Saturday, 19 August 2017
Jose Mourinho backs Anthony Martial to improve for Manchester United as Tottenham links are put to bed
By Ngèo Mà Có Tình17:37Jose Mourinho backs Anthony Martial to improve for Manchester United as Tottenham links are put to bed
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Jose Mourinho backs Anthony Martial to improve for Manchester
United as Tottenham links are put to bed
JoseMourinho has backed AnthonyMartial to improve this season amid speculation that he could
leave Manchester United.
Tottenham, who were interested in Martial prior
to his move to Manchester, have been linked with the striker again this summer
after struggling to cement his place in the side last season.
The 21-year-old made a telling impact from the
bench in the club’s opening day victory over West Ham, scoring one and
assisting another at Old Trafford.
And Mourinho insists there’s more to come from
Martial this season.
·
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"I have faith in him," Mourinho told
reporters. "Probably the player that I was looking for was not a pure
winger because I have pure wingers.
"Probably the player I was looking for is a
player that allows me to play with three in the back and do the wing-back.
"Because as a pure attacking player,
Anthony is a good player.
"I believe he's one of the players that is
going to have a better season this season than the previous season. I believe.
"I look at some of my players and I am sure
that some of them will be better this season than they were last season, and
Anthony is that for sure."
Manchester United
currently sit top of the Premier League table, and face Swansea City in the first top flight fixture of the weekend.
Premier League: Manchester United will be wary of being complacent against Swansea City after strong start to season
By Ngèo Mà Có Tình17:33Premier League: Manchester United will be wary of being complacent against Swansea City after strong start to season
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Premier League: Manchester United will be wary of beingcomplacent against Swansea City after strong start to season
Swansea: Anthony Martial has warned Manchester
United not to get carried away by their impressive start to the Premier League
season as the leaders head to Swansea on Saturday.
An
emphatic 4-0 victory over West Ham in their opening game suggested United have
shaken off a tendency to draw matches they should be winning, putting them in
good spirits for the trip to south Wales.
United
were held to 15 league draws last season, more than any other team in the top
division, and one of them was against Swansea at Old Trafford in April.
Jose
Mourinho's side look much better equipped now to deal with sides who sit deep
and try to frustrate them; their attacking verve was too much for a defensively
minded Hammers side last Sunday.
The
British record £75 million ($96 million) fee paid to Everton for Romelu Lukaku
already looks like money well spent, with the Belgium striker scoring twice on
his league debut, while Nemanja Matic, a £40 million recruit from Chelsea, was
outstanding in midfield.
Mourinho's
men look well set to improve on last season's sixth place finish and the United
manager has even spoken of a title challenge this season.
He has
won the domestic title in his second season in each of his last five managerial
positions – at Porto, Chelsea twice, Inter Milan and Real Madrid.
With
Chelsea faltering at home to Burnley last weekend, Mourinho's hopes of marking
his second season at Old Trafford by winning the Premier League may just have
grown a little.
Not
that it's time to start dreaming of future glory just yet, according to United
striker Martial, who scored against West Ham after coming off the bench.
"As
a squad, we haven't really talked about specific aims for the season too much
so far, but the goal is to win as many titles as possible," he said.
Mourinho
does have long-term injuries to contend with; Ashley Young's hamstring problem
will keep him out until October, while defenders Luke Shaw and Marcos Rojo are
still some way off full fitness.
Mourinho
confirmed last week that he is in discussions to re-sign Zlatan Ibrahimovic,
but the former Paris Saint-Germain striker's cruciate knee ligament damage
still requires several more months of rehabilitation.
One
bonus for United is that they will not have to face the player who scored
Swansea's goal at Old Trafford last season after Gylfi Sigurdsson's drawn-out
transfer to Everton finally went through on Wednesday
Last
season's 15-goal top scorer Fernando Llorente could return for Swansea, having
completed his recovery from a broken arm, but midfielders Ki Sung-Yeung and
Nathan Dyer are still injured.
Paul
Clement, who guided Swansea to safety with a game to spare last season after
arriving at the club in January, plans to use the Sigurdsson money to bring in
up to three signings.
Published
Date: Aug 19, 2017 03:03 pm | Updated Date: Aug 19, 2017 03:20 pm
SOURCE: http://www.firstpost.com/sports/premier-league-manchester-united-will-be-vary-of-being-complacent-against-swansea-city-after-strong-start-to-season-3948475.html
Friday, 18 August 2017
Game of Thrones season 7 release date, spoilers, leaks, trailer and everything you need to know
By Ngèo Mà Có Tình23:26Game of Thrones season 7 release date, leaks, spoilers, trailer and everything you need to know
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Game of Thrones season 7 release date, spoilers, leaks, trailer and everything you need to know
You no longer know nothing
WARNING: This article contains spoilers for Game of Thrones season seven. Obvs.Game of Thrones season 7 is officially underway, but new plot teasers and developments continue to surface... and there's already much speculation about the show's future.
