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Thursday, June 30, 2022

Mark Kohler appointed CT Secretary of the State to complete Merrill's term - The Connecticut Mirror

2022 Upper Deck NHL Draft complete selection order - NHL.com

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NEW YORK -- The National Hockey League announced today the order of selection for the 2022 Upper Deck NHL Draft, July 7-8 at Bell Centre in Montreal.

The host Montreal Canadiens own the first overall selection and a League-high 14 overall; the most picks made by a club in one year since the introduction of the 7-round draft in 2005 is 13 (NY Islanders in 2006 and 2008, Florida in 2010 and Carolina in 2021).

The first round of the 2022 Upper Deck NHL Draft will be broadcast on Thursday, July 7, at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN+ in the U.S. and Sportsnet, TVA Sports in Canada. Rounds 2-7 will air on NHL Network, ESPN+ in the U.S. and on Sportsnet, TVA Sports in Canada on Friday, July 8 at 11 a.m. ET.

 
Round 1
1. Montreal
2. New Jersey
3. Arizona
4. Seattle
5. Philadelphia
6. Columbus (from CHI)
7. Ottawa
8. Detroit
9. Buffalo
10. Anaheim
11. San Jose
12. Columbus
13. NY Islanders
14. Winnipeg
15. Vancouver
16. Buffalo (from VGK)
17. Nashville
18. Dallas
19. Minnesota (from LAK)
20. Washington
21. Pittsburgh
22. Anaheim (from BOS)
23. St. Louis
24. Minnesota
25. Toronto
26. Montreal (from CGY)
27. Arizona (from CAR via MTL)
28. Buffalo (from FLA)
29. Edmonton
30. Winnipeg (from NYR)
31. Tampa Bay
32. Arizona (from COL)
 
Round 2
33. Montreal
34. Arizona
35. Seattle
36. Arizona (from PHI)
37. New Jersey
38. Chicago
39. Ottawa
40. Detroit
41. Buffalo
42. Anaheim
43. Arizona (from SJS)
44. Columbus
45. Arizona (from NYI)
46. Washington (from WPG)
47. Minnesota (from VAN via ARI)
48. Vegas
49. Seattle (from NSH)
50. Dallas
51. Los Angeles
52. Detroit (from WSH)
53. Anaheim (from PIT)
54. Boston
55. Winnipeg (from STL via NYR)
56. Minnesota *
57. Chicago (from MIN)
58. Seattle (from TOR)
59. Calgary
60. Carolina
61. Seattle (from FLA via CGY)
62. Montreal (from EDM)
63. NY Rangers
64. Ottawa (from TBL)
65. NY Islanders (from COL)

* Pick 56 - Compensatory pick (MIN did not sign 2018 1st-round pick Filip Johansson)
 
Round 3
66. Montreal
67. Arizona
68. Seattle
69. Philadelphia
70. New Jersey
71. Carolina (from CHI)
72. Ottawa
73. Detroit
74. Buffalo
75. Montreal (from ANA)
76. San Jose
77. Winnipeg (from CBJ)
78. NY Islanders
79. Toronto (from WPG via VAN)
80. Vancouver
81. Chicago (from VGK)
82. Nashville
83. Dallas
84. Nashville (from LAK)
85. Washington
86. Los Angeles (from PIT)
87. Ottawa (from BOS)
88. St. Louis
89. Minnesota
90. Chicago (from TOR via CGY)
91. Boston (from CGY)
92. Montreal (from CAR)
93. Florida
94. Chicago (from EDM)
95. Vegas (from NYR)
96. Columbus (from TBL)
97. Colorado
 
Round 4
98. Montreal
99. Winnipeg (from ARI)
100. Seattle
101. Philadelphia
102. New Jersey
103. Tampa Bay (from CHI)
104. Ottawa
105. Detroit
106. Buffalo
107. Anaheim
108. San Jose
109. Columbus
110. New Jersey (from NYI)
111. NY Rangers (from WPG via VGK)
112. Vancouver
113. Detroit (from VGK)
114. Nashville
115. Dallas
116. Los Angeles
117. Seattle (from WSH)
118. Pittsburgh
119. Boston
120. St. Louis
121. Minnesota
122. Nashville (from CBJ via TOR)
123. Seattle (from CGY)
124. Carolina
125. Florida
126. New Jersey (from EDM)
127. Montreal (from NYR via FLA)
128. Montreal (from TBL)
129. Detroit (from COL)


Round 5
130. Montreal
131. Arizona
132. Seattle
133. Philadelphia
134. Buffalo (from NJD)
135. Vegas (from CHI)
136. Ottawa
137. Detroit
138. San Jose (from BUF via VGK)
139. Anaheim
140. San Jose
141. New Jersey (from CBJ)
142. NY Islanders
143. Ottawa (from WPG)
144. Vancouver
145. Vegas
146. Nashville
147. Dallas
148. Los Angeles
149. Washington
150. Pittsburgh
151. Ottawa (from BOS)
152. St. Louis
153. Minnesota
154. Anaheim (from TOR)
155. Calgary
156. Carolina
157. Florida
158. Edmonton
159. NY Rangers
160. Tampa Bay
161. Colorado
 
Round 6
162. Montreal
163. Arizona
164. Seattle
165. Philadelphia
166. New Jersey
167. Chicago
168. Ottawa
169. Tampa Bay (from DET)
170. Buffalo
171. Carolina (from ANA)
172. San Jose
173. Chicago (from CBJ)
174. NY Islanders
175. Winnipeg
176. Vancouver
177. Vegas
178. Anaheim (from NSH)
179. Dallas
180. Los Angeles
181. Washington
182. Pittsburgh
183. Boston
184. St. Louis
185. Minnesota
186. Florida (from TOR via CBJ)
187. Buffalo (from CGY via FLA)
188. Carolina
189. Florida
190. Edmonton
191. NY Rangers
192. Tampa Bay
193. Colorado

