Justin Jefferson, T.J. Hockenson downplay contract extensions at Vikings training camp
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
It’s no secret that receiver Justin Jefferson and tight end T.J. Hockenson, two major stars on offense, are both in line to sign lucrative contract extensions with the Vikings at some point in the near future.Technically, the 24-year-old Jefferson has two years left on his rookie contract. But because he has been so dominant, it would benefit the Vikings to make him the NFL’s highest-paid receiver sooner rather than later Meanwhile, the 26-year-old Hockenson is in the final year of his rookie contract, so he’s probably looking for some sort of financial commitment soon, too.The biggest thing the Vikings have working in their favor is neither Jefferson nor Hockenson are holding the team’s feet to the fire at the moment. Both players downplayed any thoughts of a contract extension on Wednesday after wrapping up the first day of training camp at TCO Performance Center.“The contract is going to play itself out,” Jefferson said. “I’m just o...Minneapolis man sentenced for firing shots in Mall of America Nike store
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
A man who fired three shots during a fistfight inside the Mall of America’s Nike store last summer was sentenced Wednesday to three years in prison.No one was injured in the Aug. 4 shooting, but the gunfire sent mall visitors screaming and running for cover and forced some shoppers to shelter in place for more than 90 minutes. The mall reopened the next day with a beefed-up law enforcement presence.Shamar Alon Ramon Lark (Courtesy of the Bloomington Police Department)Shamar Alon Ramon Lark, 22, of Minneapolis, pleaded guilty last month to felony second-degree assault in connection with the shooting at the Bloomington mall. Two other felony gun charges — intentionally discharging a firearm endangering the safety of others and carrying a pistol in a public place without a permit — were dismissed as part of a plea agreement he reached with Hennepin County prosecutors six days before a trial was set to begin.According to the charges, a fight broke out between six people in t...Jamelle Bouie: What the Joe Manchin-No Labels fantasy gets wrong about America
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
For as long as Americans have had partisan political competition, they have hated partisanship itself.By his second term in office, in the mid-1790s, President George Washington faced organized political opponents in the form of Democratic-Republican societies that had spread throughout the country.“There was the Society for the Preservation of Liberty in Virginia, the Sons of St. Tammany and the Democratic Society in New York, the Constitutional Society in Boston, the Society of Political Inquiries, the German Republican Society and the Democratic Society of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, and similar groups scattered in all the states,” historian Susan Dunn notes in “Jefferson’s Second Revolution: The Election Crisis of 1800 and the Triumph of Republicanism.”In the wake of the Whiskey Rebellion of the early 1790s, Washington blamed these societies for “encouraging dissension and fomenting disorder,” as Dunn puts it. He accused them of spreading their “nefarious doctrines with a view...Jonathan David Farley: I’m a Harvard and Oxford educated mathematician, and I still needed — and need — affirmative action
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
When I was a graduate student at the University of Oxford, I met an English mathematician who told me that he had once visited Harvard, my alma mater. While there, he came across the files of two members of the hockey team, who, he said, had received scores of 400 on the SAT for high school students — the lowest scores possible. (Of course these students were white, since Black people don’t play hockey.) I would not have believed it if he had not told me that this was something he had seen with his own eyes. His story opened mine.The opponents of affirmative action know of such stories, but the only stories that bother them are the ones involving unqualified Black people. So it is a mistake to counter them by refuting their logic, since even they don’t believe what they’re saying. Like the hydra, as soon as we demolish one argument, they’ll invent another.For example, if the opponents of affirmative action really were so concerned with “discrimina...Noam N. Levey: Medical debt is making Americans angry. Doctors and hospitals ignore this at their peril
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
For Emily Boller, it was a $5,000 hospital bill for a simple case of pink eye that took four years to pay off. For Mary Curley, it was the threatening collection letters from a lab that arrived more than 2½ years later, just as her husband lost his job and the family was fighting to save their home.For Cory Day, it was a $1,000 fee he was charged at an emergency room outside Los Angeles, even though he only checked in and then left before being seen. “I feel like the hospital is a predator,” Day said. “This is a place that’s supposed to be looking after you.”The experience offered a stark lesson, he said: “Don’t trust the system.”Reporting on medical debt over the past two years, I’ve spent hundreds of hours on the telephone, in the living rooms, and at the kitchen tables of patients like Day, Curley, and Boller. They are among the 100 million people in America whom we found have been driven into debt by medical and dental bills....Jace Frederick: 3M Open features enough local connections to maybe, eventually become ‘our’ Open