Is the end in sight? From teasers to story leaks to theories, here's everything you need to know.Game of Thrones season 7 release date: When's it on?Season 7 premiered simultaneously on Sunday night, July 16 on at 9pm ET on HBO in the US and at 2am on Monday, July 17 on Sky Atlantic in the UK.
Each week, if you can't stomach the thought of staying up so late, there's always the repeat viewing later in the day at the more manageable time of 9pm to look forward to. You can also watch it on demand any time after 2am.If you don't want to stump up for the full Sky package, you can try a NowTV Entertainment Pass, which gives you access to the show (and loads of others) on all your devices. It's currently available for a two-weekfree trial (it's £6.99 a month afterwards and £7.99 from 15 August), so you can watch the first two episodes for nothing at all if you time it right.
"We're starting a bit later because at the end of this season, 'Winter is here' – and that means that sunny weather doesn't really serve our purposes any more," showrunners David Benioff and Dan Weiss previously confirmed.
Related: How to watch Game of Thrones season 7premiere FREE – what time is it on TV?
"So we kind of pushed everything down the line, so we could get some grim grey weather even in the sunnier places that we shoot."Makes sense... not that it helps to soothe our broken hearts. We'll be getting a bumper-length premiere running to 59 minutes and season finale lasting at least a whopping 81 minutes, maybe closer to 90, to make up for the long wait.
It's looking like we could be in for another long wait after that, too, with the eighth and final season possibly delayed until 2019. "[Benioff and Weiss] have to write the episodes and figure out the production schedule," HBO President Casey Bloys said. "We'll have a better sense of that once they get further into the writing."
"We honestly don't know yet [when the final episodes will air]," Benioff admitted. "There's been a lot of back and forth about air dates. That's a long way off from being settled."
Filming wrapped on season 7 in February – with Emilia Clarke having already completed work on the "mindblower" new season. To give us a taste, here's a first-look teaser: featuring the first dialogue from season 7 courtesy of Jon Snow, it hints at a huge battle ahead between the living and the undead White Walkers.
"The same thing is coming for all of us. There is only one war that matters – the great war… AND IT IS HERE."
Atlas V launches TDRS-M data relay satellite for NASA
Atlas V launches TDRS-M data relay satellite for NASA
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A
United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket roared off the pad with NASA’s
newest communications spacecraft, Tracking and Data Relay Satellite M (TDRS-M).
Liftoff took place at 8:29 a.m. EDT (12:29 GMT) Aug. 18, 2017.
The launch occurred
about 26 minutes into a 40-minute window due to an issue detected on the
vehicle’s Centaur upper stage engine, the RL10C. Thermal conditioning took a
bit longer than planned. The pre-chill eventually took place, clearing the way
for a successful liftoff and eventual satellite deployment.
image:
http://www.spaceflightinsider.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/12142-nasa_atlas_v_tdrsm-michael_howard-655x437.jpg
NASA’s TDRS-M spacecraft
was rolled out to Canaveral’s Space Launch Complex 41 on Aug. 16, 2017. Photo
Credit: Mike Howard / SpaceFlight Insider
Weather for the launch
was nearly perfect. In the hours before liftoff, the 45th Weather Squadron had
predicted a 90 percent chance of favorable conditions. The only concern was the
potential for thick clouds. However, those never materialized. Additionally an
offshore anvil cloud stayed just far enough away to not be a problem.
Once the countdown finally reached zero,
the 191-foot (58-meter) tall Atlas V, which was in the 401 configuration
(four-meter fairing, zero solid rocket boosters, and a single engine Centaur
upper stage), rose into the Florida skies away from Space Launch Complex 41
atop a column of flame produced by the first stage’s RD-180 engine.
Just under 1.5 minutes
into flight, the vehicle passed Mach 1, the speed of sound. Some three minutes
later, the Common Core Booster first stage finished consuming its rocket grade
kerosene and liquid oxygen propellant. At 4 minutes, 8 seconds after leaving
Cape Canaveral, the booster separated with the upper stage and fell away.
About 10 seconds later,
the Centaur upper stage’s RL10C engine ignited to continue powering toward
orbit. Consuming liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen, the engine burned for
almost 14 minutes before shutting down as planned. During that time, at 4
minutes, 26 seconds into flight, the payload fairing jettisoned, revealing
TDRS-M to the vacuum of space.
About 18 minutes after
launch, the Centaur upper stage with TDRS-M on top was in a parking orbit.
There, the duo coasted for about 90 minutes before the RL10C ignited again for
about a minute to place the satellite into a geostationary transfer orbit of
about 2,882 miles by 22,237 miles (4,638 kilometers by 35,787 kilometers)
inclined 26.2 degrees from the equator.
TDRS-M separated from
Centaur at about 1 hour, 53 minutes into flight. It will use its onboard
propellant to finish the job of circularizing its orbit into a geostationary
orbit where it will reside with nine other TDRS satellites, seven of which are
active. Two are in storage orbits.
