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Taoiseach John Bruton had a firm view that neither Sinn Féin nor the SDLP were accurately representing the views of ordinary members of the nationalist community in Northern Ireland. State papers released by the National Archives show that the Fine Gael leader, who became taoiseach in December 1994, considered conducting opinion polling to better understand the priorities of Northern nationalists during the peace process. They also reveal that Mr Bruton was mistrustful of the views of the Department of Foreign Affairs on the same issue. Confidential files show that he questioned whether the public demands of the two main nationalist political parties which centred on issues of sovereignty and the establishment of North-South institutions aligned with the everyday concerns of nationalist voters. He suspected that issues of “respect” and “dignity” might resonate more strongly with the community than the constitutional goals espoused by Sinn Féin and the SDLP. In a memo to his advisers, the Taoiseach warned of the risks of entering peace talks without a clear understanding of nationalist voters’ core concerns. What's your view on this issue? You can tell us here “In the absence of a clear understanding of irreducible northern nationalist demands, there is a danger that the Irish Government will be drawn into writing a blank cheque in the talks,” he wrote. He claimed there was some urgency in finding out what nationalists in Northern Ireland wanted as peace talks were due to get underway within two months. Mr Bruton’s proposed solution was to conduct qualitative research into the opinions of Northern nationalists which would be funded by Fine Gael. Files show he wanted to find out whether nationalists might accept a settlement involving power-sharing, a reformed police force, greater cultural recognition, and modest North-South co-operation. While it appears the proposed polling never went ahead, Bruton’s envisioned compromise is not too dissimilar to elements of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement which ultimately resolved many of the issues he had outlined. The State papers also reveal the Taoiseach’s wariness that the outlook of the Department of Foreign Affairs was closely aligned to the views of Sinn Féin and the SDLP. He emphasised the need for the various parties to be reminded of the firm stance adopted by unionist leaders for nationalists to demonstrate their commitment to the peace process through actions such as IRA decommissioning. In one note, Mr Bruton wrote: “We need to stress to SDLP, SF, D/FA and all others, how definite the Unionists were on paragraph 10 of the Downing St declaration re ‘action to show commitment’ and the vital necessity for nationalists to come up with new thinking.” Nationalist concerns Other documents show that Sinn Féin and the SDLP were somewhat concerned about Mr Bruton’s commitment to the peace process following his surprise election as Taoiseach following the collapse of the Fianna Fáil-Labour coalition at the end of 1994. They reveal that Sinn Féin president, Gerry Adams, initially expressed cautious optimism about the Fine Gael leader’s approach to the peace process but grew critical by early 1995. Mr Adams complained that the IRA ceasefire had been sold on the basis of “three pieces of the jigsaw” — a reference to support from Irish America, the relationship with SDLP leader, John Hume, and the commitment of the Fianna Fáil-Labour government. However, he pointed out that there was a new government in place in the Republic while the support from Irish America had not lived up to expectation. The SDLP leader also had some concerns about Mr Bruton and told a senior civil servant in the Department of Foreign Affairs that the British were using the issue of the IRA decommissioning weapons solely for the purpose of tactically driving a wedge between the Taoiseach and other nationalist interests. Mr Hume claimed it “would be disastrous” if that was allowed to happen. In turn, files show that Mr Bruton had his own concerns about the SDLP leader and informed his own officials in September 1995 about the need “to clarify John Hume’s personal position on the peace process". The Fine Gael leader wanted to determine whether Mr Hume supported Sinn Féin’s position of no decommissioning until after a peace agreement or whether he would back the Irish government’s call for symbolic gestures during negotiations. Without knowing the position of Mr Hume, whom he noted was regarded as “the expert on the peace process”, Mr Bruton warned that his government would be “travelling blind.”Caitlin Moran’s Celebrity Watch Awards 2024
This New, Yellow Powder Quickly Pulls Carbon Dioxide From the Air, and Researchers Say 'There's Nothing Like It'China Replaces General in Charge of Ground Force’s Political Loyalty
