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Thursday, December 31, 2020

North Dakota man kicks in front door after getting no reply to Facebook friend request, police say - Duluth News Tribune

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WILLISTON, N.D. — A Williston, N.D., man is accused of kicking in the front door of a house after his ex-coworker did not reply to his Facebook friend request.

Caleb Burczyk, 29, pleaded not guilty to felony charges of burglary and terrorizing filed in Williams County District Court Tuesday, Dec. 29. Burczyk's attorney Jeff Nehring declined to comment on the case.

Police say Burczyk started sending aggressive Facebook messages to his ex-coworker on Dec. 24, according to an affidavit of probable cause. He threatened his ex-coworker's life and warned him that he was going to "come at" him if he did not accept his Facebook friend request, the affidavit stated.

"Accept my friend request or I'm going to murder you," Burczyk wrote in a message to his ex-coworker, according to the affidavit.

Police say Burczyk broke into the house of his ex-coworker's father on Dec. 26. Security footage shows a man kicking in the front door of the house and investigators later identified the man as Burczyk, the affidavit states.

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The ex-coworker later told police that he was scared for his and his family's well-being, according to the affidavit.

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Virginia middle schooler sends cards to those suffering from loneliness - WTOP

The World Health Organization has said social isolation can be as damaging to health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. The problem worsens as we get older.

Zoe Moser, a 12-year-old student at Bull Run Middle School in Gainesville, Virginia, knows from personal experience.

When she wasn’t able to visit her elderly cousin who lives in a nursing home in North Carolina, she got an idea for a new business called The Zoe Project.

She wanted to make a handmade card to show her cousin that she was thinking about her, so she did. Then other residents of the nursing home wanted cards too, so she sent them to others as well.

Moser said the cards sometimes have inspirational Bible verses, or words of encouragement to help lift a person’s spirits.

Moser said her church also stopped visiting the nursing home in her area, so she decided to send cards to residents she used to see.

She said she has expanded her business to make cards “for people who were incarcerated or people in nursing homes, people in jail, anyone I thought of, or anyone who felt forgotten.”

She says she has sent her cards to people in states including Virginia, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and California.

For more information on how you can take part in the project, check out her encouragement cards on Instagram under The Zoe Project.

Like WTOP on Facebook and follow @WTOP on Twitter to engage in conversation about this article and others.

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© 2020 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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Lady Raiders Open Conference Play Against Florida Atlantic - GoBlueRaiders.com

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. - The Middle Tennessee women's basketball team opens C-USA play with two games this weekend against Florida Atlantic at Murphy Center.
 
Middle Tennessee's Friday and Saturday matchup with Florida Atlantic can be seen on CUSA.tv. Also, fans are encouraged to tune into the following radio stations to hear the broadcast by Dick Palmer and Duane Hickey WGNS 1450 AM/100.5 FM/101.9 FM/TuneIn App.
 
Game 6 & 7: Middle Tennessee (2-3, 0-0 C-USA) vs. Florida Atlantic (2-2, 0-0 C-USA)
- Friday, Jan. 1, 2021 – 6:00 pm CST
- Saturday, Jan. 2, 2021 – 2:00 pm CST
- Murphy Center – Murfreesboro, Tenn.
 
About the Lady Raiders
- Middle Tennessee closed the non-conference portion of its schedule on Sunday, Dec. 20, with an 84-64 win over Lipscomb. The Lady Raiders were led by junior guard Anastasia Hayes who scored 35 points and grabbed eight rebounds. Deja Cage posted 22 points with six rebounds, while Alexis Whittington (11 points, 11 rebounds) earned the second double-double of her career.
- Anastasia Hayes leads the nation in scoring averaging 28.8 points per game. She has scored at least 25 points in every game this season.
- The Lady Raiders have had a balanced offensive attack this season. Middle Tennessee has four players averaging in double figures. Overall, the top five scorers all average at least 8.0 points per game.
- Middle Tennessee is 5-3 in C-USA openers under head coach Rick Insell.
 
All-Time vs. Florida Atlantic
- Middle Tennessee leads the all-time series with the Owls, 24-1. The only loss was a 73-70 decision on Feb. 21, 2009.
- Rick Insell is 24-1 vs. Florida Atlantic.
- MT is 13-0 vs. Florida Atlantic inside Murphy Center
- Middle Tennessee has a 19-game winning streak over the Owls
 
Scouting the Owls
- Last time out, Florida Atlantic defeated Florida Memorial 104-73 on Dec. 18. Iggy Allen led the team with 19 points.
- Iggy Allen (21.0 ppg) leads the Owls in scoring and ranks third in C-USA in scoring.
- The Owls have been relentless on the offensive glass this season as they are currently third in the country in offensive rebounds per game. 
- Florida Atlantic also enters this weekend's matchup ranked 13th nationally in rebounds per game (48.0).
- The Owls average 83.5 points per game while holding opponents to 78.8.
 