The TDRS system is the set of
geostationary orbiting satellites NASA uses to communicate with its array of
low-Earth orbiting spacecraft, and with U.S. scientific facilities in
Antarctica.
TDRSS is essential to
maintaining continuous communications with important NASA spacecraft, including
the International Space Station and the Hubble Space Telescope. TDRS-M is the
latest addition to this constellation and completes the third generation of
TDRS satellites.
image:
http://www.spaceflightinsider.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/12272-nasa_atlas_v_tdrsm-vikash_mahadeo-655x436.jpg
Photo Credit: Vikash
Mahadeo / SpaceFlight Insider
“ULA uses the TDRS
system as a primary means of receiving and distributing launch vehicle
telemetry data during every flight. In fact, the TDRS-K and TDRS-L spacecraft,
launched by ULA in 2013 and 2014 tracked today’s launch” said Laura Maginnis,
ULA vice president of Government Satellite Launch, in a news release. “We are
absolutely honored to have delivered this core NASA capability and critical
national resource for our country.”
The launch of TDRS-M was
delayed from Aug. 3, 2017, when a July accident during the satellite’s
check-out damaged the spacecraft’s Omni S-band antenna. Boeing, the
spacecraft’s manufacturer, replaced the antenna and resolved an unrelated
damage incident caused by static electricity discharge.
After the repairs, NASA
expected to launch on Aug. 20, but managed to get an earlier launch date of
Aug. 18 with a 40-minute window opening at 8:03 a.m. EDT (12:03 GMT).
The TDRS-M satellite was
encapsulated in its payload fairing and delivered to the Vertical Integration
Facility on Aug. 9. The Atlas V rocket was rolled out to its launch pad on
its Mobile Launch Platform on Aug. 16.
NASA has not yet begun
acquiring a fourth generation of TDRSS spacecraft, but is planning a test bed
satellite for laser communications for launch in 2019. The Laser Communication
Relay Demonstration will launch alongside other payloads on a host satellite
and will demonstrate the ability to relay a communications laser from a
spacecraft to a ground station. The satellite is being developed at Goddard
Space Flight Center, which also develops the TDRSS constellation.
Today’s flight was the
120th ULA mission and the 72nd Atlas V launch. In particular, it was the 37th
flight of the 401 configuration. This was the third TRDS satellite launched by
ULA.
The next Atlas V launch
is currently targeting early September from Vandenberg Air Force Base. The
mission, NROL-42, will send a classified payload into orbit for the National
Reconnaissance Office. The rocket will fly in the 541 configuration, meaning it
will have a five-meter fairing, four solid rocket motors and a single engine
Centaur upper stage.
SOURCE: (http://www.spaceflightinsider.com/organizations/ula/atlas-v-launches-tdrs-m-data-relay-satellite-nasa/)
Sherwin-Williams, Sở giao dịch chứng khoán New York
Louisiana (LPX) Holding Boosted by Quantitative Investment Management Llc; Sherwin Williams Co (SHW) Stock Price Rose While Lombard Odier Asset Management Usa Has Raised Holding
August 18, 2017 - By Vivian Park
Quantitative
Investment Management Llc increased its stake in Louisiana (LPX) by 104.07%
based on its latest 2016Q4 regulatory filing with the SEC. Quantitative
Investment Management Llc bought 35,800 shares as the company’s stock declined
7.61% while stock markets rallied. The hedge fund held 70,200 shares of the
forest products company at the end of 2016Q4, valued at $1.33M, up from 34,400
at the end of the previous reported quarter. Quantitative Investment Management
Llc who had been investing in Louisiana for a number of months, seems to be
bullish on the $3.43 billion market cap company. The stock decreased 1.45% or
$0.35 during the last trading session, reaching $23.72. About shares traded.
Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (NYSE:LPX) has risen 29.07% since August 18, 2016
and is uptrending. It has outperformed by 12.37% the S&P500.
Lombard
Odier Asset Management Usa Corp increased its stake in Sherwin Williams Co
(SHW) by 112.28% based on its latest 2016Q4 regulatory filing with the SEC.
Lombard Odier Asset Management Usa Corp bought 20,095 shares as the company’s
stock rose 6.75% with the market. The institutional investor held 37,993 shares
of the building materials company at the end of 2016Q4, valued at $10.21M, up
from 17,898 at the end of the previous reported quarter. Lombard Odier Asset
Management Usa Corp who had been investing in Sherwin Williams Co for a number
of months, seems to be bullish on the $30.78B market cap company. The stock
decreased 1.16% or $3.87 during the last trading session, reaching $329.56.
About shares traded. Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW) has risen 15.27% since
August 18, 2016 and is uptrending. It has underperformed by 1.43% the
S&P500.
