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Saturday, October 31, 2020

College Football Playoff Picture for Week 10: Four in, four out heading into November - Sporting News

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The College Football Playoff puzzle is more difficult than ever to piece together in a season impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

That said, the season enters November with the Pac-12 and Mid-American Conference returning to action and several teams finding separation. Everyone is playing, and while the race might be in different stages across the FBS, the chase is on.  

The first set of CFP rankings won't be revealed until Nov. 24, so there is three more weeks of game action.  

Ranking announcement Date
1 Tuesday, Nov. 24
2 Tuesday, Dec. 1
3 Tuesday, Dec. 8
4 Tuesday, Dec. 15
FINAL Sunday, Dec. 20

With that in mind, Sporting News breaks down the College Football Playoff picture with four teams in, four teams out and four teams to watch heading into the first week of November:  

Four In  

1. Clemson (7-0)  

Backup QB D.J. Uiagalelei and star rusher Travis Etienne led Clemson to a comeback from a 15-point halftime deficit against Boston College in a 34-28 victory. Trevor Lawrence won't play next week against Notre Dame while recovering from COVID-19. If Tigers win anyway, they can take complete control of the ACC race. It's on the defense to put four quality quarters together this time.  

MORE: Big questions for Clemson-Notre Dame

2. Ohio State (2-0) 

The Buckeyes jumped out to a big halftime lead and cruised to a 38-25 victory at Penn State. Justin Fields, who hit 28 of 34 passes for 318 yards and four TDs, has emerged as the Heisman Trophy favorite. There is no end in sight to Ohio State's Big Ten dominance under second-year coach Ryan Day. Ohio State resumes action against Rutgers in prime time next week. Former Buckeyes defensive coordinator Greg Schiano will be on the other side. 

3. Alabama (6-0)  

Is Mac Jones or Najee Harris the better Heisman Trophy contender? That's an open-ended question that can be discussed over the bye week. The Crimson Tide remain the team to beat in the SEC after a 41-0 shutout win over Mississippi State. The remaining schedule features LSU, Kentucky, Auburn and Arkansas. It's possible that none of those teams will be ranked when they play Alabama. The path toward yet another SEC championship appearance is open for Nick Saban, who celebrated his 69th birthday in style. 

4. Notre Dame (6-0) 

The Irish improved to 6-0 with a 31-13 victory against Georgia Tech, and that sets up a top-five showdown with Clemson at Notre Dame Stadium. Ian Book has lost just three games as a starter with the Irish, but two of those were against top-10 teams. Notre Dame can take a big step toward a second Playoff berth under Brian Kelly with a victory against the Tigers. The Irish are 2-5 at home against the No. 1 team, and the "Bush Push" game in 2005 was the last one. 

Four out  

5. Georgia (4-1)  

Georgia returned from a bye week to beat Kentucky 14-3 in a grind-it-out-game. Georgia averaged 5 yards per carry, but Stetson Bennett had 131 passing yards and threw two interceptions against the Wildcats. The Bulldogs can take control of the SEC East race against Florida on Nov. 7, but there is no margin for error the rest of the season. 

6. Cincinnati (5-0)  

The Bearcats are keeping the American Athletic Conference in the Playoff discussion, and they are getting better with each week. Cincinnati hammered last year's AAC champion Memphis 49-10 in Week 9, and they are one of four teams with multiple victories against ranked teams. Georgia, Alabama and North Carolina are the others. 

7. Oregon (0-0)  

The Ducks have not held a spot in the Playoff in our weekly bowl projections, but this would likely be their spot if the rankings started this week. Oregon has the disadvantage of a six-game conference schedule, and there is no margin for error beginning with Stanford in Week 10. Still, we like Oregon in this position for now.  

8. Texas A&M (4-1)  

This is the drop-off point in the race. Texas A&M has done their part since a 52-24 loss to Alabama, and Jimbo Fisher has righted the Aggies' program. That continued in a 42-31 victory against Arkansas in Week 9, but that tiebreaker against Alabama will likely keep Texas A&M out of the SEC championship game. The best hope is to finish 9-1 and hope the competition fails. Road games at South Carolina and Tennessee the next two weeks are intriguing. 

Anybody else?  

Florida (3-1) returned after a three-week absence and beat Missouri 41-17 after a halftime brawl, but the Gators won't be taken seriously unless they beat Georgia … BYU (6-0) is unbeaten and has a Heisman Trophy contender in Zach Wilson, and they get a chance to prove it against Boise State next week … Miami (5-1) will be watching that Clemson-Notre Dame game closely next week. … Wisconsin (1-0) might be the last challenger left for Ohio State in the Big Ten, but when will the Badgers return to the field?  

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Cough analysis app could detect COVID-19 by sound alone - AppleInsider

Researchers at MIT have used machine learning to create software capable of detecting whether a person has caught COVID-19 by analyzing their cough, a development that could eventually result in an iPhone app for daily checks.

So far, the iPhone has lent itself to helping users determine if they are at risk of the coronavirus by coming into close proximity to someone carrying the virus. If a new discovery by MIT researchers is developed further, the iPhone may end up being able to do more to dampen the spread of the virus further.

A paper from the team published in the IEEE Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology claims an AI model was created that could tell the difference between asymptomatic people and those who are healthy, via analysis of recordings of forced coughs. The model is claimed to be accurate 98.5% of the time when listening to recordings of people confirmed to have had COVID-19, as well as 100 percent of asymptomatic cough recordings.

The team collected more than 70,000 recordings via a website where the public could record a series of coughs via their smartphone or other devices, at the same time as filling out a survey about their symptoms, if they were confirmed to have the virus, and other details. The recordings resulted in around 200,000 forced-cough samples, including 2,500 of those confirmed to have COVID-19 or were asymptomatic.

Combining the 2,500 confirmed samples with another 2,500 randomly selected from the data set, the AI model was trained, then tested. The researchers claim the results revealed "a striking similarity between Alzheimer's and COVID discrimination."