Follow Us
Be sure to follow the Lady Raiders @MT_WBB on Twitter, @mt_wbb on Instagram, and MTSU Women's Basketball on Facebook for news and updates regarding everything Lady Raiders basketball.
 
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Put port workers toward the front of the vaccine line - New York Daily News

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Unfortunately, our website is currently unavailable in most European countries. We are engaged on the issue and committed to looking at options that support our full range of digital offerings to the EU market. We continue to identify technical compliance solutions that will provide all readers with our award-winning journalism.

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New Year's Eve in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic – in pictures - The Guardian

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New Year's Eve in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic – in pictures  The Guardian

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Middle Valley Church Of God Has Services Sunday And Wednesday - The Chattanoogan

Middle Valley Church of God, at 1703 Thrasher Pike in Hixson, announces that it will meet as a congregation on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. in the church auditorium.   

All suggested CDC precautions including social separation, the availability of masks and gloves, and hand sanitizer will be made available, along with other needed precautions.  The auditorium and related rooms have been sanitized prior to each service. 

Attendees will have an opportunity to join with others in singing and worship.

Pastor Mitch McClure will encourage those attending with a sermon titled, 'There Are Tough Times Coming, Then Will Show Up.' 

Additionally, Middle Valley Church of God has resumed its mid-week Bible Study each Wednesday at 7 p.m.  Pastor Mitch McClure is presently leading a Bible Study that will take place in the church auditorium in order to observe proper social distancing.  The topic of the Bible Study will be 'Opportunity For Blessing In Your Life.' 

For additional information, please contact Pastor McClure at the church office, 843-1539.  All are welcome to participate.

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Middle Valley Church Of God Has Services Sunday And Wednesday - The Chattanoogan
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Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Elementary, middle schools can open classrooms starting Jan. 19 - Charleston Gazette-Mail

Declaring remote learning a failure and schools a safe place, Gov. Jim Justice is killing his already weakened color-coded school closing and reopening map.

He announced Wednesday that all elementary and middle schools will be allowed to reopen Jan. 19 for in-person instruction. Previously, his administration required counties coded orange or red to shutter schools to all but special education students. High schools in all but red counties also will be permitted to reopen Jan. 19, the governor said.

The map’s colors are based on the number of new daily COVID-19 cases or the percentage of positive tests in counties overall, not in schools alone. Justice has loosened the map’s restrictions several times. The map and color-coding system was inspired by a Harvard Global Health Institute map.

Earlier this month, Ashish Jha, the Brown University School of Public Health dean who helped develop that guidance, offered new recommendations in conjunction with Harvard experts and others.

“Where schools opened up again with mitigation measures in place, we saw no evidence that schools drive significant community spread,” Jha said in a news release. “With the right controls in place, schools can even maintain lower infection rates than the community.”

The new guidance says “schools should use metrics of community spread as general points of information, not on-off switches for closure and opening, and should focus their own attention on developing ways to measure any in-school transmission and the quality of their infection control regime.”

West Virginia has provided little statewide information on the quality of infection control in some areas, such as ventilation in schools.

“There’s no question that kids learn better in front of a teacher, but, again, we’re putting people at risk,” said Dale Lee, president of the West Virginia Education Association school workers union. “Not only our educators, but we’re putting our students, parents and grandparents at the possibility of risk.

“We’re going to contact our members, our people, our leaders. And I’ve already heard from many of them who are feeling frustrated. The numbers are higher than they’ve been throughout. And, for four months we’ve followed the map that said: ‘You’re red or orange: You’re not going back.’ Suddenly, we’re saying, ‘No, we were kidding; it’s really safe to go back.’”

Both he and Jay O’Neal, a Kanawha County teacher who’s part of the West Virginia United Caucus teachers group, noted that children are often asymptomatic. They aren’t routinely tested, making it difficult to know the degree of spread in schools.

“It feels a little bit crazy to me,” O’Neal said. “I mean, levels are at the highest they’ve ever been. We can assume, because of Christmas, they’re probably going to go higher, and so I’m just assuming, by Jan. 19, probably the levels will be higher than they are now.”

O’Neal said it is infuriating that the governor made the announcement at another online-only news conference, where he doesn’t allow reporters in the room.

“It seems like there’s two different definitions,” he said. “There’s safe for Jim Justice, and then there’s safe for everyone else.”

The return to in-person instruction will be for five-day weeks, the West Virginia Department of Education said.

“Special allowances will be given for four-day learning models in counties whose teachers are providing direct virtual-learning instruction to their own students,” the department said in a Wednesday news release.

Justice initially said Wednesday that schools would reopen Jan. 19, but then he said local control would be respected.

Even before the pandemic, state law provided for superintendents opting to close schools. State law says superintendents “shall ... close a school temporarily when conditions are detrimental to the health, safety or welfare of the pupils,” and “schools may be closed by proper authorities on account of the prevalence of contagious disease.”