Lombard
Odier Asset Management Usa Corp, which manages about $3.79 billion and $683.66
million US Long portfolio, decreased its stake in Callon Pete Co Del (NYSE:CPE)
by 39,756 shares to 232,229 shares, valued at $3.57 million in 2016Q4, according
to the filing. It also reduced its holding in Summit Matls Inc by 419,433
shares in the quarter, leaving it with 230,567 shares, and cut its stake in
Pieris Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Since
May 3, 2017, it had 0 insider purchases, and 4 insider sales for $8.18 million
activity. KROPF SUSAN J sold $677,860 worth of stock. Another trade for 10,500
shares valued at $3.52M was sold by Davisson Robert J. Baxter Joel D. also sold
$1.84M worth of Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW) on Monday, May 15.
Investors
sentiment decreased to 0.95 in Q4 2016. Its down 0.15, from 1.1 in 2016Q3. It
turned negative, as 64 investors sold SHW shares while 237 reduced holdings. 86
funds opened positions while 200 raised stakes. 66.23 million shares or 0.25%
less from 66.39 million shares in 2016Q3 were reported. Exxonmobil Inv Inc Tx
holds 18,709 shares or 0.11% of its portfolio. Hbk Investments Limited
Partnership holds 36,646 shares. Hudson Bay Capital Mgmt Ltd Partnership has
invested 0.04% in Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW). Moreover, Gilder Gagnon Howe
& Com Limited Liability Corporation has 0.01% invested in Sherwin-Williams
Co (NYSE:SHW). 45,711 were reported by Raub Brock Mgmt Limited Partnership.
Chartist Ca stated it has 237,967 shares. 21,200 are held by Gabelli Funds Ltd.
The Illinois-based First Midwest National Bank & Trust Trust Division has
invested 0.19% in Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW). East Coast Asset Limited,
Massachusetts-based fund reported 1,575 shares. Alpha Windward Limited reported
815 shares. Hilltop Hldg Inc owns 1,250 shares. Gideon Capital Advsr Inc
invested in 969 shares. Bp Public Limited Co accumulated 4,000 shares. Central
Commercial Bank & Tru has invested 0.06% in Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW).
Brown Advisory has invested 0.02% of its portfolio in Sherwin-Williams Co
(NYSE:SHW).
More
recent Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW) news were published by:
Crainscleveland.com which released: “Sherwin-Williams declines as consumer
paint demand fizzles” on July 21, 2017. Also Seekingalpha.com published the
news titled: “Sherwin-Williams: Strong Q2 Thanks To Newly Acquired Valspar” on
July 23, 2017. Nasdaq.com‘s news article titled: “Sherwin-Williams Becomes
Oversold” with publication date: August 01, 2017 was also an interesting one.
Among
21 analysts covering Sherwin-Williams Company (NYSE:SHW), 14 have Buy
rating, 0 Sell and 7 Hold. Therefore 67% are positive. Sherwin-Williams Company
had 36 analyst reports since July 22, 2015 according to SRatingsIntel. The firm
has “Buy” rating by Northcoast given on Wednesday, July 22. On Tuesday, April 4
the stock rating was upgraded by KeyBanc Capital Markets to “Overweight”. The
stock of Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW) has “Buy” rating given on Friday, July
21 by Credit Suisse. On Tuesday, June 13 the stock rating was upgraded by
Longbow to “Buy”. The stock of Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW) earned “Buy”
rating by Longbow on Wednesday, March 16. Citigroup initiated it with “Buy”
rating and $410 target in Friday, June 23 report. The stock of Sherwin-Williams
Co (NYSE:SHW) earned “Outperform” rating by RBC Capital Markets on Friday,
October 30. RBC Capital Markets maintained it with “Buy” rating and $39000
target in Thursday, July 13 report. Seaport Global downgraded the stock to
“Neutral” rating in Monday, July 11 report. The firm earned “Outperform” rating
on Friday, January 29 by RBC Capital Markets.
Investors
sentiment increased to 1.3 in Q4 2016. Its up 0.07, from 1.23 in 2016Q3. It is
positive, as 24 investors sold LPX shares while 66 reduced holdings. 42 funds
opened positions while 75 raised stakes. 128.36 million shares or 3.91% less
from 133.59 million shares in 2016Q3 were reported. Blackrock owns 0% invested
in Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (NYSE:LPX) for 66,207 shares. Nomura Inc
reported 26,265 shares or 0% of all its holdings. Aqr Capital Mgmt Ltd Liability
Com invested in 40,062 shares or 0% of the stock. Retirement System Of Alabama
holds 183,662 shares or 0.02% of its portfolio. Ubs Asset Mngmt Americas has
80,034 shares for 0% of their portfolio. Tennessee-based First Mercantile Tru
has invested 0.07% in Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (NYSE:LPX). Numeric Invsts
Limited Liability Com stated it has 569,600 shares. Jpmorgan Chase has invested
0% of its portfolio in Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (NYSE:LPX). California
Employees Retirement Systems accumulated 0.01% or 309,200 shares. Oakbrook
Investments Ltd Liability Company holds 0.01% or 11,800 shares. Hotchkis &
Wiley Capital Management Ltd Liability Co reported 0.01% of its portfolio in
Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (NYSE:LPX). Gendell Jeffrey L holds 30,474
shares. Parametric Port Ltd Liability Com reported 508,721 shares or 0.01% of
all its holdings. Oregon Pub Employees Retirement Fund has invested 0.02% in
Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (NYSE:LPX). Gam Holding Ag holds 10,000 shares or
0% of its portfolio.
