-old might be experiencing during her first airline flight: lost luggage, a missed connection, a bumpy flight.
“I’m OK, but something happened,” MacKensey Nielsen’s text read.
Deb Nielsen texted back, asking her daughter to call. That’s when she learned that MacKensey had been in the baggage claim area of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Florida on Friday when a man began firing a handgun, killing five people and wounding eight, authorities say.
Three of those who were killed stood near MacKensey, she told her mother.
“The woman beside her got hit and dropped to the ground and then (MacKensey) dropped to the ground,” Deb Nielsen said. “She said, ‘I was so close, I was touching them.’”
MacKensey caught sight of the shooter, she told her mother, but in the chaos, didn’t get a good look at him. Both MacKensey and her boyfriend, Jacob Collette, 24, dropped to the ground as those who were shot also fell to the floor in the baggage claim area.
Collette planned the trip to Florida that was supposed to be a dream vacation for his girlfriend. The couple, who live in Saco, flew from the Portland International Jetport Friday morning and landed in Fort Lauderdale at midday. After collecting their luggage, they were going to get something to eat and then make the connection for their cruise ship, where they would spend the next week soaking up the warmth, escaping, for a bit, another cold Maine winter.
MacKensey Nielsen was nervous, but also excited Friday morning for her first trip on an airliner, her mother said.
“It was something that was going to make memories,” Deb Nielsen recalled telling her daughter, the fourth of her five children. “It did. Just not good memories.”
Deb Nielsen kept in contact with her daughter all Friday afternoon, and said that the couple had been interviewed by the FBI and were finally told they could leave the airport around 6:30 p.m., nearly six hours after the shooting.
Their cruise ship had sailed, so the two were headed to a hotel to deal with what had happened and figure out what they do next.
“The thing that stuck in her mind was the people that were around her,” Deb Nielsen said One thing is certain, Deb Nielsen said: there will be no flight back to Maine for the couple.
“They’re waiting to see if they’ll get on another ship,” she said. “If they don’t, we’ll drive down because she doesn’t want to fly.”
Deb Nielsen believes God played a role in sparing her daughter, and said that she and her husband, Allen, were praying for those families who didn’t hear from loved ones Friday afternoon.
A family of four from Warren also was in the baggage claim area at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport when the gunman opened fire.
Trisha and Jack Martin and their sons, Ryan, 18, and Ben, 14, were unhurt, family members said.
Ben Martin is a student at Medomak Valley High School and Ryan Martin is a student at Franklin Pierce University in New Hampshire.
Trisha Martin told a family member she was standing next to a man who was shot in the head and killed by the gunman.
The Martins became aware of the shooting when they heard popping sounds.
The Martin family had flown out of the jetport early Friday to Atlanta, and from there to Fort Lauderdale. They planned to leave on a vacation cruise Saturday.
Casey Prentice, the owner of Evo restaurant in Portland, also was in the airport when the shooting occurred Friday, but not in the baggage claim area.
Evo told WCSH-TV that he was in the Sky Lounge at the airport when people ran through, yelling “shots fired.”
He said that the doors from the lounge to the terminal were locked down, but people began to run out of the terminal onto the tarmac, the station said. Evo soon followed, according to WCSH, and sat with his back to a concrete wall.
John Choudhari of Portland said the airport was a scene of utter chaos for hours after the shooting, stretching into the night.
Choudhari, 26, a sports clerk at the Portland Press Herald, and his girlfriend, Jill Bradbury, 22, a waitress, had spent five days in the Bahamas and were on their way back to Maine Friday.
The Portland couple’s itinerary took them to Fort Lauderdale, where they were to take a flight to Boston. They were eating lunch in an airport restaurant when people starting getting alerts on their phones about the shooting, he said.
Choudhari and Bradbury decided to go to their gate, where at about 2 p.m., they were told to get ready to board their plane.
“Then we just saw hundreds of people streaming and running and TSA agents who had their guns drawn and they were telling everyone to get on the ground,” Choudhari said, adding that he and Bradbury dove underneath chairs in the waiting area. “We had no idea what was going on. People were stacked on top of each other.”
Then, he said, another TSA agent told everyone to run, so the throng streamed out of emergency doors onto the tarmac.
“I sprained my ankle pretty bad doing it, but at that point, I didn’t care,” Choudhari said.
Trucks rolled onto the tarmac and people were told to hide behind them as rumors spread of second and third shooters and panicked families became separated, Choudhari said.
Finally, as things calmed down, airport workers distributed bottled water to the people and they eventually were led back into the terminal. Initially, Choudhari said, the stranded passengers were told they wouldn’t be able to reclaim their belongings Friday, until people complained about medications and cash left behind. Finally, he said, they were led in small groups back into the terminal to recover their items. By 9:30 p.m., the airport was still crowded with people trying to make arrangements for the night after all flights were canceled.
Choudhari said he managed to book a room in Port Everglades and the couple has reservations on a flight from West Palm Beach to Boston Saturday night, although he noted ruefully that depends on the weather, with Boston expected to get snow.
Courier-Gazette Staff Writer Daniel Dunkle contributed to this report.
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UIC cruises in 2nd half, beats Detroit 78-64