But the education department, which has significant power independent of the governor, indicated in an email that it might take a different tack.

“We believe the inequities among students inherent to remote learning are so great that, without a health and safety justification, a move to county-wide remote learning would be a derogation of the right to a thorough and efficient education,” the agency said.

The department also defended schools as safe: “The data in both West Virginia and nationwide show that schools are safe, particular for younger learners in middle school and below.”

Until Jan. 19, all public schools will be remote only, education officials said. Kanawha County, the state’s most-populous district, announced earlier in the day that it would continue remote learning for at least next week.

“Families have the option to keep their children in virtual learning regardless of changes to in-person instruction,” the department’s news release said.

Referring to online learning, Justice said Wednesday during his news conference: “We’ve tried. We’ve tried really, really hard, but we all know, across the board, that we’re failing in that. We’re absolutely failing.”

While West Virginia has a documented dearth of broadband internet coverage and there has been anecdotal evidence of online learning problems, the education department said as recently as Dec. 8 that it hadn’t collected data on how students were performing in the fall.

On Wednesday, the governor and the department revealed a previously unshared statistic: a third of students have received failing grades in at least one core subject area, such as math or English. That information “was obtained through a snapshot of [West Virginia Education Information System] data,” the education department said.

Justice also announced Wednesday that, over the next two to three weeks, vaccines will be offered to all teachers and school service personnel, such as bus drivers and custodians, older than 50. Employees younger than 50 also will be vaccinated, Justice said, but he didn’t provide a timetable.

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Elementary, middle schools can open classrooms starting Jan. 19 - Charleston Gazette-Mail
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Middle Valley COG Has Services Sunday And Wednesday - The Chattanoogan

Middle Valley Church of God, at 1703 Thrasher Pike in Hixson, announces that it will meet as a congregation on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. in the church auditorium.   

All suggested CDC precautions including social separation, the availability of masks and gloves, and hand sanitizer will be made available, along with other needed precautions.  The auditorium and related rooms have been sanitized prior to each service. 

Attendees will have an opportunity to join with others in singing and worship.

Pastor Mitch McClure will encourage those attending with a sermon titled, 'There Are Tough Times Coming, Then Will Show Up.' 

Additionally, Middle Valley Church of God has resumed its mid-week Bible Study each Wednesday at 7 p.m.  Pastor Mitch McClure is presently leading a Bible Study that will take place in the church auditorium in order to observe proper social distancing.  The topic of the Bible Study will be 'Opportunity For Blessing In Your Life.' 

For additional information, please contact Pastor McClure at the church office, 843-1539.  All are welcome to participate.

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D-Law: It Doesn't Matter Who's In Front Of Us - DallasCowboys.com

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It's a fantastic point. The Cowboys undoubtedly haven't received much sympathy for playing the majority of their season without Dak Prescott, who fractured his ankle all the way back on Oct. 11. Style points also don't matter in the NFL, so long as you beat whoever's next on the schedule.

"It doesn't matter who's in front of us, we've got to keep chopping down wood to make it where we want to go," Lawrence said.

The streak should end on Sunday. Daniel Jones has battled ankle and hamstring injuries in the latter stages of the season, but he started in New York's loss to Baltimore last weekend and is on track to play against the Cowboys.

The Giants rank 30th in the NFL with 48 sacks allowed this season, and Jones has accounted for 43 of those. The second-year signal-caller has developed a reputation for holding onto the ball, as he also has 10 fumbled on the year to go along with all those sacks.

"He's still a young quarterback, has a lot to learn in the NFL," Lawrence said. "It's all about quarterbacks feeling safe and if their offensive line makes them feel safe enough to hold the ball for three or four seconds, so be it. But that's not the case here. You'll see on Sunday."

Regardless of the reason for the win streak, it has put the Cowboys squarely in position to accomplish something few would have seen as possible a month ago – win the NFC East, and secure the playoff berth that goes with it.

If the Cowboys can do that, after the season they've been through, they're not going to care about how it happened – or who has something critical to say about it.

"We had a rough start, but I feel like the guys came together strongly and we're playing awesome football right now," Lawrence said. "All we can do is keep playing awesome football and let everything else fall into place. We can't sit here and dwell on what's going on outside our football complex but getting better, period."

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Moultrie Middle's art teacher reflects on long career - Charleston Post Courier

Claire Teuber

Teuber celebrates her retirement with teachers and faculty at Moultrie Middle School in Mount Pleasant. 

Known as a jokester, life-long adventurer and talented art teacher whose class projects decorate the halls, Claire Teuber left her mark on Moultrie Middle School. As she entered retirement after almost 30 years, the teachers and faculty at Moultrie celebrated her retirement with a drive-thru party.

One of Teuber’s favorite projects to do with her students was a collaborative portrait. She would enlarge a photograph and give each student a section to draw and paint on a small square of plywood. The students wouldn’t know the subject of the portrait until all the pieces were put together. Teuber said throughout the process, she sometimes doubted whether it would turn out all right, but it eventually would and the whole class was very excited when a portrait finally came together.