Among
8 analysts covering Louisiana-Pacific (NYSE:LPX), 3 have Buy
rating, 1 Sell and 4 Hold. Therefore 38% are positive. Louisiana-Pacific had 18
analyst reports since August 26, 2015 according to SRatingsIntel. The rating
was upgraded by RBC Capital Markets on Friday, September 4 to “Outperform”. The
firm has “Buy” rating by RBC Capital Markets given on Wednesday, April 19. The
company was downgraded on Wednesday, April 12 by Buckingham Research. The firm
has “Buy” rating given on Friday, October 14 by Vertical Research. On
Wednesday, July 26 the stock rating was maintained by BMO Capital Markets with
“Hold”. The stock has “Top Pick” rating by RBC Capital Markets on Thursday,
February 9. RBC Capital Markets maintained Louisiana-Pacific Corporation
(NYSE:LPX) on Sunday, July 30 with “Buy” rating. On Wednesday, April 12 the
stock rating was downgraded by Vertical Research to “Hold”. As per Thursday,
June 22, the company rating was maintained by BMO Capital Markets. The rating
was downgraded by Bank of America on Wednesday, December 7 to “Underperform”.
More
recent Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (NYSE:LPX) news were published by:
Marketwired.com which released: “International Barrier Enters Agreement to
Combine with Louisiana-Pacific …” on July 31, 2017. Also Nasdaq.com published
the news titled: “Louisiana-Pacific Unveils LP SmartSide Perfection Shingle” on
August 16, 2017. Seekingalpha.com‘s news article titled: “Louisiana-Pacific
Corporation’s (LPX) CEO Brad Southern on Q2 2017 Results …” with publication
date: August 01, 2017 was also an interesting one.
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Taney statue removed from Md. state house grounds overnight
Taney statue removed from Md. state house grounds overnight
Workers dismantled a statue of Supreme Court Justice Roger B. Taney outside the Maryland State House in Annapolis, Md.
Workers dismantled a 145-year-old statue of Supreme Court
Justice Roger B. Taney outside the Maryland State House shortly after midnight
Friday, the latest ripple effect from last weekend’s deadly violence at a rally
of white supremacists in Charlottesville.
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) said his revulsion at what
happened in Charlottesville — at a demonstration purportedly in defense of a
statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee — prompted him to change his mind
about the Taney statute and push for its removal, an act long sought by civil
rights groups.
The State House Trust board voted Wednesday to remove the
memorial to Taney, a former chief justice who defended slavery in the court’s
1857 Dred Scott decision. Taney’s ruling said blacks, whether slaves or not,
could never be U.S. citizens.
Police blocked off the streets around the State House complex
Thursday evening. A crane and two flatbed trucks arrived shortly after
midnight, and a crew soon began the process of removing the memorial from its
base, with more than two dozen bystanders looking on, mostly local residents
who figured the road closure must have been a sign that the monument would be
coming down soon.
Some witnesses commented that Taney’s likeness, gazing slightly
down, appeared to be bowing its head in shame as workers pulled straps around
his frame.ew Photos
“It’s just a bad statue overall,” said Robb Tufts, 43, of
Annapolis. “He’s all hunched over like Ebenezer Scrooge . . . we deserve to celebrate the heroes of Maryland, not the
villains of history.”
As the crane’s arm started extending toward the monument shortly
after 1 a.m., sprinklers erupted on the State House lawn, sending crew members
scrambling and briefly disrupting their work, as though Taney was making a last
stand atop his perch.
After work resumed, the crane lifted the statue and maneuvered
it to a flatbed truck, where the memorial was wrapped in a tarp and driven away
around 2:20 a.m.
Hogan’s spokesman, Doug Mayer, said the monument would be placed
in an undisclosed state storage facility. The perch remained on the lawn,
covered by a wooden box.
A different statue of Taney and three Confederate memorials in
Baltimore were taken down under cover of darkness early Wednesday.
President Trump, who has made conflicting statements about who
is to blame for the violence in Charlottesville, has decried the removal of
monuments, saying on Thursday that the “history and culture of our great
country” was “being ripped apart.”
Cookie Washington, an African American who turned 59 on Friday
and has lived in Annapolis since childhood, said seeing the demise of Taney
statue “felt like a birthday treat.”