Round 7
194. Montreal
195. San Jose (from ARI)
196. Seattle
197. Philadelphia
198. New Jersey
199. Chicago
200. Boston (from OTT)
201. Detroit
202. Buffalo
203. Columbus (from ANA)
204. San Jose
205. Carolina (from CBJ)
206. Ottawa (from NYI)
207. Winnipeg
208. Vancouver
209. Vegas
210. Nashville
211. Buffalo (from DAL)
212. Detroit (from LAK)
213. Washington
214. Pittsburgh
215. Boston
216. Montreal (from STL via PHI and ARI)
217. San Jose (from MIN)
218. Toronto
219. Calgary
220. Carolina
221. Florida
222. Edmonton
223. Tampa Bay (from NYR)
224. Tampa Bay
225. Colorado

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Visit Local Farmers Markets to Help with Complete Nutrition - Putnam County Online

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Visit Local Farmers Markets to Help with Complete Nutrition  Putnam County Online

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Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Negative Claim Elements and the Importance of Complete Patent Disclosures: How Novartis Lost a $2.8 Billion Drug to Generic Drug Makers - Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati

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Negative Claim Elements and the Importance of Complete Patent Disclosures: How Novartis Lost a $2.8 Billion Drug to Generic Drug Makers  Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati

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Is Your Colleague Overly Competitive? - Psychology Today

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Source: Andrea Piacquadio/Pexels

A little bit of competition can be both fun and motivating to many; but, when a colleague is constantly competing, this can impact productivity and morale in the workplace.

Competitive colleagues must surpass you, making the simplest contest into a rivalry. Some such colleagues take competition beyond its intended purpose. Not only must they win standard organized matches like sales contests, but they also attempt to turn most other tasks into a clash, purely for the “prize” of coming out ahead.

You might be brainstorming for a solution, with everyone offering possibilities, yet competitive colleagues take it as a personal rejection when their ideas aren’t accepted. By denying them the applause they seek, you become their enemy.

You aren’t aware you’re in a contest, while competitive colleagues feel compelled to keep winning at whatever they do with you, regardless of what it costs them. Deep down, they are afraid they don’t really excel, and so they feel forced to prove to themselves and to you that they are superior. They are saddled with an unnecessary load—the fear that they may not continue being the best. They’re on top of the world when they win, dejected when they don’t. All of this subjects you to a perpetually tense situation.

What You’re Thinking

"We should be pooling our ideas to evolve a faster procedure. I like to match wits with Scarlett because she makes me justify my reasoning, but she’s turning this into some sort of rivalry to make herself shine. She’s trying to get me to say I’m wrong because I don’t do things her way. She must lie awake at night dreaming up schemes to come out looking better than the rest of us."

A Competitor’s Thoughts

"Why did I have to embarrass myself like that? If only I’d worked a little longer, I could have devised a winning plan. I know I can outthink them, but they keep putting me down because they won’t admit I’m smarter than they are. My coworkers pretend to be my friends, but they are standing in the way of my promotion. I have to try harder to wipe them out."

Strategy

Your goal is to restore a friendly atmosphere, so you can enjoy your work without any hostility.

  1. Be professional and gracious. Give competitors the respect and recognition they desperately seek. In a professional manner, show them that you want to be friendly even though they rebuff you. Allow them to feel important so that they won’t have to run you down to uplift their self-esteem.
  2. Explain the value of synthesizing. The whole (resulting outcome) is greater than the sum of the parts because when you share your thinking and extract the best thoughts from each of you, you form a new and more valuable combination.
  3. Be honorable in taking and giving credit. You want credit for your work, and competitive colleagues should get credit for theirs. Don’t allow them to claim as their achievements your efforts or joint efforts. Concentrate on running your own race, not on seeking revenge with dirty tricks of backstabbing.

Tip: If your ego is intact, you can afford to be generous. You can give competitive colleagues the reassurance they need while you are spurred on to greater creativity, matching wits with someone else who’s reaching for a better way.

Copyright© 2022 Amy Cooper Hakim

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Atlanta principal accused of sexually harassing a colleague will retire Thursday - WSB Atlanta

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ATLANTA — Channel 2 has learned that a former Atlanta Public Schools principal accused of sexually harassing a colleague will retire this week. Artesza Portee is leaving the district months after APS transferred him following student protests about his alleged behavior, which has been the subject of several school district investigations and is now the subject of a federal civil suit against the district and Portee.

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Channel 2 Investigative Reporter Richard Belcher says the district went to extraordinary lengths to hide where Portee was working after his transfer. We filed a request under the Georgia Open Records Act to find out Portee’s new assignment, but APS refused to provide the records, in effect hiding Portee for months

When he learned of Portee’s pending retirement, the attorney for Portee’s alleged victim was critical of APS’s handling of the whole matter.

“It’s shameful. That’s what it is,” Stephen Katz said.

His client, Sheri McEachern, contends Portee kissed and groped her in 2018 in his office at Sylvan Middle School, where Portee was then principal.

“He literally walked over to me, put his tongue in my mouth,” McEachern told Channel 2′s Richard Belcher last September.

TRENDING STORIES:

McEachern waited two years to file a formal complaint, which she admits was a mistake. When she did, APS hired the private law firm Greenberg Traurig to investigate Portee, one of several such investigations of Portee, which cost the district more than $75,000.

Among the law firm’s conclusions: “Portee’s character for truthfulness with regard to his denial of any improper conduct with women at APS...does not appear credible and warrants action by APS.”

Once she read the report, McEachern agreed. “There was very clear evidence that he was not truthful, that he had done this before,” she told Channel 2.

APS suspended but did not fire Portee, who by then was principal at Douglass High, where McEachern also worked. He was allowed to serve his 25-day suspension one day-per week for 25 weeks. APS told Channel 2 it “considers the matter closed.”

But that changed quickly after students at Douglass learned of McEachern’s accusations against their principal last September. No one was injured, but the school was placed on lockdown, and Superintendent Lisa Herring paid a visit to the school that same week. Suddenly the matter wasn’t closed after all. APS quickly transferred Portee but took the highly unusual step of refusing to provide information about his new assignment.

Sources later confirmed the district had moved the $160,000-a-year former principal to some undisclosed job at the transportation office on Metropolitan Boulevard. Last month, he announced his intention to retire June 30, the end of the school year.