Over the years, her students completed portraits of Malala Yousafzai, Clementa Pinckney, Chief Joseph, Teddy Roosevelt, Rosa Parks and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The students’ most recent portrait was of Teuber herself, a surprise for her retirement.

Claire Teuber

Claire Teuber’s students created a portrait of Teuber and her cat to celebrate her retirement.

After spending so many years with middle schoolers, Teuber has many memories and funny stories to tell. “The absurdity cracks me up,” she said.

She remembers two of her students, who never got along with each other, walked into her classroom one day. One of them shouted, “Something stinks,” and the other responded with “you stink” which, of course, bothered that student. She couldn’t help but laugh when she tried to explain to him that if she yelled that at the faculty meeting, she would probably receive the same response.

Another time, two young men were walking down the hallway wearing shorts; she said Mount Pleasant boys wear shorts all the time even in the freezing weather. One was messing with the other, and she asked what was going on and he said the other student told everyone he has a prosthetic leg, which clearly didn’t make sense. She said that was one of many crazy, odd things she had heard throughout the years.

“I know people always say they (middle schoolers) are a pain in the butt, but I think they’re a real treat. Don’t get me wrong, sometimes they will be a pain in the butt,” Teuber said.

She said there are moments where it’s easy to get frustrated with students’ behavior, but looking back over her career, the aspect that really stands out is how truly earnest her students were about what they were learning.

Because she has taught for so many years at Moultrie she sometimes runs into former students.

Claire Teuber

Claire Teuber covered in silly string at her retirement party. 

“I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been at the Harris Teeter or some place and some man will come up to me and say, ‘I was in your 8th grade art class and I just want to apologize,’” Teuber said.

Teuber recently moved to Brevard, North Carolina, but while she was still in Mount Pleasant, one of her neighbors was a former student who is now a mom with two kids. She still refused to call “Ms. Teuber” by her first name.

Two former students, Jessica Lamberson and Matthew Lee, are now teachers at Moultrie Middle.

Lamberson said Teuber is one of those teachers students never forget. “She was that teacher that became kind of like a family member while you were at school,” Lamberson said.

Lamberson has taught 7th grade science at Moultrie Middle for three years. When she returned to Moultrie as a teacher, she said Teuber made her “feel at home again.”

Teuber said Moultrie feels like a tight-knit family. Last December, when Teuber was diagnosed with breast cancer, she said the school community was extra helpful.

“They did everything but stand on their heads and they would have done that, too, if I’d ask them,” Teuber said. “They’re just really solid, true and loyal friends and I’m going to miss the heck out of them.”

Lynne Tart, a Spanish teacher at Moultrie for nine years, said she will miss eating lunch with Teuber, who she described as artistic and talented in many different ways.

Teuber visited Tart the day after her son was born to photograph her newborn baby. Now, Tart’s 8-year-old son retells many of Teuber’s jokes that she shared with him over the years.

“She will be missed, her spirit, her humor. We’re going to miss her,” Tart said.

From day one, Teuber has felt like the community at Moultrie has embraced her, even though she considers herself a “wild-card.”

“Instead of making me feel that I was the odd man out, they made me feel that my differentness was a special thing,” Teuber said. “They do that for kids all the time.”

Teuber is beginning the next phase of her life in a log cabin near Pisgah National Forest. She will be creating many projects of her own, including stain glass windows and woodcarving. One aspect she’ll miss is not having the occasional run-in with a student in Mount Pleasant. She said the atmosphere at Moultrie Middle School is “second to none.”

“It’s just a warm, welcoming place. I think the kids feel that,” Teuber said. “My hope for it is that it keeps going on like that.”

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High School Student Presents Book to Middle School Students - Spectrum News

UNION COUNTY, N.C -- In November, Spectrum News shared a story about a Union County High Schooler who decided to publish a book during the pandemic.

Since then, Thomas McDowell Jr. has sold over 50 copies of his book titled, "The Story Of Issac" In December he gave his first presentation to students at East Union Middle School.

“This is amazing,” he said. “It’s kind of a dream come true in a sense because one of my dreams was that one day this would be in the libraries around the world even though its only one library it’s a start.”

Alecia McClendon is a seventh grade English Language Arts teacher. She read the book over the summer and decided to incorporate it into her lesson plan this semester.

“The book it talks about a lot of issues that some people are not comfortable talking about like racism, social class, and things like that,” she said. “So, right now, kids are really opening up to it. They are being receptive to it and they are sharing their thoughts and ideas.”

McClendon’s students have been able to break down different elements from the book which is something McDowell is excited to see.

“I think a lot of kids really took that in,” he said. “Some people may not like what you do and they may not support what you do. They have a right to do that in a sense but you got to get those people out your life cause you’re never going to succeed in life if you have people holding you back.”