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
The RBC Canadian Open is both a regular PGA Tour event on the schedule and the nation to the north’s national open.What a wild scene it was last month, when Canada’s Nick Taylor fended off Tommy Fleetwood in a playoff to become the first Canadian winner of the event in 69 years. National pride oozed not only out of Taylor, but his fellow countrymen in the field and spectators in the audience.That a regular PGA Tour stop could generate that type of pride, drama and emotion was a special sight to behold.The 3M Open will never quite be that.A state is not a nation. And Minnesota already has a state open, run every summer by the Minnesota Golf Association and Minnesota PGA. But this week’s field of 156 players at TPC Twin Cities features enough local connections that it’s not difficult to envision a scenario in which one of the “locals” is in position to contend in Sunday’s final round and receives a large backing from the crowd.Perhaps that is ...Harbour Point Gardens landlords appear in Troy City Court
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
TROY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- The Harbour Point Gardens saga enters a courtroom Wednesday morning as the landlords face scrutiny over safety at the apartments and how long it’s taken to fix the conditions that first forced tenants out.Now 34 days into an emergency evacuation from their apartments, several of the displaced Harbour Point Gardens tenants turning up to Troy City Court to attend the appearance in code enforcement court."There’s a lot of people that can’t be here because they’re working, so as a retiree, I have that time. So I’ll stand for the others," says Evarist Nicholas, who is still being temporarily housed at an area motel.Robert Howard, the regional general manager for Lexington Property Group, and Attorney Benjamin Neidl plead not guilty on behalf of the complex ownership company, "182 Delaware LLC". The Troy Department of Code Enforcement issued 12 tickets against the owners--seven for "failure to maintain a structure fit for human habitation" and to do with condemning ...Casey Williamson's mother devastated after convicted killer given stay of execution
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
ST. LOUIS – Wednesday marks the 21st anniversary of a little girl's disappearance and murder that gripped the St. Louis area for years. Casey Williamson’s killer, Johnny Johnson, was set to be executed next week for the crime, but received a federal stay of execution on Tuesday.Casey’s mother, Angie Wideman, spoke with FOX 2 about how her daughter's death has affected their entire family over the past two decades. The 6-year-old disappeared from a friend's Valley Park home on July 26, 2002, prompting a large search.Wideman and the entire community hoped and prayed the child would be found ok. Then the heartbreaking news that Casey had been found dead.Wideman says that day sometimes feels like it was forever ago, and sometimes it feels like it was just yesterday. Prior to the federal appeals court’s stay, Wideman had been emotionally preparing for Johnson’s execution.Wideman wants to be there to see Johnson pay for his crime. Johnson took Casey to an old, abandoned glass factory the ...Florissant mother, daughter recount flash flooding rescue
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
FLORISSANT, Mo. – It’s often said that seconds can mean the difference between life and death. A Florissant mother and her two daughters bore witness to that as their home quickly filled up with water during last year's surprise flash flooding.“The water was coming into my bedroom ... and it started coming in through the doorway,” Deborah Ford said. “I'm like, ‘Oh my God, what are we going to do?’”Heavy rainfall flooded much of Florissant and other parts of the region exactly one year ago, causing extensive damage to parts of north St. Louis County.Ford's doorbell camera recorded Florissant police officers encountering swift floodwaters as they jumped into action to help save her family.“He grabbed me, because I can’t swim. I'm afraid of water,” Ford said."They came in to get us out of here. They definitely risked their lives for us,” Donneisha Atkins, Ford’s daughter, said. “And I’m pretty sure it was unexpected for them. They put their pride to the side, a...Nonprofit in Wildwood asks for ice donations to keep horses cool amid heatwave
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:02:35 GMT
WILDWOOD, Mo. - The hot weather is affecting a local nonprofit organization that rescues horses and provides therapy to people with mental, physical, and psychological challenges.Afternoon rain and cloudy skies meant temperatures around the St. Louis region were in the upper 80s Wednesday. However, with temperatures of 100 degrees expected, the organization needs ice to keep 18 horses' body temperatures regulated.If humans can become overheated in hot weather, it stands to reason that these massive beasts can as well.On Wednesday afternoon, volunteers from the National Charity League served in Wildwood at the Equine Assisted Therapy. Schnucks shoppers may be eligible for compensation in lawsuit over alcohol prices “I saw that there was an opportunity to come out here today and bring ice to the horses," said Ella Cooper, a National Charity League volunteer. "I just thought that would be fun and interesting to learn about and do."Cooper and her friend Katie Hickman stopped by the no...Latest news
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