The AI framework was based on one that existed for Alzheimer's research, and determined it could pick up four biomarkers relating to vocal cord strength, sentiment, lung and respiratory response, and muscular degradation specific to COVID-19.

The team are now working to create a pre-screening app it intends to distribute for free, based on the AI model, as well as working with a number of hospitals to enlarge the cough recording pool, for further training.

It is suggested by the team that such cough analysis could be implemented into smart speakers and digital assistants to perform daily assessments. This naturally would depend on the devices involved having sufficiently good quality microphones as well as handling the necessary privacy issues, not to mention the assistance of companies like Apple and Amazon to implement, making it unlikely albeit altruistic.

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Four hurt in shooting at strip club in Anaheim - Los Angeles Times

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Four people were wounded in a shooting at a strip club in Anaheim early Saturday, authorities said. None of their injuries were believed to be life-threatening.

Shots were fired from a passing sedan into the Sahara Theater in the 1200 block of South State College Boulevard about 1:35 a.m., said Sgt. Shane Carringer, public information officer with the Anaheim Police Department.

Between 30 and 50 people were inside the club at the time, though many had left by the time officers arrived to investigate, Carringer said.

Four people suffered what appeared to be gunshot wounds that ranged from minor to moderate in severity, Carringer said. One man refused medical attention, and two men and one woman were taken to area hospitals, he said. One or two of them had been discharged by later Saturday morning, he said.

Police were looking for a bright red, newer-model Honda sedan from which the suspect opened fire, Carringer said. No description of the shooter was provided.

There was no word on a motive, and police reported no arrest as of Saturday morning.

“We just really don’t know much about it still,” Carringer said. “We have a bunch of leads we’re following up on, but right now, it’s largely still a very active investigation.”

Anyone with information was asked to contact Anaheim police.

Orange County is currently in the red tier of the state’s four-phase plan for relaxing coronavirus restrictions, meaning the risk of transmission is still considered substantial. But some nonessential businesses have been permitted to resume indoor operations.

Carringer said he believed the strip club was allowed to operate, provided it served food.

A similar situation arose earlier this month when San Diego Padres outfielder Tommy Pham was stabbed outside a Midway District strip club. San Diego County is also in the red tier.

Officials said then that strip clubs that serve food can be considered restaurants, which are allowed to operate with some restrictions in counties classified in the red tier. But strip clubs are not permitted to operate as bars or live entertainment venues in those counties, which means that people can’t drink without eating, and dancers can’t perform pole or lap dances, they said.

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Covid-19: PM set to announce four-week England lockdown - BBC News

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Covid-19: PM set to announce four-week England lockdown

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Boris Johnson
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Prime Minister Boris Johnson is set to announce a second national lockdown for England as the UK passed one million Covid-19 cases.

Non-essential shops and hospitality will have to close for four weeks, sources told the BBC.

But unlike the restrictions in spring, schools, colleges and universities will be allowed to stay open.

The lockdown is also expected to include restrictions on travel and is due to come into force on Thursday, lasting until 2 December, BBC political correspondent Nick Eardley said.

Takeaways will be allowed to stay open as pubs, bars and restaurants close and it is expected people will be told they can only meet one person from outside their household outdoors.

The prime minister is due to lead a news conference later, after holding a cabinet meeting to discuss the coronavirus response.

He is set to be joined by England's chief medical officer Chris Whitty and the government's chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance for the briefing.

The UK recorded another 21,915 confirmed coronavirus cases on Saturday, bringing the total since the pandemic began to 1,011,660.

Another 326 people were reported to have died within 28 days of a positive test.

The UK is the ninth country to reach the milestone of a million cases - after the US, India, Brazil, Russia, France, Spain, Argentina and Colombia.

But the true number of infections is expected to be higher due to a lack of widespread testing at the start of the pandemic.

Graphic showing UK coronavirus figures

Prof Neil Ferguson, whose modelling was crucial to the decision to impose the first lockdown, said keeping universities and schools open meant infections would decrease more slowly this time.

He said the new restrictions could reduce cases by anywhere between 20% and 80%, adding that he hoped larger groups of people would be able to gather by Christmas "if only for a few days".

Mr Johnson has so far resisted pressure to introduce nationwide restrictions, saying they would be "disastrous" for the UK's finances and opting instead for a three-tiered system targeting local areas in England.

Ahead of the news conference, school and university unions called for education institutions to be closed and for teaching to move online in another national lockdown.

The National Education Union said it would be "self-defeating" to ignore how schools helped to spread the virus.

And "the health and safety of the country is being put at risk" by the insistence on keeping in-person teaching on campuses, the University and College Union said.

Presentational grey line
Analysis box by Nick Triggle, health correspondent

The month-long lockdown may suppress the virus, but what is less clear is whether the government will be in a better position to stop it rebounding.

There have been calls to fix the test and trace service, but that is easier said than done.

Testing capacity is being increased. In the coming days, the government is expected to announce its labs are able to process 500,000 tests a day. That should allow the system to speed up turnaround times.

But improving the tracing side of the service is likely to be much more difficult.

Councils in England are being encouraged to set up their own local contact tracing teams to support the under-pressure national system.

About a third of areas have now launched their own services and there are some encouraging signs in what's being achieved.

But questions are quite rightly being asked why this is only happening now as the second wave hits.

Significant levels of transmission are also being seen in care homes and hospitals, where one in six of the new daily admissions are suspected to be cases where patients have caught the virus in hospital.

Expect infection levels to come down quickly - and eventually that to translate to fewer hospital admissions and deaths.

But the true test of the lockdown lies elsewhere.

Presentational grey line

The British Chambers of Commerce said the new restrictions would be a "devastating blow" to businesses, which were in a weaker position now than they were in March.

Director general Adam Marshall said the government must increase business support and "must not squander" the extra time bought by another lockdown.

Elsewhere in the UK, Wales' First Minister Mark Drakeford said the 17-day "firebreak" there will end as planned on 9 November.

He said that his cabinet will meet on Sunday to "discuss any potential border issues for Wales in light of any announcement by No 10".