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NewsHubTarkus Ferguson had 16 points, six rebounds and six assists Friday night and Illinois-Chicago notched its first Horizon League win, beating Detroit 78-64.
The Flames (8-7, 1-1) recovered from a slow start — falling behind 9-2 — and mostly cruised after building a 40-25 lead at the break. The Titans (2-13, 0-3) had a 9-2 run to cut their deficit to 71-61 but got no closer.
Marcus Ottey added 12 points, and Tai Odiase and Michael Kolawole had 11 points each for UIC. Odiase also had a season-high eight blocks and Godwin Boahen had nine points, six rebounds and seven assists.
Jaleel Hogan had 17 points and four blocks for Detroit. Josh McFolley scored 13 and Corey Allen added 12 points and four steals.
The Titans had 10 steals and scored 27 points off 23 Flames turnovers. But UIC shot 57.8 percent from the field and 53.3 percent from 3-point range.

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Girls’ basketball: Yarmouth wins fourth in a row

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NewsHubYARMOUTH — Yarmouth overcame a poor first half and rallied for a 47-36 win against Lincoln Academy in a Class B South girls’ basketball game Friday night.
It was the fourth consecutive win for the Clippers, who trailed 14-9 at halftime.
“It was a very lousy first half,” Yarmouth Coach Chris Strong said. “We had no offense. We didn’t move the ball well. We were getting a lot of good looks. We were just cold.”
The Clippers (6-2) hit just 3 of 27 shots in the first half.
“We definitely were a little discouraged only having nine points in the first half,” said Alison Clark, a senior forward. “We were taking good shots; they just weren’t falling. The thought was we just needed to keep shooting. They will fall, and they did in the second half.”
Yarmouth did change its approach, however.
“We knew we had to get the ball in the middle more in order to distribute the ball to the guards,” Strong said.
The inside-out game, which featured Clark in the post, helped the Clippers find their offensive groove.
“We started to swing (the ball) and get really good looks,” said Cory Langenbach, a senior guard. “We did that more in the second half.”
Yarmouth also got a lift from its bench. Ceanne Lyon, a sophomore forward, subbed into the game and hit back-to-back jumpers in the final minute of the third quarter to give the Clippers a 27-25 lead.
Yarmouth then reeled off a 9-1 run early in the fourth quarter to pull away. The Clippers sank 11 of 16 free throws and committed just one turnover in the final eight minutes.
“This was a very aggressive (Lincoln Academy) team,” Strong said. “They’re a good defensive team, and it was really about taking care of the ball.”
Lincoln Academy, which reached the regional final last season, dropped to 3-4.
“We talked about keeping the score in the 20s, but it was really a tremendous defensive letdown in the second half,” Lincoln Coach Kevin Feltis said. “We fell apart. We were really undisciplined in the second half, defensively.”
Brie Wajer scored 15 points for the Eagles, but Yarmouth shut everyone else down.
“They move well in the zone when they play a zone defense,” Feltis said. “They get out and got a hand in our face. They boxed out well.”
“We kept on mixing it up with the zone and with the box,” Clark said. “That kind of threw them off and kept their points low, which helped us when we were trying to come back.”
Sara D’Appolonia, a junior guard, scored 11 points for the Clippers, with all but two after halftime. Clark scored eight of her 10 points in the second half.
“Yarmouth is a good team,” Feltis said. “They’re a team on the rise. They’re well-coached and they do a real nice job.”
“We are a well-balanced team,” Strong said. “We are getting to the point in our season where we’re (playing) a lot of teams that are comparable, so it’s a good test of where our weaknesses are and (finding out) the things we need to do to get to the tournament.”
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NHS running blade fuels boy's Paralympic goal