“The administration is complicit in covering it up. The administration wanted to hide their own malfeasance. They wanted to hide their own behaviors, and so they wanted this quietly to go away,” Katz told Channel 2 when he learned of the retirement. Katz says the district’s treatment of Artesza Portee sends a clear message to women employees: “You can be sexually assaulted. You can endure the greatest of indignities that violate the law, but you just have to take it.”

APS declined to comment other than to confirm that Portee is retiring.

McEachern is still employed by APS and has a pending federal lawsuit against the district and Portee.

Andrew Coffman, the attorney for Portee, did not provide a statement.

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Tuesday, June 28, 2022

LA Clippers And City of Los Angeles Complete Renovations on 350 Clippers Community Courts - NBA.com

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L.A.'s public basketball courts serve hundreds of thousands annually, for basketball, other sports and as essential community gathering spaces Clippers Chairman Steve Ballmer, Mayor Eric Garcetti and City Councilman Herb Wesson opened the newest Clippers Community Courts at Obama Sports Center today

Los Angeles, CA – This afternoon at the newly-renovated Michelle and Barack Obama Sports Center, Clippers Chairman Steve Ballmer, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti and L.A. City Councilman Herb Wesson celebrated the opening of the newest Clippers Community Courts, the last of 350 public basketball courts renovated throughout L.A.'s City Parks system. This project was managed by Los Angeles Parks Foundation and logistics were overseen by the Department of Recreation and Parks thanks to a major gift from the Clippers and Ballmers in 2018.

“The City of L.A.'s population is almost 4M people, and 98% of them live within two miles of a Clippers Community Court. That means 3.9M people have access to these courts and all of the benefits that come with them. With our partners at the Los Angeles Parks Foundation and L.A.'s Department of Recreation and Parks, this is a proud achievement,” said Clippers Chairman Steve Ballmer. “Our dedicated team of city workers, contractors and staff, despite many obstacles, including a pandemic, completed this early. This project was a complete team effort.”

The Clippers and City of Los Angeles first embarked upon this project because they understood the impact that updated, safe places to play and gather would have on all economic levels and in all geographic areas of L.A. According to L.A. County's 2020 Census, 98.1% of all of L.A.'s population lives within a two-mile radius of a Clippers Community Court, and 76.7% lives within a one-mile radius.

“Here in Los Angeles, the Clippers are so much more than a basketball organization - they're an agent for social and economic change, and one of our strongest partners in our work to empower young Angelenos,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti. “The Community Courts Renovations embody everything that the Clippers stand for, and the 350 newly renovated courts are much needed improvements that will enhance the quality of people's lives, create new opportunities, and promote healthier communities.” “Here in Los Angeles, the Clippers are so much more than a basketball organization – they're an agent for social and economic change, and one of our strongest partners in our work to empower young Angelenos,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti. “The Community Courts Renovations embody everything that the Clippers stand for, and the 350 newly renovated courts are much needed improvements that will enhance the quality of people's lives, create new opportunities, and promote healthier communities.”

Since the City started renovations just four years ago, the 350 Clippers Community Courts have been used as everything from basketball courts to shelters, emergency child care centers and alternative learning sites during the pandemic. The newly-updated facilities will let all L.A. neighborhoods host the youth sports programming that the City will benefit from as part of LA 2028's investment in Los Angeles leading up to the 2028 Olympic games.

The Clippers Community Courts at the Michelle and Barack Obama Sports Center, formerly the Rancho Cienega Sports Complex, have played host to the Clippers' Late Night Hoops basketball program, which provides positive alternatives for young adults plus a job fair, since 2012. The Center was also one of the first nine to participate in the Jr. Clippers program 17 years ago, which brings youth basketball to kids across L.A. In addition to the renovated Clippers Community Courts, the Clippers have also given the Obama Sports Center a brand new Technology Lab, which features new computers, furniture and technology for a recording and photography studio, including a portable sound room, green screen, camera and musical equipment. The Tech Lab is an NBA Cares 75th Anniversary Legacy Project.

“I'm proud to have played a role in providing a state-of-the-art facility in the City of Los Angeles. Not only will our adults and seniors have access, but my heart is overjoyed to know that our kids will have the best of what this City has to offer. This center is their own personal Country Club! I want to thank the LA Clippers for being true partners in this endeavor. Their contribution to the technology center and world class basketball courts underscores their dedication to providing our kids with the chance to thrive, excel and travel as far as their imagination and abilities will take them,” said 10th District Councilmember, Herb Wesson. “I also want to applaud the Bureau of Engineering and the Department of Recreation & Parks. Each department understood how important this complex was to the community, and a huge shout out to my staff. And now that this center is complete, it's time for us to show off what we as a community have created.”

“This was the largest donation ever to the City of Los Angeles' parks system and it has transformed recreation centers, and been a point of pride, for nearly every neighborhood in the City,” said Carolyn Ramsay, Los Angeles Parks Foundation's Executive Director. “I have to thank my predecessor, Judith Kieffer, who developed the initiative with Clippers President of Business Operations Gillian Zucker and Denise Booth, Clippers Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer & Vice President of Community Relations and Player Programs. We also want to express our deep gratitude to Steve Ballmer whose visionary donation came from understanding the need for basketball courts as an essential focal point for every community.”

Ballmer, Garcetti, Wesson, Ramsay and other community partners cut the ribbon to officially open the Clippers Community Courts at the Michelle and Barack Obama Sports Center this afternoon. Photos and video from the ceremony are available HERE.

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How to Complete Destiny 2 Bound in Sorrow Week 6 Quests - DualShockers

City Councilman under fire after podcast co-host talks disparagingly about colleague - 13WHAM-TV

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Allen chosen Jacksonville Memorial Hospital colleague of the month - Jacksonville Journal-Courier

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Registered nurse Tiffany Allen is Jacksonville Memorial Hospital's Colleague of the Month for May.

Registered nurse Tiffany Allen is Jacksonville Memorial Hospital's Colleague of the Month for May.

Bre Linstromberg Copper/Memorial Health

Tiffany Allen has been named Jacksonville Memorial Hospital’s Colleague of the Month for May.

Allen is a registered nurse in the hospital’s ambulatory surgery department.