McDowell hopes he can get his book into the hands of more Union County students. Thanks to teachers like Mrs. McClendon, he’s slowly making that happen.

“When teachers are teaching it doesn’t have to be the same book over and over again, year after year,” she said. “It can be a different book because we want to get our kids to read and actually enjoy and become engaged and have a relationship with the book that will hopefully one day change their lives."

McDowell says he’s currently writing a sequel, and he’s working on creating an audio version of his book. You can learn more about his book and purchase a copy here.

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Honduran indigenous environmental activist killed in front of family - CNN

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Felix Vasquez, a defender of environmental and human rights, died on Saturday night after the attack in the village El Ocotal, in central Honduras.
A law enforcement spokesman told Reuters the killing was under investigation.
"Police authorities immediately decided to initiate a corresponding investigation... we hope to have an answer soon," police official Kevin Hernandez told journalists.
Honduras is one of the world's most dangerous countries for activists, with 14 land and environmental defenders killed last year, up from four people in 2018, according to data made available by advocacy group Global Witness.
Vasquez, a member of the indigenous Lenca community, which lives in the mountainous region near the border with El Salvador, had intended to run for Congress as a member of the opposition LIBRE party in 2021 elections.
He had filed complaints to national authorities starting in 2017 over alleged political persecution due to his work in environmental activism, according to the Coalition against Impunity (CCI), a non-government organization.
"The state is directly responsible for his murder due to its omissions in the face of the serious risks of which it was duly aware," the CCI said.
The Honduran government did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Vasquez's killing comes four years after the assassination of Lenca indigenous activist Berta Caceres, a veteran land rights defender who led a battle against a major dam on ancestral lands before she was shot to death at her home.

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Doug Pederson can lead an Eagles turnaround, if the front office lets him - Philadelphia Eagles Blog- ESPN - ESPN

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PHILADELPHIA -- Eagles coach Doug Pederson spoke with a renewed sense of confidence this week that stood in sharp contrast to the bleak state of affairs in Philadelphia.

The Eagles sit at 4-10-1, Pederson's offense ranks in the bottom third in the NFL in points per game (21.3) and passing yards (215.3 per game), and franchise quarterback Carson Wentz regressed from MVP-caliber to bottom-of-the-league bad on his watch. That's enough to warm any coach's chair.

But the Vince Lombardi Trophy in Pederson's home display case still glimmers and his recent résumé is filled with three trips to the postseason since 2016. He leaned on those merits as he shifted posture and sprang from a coach short on answers for much of the season to one full of them.

"Really my confidence lies in myself, that I know exactly how to get things fixed," said Pederson, who earlier Monday said he "fully expects" to return as coach in 2021. "We've won a lot of games around here. Been in the postseason three out of the five years I've been here and a championship and all that. I've seen it, I've done it."

He's right. For as bad as it has been in 2020, Pederson has a proven track record that shouldn't be dismissed after one down, unordinary season. He continues to command the loyalty of his players and his staff. He has earned a chance to turn things around.

In order for it to be a successful venture, though, the team brass needs to fight its instincts and empower Pederson more and themselves less.

Pederson's collaborative mindset is a big reason for the team's success during his tenure. He has embraced Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie's analytics-fueled approach to the game and weekly in-depth meetings with Lurie and general manager Howie Roseman to discuss all things football. Pederson has respected the line between coaching and personnel decisions, leaving Roseman and his staff to their expertise while focusing on his own.

But there's a fine line between collaborative and claustrophobic if the boundaries aren't properly respected.

The public stance is Pederson has final say on his coaching staff, but he did an about-face and fired offensive coordinator Mike Groh and receivers coach Carson Walch a day after he said they would return at the end of last season, aligning himself with his boss', ahem, recommendation.

Lurie wanted to add coaches with fresh ideas to revive a sagging offense and was involved in that search along with Roseman. Lurie was particularly fond of USC offensive coordinator Graham Harrell, a source said, but Philadelphia was unable to land him. The Eagles ultimately went without an offensive coordinator and hired Kyle Shanahan protégé Rich Scangarello as senior offensive assistant, Andrew Breiner as pass game analyst and Marty Mornhinweg as senior offensive consultant, and elevated quarterbacks coach Press Taylor to pass game coordinator. The mix struggled to mesh, no identity was formed on offense, and the many voices too frequently caused a cacophony for Pederson and Wentz.

Pederson's frustration this season has been evident, and some close to him suspect it is related in part to the front-office dynamics. That would add to what was described to ESPN as a growing frustration among some members of the Eagles' staff that their evaluation of players is not being weighed heavily enough in personnel decisions.

Pederson, 52, was asked Monday if he would like more say in player talent acquisition.

"I want to be a part of the evaluation process. I want to be a voice that's heard, and I want to have that collaborative communication with Howie and his staff and be a part of that process," Pederson said.