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has issued new advice that people should not travel to or from England, except for essential purposes, ahead of the nation's five-level system of restrictions coming into force on Monday.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
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The lockdown decision for England comes as scientists warned the NHS could be "overwhelmed within weeks".

Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust, said the current restrictions were not enough to stop the virus spreading and without action, "there's absolutely no doubt that many more of us would have seen loved ones die, suffer with long-term Covid symptoms or from other illnesses".

Documents seen by the BBC, understood to be part of a presentation by the government's pandemic modelling group SPI-M shown to Mr Johnson, show projections by several different groups of the likely course of the disease.

All models predict that hospitalisations are likely to peak in mid-December, with deaths rising until at least late December before falling from early January.

Projected daily deaths
Graphic showing projections for hospital capacity
1px transparent line

A separate document circulating in government - based on NHS England modelling from 28 October - warns that the NHS would be unable to accept any more patients by Christmas, even if the Nightingale hospitals are used and non-urgent procedures cancelled.

It warns that south-west England and the Midlands will be the first to run out of capacity, potentially within a fortnight.

These latest papers come after a statement from the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) revealed that Covid is spreading much faster in England than the predicted "worst-case" scenario.

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How to Detect Fire Alarms and Other Noises With Sound Recognition in iOS 14 - PCMag

Apple has continually enhanced the iPhone and iPad with accessibility features designed to help people with certain disabilities. One unique tool introduced in iOS 14 and iPadOS 14 is Sound Recognition. Geared for people who are deaf or hard of hearing, this new feature notifies you if your device detects a certain sound. 

The Sound Recognition feature can detect a variety of noises, including a fire alarm, siren, smoke alarm, a cat or dog, an appliance, a car horn, a doorbell, a knock on the door, water running, and a baby crying. The idea is that even if you can’t hear the sound yourself, your device can. When it hears a specific sound, it will then display a visual notification to alert you. 

Of course, there are also some limitations to this feature. For Sound Recognition to work, your device needs to be close enough to detect the sound. If you’re in the other room and there’s a knock on the door, your device probably won’t be sensitive enough to detect it. When Sound Recognition is turned on, you can’t activate Siri by saying “Hey Siri.” You will have to turn it off to activate Siri by voice.


Enable Sound Recognition

Before you can use Sound Recognition, update your device’s operating system to make sure you are running iOS 14/iPadOS 14 or higher. Go to Settings > General > Software Update to perform the update. You’ll be told that your software is up to date or prompted to install the latest update.

sound recognition settings

You can enable Sound Recognition by going to Settings > Accessibility > Sound Recognition and turning on the switch for Sound Recognition.


Sound Notifications

Next, tap the option for Sounds to choose which sounds you want your device to identify. Turn on the switch next to any sounds for which you want to receive a notification.

sound notification settings

Test the feature first to make sure it works. Ring your own doorbell, honk your car’s horn, or even test your smoke alarm. If the sound is detected, a notification appears at the top of your screen.

If you’re satisfied that Sound Notifications is working, you can now position your device near any potential source of sound and wait for a notification to appear. 

sound notification alert

Keep in mind that a feature like Sound Notifications relies on artificial intelligence to detect certain noises, so it won’t always be perfect. The feature may fail to detect certain noises depending on your device’s location and the volume of the noise. It may even fail to correctly identify the right noise.

For those reasons, you don’t want to rely on Sound Notifications as your only form of aid, especially in the event of an emergency such as a smoke or fire alarm going off. You can, however, use this tool as a supplemental means of support if you have trouble hearing certain sounds on your own.

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Reporters - Africa 1960: Four faces of independence from France - FRANCE 24

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Issued on:

Sixty years ago, most of the French colonies in sub-Saharan Africa became independent nations. Between January 1 and December 31, 1960, some 17 countries, including 14 under French rule, gained their statehood. Senegal's first post-independence president, LĂ©opold SĂ©dar Senghor, referred to 1960 as the "magical year", while others hailed a peaceful decolonisation process.

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But behind the scenes, negotiations were bitter. For France, in the midst of the Algerian War of Independence, there was no question of losing its prerogatives, nor its interests in Africa. And in the context of the Cold War, each country had to choose its side or its political orientation.

By following the path of four charismatic leaders – Senegal's LĂ©opold SĂ©dar Senghor, the Ivorian FĂ©lix HouphouĂ«t-Boigny, Guinea's Ahmed SĂ©kou TourĂ© and Central African Republic's BarthĂ©lemy Boganda – FRANCE 24's journalist Florence Gaillard offers viewers a look back at the eventful history of these African countries' path to statehood.

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Four more states could legalize marijuana this November - CNN

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Voters in Republican-led Arizona and South Dakota and Democrat-led Montana and New Jersey will consider proposals to legalize recreational marijuana. Another red state, Mississippi, is weighing a pair of ballot questions to legalize medical marijuana. Currently, 11 states have legalized full, adult marijuana use. All but two did so by ballot initiative, which poses the question directly to voters.
Polls show that the ballots initiatives have support in Arizona, Montana and New Jersey.
"It's really showing the kind of breadth of acceptance that we're seeing around the country with respect to cannabis," said Steven Hawkins, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project, an advocacy group that works with many of the ballot initiatives.
Not every effort to get marijuana on the ballot this year was successful, though, with the coronavirus pandemic and early stay-at-home orders having scuttled signature drives to gather enough support to place the questions on some states' ballots. "We lost the time needed to gather signatures or else there would be six states," Hawkins said, counting the states considering full adult-use legalization this year.
The initiatives would only be the first step in the process, said John Hudak, deputy director at the Brookings Institution who specializes in state and federal marijuana policy.
Should voters approve the measures on November 3, he said, the state legislatures would need to set up regulatory structures within each state.