During a recent surge in patients hospitalized for COVID-19, Allen worked in the post-anesthesia care unit/COVID intensive care unit, where she was a valuable resource for her nurse and clinical staff colleagues, hospital officials said.

"As a nurse, I learn new things daily and I enjoy caring for patients, hearing their stories and learning from each and every one of them," said Allen, who has been with Jacksonville Memorial Hospital since 2014.

Outside of work, she said she enjoys home improvement projects, watching the St. Louis Cardinals, boating and spending time poolside with her husband and daughter.

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Monday, June 27, 2022

Volleyball announces complete 2022 schedule - University of Texas Athletics - TexasSports.com

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AUSTIN, Texas – Texas Volleyball has announced its complete 2022 schedule, featuring 13 home matches at Gregory Gymnasium. The schedule also features 16 total matches against teams from last season's NCAA Tournament field.

The Longhorns open the season with a pair of matches on the road against Ohio State, August 26-27. The Buckeyes advanced to the NCAA Regional Semifinal for the second-consecutive season in 2021.

Texas opens its home slate on August 31 against Minnesota, who made it to the NCAA Regional Final last season before losing to the eventual national champion Wisconsin. Last season the Longhorns defeated Minnesota, 3-1, at Maturi Pavilion.

The Longhorns face another marquee opponent on the road, taking on Stanford on Sept. 4 in Palo Alto, Calif.

Following the trip to Stanford, Texas plays its final four non-conference matches at home. The Longhorns host UC Davis, Denver, Houston and High Point before heading into Big 12 play.

The Longhorns will open Big 12 play on Sept. 21 at Kansas before returning to Gregory Gym for a match against Oklahoma on Sept. 24.

Texas won its fifth-straight Big 12 Championship in 2021 and advanced to the NCAA Regional Final forth 15th time in the last 16 seasons.

Times and television broadcast information for all Texas volleyball matches will be released at a later date.

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Equitrans to complete WV-VA Mountain Valley natgas pipe in 2023 - Reuters.com

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Pipes are seen at Dominion's Cove Point liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant on Maryland's Chesapeake Bay in this picture taken February 5, 2014. REUTERS/Tim Gardner/File Photo

June 27 (Reuters) - The joint venture building the Mountain Valley natural gas pipeline from West Virginia to Virginia said on Monday it still expects to complete the project in the second half of 2023 even though it asked regulators for four more years to complete the long-delayed project.

Mountain Valley - the only big gas pipe under construction in Appalachia - is one of several U.S. pipeline projects delayed by regulatory and legal fights with environmental and local groups that found problems with federal permits issued during President Donald Trump's administration. read more

Mountain Valley on Friday asked the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for the extension from October 2022 to October 2026 due to ongoing litigation and court remand proceedings related to several permits and authorizations.

In May, Equitrans Midstream (ETRN.N), the lead partner building the project, said it expected the pipe to enter service in the second half of 2023 at a cost of around $6.6 billion.

When Mountain Valley construction started in February 2018, Equitrans estimated the 303-mile (488-km), 2-billion-cubic-feet-per-day (bcfd) project would cost about $3.5 billion and enter service by late 2018.

Equitrans said the pipeline was "nearly 94%complete." read more

Several agencies need to reissue permits, including FERC, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Biological Opinion), U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management (Right-of-Way across Jefferson National Forest).

Many of those permits were vacated by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit - some more than once.

Last week, analysts at ClearView Partners said they expect federal agencies to finish their reviews by the end of 2022 with construction completion in early 2023.

Equitrans has a 47.8% ownership interest in Mountain Valley and will operate the pipeline.

Mountain Valley is owned by units of Equitrans, NextEra Energy (NEE.N), Consolidated Edison (ED.N), AltaGas (ALA.TO) and RGC Resources (RGCO.O).

Reporting by Scott DiSavino Editing by Chizu Nomiyama

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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City lawmaker Jose Peo shrugs off sexual remarks about colleague on podcast - Rochester City Newspaper

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Most episodes of “Politically Correcting with Jose Peo,” a weekly eponymous podcast hosted by the conservative-leaning Democratic member of the Rochester City Council, are the same: Peo and his co-hosts banter over beer about cancel culture, progressive politics, and “woke” ideals.

The show often meanders and has a trend toward middle-school humor that hinges on innuendo.

But a recent episode took a turn so vulgar against a sitting City Council member that it prompted the president of the body to get involved — although it was not immediately clear what action the president might take.

The episode, which was recorded and livestreamed on June 15, had been fairly typical until about an hour and 18 minutes in, when one of the co-hosts suggested that Peo’s colleague on the City Council, Mary Lupien, would have sex with him.

“I guarantee you, if the ginger went out with me on a date, I guarantee you she’d let me beat it up that same day,” the co-host, Lavelle Lewis, said, referring to Lupien, who has red hair, as “the ginger” and using a euphemism for intercourse.

“Absolutely would, I know for a fact she would,” he went on.

Lewis never invoked Lupien by name, but Peo made clear to whom Lewis was referring when he appeared to halfheartedly distance himself from the conversation by holding up a hand and saying while laughing, “Mary, I’m out of this.”

A few minutes later, as Lewis hesitated to take the crudeness further, Peo appeared to egg him on by calling him a “pussy.” Lewis caved and wondered aloud whether “she” would wear a facemask if he were to ejaculate on her face.

Lewis appeared to justify the baseness of the discussion by shouting, “We are just men having a conversation over drinks.”

Reached by phone, Lupien said she had heard the podcast and that she was distraught. She expressed her distress with a written statement.

“I’m deeply disappointed in my colleague,” Lupien wrote. “It’s a violation of my humanity to reduce me to a body part, to an act. It dishonors me both personally and professionally. Now, more than ever, we need to uphold the rights and dignity of women — especially those who have the courage to speak their mind.”

Council President Miguel Meléndez said he has been in touch with both Peo and Lupien and is currently reviewing next steps, but acknowledged being in uncharted territory and not knowing what they may be.

“I made Jose aware that we caught wind of it, heard it, and I told him, frankly, you can’t divorce your podcast from Council work, because you’re mentioning other councilmembers on it,” Meléndez said.