"I don't necessarily want to cross that line because it takes you away from doing your job as the head football coach. I like being on the football side of things as a former football player and obviously now a coach. That's where my passion lies. But yet, I want to be part of the solution. I want to help evaluate and help bring guys in here that can help us win."

However pure their intentions and wise their guidance, the perception of Roseman and Lurie encroaching on Pederson's territory and limiting his power has led some inside and outside the organization to believe Pederson is not being granted the level of respect and sway a Super Bowl winning coach needs and deserves.

Given how poorly things have gone on the field this season, it would be unsurprising if the inclination up top was to assume more control in an effort to get the ship righted if they decide to continue with Pederson as coach. But that would only further push the team in the wrong direction. What Pederson needs is the proper space to build out a staff in his vision. They have to trust in his ability to shepherd this team back to contender status, in his way, and ensure he is an equal partner.

"I know what it takes. Me personally, I've been in three Super Bowls, been on three Super Bowl teams, and I've seen exactly how it can be done," he said. "We've got to get that back."

If they can't grant Pederson that latitude, they might as well move on.

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Man shot, killed during confrontation with suspicious driver in front of his NW Side home, police say - KSAT San Antonio

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SAN ANTONIO – A 41-year-old man was shot and killed following a confrontation with a suspicious driver outside his home on the Northwest Side, the San Antonio Police Department said.

Officers were called just after 9 p.m. Tuesday to a home on Brentcove Street in the Finesilver Ranch subdivision after receiving word of gunshots being fired. The gated community is located inside Loop 1604 near Braun Road.

According to police, officers arrived to find the victim on the ground in front of his home with a gunshot wound. The man was pronounced dead at the scene.

Police said prior to the shooting the man had walked outside to talk on his phone when he noticed a suspicious truck driving in front of his house. The victim allegedly confronted the driver and there was a brief verbal altercation, police said.

SAPD said the assailant fired two shots at the victim and sped away. The shooter has not yet been found.

The victim’s name has not yet been released, pending notification to next of kin. Neighbors were notified to gather video surveillance of the shooting, police said.

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Ravens News 12/30: Strong Front and more - Baltimore Beatdown

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NFL overreactions, Week 16: Ravens’ offense not built to win Super Bowl - Brandon Mendoza

Ravens’ offense not built to win the Super Bowl

The Ravens rushed 40 times for 249 yards in their 27-13 win over the Giants in Week 16. It was the Ravens’ fifth game of at least 200 rush yards this season (most in the NFL) and their 38th consecutive game of at least 100 rush yards, which is tied with the 1935-39 Lions for the second-longest streak in NFL history. Only the 1974-77 Steelers had a longer streak (43 games).

In a league that has shifted from run-first to pass-heavy, it is impressive Baltimore has found so much regular-season success despite being the only team in the NFL to rush on more than 50 percent of its offensive plays in each of the last two campaigns.

Baltimore is running the ball on 54.5 percent of their offensive plays this season, a mark that 14 Super Bowl winners also hit during their roads to the Lombardi Trophy. However, 13 of those 14 teams won their titles in 1991 or earlier. The only outlier — the 2005 Steelers led by second-year QB Ben Roethlisberger. While the Ravens boast an NFL-best 177.8 rush yards per game, you have to go all the way back to the 1975 Steelers to find a team that rushed for at least 175 yards per game in the regular season and then won the Super Bowl.

Ravens’ defensive front returning to full strength at just the right time - Mike Preston

Buried under the Ravens’ avalanche of offensive production in recent weeks are the returns of Williams and Campbell to the starting lineup. Replacements Justin Madubuike, Justin Ellis and Broderick Washington performed well when the two veterans were out with injuries, but the Ravens need their top linemen if they want to get into the postseason and make a run.

“It’s a plus,” coach John Harbaugh said about the return of Campbell and Williams. “I thought Calais played well. It’s good to see him getting healthy again, and I think he’ll be even better as we go forward. Brandon is playing at a high level. [Starting defensive end] Derek Wolfe is playing at a high level. Madubuike had another really good game; he keeps getting better every single week.

“Justin Ellis is playing really well. Those guys all did a great job in the game. So, we have some depth in there. Certainly Calais, he’s one of the best ever. It’s great to have him back, and it makes a difference.”

Campbell can also collapse the pocket, which stops quarterbacks from stepping up to throw. Without any lanes in the middle, Jones became a much easier target for outside linebackers Matthew Judon, Pernell McPhee and Yannick Ngakoue.

2021 NFL Mock Draft: Justin Fields to Atlanta, Jaylen Waddle to Philadelphia, first-round WR to Green Bay - Austin Gayle

24. BALTIMORE RAVENS: WR RASHOD BATEMAN, MINNESOTA

Baltimore’s 2019 draft picks Marquise Brown and Miles Boykin haven’t lived up to expectations. Rookies James Proche and Devin Duvernay have been gadget players at best in 2020. Willie Snead IV is an afterthought in the offense and is expected to test free agent this offseason. Dez Bryant is 32 years old and nearly quit the team after testing positive for COVID-19. If Rashod Bateman, Rondale Moore or even Kadarius Toney is still on the board late in the first round, Baltimore might have to prioritize need and sprint the card in.