Polling strong in Arizona

Arizona's Proposition 207 would allow adults 21 years and older to possess, consume or transfer up to one ounce of cannabis and create a regulatory system for the products' cultivation and sale. /legislature would still need to set up the regulatory system in Arizona? Or is Hudak only referring to what's common?
A similar provision failed in 2016 by less than three points, but this time around, polling has consistently found majority support. A recent Monmouth University poll found 56% support for Proposition 207 among registered voters and 36% opposed.
Advocates credit higher support for this year's effort to a reworked ballot question. Besides legalizing marijuana, it would also set up a pathway to strike prior convictions for marijuana from criminal records, and includes a provision for home growers.
Medical use has been legal in Arizona for a decade, and it remains the only state in the country where the smallest possession of marijuana is still considered a felony.
Arizona's Republican Gov. Doug Ducey opposes this year's ballot measure, asking voters to again vote "No."
"The current system with medical marijuana is serving the people who need it for health-related reasons," Ducey wrote in the state's compilation of arguments for and against the ballot measure, provided to voters. "We don't need the wholesale expansion that full-throttle legalization will bring."
If Arizona votes to fully legalize this November, Julie Gunnigle, the Democratic candidate for Maricopa County attorney who supports Proposition 207, said it would be a powerful bellwether to other parts of the country.
"If Arizona can do it, the rest of the country is ready," she said.

South Dakota could 'leapfrog'

South Dakota has two measures on the ballot:
-- Measure 26 would establish a medical cannabis program and registration system for people with qualifying conditions.
-- Amendment A would legalize cannabis for all adults and require state legislators to adopt medical cannabis and hemp laws.
There's a term for what South Dakota could do: Leapfrog.
Many states have followed a multi-year path toward full legalization, starting with decriminalization, followed by medical use, and then full legalization. But South Dakota is poised to enact both medical and adult-use in one fell swoop -- via two ballot questions.
The state could be the first to simultaneously approve both.
South Dakota currently has tough penalties for possession of small amounts of cannabis.
The state's Republican Gov. Kristi Noem opposes both ballot measures, and recently appeared in an advertisement urging a "no" vote against full legalization.
"The fact is, I've never met someone who got smarter for smoking pot," Noem said in the ad. "It's not good for our kids and it's not going to improve our communities."
If it does pass, Hudak said, "it would be a pretty significant step toward understanding just how progressive people are ready to be, in unlikely states, around this issue."

Montana revamps its signature drives

In Montana, the window to gather the tens of thousands of signatures needed to place its two legalization questions on the ballot collided with the early months of the pandemic and stay-at-home orders.
The state also has two initiatives:
-- Initiative 190 would allow adults in the state to possess, buy and use cannabis for recreational use and defined a 20% tax on recreational cannabis. It would also allow people serving a sentence for certain cannabis-related acts to apply for resentencing or records expungement.
-- The second question, Initiative 118, would amend the state's constitution to establish 21 as the legal age to purchase, possess and consume cannabis.
Once the stay-at-home order was lifted in late April, organizers had to get creative to collect the 76,400 signatures required to make the ballot in June. They relaunched the signature drive with new health protocols in place, including hand sanitizer, distancing, temperature checks for volunteers and a new pen for every signer.
"We took a series of steps to make sure the pandemic didn't take away Montana's constitutional ballot initiative process," said Matthew Schweich, deputy director at the Marijuana Policy Project and one of the leaders of the Montana and South Dakota ballot efforts.
Montana's Chamber of Commerce came out against the ballot questions, citing businesses' concerns about marijuana's impact on the labor force -- a similar concern to the one voiced by Arizona's Chamber of Commerce.
Like Arizona, recent polling shows support for legalization. Among likely and active Montana voters, 49% support legalization while 39% oppose it, according to a Montana State University poll taken in late September.

New Jersey navigates mail-in ballots

In New Jersey, state lawmakers, unable to drum up enough support to pass a bill to fully legalize marijuana agreed to place the question directly to voters: "Do you approve amending the Constitution to legalize a controlled form of marijuana called 'cannabis'?"
Public Question No. 1 would amend the state constitution to legalize cannabis for personal, non-medical use by adults 21 and older. If the measure passes, the state commission that oversees the medical market would also regulate the personal market.
Gregg Edwards, executive director of Don't Let NJ Go to Pot, called the move to change the state's Constitution "pretty extreme," saying, "Now cannabis is going to appear in the New Jersey Constitution alongside the freedom to associate. And once it's in the Constitution, the likelihood of it coming out is slim or next to none."
Edwards said that normally, he'd be speaking with parent teacher organizations and local chambers of commerce to build support for the opposition effort, but this year "they just haven't been available to us."
"We would have liked to spend the spring, summer and fall talking to folks," he said. "It's just been next to impossible."
The push to legalize has enjoyed a healthy lead in the polls.
But organizers -- facing the challenges of expanded mail-in voting in the state due to Covid-19 -- said they have had to help voters, some new to the mail-in-ballot process altogether, find the question on the ballot. itself. Depending on the county, it's likely on the backside of the ballot.
"We have to drill down on making sure people know they have to flip the ballot over," said Tara Martin with NJ CAN 2020.

Mississippi's medicinal push

Mississippians will consider two dueling proposals to legalize medical marijuana. The state's unique ballot's structure asks voters whether they are for approving either Initiative 65 or Initiative 65A, or against both.
-- Initiative 65 would allow physicians to recommend medical cannabis for patients with any of 22 qualifying conditions such as cancer, multiple sclerosis and post-traumatic stress disorder. The constitutional amendment would establish a regulatory program for businesses to grow and sell medical cannabis and for the products to be taxed at a 7% rate.
-- Initiative 65A, an alternative proposal, would limit the smoking of medical cannabis to people who are terminally ill, and would leave the future regulatory framework up to the legislature.
Even if a person votes against both, they still have the opportunity to choose between the two.
Should either measure pass, Hudak said, "it would signal a pretty significant change in politics around cannabis in the South in a way we really haven't had a good test of yet."

End of the road for legalization via ballot measure?