“With what’s happening in this country lately, it doesn’t feel
welcoming for everyone,” she said. “I’m glad to see this.”
The removal of the memorial in Annapolis came hours after
Maryland Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D-Calvert) lashed out at
the governor for not holding a public hearing on the issue before the State
House Trust board voted.
In a letter to Hogan, Miller defended Taney’s legacy and long
record of government service, and said the memorial should stay put to help
educate people about the past. He also criticized Hogan for pushing a vote on
the matter “outside the public eye.”
Hogan is chairman of the State House Trust board, which voted by
email — its traditional method — to remove the Taney statue and make plans for
storing or relocating it. Miller, House Speaker Michael E. Busch (D-Anne
Arundel) and Maryland Historical Trust chair Charles L. Edson are also members
of the panel.
Mayer said Thursday that Miller is “completely within his right
to continue defending Roger Taney,” adding that Hogan and the Senate leader
would have to “agree to disagree.”
Busch
called for removal of the statue on Monday, saying that “the time has come for
Taney to come down.” A spokeswoman for his office said the speaker’s decision
was influenced by Saturday’s deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville and the racially motivated 2015
mass shooting at an African American church in Charleston, S.C.
Hogan announced on Tuesday that he would take action to remove the monument, saying
it’s “the right thing to do.”
Busch,
Edson and Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford (R), who serves as Hogan’s designee on the
board, voted infavor of taking down the monument. Miller did not vote.
The Senate president said in his letter that voting by email was
“just plain wrong” and that the matter was “of such consequence that the
transparency of a public meeting and public conversation should have occurred.”
Miller, who is known to be an avid reader of history, credited
the former chief justice for “anti-slavery words and actions,” saying that
“unlike George Washington who freed his slaves upon his death, Taney freed his
slaves early in his life.”
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He also noted Taney’s many roles in public service, including
state lawmaker, Maryland attorney general, U.S. secretary of war, U.S. attorney
general and U.S. treasury secretary.
The state placed the Taney statue on the lawn of the capital
complex in 1872. Since then, it has added interpretive plaques explaining the
controversy over his divisive Dred Scott opinion and erected a statue of
Thurgood Marshall, a Baltimore native who was the first African American
Supreme Court justice, on the opposite side of the State House.
The trust also agreed last year to erect statues in the State
House honoring abolitionists Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass.
Benjamin Jealous, the former NAACP president who is seeking the
Democratic nomination to challenge Hogan in 2018, said Monday that he would
push to take down all Confederate statues in the state if he is elected.
Responding to news of Miller’s letter, Jealous said he was
“disappointed to hear there would be any opposition to this issue.” State
leaders, he said, “should be setting the right example for our children, who
should know that when the time came, we had the courage to say there’s no room
for symbols of hate in our state.”
Read more:
source: (https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/md-senate-president-slams-hogan-for-fast-vote-to-remove-taney-statue/2017/08/17/41833b12-8390-11e7-ab27-1a21a8e006ab_story.html?utm_term=.260074d4470c)
Chris Long on anthem protest support: 'Time for people that look like me' to step up
By Ngèo Mà Có Tình21:14Chris Long on anthem protest support: 'Time for people that look like me' to step up
No comments:
Chris Long on anthem protest support: 'Time for people that look like me' to step up
Chris Long (56) supports Malcolm Jenkins (27) during his protest Thursday night. (AP)More
The Philadelphia
Eagles’ Malcolm Jenkins has been offering his own statement during the pregame
playing of the national anthem, raising a fist to protest racial injustice.
Teammate Chris Long joined Jenkins on Thursday night, placing a hand on
Jenkins’ shoulder. It was a small gesture in the moment, but it could have
significant impact on the ongoing anthem debate.
Why? Very simple.
Jenkins, like Colin Kaepernick and most — if not all — the anthem protesters in
the NFL to date, is black. Long is white.
“I think it’s a good
time for people that look like me to be here for people that are fighting for
equality,” Long said after the game. A graduate of the University of
Virginia who considers Charlottesville his home, Long spoke out in no uncertain
terms about President Trump’s “both sides” equivocation in the wake of last
weekend’s fatal riots.
“It’s been a hard week
for everybody,” he continued. “I think it’s not just a hard week for
someone being from Charlottesville. It’s a tough week for America. I’ve heard a
lot of people say, ‘You need white athletes to get involved in the anthem
protest.’ I’ve said before that I’ll never kneel for an anthem because the flag
means something different to everybody in this country, but I support my
peers.”
Long then directly
addressed the critics he knew would be rising out of the comment sections and
sports-radio call-ins of the world: “If you don’t see why you need allies for
people that are fighting for equality right now, I don’t think you’ll ever see
it,” he said. “My thing is, Malcolm’s a leader and I’m here to show support as
a white athlete.”
