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How Democrats ‘debanked’ political opponents in shocking attack on American freedomsTwo Former Blue Jackets Have Funny Social Media Exchange

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Listings appear on a space-available basis, free for nonprofits and at the discretion of The Gazette. Email information at least two weeks in advance: listings@gazette.com . The Blue Zones Challenge Part 1 — Sponsored by Unity Spiritual Center with Dan Buettner, with practical steps to enhance a long life, living well through exploration of health, happiness, movement, nutrition and social connection, noon-1 p.m. Jan. 12 free; 6-8 p.m. Jan. 15-Feb. 5, $100, 1945 Mesa Road; fitfocus@qwestoffice.net , 719-313-0329. Children's Coping Skills with TESSA — For ages 5-12 with an adult, with mindful hike and indoor presentation, 2-4 p.m. Jan. 24, Fountain Creek Nature Center, 320 Peppergrass Lane, Fountain, donations accepted. Registration: 719-520-6745, elpasocountynaturecenters.com . Jackson Creek Senior Living — 16601 Jackson Creek Parkway, Monument. Registration: 719-725-1331, jacksoncreekseniorliving.com/events . • Parkinson's Exercise Empowerment, 10:30-11:30 a.m., fourth Thursdays through Sept. 25. National Alliance on Mental Illness — Exact location will be given upon registration. Registration: 719-473-8477. • NAMI Family-to-Family Program, for family, friends and partners of adults with mental health conditions, 6-8:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Jan. 15-March 5, Southwest, Colorado Springs. • NAMI Peer-to-Peer Program, for adults with mental illness, 6-8 p.m. Mondays, Jan. 27-March 17, Southeast Colorado Springs. Reclaim & Renew: A Burnout Recovery Retreat — For adults in high-stress fields such as health care, therapy and caregiving, March 7-9, La Foret Conference & Retreat Center, 6145 Shoup Road, $150 and up. Financial aid available. Registration: laforet.org/events . Teaching Sign Language to People with Disabilities — 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Jan. 30, Cheyenne Village, 6275 Lehman Drive, 440. Registration: tinyurl.com/mpzyacza .

WINNIPEG - Mike O’Shea stood in front of reporters Friday and kept his cool while answering questions about the Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ 41-24 Grey Cup loss to the Toronto Argonauts last weekend. The head coach was asked if he made a mistake keeping injured quarterback Zach Collaros in the game, why star running back Brady Oliveira didn’t get the ball more and whether a flawed game plan led to Winnipeg’s third consecutive championship loss. “As an entire team, we didn’t have our best game,” O’Shea said in his end-of-the-season press conference. “We didn’t lack effort. We didn’t lack desire. “We didn’t have our best game as an entire team. Three phases. Coaches — everybody. Me especially.” O’Shea admitted he missed calling a timeout in the fourth quarter when there were only 11 Blue Bombers on the field instead of 12. “I don’t get the count over the headset as quickly as I probably need to, we can’t count. As I’m seeing a guy come off, that’s the right time for that timeout that I should have used,” O’Shea said. He also said he should have used a challenge flag earlier on a play he didn’t identify, and checked on his players more during the game. But hindsight wouldn’t change his decision to put Collaros back in the game after the index finger on his throwing hand was cut deep when it hit a defender’s helmet. “He absolutely deserves every opportunity to lead this team,” O’Shea said. “From what I saw and from chatting with him very briefly, I felt really comfortable with that. I didn’t think it was going to be easy, but I thought it’s Zach, so...” The injury to Collaros’s finger happened late in the third quarter when the Blue Bombers were trailing the Argonauts 17-10. The veteran left the game and returned with a bandaged finger that needed five stitches and a numbing agent. He wore a glove on the hand and told reporters earlier this week it was difficult to grip the ball. Collaros said he warned receivers in the huddle his throws might not have the usual zip and they should be prepared to come back for the ball. “(I) saw him delivering the ball on the sidelines. Then you see him deliver a couple balls out there and some of them are pretty damn good, right?” O’Shea said. “The awareness of Zach to say to the receivers, ‘hey, work a little harder for me,’ I think it’s natural and what should be said. I think they already know that.” When Collaros re-entered the game, he threw interceptions in back-to-back series. “On one of them he got rid of the ball and I thought it was a good ball and the defensive player made a good play,” O’Shea said of the picks. “One slipped right out of his hand or I don’t know if it got tipped or not. You’ve got to give him that opportunity.” Oliveira was questioning his lack of opportunities in the game when he spoke to reporters earlier in the week. The CFL’s newly minted most outstanding player and top Canadian only had 11 carries for 84 yards and one late touchdown. About 17 or 18 run plays were called, O’Shea said. “One starts off with a procedure penalty in the first and then six of those get pulled because there’s X number of guys in the box or the read says this is not a run play anymore, this is now a pass play,” he said. “You call that many runs and then a pile of them get pulled because of the structure of the defence. That’s OK with me at that point.” O’Shea said Bombers offensive co-ordinator Buck Pierce has been granted permission to talk to CFL teams with head-coaching job openings. The B.C. Lions are reportedly interested in Pierce. The Edmonton Elks also have a vacant head coach spot. If Pierce doesn’t become a head coach, O’Shea said he wants him to stay in Winnipeg. He believes Pierce had the offence “extremely well-prepared” for the Grey Cup. “I’m never going to question the play-calling, and I think what’s going on here is we’re questioning,” O’Shea said. “We’re trying to find blame and fault when that’s nowhere in our DNA of how we built this eight, nine, 10 years ago. We’re starting to try and find all these answers and question all these people that were 0-4 and 2-6 and then 10-1, and we just didn’t play our best game.” The Bombers finished 11-7 and claimed the West Division title that earned them a fifth consecutive trip to the Grey Cup. They won the championship in 2019 and ’21, but lost 28-24 to the Montreal Alouettes last year and 24-23 to Toronto in 2023. “We’re the same group that got there, that went on a phenomenal run after a bad start, and a bad start for a lot of reasons that we overcame,” O’Shea said. “I just, I don’t question any of it. I look for answers, too. I watch the film over and over and over again. And look to already make notes on how we’re going to be better, how we’re going to get back there again.” This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 22, 2024.