Advocates say they first pursued the piecemeal ballot measure process to legalize cannabis because it has been easier than navigating the time-consuming efforts in state legislatures. But they're running out of states that use ballot measures to shape public policy, Hudak said.
Just 26 states have initiative or veto referendum processes at the state level. And already, leaders in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and New Mexico are calling for their states to legalize too.
"Conversations are getting more serious," Hudak said. "A lot of progress has been made at the legislative level, even if there's not a lot to show for it."
But Schweich hopes voters' decisions come Election Day will serve as a tipping point toward a national conversation.
"The reason there's a conversation in Congress is because of all of the victories that we've already incurred at the state level," Schweich said. "If we can win in New Jersey, Mississippi, South Dakota, Montana and Arizona, it's going to send a really loud message to Congress that it's time to fix this at the federal level in 2021."

Attitudes have changed

"Marijuana used to represent the counter culture. Now it represents Wall Street in many ways," said Kevin Sabet, co-founder and CEO of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, a national group that opposes legalization. Sabet and his organization support decriminalization of marijuana use, which would end treating the drug as a criminal offense. Currently, 27 states and Washington, DC, have decriminalized cannabis.
"The idea that to not throw people in prison and to decriminalize, you have to make big tobacco rich and commercialize marijuana is unfounded," Sabet said.
As more states have legalized cannabis, tobacco and alcohol companies have made sizable investments in the burgeoning industry. In 2018, Altria, formerly known as Philip Morris, invested $1.8 billion in a Canadian cannabis company. Major US breweries including Anheuser-Busch InBev, Constellation Brands and Molson Coors have invested or partnered with cannabis companies. In October, American beer brewer Pabst Blue Ribbon released a cannabis-infused seltzer for sale in some California dispensaries and online.
"Legalization, no doubt, is going to make a few people very rich," Sabet said. "And it may rescue big tobacco from its long economic demise as well as give big alcohol a new product line."
Hudak says there has been a "market consolidation."
"The fear out there is that there will be a Philip Morris of cannabis, which we don't have," Hudak said. "We shouldn't fear big marijuana, we should fear bad marijuana. The idea that there is a large business operating does not necessarily mean that the outcomes will be bad, and at the same time, simply because a business is small doesn't necessarily mean that it's behaviors will be good."
He added that regulatory systems can help create some guard rails -- and there's more work to do.
"The unfortunate reality right now is that the way the cannabis industry works and states structure their laws, it's a lot easier for a wealthy, white male business man who's had success in another industry to get into the cannabis industry than it is for someone who previously grew in the black market or a person of color of younger person or person of fewer means," Hudak said.

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Franklin Memorial Hospital reports four positive COVID-19 cases - Lewiston Sun Journal

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The main and Emergency entrances to the Franklin Memorial Hospital in Farmington. Morning Sentinel file photo

FARMINGTON — Franklin Memorial Hospital announced Friday that four members of its care team have tested positive for COVID-19.

The Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention has classified the cases as an outbreak.

Medical leaders at the hospital are working with the Maine CDC to limit the spread of the outbreak. The four individuals who tested positive worked in different parts of the hospital and the hospital has initiated testing of anyone who could have potentially been exposed. The employees are in quarantine.

According to a statement released Friday by the hospital, the cases are not thought to pose a huge risk to patients because the staff has been consistent in using protective equipment that has been shown to minimize transmission of COVID-19.

However, medical leaders at the hospital worry the cases are a sign that COVID-19 is spreading extensively to Maine’s rural areas. Trampas Hutches, president of Franklin Community Health Care, said in the statement that it is important for members of the community to continue to wear a mask, social distance, practice good hand hygiene and to keep surfaces clean.

“Up to this point, Maine has done much better than the rest of the country controlling the spread of this virus, and fortunately for our community, it hasn’t been as prevalent in Franklin County,” Hutches said.  “With the cooler weather, every indication is that that is starting to change. It is vital that we take this threat seriously by wearing a mask and practicing social distancing.”

Franklin Memorial Hospital is open for all services, and there are extensive protocols in place to keep patients safe, including universal masking in all facilities, frequent cleaning and designated areas for treating those who may have been infected with COVID-19.


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Friday, October 30, 2020

Four years of Trump has made the world less safe, and the damage might be irreversible - CNN