Jenkins is one of a
growing number of athletes taking a strong stand against racial injustice,
using the nonviolent symbolism of silent anthem protest to draw attention to
their cause. Kaepernick, of course, is out of a job at the moment; whether
that’s because of his political protest or his lack of skills is a matter of
some dispute. But Jenkins, a highly regarded safety, ranked 90th on the NFL’s
Top 100 list earlier this year. Like fellow protester Michael Bennett of
Seattle and (possibly) Marshawn Lynch of
Oakland, he’s not so easy to brush aside from a football perspective.
“Stepping out in front
of all those people and the obvious attention that is going to be brought to it
is not an easy thing to do,” Jenkins said after the game. “I think looking at
the atmosphere last year compared to this year, so much has transpired, and in
a negative direction, that I think the stakes are almost higher now.”
“When you get in the position on a platform
where you get a chance to give back and create opportunities for others, that’s
where I want my legacy to be,” Bennett told YahooSports earlier this week. “I want to create opportunities for
others. I want to raise the bar about what we can do as athletes and people.”
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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports and the author of EARNHARDT NATION, on sale now at Amazon or wherever books are sold. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter or on Facebook.
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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports and the author of EARNHARDT NATION, on sale now at Amazon or wherever books are sold. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter or on Facebook.
“Logan Lucky” and “Marjorie Prime”
“Logan Lucky” and “Marjorie Prime”
Adam Driver and Channing Tatum star in Steven Soderbergh’s heist movie.
The good
news about the new Steven Soderbergh film, “Logan Lucky,” is that, although
it’s about a heist, it contains not a single person named Ocean. George Clooney
in a well-pressed suit, his bons mots tumbling like dice, is never going to be
an eyesore, but even the proudest Las Vegan will have tired of the spectacle by
now. That explains why Soderbergh, who directed “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001) and its
two sequels, begins the latest movie with so sweaty a statement of intent:
Channing Tatum, busy with his tools, under the hood of a truck. Sitting nearby
is his young daughter, Sadie (Farrah Mackenzie), who passes him the wrenches
that he needs. Caesars Palace seems a long way off.
Tatum plays Jimmy Logan, who lives in Boone County, West Virginia,
and drives an excavator at the mine. As befits a lover of country music, he has
an ex-wife named Bobbie Jo (Katie Holmes), who wears a fringed white top and
rhinestone-studded jeans, and a sister, Mellie (Riley Keough), who works as a
hairdresser. Stopping by Mellie’s salon, Jimmy admits to one of her clients
that he doesn’t like cell phones. “You one of those Unabomber types?” she asks.
Jimmy also has a brother, Clyde (Adam Driver), who lost half an arm in Iraq.
Despite being, in physical terms, the least plausible siblings since Danny
DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger, in “Twins” (1988), Jimmy and Clyde are
conjoined in mental sloth. In the words of one onlooker, “You Logans must be as
simpleminded as people say.”
Yet the movie doesn’t always bear out that verdict. For one thing,
the brothers show a casual proficiency that borders on cool. Clyde pours
drinks, with a conjurer’s grace, at a local bar; Jimmy takes off his hard hat
and skims it backhanded into a storage locker, yards away, like 007 tossing his
trilby onto a hat stand. Then there’s the plan. In Jimmy’s kitchen is what
Clyde describes as “a robbery to-do list,” the idea being to steal a cornucopia
of cash from the Charlotte Motor Speedway, in Concord, North Carolina—or, more
precisely, to suck the cash from a vault beneath the track, through a network
of tubes. The boys enlist the aid of a safe-blower named Joe Bang (Daniel
Craig), the only hitch being that he’s in jail. No problem. Clyde gets himself
arrested, by driving briskly through the window of a store, and thrown into the
same prison. He and Joe must break out for the day, hook up with Jimmy, pull
off the theft, and break back in without being missed. All of which sounds
wacky enough, but is it simpleminded?
That question meanders through “Logan Lucky.” What we have here is
a filmmaker of proven liberal credentials (a few years ago, he made a two-part,
four-and-a-half-hour bio-pic of Che Guevara) addressing himself to a patch of
America where those credentials don’t mean jack. Such is the merriment of the
new movie, and so spirited is its pace, that you barely notice the wavering of
the tone. On the one hand, Soderbergh and his screenwriter, Rebecca Blunt, set
up various characters as ninepins—folks like Joe’s brothers, Fish and Sam,
played so broadly by Jack Quaid and Brian Gleeson, and with such raw
redneckery, that they’re begging to be knocked down. Roll up, the movie cries,
watch the hicks toss toilet seats instead of horseshoes! Listen to them mangle
the lingo of the modern age! (“All the Twitters, I know ’em.” “I looked it upon the Google.”) Soderbergh reinforces this overkill with leering closeups;
we’re crotch-side with Joe as he does pushups in his cell, and Clyde slides a
cocktail so near to the lens that he might as well be offering the cameraman a
swig.