Why Ravens Will Take Care of Business This Time - John Eisenberg

The Bengals would love to play spoiler again, and no doubt, they’re capable. Although they’re only 4-10-1 this season, they’ve won two straight games and solidly thumped the Pittsburgh Steelers in Cincinnati two weeks ago.

“They’re playing their best football of the season, really, by far,” Ravens Head Coach John Harbaugh said Monday.

Nonetheless, I’d be extremely surprised if the Ravens didn’t take care of their business Sunday at Paul Brown Stadium.

Although the Bengals are feisty, the Ravens are favored by 11 points and have a long, long history of winning such games. Since they moved to Baltimore in 1996, they’re 41-0 in regular season games in which they’re double-digit favorites – quite a stat, huh?

With their playoff aspirations gone, the Bengals surely see Sunday’s game as their postseason. But it’s hard to envision them stopping the Ravens’ powerful ground game, which has dominated several stout rushing defenses recently with multiple extra blockers helping open holes for Jackson, J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards.

NFL Week 17 picks: Cowboys earn improbable postseason berth, Bears lose to Packers but still make playoffs - John Breech

Baltimore (10-5) at Cincinnati (4-10-1)

1 p.m. ET (CBS)

For the second time in three years, these two teams are meeting in Week 17 in a game the Ravens need to win to keep their playoffs hopes alive and I think we all remember what happened the last time the Ravens needed a Week 17 win against the Bengals.

The 2017 Bengals were a monstrous underdog — the Ravens were favored by eight — but they still managed to pull off the win. This week, the Bengals are also a monstrous underdog, so the planets could be aligning for another upset. The Bengals are playing their best football of the season on defense and actually look competent on offense, which could be an issue for Baltimore. Although I’m an admitted Bengals homer, I’m not going to pick them to win here, but I do think it will be a lot closer than people think.

The pick: Ravens 30-23 over Bengals

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Judge John Hodgman on Calling Yourself Middle-Aged - The New York Times

Blake writes: My mother thinks I’m too young to call myself middle-aged. I’m 32, well into the middle range of the average American male life span. My wife and I are expecting our second child. May I say I’m middle-aged?

I understand. If you, like me, were born at the mental age of 35, it’s a huge relief to reach that milestone and finally let loose the sexless, puttering weirdo who was always inside you. But those golden years don’t last. True middle age doesn’t happen until you deny you are middle-aged — when your kids start disappearing into their own adulthoods, so you grow a beard and wear hoodies because you’re still young! In some ways younger than ever! Don’t worry, those years are fun, too (except for everyone else). Then one day you’ll make a pun to a barista, and she will stare through you and say, “Nice dad joke,” and that is how you die. Or at least, it’s how I did.

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Equality Expected To Be Front And Center For New Administration: Here’s A Word Of Advice - Forbes

N.J. middle school teacher accused of sexually assaulting teen released ahead of trial - NJ.com

A middle school teacher accused of sexually assaulting a teen girl he lived with has been released from jail pending trial.

Harry Wyatt, 53, of Piscataway, was released following a Tuesday morning court hearing after being charged with sexual assault, criminal sexual contact and endangering the welfare of a child on Christmas Eve. Court records show Wyatt knew the victim personally and not through his role as a teacher.

Wyatt does not have a criminal record. As a condition of release, he cannot have any contact with the girl, or have any unsupervised contact with underage children, including students, Judge Colleen Flynn said.

He is a teacher at the Leonard V. Moore Middle School, which is part of the Roselle School District, the prosecutor’s office said.

In a statement sent to NJ Advance Media, superintendent Dr. Nathan L. Fisher declined to comment.

“The Roselle Board of Education has a strict policy of confidentiality regarding personnel matters, and in view of the fact that this issue is a personnel matter, I am unable to provide any additional information at this time,” he said. “Nevertheless, please rest assured that the District will cooperate with law enforcement if called upon to do so.”

Thank you for relying on us to provide the journalism you can trust. Please consider supporting NJ.com with a subscription.

Katie Kausch may be reached at kkausch@njadvancemedia.com. Tell us your coronavirus story or send a tip here.

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'Treasured' middle school teacher passes away after battle with COVID-19 - FOX Carolina

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'Treasured' middle school teacher passes away after battle with COVID-19  FOX Carolina

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Eight wooden soldiers in front of Mason City Hall are rotting. Local vets want to save them - Lansing State Journal

Why Biden's National Security Adviser Plans To Focus On The U.S. Middle Class - NPR

Jake Sullivan, President-elect Joe Biden's incoming national security adviser, gives remarks in Wilmington, Del., on Nov. 24. Carolyn Kaster/AP

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"We've reached a point where foreign policy is domestic policy, and domestic policy is foreign policy," incoming national security adviser Jake Sullivan told NPR over Zoom on Tuesday. "And the work that we do abroad fundamentally has to connect to making the lives of working people better, safer, fairer."