The Cal Poly Humboldt basketball games ended the year with non-conference road matchups on Saturday, the men’s ‘Jacks team got a win over Westmont College to move over .500 while the women’s team lost to Western Oregon. Humboldt’s men’s team improved to 5-4 before the holidays with a 79-73 win in Santa Barbara thanks to a strong first half with freshman guard Aidan Fowler leading the way with 14 points off the bench for the ‘Jacks. The ‘Jacks had their foot on the gas from the opening tip, going on a 14-0 run to jump out to a 21-5 lead less than five minutes into Saturday’s game. The run was capped off with a made jumper by graduate student Cam Timmons, Humboldt’s longest-tenured player who was playing in his fourth game of the season after returning from a leg injury that ended his 2023-2024 season early. A dunk by sophomore Rob Diaz III with just over seven minutes left in the first half pushed Humboldt’s lead to 25 points, leading 40-15 but Westmont battled back late in the first half to head to the intermission trailing only 46-28. After taking the 18-point lead into half, things got a bit close for comfort for Humboldt in the second half. The ‘Jacks began the second half on a 6-0 run before being outscored 45-27 the rest of the way to do just enough to hold on for the road win. With 8:27 to play the ‘Jacks still led by 20 but Westmont got it to within five with under a minute to play. Fowler clinched the game with a pair of made free throws, two of the six free throws Fowler made in the final minute to secure the win and move Humboldt to 5-4 on the season heading into the new year. While Fowler’s 14 was tops for Humboldt, senior guard Jamal Briscoe was right behind him with 13 while not missing a shot, going 4-4 from the field (three threes) and hitting both of his shots from the free throw line. Senior forward Kyle Frelow added 12 points with freshman forward Josiah Sanders finishing with 10. It was a good shooting performance from Humboldt, shooting 48% from the field, 38% from three and hit 15 of their 18 chances from the free throw line. The ‘Jacks got major contributions from their bench, which outscored Westmont’s bench 27-11 thanks to contributions from Fowler, Timmons and freshman forward Marsai Mason. With the victory, the ‘Jacks are now within one win of matching their total from a season ago, where Humboldt finished last in the CCAA with a 3-19 and went 6-21 overall. Humboldt’s women’s team fell to 3-7 on Saturday with their 62-52 loss to Western Oregon with the ‘Jacks comeback attempt falling short. The ‘Jacks offense got off to a slow start, with just seven points in the first quarter on 3-17 (18%) shooting in the period. Humboldt scored just two points in the game’s opening eight minutes and 30 seconds. The ‘Jacks tied the game early in the second quarter off of a made three by senior guard Marley Johnson before Western Oregon headed into the half with a 26-21 lead. Western Oregon grew the lead to double-digits in the third quarter before Humboldt again trimmed it back down to two points entering the fourth quarter after a made layup by sophomore forward Kyori Lloyd. A free throw by freshman guard Riley Sanz to open the fourth made it a one-point game but Western Oregon then went on a 8-0 run to give the Wolves some breathing room late in the game. The Wolves’ lead got as large as 13 in the fourth, before taking the 62-52 win. After the 52-point outing on Saturday, Humboldt now ranks tied for 229th (out of 290 schools) for Division II scoring offense, averaging 60.0 points per game. The ‘Jacks scoring defense ranks even worse, currently sitting at 257th with Humboldt’s opponents scoring 72.8 per game. Humboldt shot 29% from the field in Saturday’s loss, going 19-65 and 6-36 from three. The ‘Jacks rank 243rd among D-II schools in field goal percentage but are up at 179th for three-point percentage. Sanz led Humboldt on Saturday with 13 points off the bench, a collegiate career-high for the freshman. Lloyd and junior guard Dylan Lovett each added nine points for the ‘Jacks in the loss. Both ‘Jacks teams return to CCAA conference play on Jan. 2 on the road against Stanislaus State before the two teams return home on Jan. 9 versus Cal State San Bernardino. Dylan McNeill can be reached at 707-441-0526.S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: From Legacy to Legend

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