He said he hopes to foster some sort of “restorative process that will move us forward.”

“My goal is to fix this issue, and I don’t know what that means yet, I’ll be honest with you,” Meléndez said.

In a written comment, Peo advised Lupien to reach out to Lewis and resolve any issue between them. He also dismissed the idea that he did anything wrong.

“I explicitly stated I had no part in the conversation, as Mary and Lavelle have both exchanged words in the past, and I have a working relationship with both of them,” Peo wrote. “Ms. Lupien is perfectly capable of reaching out to Lavelle directly to express her feelings and squash any beef, instead of using her faction on social media, and now in local media, to try and censor a Black man from exercising his First Amendment right on my show."

Peo’s podcast is part of the We the People Podcast Network, a local podcast company perhaps best known for hosting “Kimberly’s Revolution” with Kimberly Ray. Ray was formerly half of the FM shock jock duo Kimberly and Beck, alongside Barry Beck. Ray and Beck were fired by Radio 95.1’s parent company iHeartMedia in 2020 after Ray made racist comments on the air.

The June 15 episode also featured moments in which the co-hosts appeared to mock County Executive Adam Bello as effeminate, and poked fun at City Councilmember Stanley Martin’s gender identity. Martin, a first-term councilmember, uses she/they pronouns.

This is not the first time Peo has faced criticism for incendiary remarks.

In 2020, Peo came under fire for accusing Black leaders of failing to speak out more forcefully against social gatherings in neighborhoods of color during the early weeks of the pandemic. Peo later apologized for his remarks.

Gino Fanelli is a CITY staff writer. He can be reached at (585) 775-9692 or gino@rochester-citynews.com.

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Fresno Councilman Drops Defamation Suit Against Colleague - gvwire.com

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This story has been updated.

Fresno City Council President Nelson Esparza announced Monday that he is dropping his defamation suit against fellow Councilman Garry Bredefeld, who has accused Esparza of attempting to extort the city attorney.

Esparza said he was withdrawing from the lawsuit to save the city the cost of defending Bredefeld and the cost of damages that Esparza said he would receive with a successful lawsuit.

“I love our city and will not sue the City of Fresno over my colleague’s defamatory remarks,” Esparza said in a news release. “His antics have already cost enough taxpayer dollars. For this reason, I am making the responsible decision to withdraw my suit so that we as a body can heal and move forward.”

Bredefeld did not have an immediate response but scheduled a 2 p.m. news conference at City Hall. At the news conference, he said Esparza’s stated goal to drop the defamation suit to save taxpayers’ dollars was “a joke and pathetic.”

Bredefeld: Esparza Wastes Public Money

If Esparza was interested in protecting taxpayers’ dollars, Bredefeld said, he wouldn’t have voted to approve a $55,000 pay raise for himself and other councilmembers; he wouldn’t have filed the defamation lawsuit; he wouldn’t have attempted to extort then-City Attorney Doug Sloan, requiring the city to embark on an expensive search for a new city attorney when Sloan quit to take a new job; and he wouldn’t have put more than $100,000 in charges on his city credit card for items that included a new council president logo and catered reception for the council president ($4,000 and $2,300), $1,700 for Grizzlies suite food catering, and $1,728 for a Tyler Maxwell mailer — in itself a possible violation of campaign finance rules.

Bredefeld said he plans to file a motion in court asking a judge to require Esparza to personally repay the legal costs incurred by the city for his defamation lawsuit. Bredefeld estimated those costs could total as much as $20,000.

As for whether Esparza could face criminal charges, Bredefeld said he and Councilman Mike Karbassi have talked to the Fresno County District Attorney’s Office, and he has spoken with the FBI.

“Let me just say that I believe there’s an active investigation going on, but I can’t comment any more than that,” he said.

Extortion Alleged

During a May 13 news conference, Bredefeld accused Esparza of attempting to extort Sloan in a meeting on April 22. During the meeting, Esparza allegedly told Sloan that he was to work for the council majority and that Esparza was “standing between you and you losing your job.”

Sloan, who now works for the city of Santa Monica, confirmed the conversation in an email to local news media later that night.

In a subsequent court filing in his defamation suit, Esparza provided an alternate version of the meeting he had with Sloan, which followed a council discussion over whether the City Attorney’s office was being “weaponized” by Bredefeld for partisan purposes. He said in the court filing that he had never suggested that Sloan only work for the council majority or to the exclusion of certain councilmembers.

Bredefeld later filed an anti-SLAPP motion to dismiss a lawsuit by claiming free speech protection. A hearing on that motion had been scheduled for Wednesday.

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Missoula PaddleHeads complete sweep of Great Falls, stretch win streak to seven games - 406mtsports.com

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Missoula PaddleHeads complete sweep of Great Falls, stretch win streak to seven games  406mtsports.com

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Palm Springs International ShortFest Announces 2022 Winners: Complete List - IndieWire

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The Palm Springs International ShortFest took place in California this weekend, honoring the best work in narrative, documentary, live action, and animated short films. $25,000 in cash prizes were given out to various winners, who were narrowed down from over 300 official selections. The top prize went to Sander Joon’s Estonian short film “Sierra,” a surreal animated film about a boy who turns himself into a tire in order to help his father win a race.

The festival’s Oscar-qualifying status means that winners in the Best Live Action Short, Best Documentary Short, Best Animated Short, and Best of the Festival categories may be eligible to submit their work to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for Oscar consideration this year.

Keep reading for the complete winners list, with synopses courtesy of the festival.

Greater Palm Springs CVB Best of the Festival Award

Winner: “Sierra” (Estonia), Directed by Sander Joon. A father and his son are losing the folkrace. In order to win, a boy turns himself into a car tire. Loosely inspired by the director’s childhood, Sierra pulls us into the surreal car racing world.

Best Animated Short

Winner: “The Cave” (South Korea), Directed by Kim Jinman, Chon Jiyoung. A boy longs for affection from his distant fisherman father. When he dies, the boy’s grief turns into an obsession with his father’s belongings. In an imaginary cave, he curses those relatives who took items of his late father’s. The curse begins to eat the boy’s soul…

Best Documentary Short

Winner: “The Sentence of Michael Thompson” (USA), Directed by Kyle Thrash, Haley Elizabeth Anderson. Michael Thompson is the longest-serving nonviolent offender in the history of Michigan. After 25 years, three appeals and two denied applications for clemency, it seems that Michael may finally have a chance at freedom.