President-elect Joe Biden talked a lot about this close connection between domestic and foreign policy during the presidential primary, often using near-identical language as Sullivan's. And Biden wasn't alone among the Democratic presidential contenders. The call for closer ties between domestic policies and what's happening around the world has become an increasingly central theme of the party's foreign policy debates.

Sullivan has played a leading role in this reorientation. He worked as a top staffer to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the Obama administration, before later serving as then-Vice President Biden's national security adviser. Sullivan was a senior policy adviser to Clinton's 2016 campaign, and therefore had a front-row seat to her surprise loss to a candidate who ran on a nationalist and isolationist platform.

Since then, Sullivan has repeatedly written and spoken about the need to put America's middle class at the center of foreign policy debates and decision-making.

So, with just three weeks to go before Biden is sworn into office and Sullivan begins occupying a key role in shaping U.S. engagement abroad, I (virtually) sat down with him to discuss the reasons behind that focus, and what it might look like as the Biden administration begins implementing its policies.

Measuring impact on "ordinary Americans"

Sullivan has been frank about the fact that, as he says, the Obama administration didn't do enough to tie foreign initiatives to domestic concerns — particularly when it came to economic policies.

I asked Sullivan whether that lack of focus on the American middle class opened the door to Trump's nationalism.

"What produced Donald Trump was a broad amalgam of factors, and so I wouldn't point to any one thing," he said. "But I would say this — I believe that the fact that we did not elevate and center middle-class concerns in our foreign policy and national security meant that we were not delivering for the American people as well as we should have, that we can learn from that, and then we can do better as we go forward."

Looking forward, he sees the focus — along with a return to more engagement with global allies — as "a more decisive and sustained rebuttal to Trumpism, by showing that engagement in the world ... can deliver the kinds of tangible results — by protecting people from pandemics, reducing the worst effects of climate change, increasing the protection against the kinds of abuses we see from China and other economic actors. We can do these things."

"What Joe Biden is proposing, and what I am reinforcing as the national security adviser, is that every element of what we do in our foreign policy and national security ultimately has to be measured by the impact it has on working families, middle-class people, ordinary Americans here in the United States," Sullivan said.

Seeking leverage over China "the right way"

How will this affect policymaking? Sullivan pointed to China, and the way the Trump administration approached a trade war that escalated to aggressive tariffs.

"What were their negotiating priorities? What did they push for?" he asked, referring to the Trump administration. "Well, one of the things they pushed for was access for major U.S. financial institutions to do business in China. And the question I would pose is, what does that have to do with jobs and wages here in the United States, making it easier for the likes of JPMorgan or Goldman Sachs to, to be able to carry out financial activities in Beijing or Shanghai?"

Biden recently told the New York Times that he won't immediately revoke Trump's tariffs on China. I asked Sullivan whether that amounts to a concession that Trump's policies gave the U.S. leverage. Here's his response:

"Well, the president-elect has said from the beginning of this campaign that in order to get China to change its abuses, we do need to build up leverage. We just have to do it the right way, by investing in our sources of strength. So [Biden's] objection to Donald Trump was not trying to seek leverage against China. It was doing it in a way that actually hasn't produced results.

"And one of the major examples of that is that the United States has gone it alone in its trade fight with China, rather than rallying other like-minded democracies, other market economies that collectively comprise 50 to 60% of the world's economy, where if we got all of them lined up and went to China with a common agenda to say, 'We won't accept these subsidies, this intellectual property theft, this dumping,' we would be in a position to get China to either change its behavior, or we could collectively impose costs on China for not doing so."

Sullivan and other incoming Biden administration officials have repeatedly signaled they will pressure China on trade, human rights, intellectual property theft and other areas of disagreement — even as they seek to work alongside the fellow global power to confront climate change.

These areas, Sullivan said, are prime examples of how he and other Biden officials will view decisions through that middle-class framework.

"The United States is going to ensure, for example, that we have the kind of free and open Internet where people can engage in commerce and speak freely and not have to worry about surveillance by foreign authoritarians, or not have to worry that the businesses that they either work for, or purchase from, are having to change their practices in fundamental ways to conform to the authoritarian tendencies of other governments. Those are things that affect Americans," he said.

"You know, there was an example from [2019] of where China tried to basically censor the National Basketball Association, the NBA," he said.

Chinese authorities cracked down on the distribution of Houston Rockets games within the country's borders after the team's general manager expressed support for pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

"Now, that's not on the same scale and scope as COVID-19, not even in the same sport, let alone the same ballpark," Sullivan said. "But it's the kind of example of where, if we do not speak out on behalf of our values and our way of life, it gets chipped away at in ways that end up encumbering and having an impact on American families and American communities."

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