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President Donald Trump's administration has already rocked confidence in the US-led international order to such an extent that experts fear the damage done to global democratic norms could take decades to restore.
From befriending autocratic strongmen to undermining multi-national institutions -- and even questioning the legitimacy American democracy -- Trump presided over a deliberate shift in the reliability of Reagan's "shining city on a hill."
"He's normalized things that were taboo. If any other Western leader acted like Trump, they'd be marginalized," said Nanjala Nyabola, a political analyst based in Nairobi. "As leader of one of the most powerful nation on earth, he's been able to behave with complete disregard for the institutions and norms that rely on good faith and trust in the international community. Undercutting that will be Trump's lasting legacy."
Perhaps the clearest examples of Trump's apparent disdain for democracy can be seen in his admiration for autocrats and authoritarians elsewhere. He has called the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia a "friend of mine" who is doing a "really spectacular job". Saudi citizens do not get to vote and are ruled by a royal family who have spent decades presiding over human rights abuses.
He has called North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un a "real leader" with whom he gets on "really well". North Korea is probably the worst example of a dictatorship on earth, with dissidents imprisoned in gulags and opponents performatively executed by a ruling family who are deified in state media.
Trump's love of strongmen doesn't stop with dictators. He's also applauded authoritarians in pseudo or partial democracies. He congratulated Russia's President Vladimir Putin and Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on electoral triumphs that were declared by international electoral observers to be lacking in genuine competition and not fought fairly, respectively. In the case of Turkey, the vote was a constitutional referendum which handed Erdogan sweeping new powers.
"When the President of the United States congratulates authoritarians for winning unfair elections or calls genuine dictators his friend, it gives those leaders the propaganda win of an endorsement from the supposed moral leader of the world," says Nic Cheeseman, professor of democracy at the University of Birmingham. "When you combine these endorsements with Trump's reduced presence on the world stage, he has created space for strongman to behave even more aggressively at home and internationally."
Trump has shown little interest in taking autocrats to task, even for grievous abuses. When journalist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered by a Saudi hit squad, Trump gave the Crown Prince a pass, saying the Middle East was "a vicious, hostile place." After Russia meddled in the 2016 US election, Trump repeatedly refused to condemn Putin. And at a G7 summit last year, Trump reportedly referred to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi -- a key US ally long accused of human rights abuses -- as "my favorite dictator."
Over the past four years, Trump has also withdrawn from international agreements and questioned the relevance of international institutions that have historically relied on America's political and financial support.
His actions have the direct and immediate impact of reducing the effectiveness of multilateralism. "When Trump pulls out of the World Health Organization in the middle of a pandemic and accuses it of working with China, he risks destroying the long-term credibility of international bodies in dealing with global crises," says Cheeseman. "When he pulls out of treaties like the Paris climate accord, he reduces the international community's ability to ask a country to stop chopping down trees. If the US is no longer a stakeholder, why should anyone else be?"
Nyabola thinks that the long-term impact of Trump's unilateralism carries two significant risks. First, his criticisms of institutions like NATO and the UN could "unravel decades of work that went into creating forums built on trust and honestly." Second, she believes that his unrestrained style of leadership has "changed international expectations of the office of president." Those expectations might include standing beside democratic nations when their independence is threated, or protecting Western security interests and promoting stability, rather than befriending and congratulating hostile actors who seek to undermine these principles.
This creates a problem for those who succeed Trump -- either now or in four years -- who would like to present his presidency as an aberration. "His rhetoric and behavior have changed what friends and enemies can claim to expect from a US president," says Jennifer Cassidy, a diplomatic scholar at Oxford University. "This means a country like Iran now has a free pass to say they will never negotiate with the US again. What is the point, they can credibly claim, if someone like Trump comes along again and rips it all up?"
Trump's transformation of America's global standing will cast a shadow over whoever eventually replaces him as president. If that's Joe Biden this January, it's likely he will try and restore some of America's international relations from day one. The difficulty he faces is, no matter how loudly he champions returning to normal, Trump happened once and the rest of the world is aware he could happen again. "Trump 2.0 could be a younger, more intellectually coherent prospect. They could have a more overt desire to tear apart the post-war world order," says Cheeseman.
No matter how much those who revered the American-led world order might want a new administration to flick a switch which undoes the past four years, it's going to take time for the US to be fully trusted by allies again. And while it rebuilds that trust, those who oppose Western democracy will continue to occupy the space that Trump afforded them when he vacated his post as leader of the free world.

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Four fixes for Bears' offense; Lions, Seahawks bolster defense - NFL.com

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Former NFL player and scout Bucky Brooks knows the ins and outs of this league, providing keen insight in his notebook. The topics of this edition include:

But first, a look at how to repair a playoff hopeful's beleaguered offense ...

Is it time for Bears coach Matt Nagy to give up play-calling duties? 

That's the question floating around the Windy City with Chicago's offense continuing to sputter. Although the team is in a prime position to snag a playoff berth with a 5-2 mark near the midpoint of the season, it is hard to consider the Monsters of the Midway legitimate contenders with a punchless offense that ranks 27th in the league in points per game (19.7). It's a credit to the stinginess of Nagy's defense that the Bears are the only above-.500 team among the six squads that average fewer than 20 points per game. The five other teams are a putrid 7-26 combined this season.

The Bears have regressed from a unit that averaged 26.3 points per game in 2018 (fourth best in the NFC) to one that has posted just 18.2 points per game since the start of last season. The drastic decline prompted Nagy to bench former first-round pick Mitchell Trubisky in favor of 2020 trade acquisition Nick Foles a month ago, but Foles hasn't provided the lift fans were hoping for, as Chicago has failed to reach 24 points in each of his four starts. In fact, the Bears could only muster a season-low 10 points in a lopsided Week 7 loss to the Rams.

Nagy acknowledged this week that he's considered relinquishing the play-calling to offensive coordinator Bill Lazor, but added: "Right now, where we're at, that's not where we think it's at, but at the same point in time, I'll always continue each week to look at it."

While I certainly understand the concern over the Bears' offense based on its inconsistent passing game and almost non-existent rushing attack (84.1 rush YPG, ranks last in the NFL), I still believe Nagy is the best man to dig the offense out of the hole as the play-caller. The former Arena League quarterback was the driving force of the offense's resurgence during his first season on the job and he has enough weaponry at his disposal to get the unit back on track in 2020. Such a dramatic turnaround will require Nagy to conduct an intensive self-scout on his squad and play-calling tendencies, but it can be done if he enters the process with an open mind. 

After taking some time to study the All-22 Coaches Film of the Bears, here are four things they can do to get back on track on offense: 

1) Increase the tempo.Based on my review of the tape, Foles and the Bears play better when they are operating at a quicker pace. The quarterback appears to have a better feel for the game when he has more control of the offense at the line of scrimmage, and the faster tempo puts more of the responsibility on No. 9 to make things happen.

By utilizing the no-huddle approach, the Bears are able to get their quarterback into a rhythm by featuring more layups on the menu, leading to a string of completions that raise his confidence. In addition, the frenetic pace forces opponents into simplified looks that alleviates some of the pressure on the offensive line. Defensive coordinators are reluctant to dial up heavy pressure against a no-huddle offense due to communication concerns and potential mental errors. The reduction of blitzes should make it easier for the offensive line to sort out its responsibilities in pass protection to keep Foles upright in the pocket. 

Operating at a faster tempo can also help to nullify the pass rush with defensive linemen unable to rotate in and out between plays. If the Bears rip off three or four first downs in a row, the pass rush could become a non-factor due to fatigue, giving the offensive line a chance to seize control of the line of scrimmage.

2) Cut out the cute plays.Nagy's innovative play calls are fun to watch from my couch. Sometimes his trickery disrupts the flow of the offense, though. The reverses, shovel passes and quick pitches show creativity, but the Bears are at their best when they stick to the basics. The lack of production from their misdirection and deception tactics frequently leaves the Bears behind the chains or completely destroys the rhythm of the drive. 