Best Live Action Short Over 15 Minutes

Winner: “Further and Further Away” (Cambodia), Directed by Polen Ly. A young indigenous Bunong woman and her older brother spend one last day in their rural village in northeastern Cambodia, before an impending move to the capital city in search of a more prosperous life. While her brother is excited for the move, she feels a quiet desire to return to their long-gone village that was lost to the development of a nearby hydroelectric dam a few years earlier.

Best Live Action Short 15 Minutes and Under

Winner: “The Right Words” (France), Directed by Adrian Moyse Dullin. Kenza, 15, and her little brother Madhi, 13, regularly humiliate one another. On the bus, Kenza puts her naive and romantic little brother to the test: profess his love for Jada, a girl that Madhi loves but who does not know he exists.

Best International Short

Winner: “Sideral” (France/Brazil), Directed by Carlos Segundo. In Natal, the northeast of Brazil, the country is preparing to launch its first manned spaceship. A couple with two children lives near the space center. The husband is a mechanic, the wife a maid who dreams of other horizons.

Best U.S. Short

Winner: “Act of God” (USA), Directed by Spencer Cook, Parker Smith. Stuart, a disabled man, isn’t the most honest guy when it comes to asking for help. Total self-reliance is his goal, which is tough when you can’t get out of bed on your own.

Best Comedy Short

Winner: “The Diamond” (Sweden), Directed by Vedran Rupic. Stefan is lonely with a blinding ambition to make friends. One day he stumbles upon a diamond in the woods. Unable to reach it, a solution presents itself in the form of a smaller man.

Best LGBT+ Short

Winner: “High Jump” (Belgium), Directed by Lennert Madou. Otto lives in a remote village while his boyfriend, Casimir, a professional dancer, has been living thousands of miles away for work. From a distance, Otto finds comfort in his lover’s choreography and uses his own body to fight his longing.

Best Midnight Short

Winner: “Your Houseplants Are Screaming” (USA), Directed by Benjamin Roberds. Human houseplants are held captive by a giant plant creature. Confined to their pots, the houseplants struggle to comprehend the horror of being shelf ornaments in a grotesque hell house made of flesh, meat, muscle and bone.

Mozaik Bridging the Borders Award

Winner: “Freedom Swimmer” (Australia/France/UK/Hong Kong), Directed by Olivia Martin-McGuire. This hybrid, poetic documentary, interweaving hand-drawn animation and film, tells the tale of a grandfather’s perilous swim from China to Hong Kong during the Cultural Revolution while creating a parallel with his granddaughter’s participation in mass protests now.

Local Jury Award

Winner: “BABYBANGZ” (USA/UK), Directed by Juliana Kasumu. Anastasia Ebel, owner of the Babybangz hair salon in Mid-City, New Orleans, reflects on her continuing desire to cultivate spaces of intentional reflection for both herself and her local New Orleans community.

Vimeo Staff Pick Award

Winner: “Meantime” (USA), Directed by Michael T. Workman. After Tim’s work-related stroke leads to troubling signs of memory loss, his son Michael returns home to Montana. As they spend more time together than they have since Michael’s childhood, they reckon with Tim’s past..

Young Cineastes Award

Winner: “Lucky Fish” (USA), Directed by Emily May Jampel. Two Asian-American teenagers meet in the bathroom of a Chinese restaurant while having dinner with their families..

Shorties! Award

Winner: “Cat and Moth” (Canada/UK), Directed by India Barnardo. A fluffy white cat wants nothing more than to find the most comfortable spot in the universe, but little does she know someone else has their eye on it too.

Best Student Documentary Short

Winner: “La Prova” (Belgium), Directed by Toni Isabella Valenzi. In the south of Italy, Rosa and Peppe witness the passing of time as they grow old together and raise a pig.

Best Student Animated Short

Winner: “The Seine’s Tears” (France), Directed by Yanis Belaid, Eliott Benard, Nicolas Mayeur, Etienne Moulin, Hadrien Pinot, Lisa Vicente, Philippine Singer, Alice Letailleur. October 17, 1961, in the middle of the Algerian war, Algerian workers are demonstrating against the mandatory curfew imposed by the Paris police.

Best Student International Short

Winner: “Bug” (Israel), Directed by Bar Cohen. After not seeing her for four months, Alma’s father asks her to leave her baby sister with him without her mother’s knowledge. Alma is forced to choose between her mom and her dad.

Best Student U.S. Short

Winner: “Foreign Uncle” (USA/China), Directed by Sining Xiang. Sining brings his American boyfriend, Patrick, back to China when he goes to visit his family. Everyone’s attitude towards Patrick changes once Sining inadvertently comes out, except for his 7-year-old nephew’s, Naonao.

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Sunday, June 26, 2022

A 'near complete' mummified baby woolly mammoth was discovered in a Canadian gold field - CNN

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(CNN)They were looking for gold in the permafrost of Canada's Klondike. Instead, they discovered what Canadian experts say is the most complete mummified woolly mammoth found in North America.