The COVID-19 pandemic has been over for years. The damage caused by the disease itself – and the economic shutdowns, mandated social isolation, and protracted school closures enacted in response – has been done. Many Americans want to leave the pandemic behind them. But it would be a grave mistake to simply move on before those responsible for lying about the pandemic, from their certainty of its origin in a Chinese wet market to their denials that the United States funded dangerous experiments that likely created the disease in the first place, are held accountable. That’s why, despite being overshadowed by other major news, including the Hunter Biden pardon, the sweeping 520-page report released this week by the U.S. House Select Committee on the Coronavirus Pandemic deserves serious attention. Among the most notable findings was the fact that Dr. Ashish K. Jha, the Biden-Harris administration’s COVID-19 response coordinator, admitted to the subcommittee last month that “COVID-19 virus might have accidentally leaked from a lab,” an acknowledgment of a reality that the medical establishment and corporate media long claimed was a “conspiracy theory” that had been “debunked.” Dr. Tim Specter, whom the subcommittee report notes “played a significant role in the pandemic response in the United Kingdom,” was more blunt than Dr. Jha. “It’s looking increasingly like that was a bit of a cover-up, and the most likely source of this was a lab leak from Wuhan,” he said, according to the report. And former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe told the committee that “the ledger on the side of lab leak is full of convincing evidence, while the spillover side is nearly empty,” according to a paraphrase of his remarks. Why were these facts obscured for so long? The theory that COVID-19 originated in a wet market was purportedly given iron-clad credence in a 2020 article titled “The proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2,” published in the scientific journal Nature. The findings were treated as gospel by the media and top medical officials throughout 2020 and 2021. But an investigative piece in The Intercept found that the primary authors of that article, Drs. Kristian G. Andersen and Andrew Rambaut, “misled Congress” about a multimillion-dollar federal grant they were seeking at the time. As we noted in a July 2023 editorial, the doctors “had a powerful incentive” to produce findings that would please Dr. Fauci “because he controlled the flow of federal research dollars.” This matters because, as the congressional subcommittee confirmed, the federal government funded the Wuhan lab where many experts now agree the virus likely originated . Dr. Fauci had every reason to avoid the likely truth of the lab-leak hypothesis, which would have turned him from the pandemic era’s valiant hero to its feckless villain overnight. Perhaps the most damning line in the subcommittee’s report: “When Dr. Andersen presented a draft of (“The proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2′′) to Nature, he stated it was ‘prompted’ by Dr. Fauci and later stated the goal of (the article) was to ‘disprove the lab leak theory.'” If there was ever an inconvenient truth, it’s the fact that millions of people were killed by, and billions of dollars were spent to mitigate the effects of, a virus whose likely origin was covered up solely for the benefit of well-compensated and unduly-venerated federal employees.
President of Barstool Sports Dave Portnoy commits $60,000 to keep Baltimore pizza shop openNone
Georgetown is set to play its first road game of the season while West Virginia attempts to build off its successful 2-1 trip to the Bahamas when the former conference rivals meet on Friday in Morgantown, W. Va., as part of the Big 12-Big East Battle. Picked 13th out of 16 in the Big 12 preseason coaches' poll, West Virginia (5-2) has been riding the hot shooting of Javon Small and Tucker DeVries. Small averages a team-high 19 points and shoots 41.3 percent on 3-pointers while DeVries adds 14.9 points per game and hits on 46.9 percent of his threes. Every basket was needed last week as the Mountaineers upset then-No. 3 Gonzaga and then-No. 24 Arizona with a loss to Louisville sandwiched in between. All three contests went into overtime, believed to be a first in program history. First-year coach Darian DeVries, who led Drake to three NCAA Tournaments in the last four seasons, had never seen anything like it. "I've never been a part of three games like that, especially with the quality of opponents that we went up these last three days," he said after the Arizona win. "Just incredible resolve and grit and toughness from our group all three nights." Georgetown has started 7-1 for the first time since the 2018-19 season and has done so with a completely revamped roster that includes 14 freshmen or sophomores. As a result of an inexperienced squad, coach Ed Cooley specifically delayed the Hoyas' first trip out of the nation's capital. "Obviously, the competition is going to change," Cooley said after the Hoyas defeated UMBC 86-62 on Monday. "We systematically scheduled this way to build confidence, continuity and chemistry and let our players feel what it is to win, and that's something hopefully that will have some carryover as we now get ready to head out on the road for the first time." Since losing to Notre Dame on Nov. 16, Georgetown has won five straight games by an average of 25.2 points. Thomas Sorber leads the Hoyas in scoring at 15.8 points per game and leads the conference in rebounding at 8.9 per game. Sorber was named as the Big East Freshman of the Week for the third time in four weeks. Georgetown holds the narrowest of leads in the all-time series at 27-26. The two schools met 27 times between 1995 and 2012 as league foes. The Mountaineers captured their lone Big East Championship in 2010 by defeating the Hoyas 60-58 at Madison Square Garden. --Field Level MediaAlec Martinez and Craig Smith could return for the Blackhawks in the Winter Classic