Nagy has to resist the urge to play trick 'em football and focus on beating opponents with consistent execution from a smaller menu of plays. Whether it is throwing more quick passes to the perimeter against soft coverage or featuring a diverse screen game, the Bears can get better results by sticking to their core plays. 

The thought of cutting back on the fun plays will certainly test the discipline and patience of an innovative coach, but Nagy must dial it back to have any chance of getting the offense back on track.

3) Find ways to let Allen Robinson make plays.The Bears have done a decent job of feeding Robinson -- he ranks fourth in the league in targets (70) and eighth in the league in receptions (44) -- but I wouldn't be opposed to getting him the ball even more, especially in spaces where he can make a play after the catch (he's averaging just 7.8 yards per target, ranking 74th in the NFL). It's hard for some creative coaches to prioritize players over plays, but Nagy can jumpstart the Bears' offense by simply putting the ball in the hands of his best players and letting them go to work. This is certainly easier said than done depending on the defense's tactics, but the Bears will score more points and produce more yards when their best players get more touches. 

Surveying the roster, Robinson should be the top priority on the call sheet as the team's most dynamic playmaker. He is a natural WR1 with the size, strength and ball skills to dominate on the perimeter. Nagy must give him enough chances to make his mark in the passing game. Whether he tosses Robinson more hitches and curls on the outside to increase his touch count or encourages Foles to throw the back-shoulder fade to him whenever he spots a favorable one-on-one matchup, the Bears' top priority should revolve around getting No. 12 the ball early and often. 

If Robinson can make a big impact as the team's No.1 receiver, it will set the table for others to eat when opponents tilt their coverage in Robinson's direction. This will make the game easier for Foles while enabling Darnell Mooney, Anthony Miller and Jimmy Graham to make better contributions as complementary weapons.

4) Stick with the run.While the Bears rank dead last in rush yards per game (84.1), Nagy can't abandon the running game. He needs to threaten the defense with enough runs to prevent opponents from sending heavy pressure at Foles or loading up in coverage. The Bears are currently operating with a 65:35 pass-run ratio and the pass-centric approach exposes the weaknesses of the team. The offensive line isn't good enough to consistently protect the quarterback when he's constantly dropping back. The overexposure for Foles ultimately leads to too many turnovers and miscues. 

Nagy must exhibit more patience with the run despite the pedestrian results because it still can enable the Bears to control the tempo and dictate the terms to the defense. Perhaps he takes a more spontaneous approach with the running game and calls runs on random downs (second-and-medium or second-and-long) to see if he can pop a big gainer against a defense sitting on the pass.

From a personnel standpoint, David Montgomery (3.7 yards per carry, 1 rush TD) needs to be more effective as the RB1. He's not getting it done as a lead back and the Bears have to determine how to best utilize him to get at least moderate production from the ground game. Cordarrelle Patterson has been effective in some spots, but it is too easy for the defense to detect how he'll be used due to the small selection of plays in which he touches the ball. 

As tempting as it might be to air it out, Nagy can't turn every game into a seven-on-seven competition and expect better results.

DINK AND DUNK

Xavier Rhodes' renaissance: If you haven't paid close attention to the Colts' defense, you're missing out on one of the most impressive bounce-back campaigns in recent memory. After falling from the ranks of the elite due to a dismal 2019 campaign, Xavier Rhodes is performing like a Tier 1 player with a chance to reclaim his crown as the league's premier shutdown corner.

Through six games, Rhodes is holding opponents to a 44.4 percent completion rate (better than Jalen Ramsey's 53.1 percent and Stephon Gilmore's 55.6 percent) while tallying eight passes defensed and a pair of interceptions, per Next Gen Stats. Most impressively, the former All-Pro has reemerged as an eraser while transitioning into a new scheme that's placed a greater emphasis on zone coverage than the man-heavy system that showcased his talents as an aggressive bump-and-run corner during his seven seasons with the Vikings. 

The quick acclimation to the Colts' Tampa 2 scheme could be attributed to Rhodes' experience as a rookie in a similar system under then-Vikings head coach Leslie Frazier. Colts defensive backs coach Alan Williams was a part of the Vikings' coaching staff that tutored Rhodes during his rookie season. Their reunion and the return to a familiar system have enabled the veteran to focus on the basics in repairing his game. 

From footwork to hash-split awareness and route recognition, Rhodes has been able to refine his fundamentals while playing in a scheme that enables him to rely on his experience and instincts to make plays. With the veteran comfortable and playing at a high level, the Colts' defense is benefitting from the reemergence of a shutdown corner settling in on the island.

Trade boosts the Lions' playoff chances: Credit Bob Quinn for making a big move before next week's trade deadline to help his defense. The embattled general manager sent the Cowboys a conditional sixth-round draft pick in exchange for defensive end Everson Griffen. The four-time Pro Bowl selectee gives coach Matt Patricia a veteran player to fortify a front line that has struggled to get to the quarterback. 

The Lions are tied for 28th in the league in sacks with eight. Defensive ends Trey Flowers and Romeo Okwara have combined for six of those sacks, but Detroit needed another playmaker to beef up the front line and enhance the defense's chances of winning with four-man rushes. Enter Griffen, who has tallied 2.5 sacks and 12 hurries in seven games this season.

As a dynamic pass rusher with the capacity to play inside or outside, Griffen gives Patricia a queen on the chessboard to create and exploit mismatches at the line of scrimmage. The 32-year-old remains one of the league's better pass rushers with a game built on speed, quickness and a non-stop motor. Griffen overwhelms blockers with a speed rush and hesitation spin move that reminds me of four-time NBA MVP LeBron James driving to the hole. 

With most offensive tackles unable to withstand Griffen's relentless approach, the veteran routinely notches sacks on extra-effort plays. Given that the Lions have been able to hang tough with opponents while lacking a consistent pass rush, the addition of an energetic rusher could push them over the top as a contender for a playoff spot down the stretch.