Miners working in the Klondike gold fields discovered the frozen baby woolly mammoth on Tuesday in Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin traditional territory, according to a news release from the Yukon government.
Elders from the Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin, a First Nations group that has lived along the Yukon River for millennia, named the mammoth calf Nun cho ga, which means "big baby animal" in the Hän language.
Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in Chief Roberta Joseph called the discovery a "remarkable recovery for our First Nation" in the release.
"We look forward to collaborating with the Yukon government on the next steps in the process for moving forward with these remains in a way that honours our traditions, culture, and laws. We are thankful for the Elders who have been guiding us so far and the name they provided," Joseph said.
The baby is female and likely died during the ice age over 30,000 years ago, according to the release. While a partial mammoth calf was found in 1948 in Alaska, Nun cha go is the first near complete and best-preserved mummified woolly mammoth found in North America, the release
"It's amazing," said Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in Elder Peggy Kormendy in the news release. "It took my breath away when they removed the tarp. We must all treat it with respect."
Recovering the mummified calf required collaboration between Treadstone Mining, Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin and the government of Yukon, says the release.
"As an ice age palaeontologist, it has been one of my life long dreams to come face to face with a real woolly mammoth," said Yukon paleontologist Grant Zazula in the release. "That dream came true today. Nun cho ga is beautiful and one of the most incredible mummified ice age animals ever discovered in the world. I am excited to get to know her more."
Scientists believe woolly mammoths, who wandered North America alongside wild horses, cave lions and giant bison, went extinct as late as 4,000 years ago. As an adult, Nun cho ga could have grown as tall as 13 feet at the shoulder.
On Twitter, geomorphologist Dan Shugar described his own experience helping recover the mummified baby, and noted the "incredible" preservation of her toe nails, hide, hair, trunk and intestines.
"Being part of the recovery of Nun cho ga, the baby woolly mammoth found in the permafrost in the Klondike this week (on Solstice and Indigenous Peoples' Day!), was the most exciting scientific thing I have ever been part of, bar none," he wrote.

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2022 BET Awards: The Complete Winners List - Entertainment Tonight

Reimagined Discoveryland Ranch offers 'Oklahoma!'-style weddings, complete with storybook endings - Tulsa World

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The story of “Oklahoma!” the musical, based on Lynn Riggs’ 1931 play “Green Grow the Lilacs,” is pretty familiar to most people who’ve spent much time in Oklahoma the state.

Two parties, Laurey and Curly, have been sweet on each other for a good while, and then the romance begins to cool a bit. Then there’s some drama for good measure. But just when it looks like all hope is lost, love comes roaring back to win the day.

In a kind of poetic symmetry, it seems that a similar turn of fortune is playing out for Discoveryland — the Sand Springs venue that once was known as “The National Outdoor Home for Rodgers and Hammerstein’s ‘Oklahoma!’”

062922-ssl-discoveryland-p1

Discoveryland Ranch — a new wedding and event venue 5 miles west of Oklahoma 97 on 41st Street in Sand Springs — once hosted a wedding several nights each week via the musical "Oklahoma!"

For 36 years beginning in the mid-1970s, audiences from across the world came to Discoveryland’s outdoor amphitheater to be transported back to an Oklahoma just before statehood to watch the love of the farm girl and the cowboy triumph over evil — or at least as close to evil as rural Claremore could muster 116 years ago.

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And they did so in that uniquely Oklahoma environment, where the bugs in the trees sometimes sang as loud as the performers on stage and where the scorching summer sun that melted the traditional Discoveryland ice cream sundaes at 5 p.m. had cooled to a manageably warm summer evening by showtime at 8.

But alas, the love affair cooled. Audiences began to dwindle. The last performance came in 2011, a year of record-setting heat across the Sooner State that made outdoor events of any kind insufferable.

“The last show was kind of in the middle of the summer,” said Jason Shipman, who, with his wife, Kayla Shipman, now owns the renamed Discoveryland Ranch property. “The weather was blazing hot, and attendance was way down.

“Financially, they had been struggling for quite a while, and that was just kind of the nail in the coffin,” he said.

And there’s the drama, just as it was when Jud Fry crashed Laurey and Curly’s wedding, forcing Curly into a fight from which Curly alone walked away.

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The newly opened Discoveryland Ranch offers a 5,000-square-foot event center and a host of other amenities for weddings, private parties or corporate events.

But then, love won.

The territory officials ruled that Jud’s death by Curly’s hand was justifiable homicide. There would be no trial.

Laurey and Curly would start their new lives together as a married couple surrounded by hope and happiness.

Like the musical, the Shipmans believe Discoveryland Ranch will have a storybook ending. The couple bought the property in late 2019 and they are now operating it as a wedding, event and entertainment venue 5 miles west of Oklahoma 97 on 41st Street.

“It was in a terrible state of disrepair,” Jason Shipman said. “We hauled off 25 dump-truck loads of trash.”

Of the 525 total acres, only 35 to 40 acres have been developed so far, he said.

“We’re restoring the amphitheater and picnic pavilion,” he said. “There’s still a lot of work to do in the amphitheater.”

An event center is just under 5,000 square feet.

Shipman said they’ve booked about 10 or so weddings for this year, “and the rental fee gives complete use of any of the facilities we have,” including the new timber-frame pavilion.

“It’s very photogenic, and there’s lots of space to spread out,” he said.

“Also, I think we’re very cost-effective compared to other venues in the area. It’s kind of a canvas that people can paint however they want.

“I think the wedding ‘barn look’ is kind of overplayed, so maybe this is more the ‘Texas Hill Country' look.”

062922-ssl-discoveryland-p4

Jason and Kayla Shipman bought the property that formerly housed the Discoveryland outdoor amphitheater in 2019.

Shipman, who grew up in Prattville, owns Riverwood Custom Homes. Kayla Shipman is a veterinarian at McKinney Animal Hospital in Sand Springs.

But the Discoveryland venture is an entirely joint project for the couple, who have been married for 22 years.

“My wife’s a good dreamer, and I’m a ‘make-it-happen’ kind of guy,” Jason Shipman said.

Although the couple have been booking quite a few weddings and corporate or private events, reimagining the site as an entertainment venue isn’t off the table, either, he said.

“We’ve been hit up by several concert promoters, and that could be a good thing, but we’re going to go slowly because we want to do it right,” Shipman said.

“We get asked just about daily about ‘Oklahoma!’ We’re going to pursue everything we can to make something happen. It won’t be a full summer, but maybe we can do something.”

Whatever they do, though, they’re looking for happy endings.

“We’re heavily invested in the Sand Springs community,” Shipman said, “so we wanted to make this something to be proud of.”

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Saturday, June 25, 2022

Baby Woolly Mammoth From Klondike Most Complete Mummified Ice Age Animal Found In North America - Forbes

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On June 21, 2022, a near complete, mummified baby woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) was found at the Treadstone Mine in the Klondike gold fields within Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin Traditional Territory.

Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin Elders named the mammoth calf Nun cho ga, meaning “big baby animal” in the Hän language.