Playing twice per year for every year since 1961 — with the exception of the 1982 strike-shortened season, when they faced each other just once — the Vikings and Lions have met 126 times. Their 127th meeting will be the biggest one yet. The NFL has announced that, next Sunday night, the 2024 regular season will conclude with the 14-2 Vikings visiting the 14-2 or 13-3 Lions for all the NFC marbles. The winner will be the No. 1 seed. The loser will be the No. 5 seed. Earlier this year, Detroit won in Minnesota, 31-29. After the Vikings failed to convert a third-and-four that would have iced the game, the Lions drove for the game-winning field goal. Even if Detroit loses to the 49ers on Monday night, a victory over the Vikings will forge a 14-3 tie, with the Lions winning the tiebreaker via the head-to-head sweep. The Lions have opened as 2.5-point favorites. It will be the first time in NFL history that two teams with 13 or more wins have met in the regular season. The outcome will give the winner a bye, and home-field advantage if/when there’s a postseason rematch. If that happens, it’ll be the first time the Vikings and Lions have ever met in the postseason. It all gets started next Sunday night in Detroit, at 8:20 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock.
Mercurity Fintech Announces Unaudited Financial Results for First Half 2024
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump is telling the Supreme Court that he can make a deal that will resolve the national security dispute over TikTok and preserve the video site for 170 million Americans. All the justices need to do, he says, is to stand aside and suspend a pending law that could shut down TikTok on Jan. 19, the day before Trump takes office again. “President Trump alone possesses the consummate deal-making expertise, the electoral mandate, and the political will to negotiate a resolution to save the platform,” his attorney said in a friend-of-the court brief filed Friday night. His plan might work, at least to buy more time. The justices had agreed to make a fast-track decision on the potentially momentous issue involving social media and free speech. “I think the court is likely to see great benefit in issuing a stay and little downside,” said UC Berkeley Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky. “The case poses a novel and very difficult 1st Amendment issue. Never before has the government tried to ban a medium of communication, but there also is a history of judicial deference to national security claims.” Prior to Trump’s intervention, TikTok appeared to face a difficult fight in the court. The House and Senate had passed legislation by large bipartisan majorities requiring the platform to separate itself from its Chinese owner or to shut down in this country. President Biden signed the bill into law in April. And by its terms, it was due to take effect in 270 days. Although the justices are not shy about striking down federal regulations, they are wary of overturning an act of Congress, particularly one that is based on threats to national security. The U.S. appeals court in Washington cited national security when it upheld the law earlier this month. In a 3-0 decision, the judges said the law did not target speech or expression. Rather, lawmakers were convinced the Chinese parent company could gather personal data on millions of Americans, the judges said. If the law took effect on Jan. 19, Apple, Oracle and other U.S. companies could have faced large civil fines if they continued to work with TikTok. Trump’s attorney D. John Sauer filed a friend-of-the-court brief that differed in tone and substance from all the others. Rather than weigh in on the 1st Amendment question the justices had agreed to decide , he explained why Trump was better-suited to decide it. “Through his historic victory on November 5, 2024, President Trump received a powerful electoral mandate from American voters to protect the free-speech rights of all Americans — including the 170 million Americans who use TikTok,” he wrote. “Moreover, President Trump is one of the most powerful, prolific, and influential users of social media in history.” Noting that Trump has 14.7 million followers on TikTok, Sauer argued that the president-elect is well-positioned “to evaluate TikTok’s importance as a unique medium for freedom of expression, including core political speech.” He also wrote that as the founder of another social-media platform, Truth Social, Trump has “an in-depth perspective on the extraordinary government power attempted to be exercised in this case — the power of the federal government to effectively shut down a social-media platform favored by tens of millions of Americans.” “In light of these interests — including, most importantly, his overarching responsibility for the United States’ national security and foreign policy — President Trump opposes banning TikTok in the United States at this juncture, and seeks the ability to resolve the issues at hand through political means once he takes office.” In 2020, Trump had voiced alarm over TikTok because of its Chinese ownership. Lawmakers later heard classified briefings that convinced them the foreign ownership posed a danger. But by the time the law won approval, Trump had switched sides. He said he believed TikTok helped him win the support of young voters. “TikTok had an impact, so we’re taking a look at it,” he told reporters two weeks ago. “I have a little warm spot in my heart.” A year ago, his attorney Sauer drew criticism from some legal experts for boldly asserting that Trump as a former president had an absolute immunity from criminal charges for his official acts while in office. But in July, he won a 6-3 ruling from the Supreme Court that gave him and Trump what he had sought. Sauer is now set to represent Trump and his administration before the Supreme Court as U.S. solicitor general. He did not say precisely what the court should do now, only that it “should consider staying the statutory deadline to grant more breathing space” to the incoming