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NewsHubAt the age of 10, Ben Moore took a brave decision.
He chose to have the lower part of his right leg amputated and was fitted with an artificial limb.
Ben was born with a condition known as fibular hemimelia – giving him a foot with only three toes and a leg that failed to develop.
It left him struggling to walk and frequently in pain.
Ben was fitted with an artificial leg after his amputation – which he says was fine for walking around school, but which did not match his sporting ambitions.
Frustratingly for a boy already keen on sport in primary school, he could not keep up with his friends.
However, his prosthetist Clare Johnson recommended him to become one of the first children to be fitted with a false leg designed specifically for sport by the NHS – and now his sights are set on competing at a future Paralympics.
Ben, now 13, says: „It has turned out really well. All my PE teachers like it that I’ve got a prosthetic leg and that I’m still doing sport. They say I have a lot of grit and zest! “
He was fitted with his new blade just before Christmas and switches between that and his other prosthetic leg depending on what he is doing.
„Ben has been empowered by his blade,“ says Clare. „We hope it will give him a level playing field so he can compete with his peers and participate in more sports with a lighter prosthetic. “
Clare adds that although she was able to make an attachment for Ben’s disordered right leg as he was growing up, it was not possible to include the sort of components that could give him a spring in his step.
After three weeks practising with the blade, Ben returned to Clare’s treatment room at Brighton General Hospital and tried jogging, running and playing indoor tennis.
He has also just taken on his able-bodied cousin in a straight race and won.
„The blade feels good,“ says Ben. „The spring of it is the bit that makes me go faster. “
„I wanted the blade to do more running, so I didn’t have to stick with cricket and stuff like that to do with upper body. I wanted to do more things with my lower body, run faster and get a bit more speed in football. “
There are about 1,500 children in England who have lost all or part of a limb and 1,100 of them either lack a leg or have one which does not work properly.
It is the first time the NHS has fitted some of them – in Brighton, North Cumbria and Luton – with false legs especially designed for sport.
While Ben has his blade, a child from Cumbria has been given a water limb called a „swim fin“ which will make swimming with friends possible.
The £1.5m programme is intended to help what the NHS says will be „several hundred“ children each year.
The cost of a blade, together with the follow-up training and assessment, is estimated at around £1,000, but it could be several times that amount in the private sector.
Clare says that by preserving the health of the children who get prostheses, the scheme could actually save money.
She says it also supports the health service’s campaign to encourage healthy lifestyles among children.
„I don’t like the idea that there are a lot of obese children and couch potatoes. I like to think that I have given (Ben) the blade and that he will show to other children that if he can do it, then everyone can do it. Sport is for everyone, not just a small elite. “
Ben’s mother Kathleen is proud of her son’s determination to play different sports, which have also included touch rugby.
„He’s been up against it,“ she says, „but despite everything he fought back and he’s a little fighter to this day. Now he’s got the blade, the sky’s the limit. “
Don’t bet against seeing Ben competing for Great Britain in a future Games.

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Raiders players honored by PFWA ahead of big playoff game

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NewsHubThree Oakland Raiders players were honored Friday by the Professional Football Writers of America a day before the big playoff game against the Houston Texans. Associated Press writers selected edge rusher Khalil Mack to the 2016 first team All-Pro. It’s the second straight year Mack has been honored. The 25-year old recorded 11 sacks and is considered a top candidate for defensive player of the year. Writers also selected Kelechi Osemele as first team left guard who is number 70 there. They also chose punter Marquette King as second team All-Pro.

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Major weekend storm could hurt Tahoe ski conditions

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NewsHubThinking of heading to the mountains this weekend, not so fast. Skiers and snowboarders might expect the high snow levels to look like a winter wonderland but rain is expected to drench the Tahoe area and could melt the fresh powder and cause dangerous flooding in the mountains and below. The National Weather Service is advising travelers to postpone trips until Monday, when the snow level falls. „We’re looking at flooding on roadways, those streams and rivers are going to be running very high and the potential for rock and mudslides on those mountain roads as well,“ said meteorologist Courtney Obergsell. Skiers are still renting gear at Sports Basement in Berkeley are looking forward to at least one good day on the mountain. „I think everybody gets excited when these storms roll in,“ said Brian Martin of Sports Basement. Martin says workers are seeing long lines and people getting their skis and snowboards waxed hoping a storm in the Bay Area translates to snow in the mountains, which is not always the case. „But if a pineapple express shows up and starts raining on all this snow we got it could get kind of messy,“ he said. The messiness could lead to road hazards like slush, ice and pooling water in lanes of traffic. „We really ask people to slow down to watch their following distances, not make multiple lane changes,“ said CHP Officer Vu Williams, „Bring speed down. „If you’re heading to the mountains carry chains for your tires.