Much-needed help is on the way for Seahawks: Like the Lions, Seattle filled a major void this week, acquiring Carlos Dunlap via a trade with the Bengals. The 11th-year pro gives Pete Carroll a proven pass rusher to insert into the lineup at the Leo position. Moreover, Dunlap gives them a long, rangy athlete with the requisite traits to play on the edge.  

"Carlos has been a very, very consistent player for a long time," Carroll told the media after the move was announced, per the Seahawks' official website. "He's always been fast, always been athletic, he still moves his feet well and gets off the rock and knows exactly how to play the spot that we want to play him in. Really it was exciting to share that with him, he was concerned to know how we would play him at all, so that was good for him to hear.

"... This is an outside guy, he's classically what you're looking for as an edge rusher. ... There are always times you're mixing schemes and you're doing things to disguise stuff and all of that. He's got the ability to (move inside) but that's not what we're bringing him here to do."

The Seahawks desperately needed an edge rusher to add some firepower to a defense that's tallied just nine sacks in six games. The lack of pressure from the front four prompted Carroll to utilize All-Pro safety Jamal Adams as the Seahawks' designated pass rusher early this season. The fourth-year pro relentlessly attacked quarterbacks from a box alignment on a variety of five-man pressures off the edge. Despite the successful results (Adams notched two sacks and three tackles for loss in the first two games of the season), the Seahawks needed a front-line presence to fill out their lineup, particularly with Adams being sidelined with a groin injury for the past three games.  

Dunlap heads to the Pacific Northwest with 82.5 career sacks and seven straight seasons with at least 7.5 sacks on his resume. Although he hasn't posted double-digit sacks since 2015 (when he recorded 13.5 sacks and 34 QB hits), he has tallied at least 21 QB hits in each of the last four seasons. If Dunlap gives the Seahawks a persistent presence off the edge, he will undoubtedly boost a defense that is on pace (479.2 yards allowed per game) to finish as the worst in the Super Bowl era.

1) Is Davante Adams the league's best route runner? If you asked my NFL Network colleague James Jones for his list of the NFL's best route runners, he would undoubtedly include Adams in the conversation. Jones might be influenced by his love of the Green Bay Packers, but I can't dispute his opinion after taking a long, hard look at Adams' game this season.

The seventh-year pro is like Picasso on the field, painting masterpieces with spectacular route-running skills. Adams works defensive backs with an array of releases that puts them on their heels before leaving them in the dust with an assortment of tricks at the top of his routes. The crafty receiver displays extraordinary stop-start quickness, balance and body control getting out of breaks. His consistent separation reflects his combination of athleticism and superb technical skills.

Studying the All-22 Coaches Film from Adams' 13-catch, 196-yard effort against the Houston Texans, I was blown away by the three-time Pro Bowler's ability to get open against any coverage. Whether facing man or zone, Adams found a way to create space from defenders. He not only displays a keen sense of timing but understands where he fits in the route progression. He patiently sets defenders up with a little extra shake-and-bake when he knows he is the second or third read in the progression and it will take Aaron Rodgers more time to find him down the field.

Adams' mastery of that subtle tactic (patience) combined with his vast array of moves makes him a hard matchup, particularly with coach Matt LaFleur moving him around the formation to create more opportunities for him to touch the rock. The Packers will feature No. 17 in the slot or out wide in the spread and empty formations to isolate him on specific defenders while also avoiding brackets and double coverage from opponents. The diverse alignments make it hard for defensive coordinators to get a bead on his whereabouts and enables Adams to enjoy free access all over the field.

Given more space and freedom to showcase his artistry as a route runner, Adams is solidifying his spot as a top-five receiver.

2) Who is Dallas' new QB1? Ben DiNucci is still an unknown to most on the national scene despite making his NFL debut in relief of the injured Andy Dalton last week. The James Madison University product did create a buzz in scouting circles leading up to the 2020 NFL Draft, though, and he's about to be introduced to a national audience with the rookie preparing to start in place of Dalton, who remains in the concussion protocol, for the Cowboys on Sunday Night Football.

The 6-foot-3, 209-pounder finished his career with the Dukes as the Colonial Athletic Association's Offensive Player of the Year after leading the FCS in completion percentage (70.9) while amassing 4,010 yards (3,441 pass yards; 569 rush yards) and 36 total touchdowns as a redshirt senior. The Pittsburgh transfer compiled a 45:18 touchdown-to-interception ratio and a 69.7 percent completion rate in 29 games with the Dukes. DiNucci added 16 rushing touchdowns while flashing intriguing skills as a dual-threat playmaker from the pocket.

Studying the All-22 Coaches Film from his time at JMU, the Cowboys' seventh-round draft pick is a capable quick-rhythm passer with a fast release and quick processing skills. He played the game like a blackjack dealer at a Las Vegas casino, dealing the ball to pass catchers on the perimeter. Despite his ability to thrive as a rhythm passer from the pocket, he adds an element as an improvisational playmaker. DiNucci has an uncanny ability to elude pass rushers while identifying and connecting with receivers down the field. He racked up score after score on a variety of impromptu slip-and-slide throws and scramble tosses near the red zone.

DiNucci's athleticism and improvisational skills add a dimension to the offense with his potential to execute the QB run game. He is an effective zone-read runner with a knack for pulling the ball at the right time, particularly near the goal line when defenses are keying on the running back. With DiNucci displaying credible running skills to complement his raw arm talent, he has the potential to become a unique playmaker with the capacity to throw to either side of the field on the move.

From a critical standpoint, DiNucci's improvisational skills and aggressive mentality can make him a bit of a wild card as a playmaker. He has a tendency to hunt for big plays, and that can lead to turnovers as a pro. As a small-school standout, he was able to get away with some throws that will become pick-sixes in the NFL. He must curb those throws to have success in his new role.

As the temporary starter in Dallas, DiNucci could add some spice to an offense that's struggling with a patchwork offensive line. If he can resist the urge to make hero throws under duress, the rookie has more than enough talent to win games with a five-star supporting cast on the perimeter and in the backfield. That's easier said than done, but we will get a chance to see DiNucci make his mark against the Eagles this weekend with the division title still very much up for grabs.

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