administration and that one provision in the law allowed for a 90-day extension before it took effect. The court asked for responses to the competing briefs by next Friday. It scheduled two hours of argument for Jan. 10. It’s not certain the justices will readily comply with Trump’s request. Two weeks ago, former Trump attorney Noel Francisco filed an appeal on TikTok’s behalf urging the justices to put the law on hold for a brief period. But the justices brushed aside that suggestion and said they would decide whether divestiture law violated the 1st Amendment. “I am skeptical Trump’s intervention will make a difference,” said Alan Rozenshtein, a University of Minnesota law professor who has written about the pending law. He noted that the Supreme Court denied TikTok’s request to stay the law because it did not think TikTok could meet the requirements for a stay: a reasonable chance of winning on the merits. “Trump’s argument does not change that,” he said. “It may be bad luck for TikTok (and Trump) that the law goes into effect the day before inauguration, but such is life.”ST. PAUL — Former Minnesota Senate Majority Leader Kari Dziedzic died Friday following a battle with cancer. She was 62. Her family said she died surrounded by loved ones. “She had a heart of gold, willing to go to any measure to help those she loved,” they said in a statement. Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party Chair Ken Martin the Minneapolis Democrat was committed to working for Minnesotans. She served in the Minnesota Senate for more than a decade. “It is impossible to overstate the positive impact that Senator Dziedzic’s leadership has had on our state,” Martin said in a statement. “She devoted her life to making her fellow Minnesotans’ lives better, and she refused to allow cancer to get in her way. Minnesota has lost a giant, but her extraordinary legacy will outlast us all.” Dziedzic was instrumental in holding together the Senate DFL caucus in 2023 as they passed, with a one-vote majority, a variety of Democratic priorities like funding universal school meals for students, approving a paid family and medical leave program, cementing legal protections for abortion and gender-affirming care and legalizing cannabis for recreational use. She was respected on both sides of the political aisle and her demeanor was always steady, even amid tense times in the Senate. Dziedzic’s laid-back style made her a surprising pick for majority leader after the 2022 election. Leaders from both major political parties said they were heartbroken by her death. “Senator Kari Dziedzic was a passionate legislator, a respected leader, and a trusted colleague and friend. She will be remembered for her integrity and her compassion for Minnesotans, something that we all saw as she continued to serve even as she battled cancer,” said Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson, an East Grand Forks Republican. “I’m deeply saddened at her passing and am praying for her family and friends as we all mourn this loss.” House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said she was “one of the most skilled diplomats ever to serve in elected office.” “Her legacy includes significant achievements in policy and investment in Minnesota, but more importantly she will be remembered for treating people with dignity and respect and never giving up on finding workable compromises,” Hortman said. “She had an incredible ability to work diligently through the most arcane and difficult policy issues to find resolution.” Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, agreed, saying she was “an uncommon leader.” “Her talents as a consequential and thoughtful leader made us all better legislators, and her examples of kindness humor, and selflessness made us all better people,” Murphy said. Former Senate DFL Leader Melisa López Franzen praised Dziedzic as a hard worker. “The last time I spoke to Kari a few weeks ago she was still serving her constituents,” she wrote on social media. “That’s Senator Dziedzic, the hardest working legislator I have ever had the honor to serve with. Rest in peace my friend.” Dziedzic was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2023 and underwent emergency surgery to limit its spread. She stepped down from her leadership position in February after her cancer recurred. The Senate will now stand in a 33-33 tie between Democrats and Republicans heading into the 2025 legislative session. Gov. Tim Walz has not yet said when he might call for a special election in the Minneapolis district. Dziedzic had a degree in engineering but couldn’t resist the family pull into public service. Her father, Walt, was a colorful Minneapolis city council member who later served on the park board. Dziedzic told MPR News that she felt drawn into politics after watching her father’s example. “I knew the long hours. I knew the phone calls at home. I knew what I was walking into,” she said. “But I also knew the opportunity that you have to help other people. And it’s about helping people and making your community better.” Dziedzic began a career in public service as a campaign volunteer and later moved on to become a scheduling aide for former U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone. After a stint working for a Hennepin County commissioner, she was nudged to run for a state Senate seat when longtime lawmaker Larry Pogemiller stepped down to take another government job. Gov. Tim Walz called Dziedzic a “one-of-a-kind leader.” He added, “Her legacy should inspire all of us in elected office to be better public servants.” Details for a memorial service have not yet been announced.