The Yukon has a world-renowned fossil record of ice age animals. In the permanently frozen soil, bones and mammoth tusks are safe from weathering and scavengers, but mummified remains with skin and hair are rarely unearthed.

Geologists from the Yukon Geological Survey and University of Calgary who recovered the frozen mammoth on site suggest that Nun cho ga died over 30,000 years ago and is an approximately one-month old female. The discovery of Nun cho ga marks the first near complete and best-preserved mummified woolly mammoth found in North America. A partial mammoth calf, named Effie, was found in 1948 at a gold mine in interior Alaska.

"The Yukon has always been an internationally renowned leader for ice age and Beringia research. We are thrilled about this significant discovery of a mummified woolly mammoth calf: Nun cho ga. Without strong partnerships between placer miners, Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin, and the Yukon government, discoveries like this could not happen," Minister of Tourism and Culture Ranj Pillai says.

This recovery could not have happened without the collaboration between Brian McCaughan of Treadstone Mining, Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin and the Government of Yukon. In the months to come, Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin and the Government of Yukon will work together to respectfully preserve and learn more about Nun cho ga and share these stories and information with the community of Dawson City, residents of the Yukon and the global scientific community.

"This is as a remarkable recovery for our First Nation, and we look forward to collaborating with the Yukon government on the next steps in the process for moving forward with these remains in a way that honours our traditions, culture, and laws. We are thankful for the Elders who have been guiding us so far and the name they provided. We are committed to respectfully handling Nun cho ga as she has chosen now to reveal herself to all of us," Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in Chief Roberta Joseph commenting the discovery.

Materials provided by the Government of Yukon 2022.

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Grotz: Saying goodbye to a colleague who answered challenges with a smile - The Delaware County Daily Times

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Before throwing cold water on the unrealistic expectations some fans have for the Eagles this year, here’s a tribute to the ultimate everyday teammate.

Several years ago, my life starting to unravel, or so I thought, I bumped into a colleague from work at the Jersey Shore. Joe Hart asked me how I was doing. I told him I’ve been better, which is not the thing you normally hear from someone coming off a vacation. He asked where I was staying. Always the victim, I told him nowhere.

Out of the goodness of his heart, no pun intended, Joe told me I was welcome to stay with him and his friend Patti at this little Rte. 47 motel about 45 minutes from the beaches. Joe was younger than me, the woman a couple years older.

It was an evening I’ll never forget as we all spoke for hours at several places and the conversations were so meaningful I pumped the brakes and listened. Insurmountable issues, I learned, were merely every day challenges.

That night was about connecting, and Joe Hart, the Delaware County Daily Times editor who passed away Tuesday from a stroke, could almost instantly do that and bond like no one I’ve known. He’s the guy that always picked up the phone when you called, answered the email promptly and above all, greeted you with a smile or a laugh so disarming you looked forward to receiving it. Joe was the guy you trusted unconditionally, and it chokes me up he’s gone.

Reading the testimonials, Joe was there for so many people in just his 40 years at the paper he couldn’t have had much time for himself. He was just 60 years old when he passed, a shame for anyone with so much to offer.

The Rte. 47 motel where we spoke is closed, the building sporting a for sale sign for years. Each time I pass, those memories return because like a lot of people who knew him, I’m truly fortunate enough to have a Joe Hart story.

• • •

Now, about those Eagles expectations …

Obviously, the Eagles are more talented on paper than the team that finished 9-8 last season and was thumped in the playoffs by the Bucs.

Receiver A.J. Brown alone would have gotten them to 10 wins last year. But let’s not forget what a struggle it was for the Eagles to squeeze into the postseason.

In the four-game win streak that clinched a playoff berth, the Eagles beat Washington and COVID-replacement quarterback Garrett Gilbert, the Giants and COVID-replacement quarterbacks Mike Glennon and Jake Fromm, and Washington with backup quarterback Taylor Heinicke by four points on a Rodney McLeod interception in the end zone with 24 ticks left. Gardner Minshew destroyed the Jets in the other win.

The additions of pass rusher Haason Reddick and defensive tackle Jordan Davis obviously will help the defense. The rest of the imports are low-risk signees that other teams didn’t want.

Cornerback James Bradberry is nowhere near as talented as Darius Slay, although you’d never know it from fanboys and aggregators raving about the Birds having their best set of starting cornerbacks since Lito Sheppard and Sheldon Brown (please, not even close).

The Eagles still are enormously reliant on quarterback Jalen Hurts, who hasn’t flashed the pure passing skills Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow, Tom Brady, Matthew Stafford and Jimmy Garoppolo did on the way to winning playoff games last year.

Brown will help and DeVonta Smith is the most talented player on the Eagles, bar none. If Hurts can exponentially improve his 61.3 percent completion accuracy (53.5 in the playoffs) and cut his total of nine interceptions almost in half, the Eagles will be a force.

If Hurts doesn’t you can almost count on clashes of egos among Brown, Smith and tight end Dallas Goedert, all of whom are playmakers worthy of the football.

That said, it will be an interesting season for an Eagles team that once again has limited the rugged offseason work to keep players healthy for the marathon season.

• • •

Last but not least, a heartfelt thanks to Ridley Park resident Zack Hill, the Senior Director of Communications with the Flyers who is retiring July 1.

Now in his 30th year with the Flyers, Hill made life covering the team, and prior to that the 76ers, more compelling by doing his skilled best to accommodate the players and the media. He appreciated the strong Delaware County interest in the Flyers, who have always had a caring fan base in Delaware County.

Hill got the job done by showing a sense of humor through good times and bad. You never knew when you’d get a text from Hill, awaiting a key player at a news conference or such, inquiring about the hole in the knee of your designer jeans or your lack of socks at the frigid WFC.

That put life in perspective and pretty much shattered the needless time spent worrying about making deadline. So did the horrible accident years ago Hill survived helping another motorist with a flat tire on the Girard Point Bridge.

From one old-timer to another not so old-timer, “is it me, Zack, is it me?”

Contact Bob Grotz at rgrotz@delcotimes.com; you can follow him on Twitter @bobgrotz or @DelcoSportsBob.

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