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Tiger Woods On His Round of Golf With Donald Trump

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NewsHubAfter their December 23 game Woods, one of the most accomplished pro golfers in history, had quite a lot to say about his round with Trump including how the President-elect hits a great long ball, according to USA Today.
“What most impressed me was how far he hits the ball at 70 years old. He takes a pretty good lash,” Woods wrote about Trump on his website. “Our discussion topics were wide-ranging; it was fun. We both enjoyed the bantering, bickering and needling.”
“We didn’t have a match and played for fun,” Woods continued. “I was testing drivers and fairway woods, and changed some settings. I think he enjoyed seeing the difference in shots when you experiment.”
Woods also went on to note that he has “had the privilege of playing golf with Mr. Trump, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.” He then noted “and I appreciate the opportunity.”
Woods has also surprised many by announcing that he intends to try and get back to competitive golf, something that many felt would never happen.
“I know many people doubted whether I would play competitive golf again, and to be honest, even I wasn’t sure. A year ago at Hero, I was asked the question and gave a completely different answer. But after a year of working harder than I’ve ever worked to get back, I knew it was possible,” Woods wrote in the blog post. “My love for the game never left. It’s just that the body would not allow me to play. Now my body is allowing me to do it again. Combine that with the amount of support I have received from so many people, and the help I’ve had from players and friends, and there is great reason for optimism.”
Follow Warner Todd Huston on Twitter @warnerthuston or email the author at igcolonel@hotmail.com .

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Mexico's Fox trolls Trump: 'Are you a legitimate president?'

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NewsHubWashington (CNN) Former Mexican President Vicente Fox is back to trolling Donald Trump on Twitter, particularly as the US President-elect has waffled on his pledge to have Mexico pay for a border wall and amid questions about Russian interference in the election.
Sr Trump,the intelligence report is devastating. Losing election by more than 3M votes and in addition this. Are you a legitimate president?
Trump may ask whoever he wants, but still neither myself nor Mexico are going to pay for his racist monument.
Another promise he can’t keep.
To @realDonaldTrump : The more jobs you destroy in México, the more immigrants the American people will have. Think a little!

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Intel Report: Russia Hacked US Government, Think Tanks To Gather Intel On Future Trump Administration

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NewsHubRussia likely engaged in a spear-phishing campaign shortly after the U. S. presidential election in order to gain intelligence on President-elect Donald Trump’s upcoming administration, according to a U. S. intelligence report.
The campaign targeted U. S. government employees , think tanks and nongovernmental agencies (NGOs), the report said, which was published by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence Friday. The U. S. intelligence community assessed that Russia will use this information to gather intel on the future Trump administration’s policies.
“We assess Russian intelligence services will continue to develop capabilities to provide Putin with options to use against the United States, judging from past practice and current efforts. Immediately after Election Day, we assess Russian intelligence began a spearphishing campaign targeting US Government employees and individuals associated with US think tanks and NGOs in national security, defense, and foreign policy fields,” said the report. “This campaign could provide material for future influence efforts as well as foreign intelligence collection on the incoming administration’s goals and plans.”
Russia also collected information on “Republican-affiliated targets,” but did not disclose them in the same manner as it did with information collected on Democratic Party targets.
Spear-phishing is the process by which a cyber criminal sends a fake email from a familiar looking source, such as a friend or business, to a target in an effort to steal user names, passwords, credit card numbers, bank account numbers and other personal information. Russian hacker group Fancy Bear is believed to have used this tactic to gain access to former Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta’s email account.
The report determined that Russia engaged in an “influence campaign” targeting the 2016 election in an attempt to “undermine public faith in the U. S. democratic process, denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency.”
The intelligence community assessed that Russian intelligence agencies will continue to provide Russian President Vladimir Putin with “options” to use against the U. S. during the Trump presidency.
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Leaders, celebrities respond to Fort Lauderdale Airport shooting

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NewsHubPosted: Jan 06 2017 06:02PM EST
Updated: Jan 06 2017 07:15PM EST
Donald Trump
Monitoring the terrible situation in Florida. Just spoke to Governor Scott. Thoughts and prayers for all. Stay safe!
Mike Pence
Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims, their families and our first responders in Fort Lauderdale, FL. https://t.co/0DutQItGvN
Gov. Rick Scott (R-FL)
In response to the shooting at the @FLLFlyer we will use every available resource to keep citizens safe. https://t.co/6VwBAFW1vT
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL)
Praying for the victims and everyone at the #FortLauderdale airport. #FLL
Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL)
Deutch, who represents a portion of Fort Lauderdale, is attacking Florida Governor Rick Scott’s decision to reach out to Donald Trump instead of President Obama, who is still in office as President.
. @FLGovScott reached out to the President-elect & Vice-president elect but not the current President? That’s inexcusable but not surprising.
Gov. Doug Ducey (R-AZ)
Prayers are with the people of Florida and all the victim’s of today’s attack and their families.
Former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords (D-AZ)
Saddened by today’s shooting in Ft. Lauderdale. @ShuttleCDRKelly & I are thinking & praying for those impacted by this terrible tragedy.
Today’s tragic shooting at FLL airport is another painful reminder of our nation’s gun violence crisis.
. @ShuttleCDRKelly & I mourn for those taken today, and pray for those who were injured.
We cannot let this horror become normal. Our country is better than this.
Ellen DeGeneres
If you were at the Fort Lauderdale airport or have family affected by this horrific shooting, you’re in our thoughts. Sending love.
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