Civil liberties and immigration rights groups worry Donald Trump’s incoming administration could use powerful law enforcement surveillance and big data technology to press ahead with some key policies, risking infringing on privacy rights. Republican Trump has repeatedly said he would “militarise” certain law enforcement activities, which could involve using the military for domestic law enforcement, though he has not provided any specifics. The Thomson Reuters Foundation reported in July that a victorious Trump could use surveillance systems and artificial intelligence to supercharge his plan to carry out a mass deportation of illegal immigrants. When the former president returns to the White House in January, he will have across-the-board powers backed by a Republican-controlled Senate and Congress, and a conservative majority in the Supreme Court. Against this backdrop, experts worry that an emboldened and more powerful and organised second Trump administration could exploit advances in technology and surveillance to forge ahead with policies ranging from immigration to policing. “He is likely to further empower law enforcement to invest in and deploy surveillance tools, with little regard for civil liberties concerns,” said Andrew Ferguson, a law professor at the American University in Washington, DC. The Trump campaign did not respond to the Thomson Reuters Foundation’s questions about its views on surveillance technology. “The American people re-elected President Trump by a resounding margin giving him a mandate to implement the promises he made on the campaign trail. He will deliver,” said Karoline Leavitt, a spokesperson for the Trump-Vance Transition team. The concerns about surveillance powers are particularly acute among immigration rights groups, which worry that a Trump administration would be able to harness data brokers, facial recognition, and other tools to create lists of immigrants it would want to deport. Data brokers are companies that track and collect personal data and, in the United States, there are few regulations restricting what they can sell to law enforcement. J D Vance, Trump’s running mate, has said the Trump administration could aim to deport around 1mn people a year. By comparison, the Biden administration deported around 150,000 illegal immigrants in 2023, the vast majority of which were new arrivals at the border. “These technologies will be exploited, and probably in the worst possible way,” said Paromita Shah, the executive director of Just Futures Law, a legal immigration advocacy group. In recent years, Shah and other immigrant rights advocate groups have asked regulators to restrict immigration authorities’ access to big data tools, and filed lawsuits alleging data brokers who share such information violate consumers’ privacy. The efforts have had little results so far. After his victory, Trump told NBC News he would prioritise the deportation plan, adding there was “no price tag” on the operation. It is unclear how many undocumented migrants Trump aims to deport. The US Department of Homeland Security estimated there were 11 million immigrants without legal status in 2022. Immigration experts, however, have pointed to some bureaucratic and legal hurdles, such as insufficient immigration judges and tight budgets for hiring agents to conduct the operations. Efforts by Trump’s first administration to deport long-standing immigrants from the interior of the country were at times hampered by a lack of co-operation between local law enforcement agencies and immigration authorities, according to a study from the libertarian Cato Institute. Another concern is that Trump could exploit advances in the police’s surveillance capacity to implement his vision of “restoring law and order and public safety in America”. There has been an explosion in surveillance tools in US police department in recent years, while law enforcement’s access to commercial databases has also increased, allowing them to track people without a warrant. The number of local police departments with “real time crime centres” — central hubs where surveillance from cameras, license plate readers and other inputs flow — has almost doubled over the last four years, according to data collected by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group. Over 90% of large police departments in the United States currently have access to automatic license plate readers, up from around 66% in 2016, data from the Department of Justice showed. Meanwhile, the data broker industry — where law enforcement can buy location information and other personal data without a warrant — has grown four-fold since 2020 to over $411bn, according to market research firm MMR. Experts worry about the implication of this for privacy but also for racial justice in policing, which has come under close scrutiny since the police killing of George Floyd in 2020. “I don’t think that (The Trump administration) is going to be taking the time to look deeply into the racial justice or privacy arms of these new technologies,” Ferguson told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “In fact, I think they are going to open the commercial floodgates to allow...new policing technology companies into the market.” Civil liberties and immigration rights groups say they are looking for ways to make it more difficult for the incoming Trump administration to harness these powers. The ACLU, the largest US national public interest law firm, is calling on local lawmakers to build “firewalls” that could limit Trump’s access to local policing resources. Immigration groups say they are planning to press the Department of Homeland Security to abandon some technology tools before it hands over power to the Trump administration in January, including winding down deals between immigration authorities and data brokers. During the last Trump administration, the ACLU and other civil liberties groups documented how local authorities would often share those license plate reading data with federal immigration authorities to support deportation operations. The day after Trump’s victory, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) issued a public notice asking companies to submit plans to support expanded programmes for tracking migrants, including with ankle monitors, GPS tracking, and biometric check-in technology, the technology publication Wired reported. After Trump’s victory, the ACLU created a petition asking Americans to write to Congress, calling on lawmakers to pass laws that would restrict the federal government’s ability to purchase Americans data from data brokers. “If Donald Trump’s administration gains unfettered access to our personal data, they could use it to go after communities of colour, political opponents, people seeking reproductive or gender-affirming healthcare, and anyone who disagrees with their policies,” the group wrote. Matt Cagle, a lawyer with the ACLU in California, said he also fears a Trump administration could exploit data collected by local police departments from tools like automatic license plate readers, or facial recognition systems. “When localities are collecting tons of information about their residents it becomes ripe for exploitation by any administration to try and target and locate all sorts of people,” he said. Earlier this year, a federal law that would have limited the ability of law enforcement to buy and use privately collected data — such as location information collected by apps — passed the US House of Representatives, but stalled in the Senate. “Commercial data is definitely a free for all,” Shah said. Police departments have also made the most of the Biden administration’s decision to give them access to Covid relief funding for “public safety” purposes. Many have used this to buy sophisticated surveillance systems — including social media monitoring systems, expanded surveillance camera systems, and license-plate readers, according to an analysis by non-profit Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). Policing groups say these tools make crime fighting more efficient — but civil libertarians have warned about dragnet surveillance, which collects data on everyone and not only those suspected of crimes. Trump’s language during the campaign — including his promise to deploy the military against the “radical left” or “enemy within” and pledge to persecute his political enemies — raises broader concerns about what the administration could do with these kinds of powerful surveillance tools, Ferguson said. “They might start with undocumented individuals,” he said. “But then you can turn the same power on any disfavoured group.” – Thomson Reuters Foundation Related Story NHRC launches its strategic plan 2024-2030 UN probe finds women, children comprise the majority of Gaza war deadGeorgetown ventures out of D.C. for first time to face West Virginia
FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) — Jalen Haynes scored 18 points as George Mason beat Mount St. Mary's 64-56 on Saturday. Haynes also added 16 rebounds for the Patriots (9-4). Darius Maddox shot 5 of 11 from the field, including 1 for 5 from 3-point range, and went 2 for 3 from the line to add 13 points. Brayden O'Connor shot 2 for 5 (2 for 3 from 3-point range) and 3 of 4 from the free-throw line to finish with nine points. The Mountaineers (8-5, 1-1 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference) were led by Dola Adebayo, who recorded 13 points and seven rebounds. Mount St. Mary's also got 11 points, nine rebounds, four assists and two blocks from Terrell Ard Jr.. Arlandus Keyes also had seven points. Haynes scored 11 points in the first half and George Mason went into halftime trailing 30-28. George Mason used a 10-3 second-half run to come back from a three-point deficit and take the lead at 34-30 with 17:54 remaining in the half before finishing off the victory. Maddox scored nine second-half points. George Mason plays Tuesday against Davidson at home, and Mount St. Mary's hosts Niagara on Sunday. The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar .Exclusive -- Naval War College Arctic Founding Director: Greenland a ‘Linchpin’ for U.S. Security, Future of Free World