On the other hand, check out race day—which, wouldn’t you know it,
happens to be heist day, too. Some of the speedway footage was shot live during
the Coca-Cola 600, one of the premier Nascar events of the year, and Soderbergh
doesn’t just give us the hullabaloo that surrounds it. He gives it to us
straight. As LeAnn Rimes sings “America the Beautiful” and fighter jets fly in
formation above, all the spectators (barring Joe Bang, who needs to stayincognito) bare their heads, and you can feel the film following suit, as you
can when Sadie, shimmering with hairspray and fake tan, carols a John Denver
song at a beauty pageant, with her audience crooning along. What Soderbergh
implies at such moments is that for countless Americans this is the life, and
that you mock it at your peril. And yet, elsewhere, the movie points and
snorts. When historians come to tell the tale of the Trumpian epoch, and of
confused cultural attitudes toward the heartland, “Logan Lucky” will be part of
the evidence.
Then again, many people will leave the cinema with nothing more
profound—or more enjoyable—than the image of Daniel Craig, adorned with a
garish blond buzz cut that makes his blue eyes madder than ever. In jail, he
wears a traditional inmate’s uniform, with black and white stripes. Asked by
Clyde and Jimmy how it’s going when they pay a visit, Joe replies, “I’m sitting on
the other side of the table wearing a onesie. How d’you think it’s going?” The
laugh that met this line when I saw the movie seemed to unlock its good cheer,
and so liberated does Craig appear, on a hollering vacation from his
stern-visaged duties as James Bond, that his mood exalts the whole enterprise.
“I’m about to get nekkid,” Joe says, sprawled on the rear seat of a Mustang
V-8, and he takes great joy in cooking up explosives from gummy bears and
bleach. Soderbergh refuses to get wonkish about the crime; he drops in a few
rum details—for what possible purpose, you wonder, is Mellie painting live
cockroaches with nail polish?—and stands back, as if to say, Let the games
begin.
Once they’re done, we get a late twist that I failed to
understand, plus some wary sleuthing from an F.B.I. agent (Hilary Swank).
Neither addition is necessary, but, then, “Logan Lucky” delights in
superfluities; it’s more about the trimmings than the meat. Not all of them
succeed. Seth MacFarlane isn’t much funnier or more believable as a British
racing driver than Don Cheadle was as a British thief in the “Ocean’s” saga;
whatever strange fixation Soderbergh has on Cockneys, or fake Cockneys, should
be laid to rest. But Katherine Waterston does wonders with a brief role as
Sylvia, a woman who went to high school with Jimmy and wound up as a medic. In
a few minutes, she gives you a hint of the startling ways in which lives can
peel apart and come together again, and she sets Jimmy thinking. He and Clyde
used to fear a Logan family curse, but their exploits here—not the plunder
alone but the patent elixir of hope, savvy, and silliness—break the spell.
If you
are feeling especially dumb, or hungover, steer clear of “Marjorie Prime.”
Michael Almereyda’s film is so subtly smart, and veiled in such layers of
suggestion, that you need to be on your toes from the beginning.
In a beautiful house by the sea, an elderly woman, Marjorie (Lois
Smith), talks to a more youthful man, named Walter (Jon Hamm). He sits erect on
the couch, unflappable and neatly groomed, like Don Draper crossed with a
robot; there’s something not quite right about him, and it’s only at the end of
the scene that the something becomes clear. As Marjorie brushes past him, she
walks through his shoes as if they weren’t there at all. And
they’re not. Walter is a Prime—a computer program, providing a 3-D facsimile of
a deceased person. In this case, the true Walter was Marjorie’s late husband,
and she has chosen to have him return as an earlier self, thus setting an
immediate moral test: if you could summon up those you have loved and lost, at
what stage would you capture them? In their heyday? Or as they were in yours?
Almereyda’s movie, adapted from a stage play by Jordan Harrison,
is technically science fiction, picking through the thorny issues of identity
that grew in “Blade Runner,” yet it looks only lightly futuristic. We never
find out how you order a Prime, or whether it’s just the well-to-do who can
afford one; will the poor continue to mourn as before? At one point, we gather
that Marjorie herself must have passed away, because it’s a reboot of her—not
younger, but more kempt—who chats with her daughter, the sorrowful Tess (GeenaDavis), politely asking for details of the departed Marjorie, so as to become a
more accurate copy. (“I’m vain?” “A little.” “That’s helpful.”) Then we have
Tess’s husband, Jon (Tim Robbins), fond of his Scotch; we wonder whether he, in
turn, will bring forth a substitute Tess, once she is no more, and whether, like
all the humans in the movie, he will be tempted to arrange for an improved or
happier model. “Marjorie Prime” could use a trim, as some of the exchanges
linger too long, but Mica Levi, who worked on “Under the Skin” (2013) and
“Jackie” (2016), contributes another searching score, and the film, with its
coastal haze and its fickle gusts of rain, is likely to lodge in your memory.
Or, as it will soon be called, your hard drive. ♦