King and PM honour former US president Jimmy Carter after his death aged 100East Tennessee State football coach Tre Lamb said his staff went 8-for-8 in recruiting the high school athletes they most wanted during Thursday’s signing day announcement. Another 5-6 high school players are expected to sign in February. There are 10-12 transfers to be announced at the mid-year will the roster to be rounded out in May. “We got who we wanted to get. The old age of surprises on signing day is over,” Lamb said. “A lot of these guys have been committed for weeks. Our coaches got to South Carolina, Georgia, some of those places when we were playing on the road. Getting them to games and seeing our gameday experience, those were big deciding factors for a lot of guys.” The group includes quarterback Jackson Byrd, cornerbacks Ramani Bruton and Brycen Dowdell, running back Jaiden Daniels, offensive linemen Eli Dorton and Cole Norred, and wide receivers Jeremiah Harrison and wide receiver Trenton Wanjogu. Obviously, quarterback has the biggest spotlight. Jaylen King, who started the first nine games for the Bucs, and reserve Reece Fountain have entered the transfer portal. Gino English, who started two games, will be lost to graduation. Byrd, a 6-foot record-setting quarterback from Clayton, N.C., is expected to be a big star in the future. For now, Lamb has plans to redshirt him. Lamb said that Baylor Hayes, who started the final game of the season against VMI, Steven Johnson, who will be in his second year with the Bucs after transferring from Charlotte, and one of the transfers whom the Bucs are bringing on campus the next couple of weeks will compete for the starting job. Byrd threw for over 10,000 yards and 114 touchdowns during his high school career, and Lamb said he even got a text from New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye’s high school coach that said Byrd was the best player in the state of North Carolina. Lamb talked about a conversation with a former ETSU coach as one reason why Byrd will be redshirted. “He’s small and needs to put some weight on,” Lamb said. “I hate playing freshmen at certain positions. Randy Sanders told me years ago that he hated playing a freshman quarterback. They don’t have experience and aren’t getting a ton of reps in training camp. “Now, Jackson is going to be unbelievable. He could easily be our starter moving forward, but we feel good about Baylor, Steve and the transfer we’re bringing in.” ETSU players who entered the transfer portal were: wide receiver A.J. Johnson, linebacker Ty Anderson, running back Torey Lambert and offensive lineman Tyson Moore. Lamb feels they’ve strengthened those positions with the freshmen wide receivers and Daniels, a running back whom he compared to current Buc player Khamran Laborn. There is some family ties with Daniels, who played at Commerce High School’s Ray Lamb Stadium. The stadium is named after Lamb’s grandfather, and it’s a place where Lamb’s dad, uncle and Furman coach Clay Hendrix all played high school football. Daniels rushed for nearly 6,000 yards over his high school career. “We really think he can help us immediately,” Lamb said. “Three positions are easiest to play early — running back, cornerback and receiver — because they’re based on athletic ability and mindset. He’s just a dynamic playmaker who played quarterback this year.” On the defensive side, the cornerbacks have athletic pedigrees. Burton’s uncle was a member of the 1994 Chicago Bulls NBA team, while Maybin’s father played football at Alabama. It was an area of need with Cam Sims and Jimmy Bowdry playing nearly every snap for the Bucs in 2024. Dorton, an offensive lineman from Anderson County, was named one of the top eight recruits from the Knoxville area and originally committed to Furman. Lamb said they reached out to a pair of Science Hill players, who had better offers, and believe a couple from Greeneville will attend ETSU. They’re also interested in bringing a couple of transfers who played high school football locally back home. But, the No. 1 goal was keeping current players on the roster. “We’re using NIL and revenue sharing to retain our best players,” Lamb said. “We’re in a really good spot right now and I feel good about recruiting. We’re not bringing in 50 new players. We get 10-12 good ones and we’re in good shape.” Stay Informed: Subscribe to Our Newsletter Today
'Worst day of my life': baby recovers in Newcastle hospital after funnel-web bite
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