Report: Les Miles Has ‘Emerged as a Front-Runner’ for Kansas Head Coach Job

AUBURN, AL - SEPTEMBER 24:  Head coach Les Miles of the LSU Tigers looks on during the game against the Auburn Tigers at Jordan-Hare Stadium on September 24, 2016 in Auburn, Alabama.  (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Former Oklahoma State and LSU head coach Les Miles is reportedly the “front-runner” for the vacant Kansas position, according to Bruce Feldman of The Athletic:

Bruce Feldman @BruceFeldmanCFB

Am told by a source that there’s a lot of momentum for Les Miles at #KU as the new head coach, and that he’s emerged as a frontrunner. https://t.co/XEQhhT036r

Kansas fired head coach David Beaty on Sunday. Beaty, who has gone just 6-39 since taking over the position prior to the 2015 season, will finish out the year.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

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Is China persecuting its Uighur Muslim minority?

The United Nations says it resembles “a massive internment camp, shrouded in secrecy”.

But China says the facility is a “vocational education and employment training centre”.

More than a million Uighur Muslims are believed to be held in the Western region of Xinjiang – a mainly Uighur populated area.

Beijing denies accusations of the mass detentions, saying Uighurs who have been involved in crime are being given a second chance through vocational work.

But the centres where they are thought to be detained have come under increasing scrutiny by many rights groups.

During questioning at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday, which is reviewing China’s human rights record this week, Beijing said it protects the freedoms of its ethnic minorities.

But will the growing international pressure make any difference?

Presenter: Mohammed Jamjoom

Guests:

Max Oidtmann – assistant professor of history at Georgetown University

Einar Tangen – political and economic analyst

Sophie Richardson – China director at Human Rights Watch

Source: Al Jazeera News

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Battle for Hodeidah ‘threatens lives’ of 59 children in hospital

The battle for the rebel-held city of Hodeidah in western Yemen has placed dozens of children in a hospital “at imminent risk of death”, according to the United Nations’ children’s agency (UNICEF).

The urgent warning on Tuesday came amid reports of fierce clashes between pro-government forces, which are backed by a Saudi-UAE-led military coalition, and Houthi rebels near the strategic Red Sea port, where hundreds of thousands of civilians could be trapped as war closes in.

“Intense fighting in the Yemeni port city of Hodeidah is now dangerously close to al-Thawra hospital – putting the lives of 59 children, including 25 in the intensive care unit, at imminent risk of death,” UNICEF said in a statement.

The agency said that medical staff and patients in the hospital in southern Hodeidah city, just 500 metres from the port, heard heavy bombing and gunfire.

“Access to and from the hospital, the only functioning one in the area, is now imperilled,” it said.

The conflict in Yemen began with the 2014 takeover of the capital, Sanaa, by the Houthis, who toppled the internationally recognised government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

The Saudi-UAE-led alliance, which is backed by the United States, intervened in 2015 in the form of a massive air campaign aimed at reinstalling Hadi’s government.

In June, the coalition launched a new offensive to retake Hodeidah, held by the Houthis since 2014.

The city is the main portal for humanitarian aid to the suffering population of Yemen, where famine looms over 14 million people – half of the country’s population – and a child dies every 10 minutes, according to the UN.

“The toll in lives could be catastrophic if the port is damaged, destroyed or blocked,” UNICEF said.

The Saudi-UAE coalition has imposed a blockade on the port, allegedly as part of efforts to prevent the Houthis from using it as a landing point for weapons supplied by Iran – an accusation denied by both the rebels and Tehran.

Rights groups are also warning that the worst could be yet to come in Hodeidah.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said: “As fighting intensifies in Hodeidah, MSF is concerned for patients and staff at Al-Salakhana hospital and for thousands of residents who remain in the city.

“All parties to the conflict must ensure that civilians and facilities such as hospitals are protected in Yemen,” the aid group said in a Twitter post on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, the Norwegian Refugee Council on Monday warned fighting and air attacks in Hodeidah threatened “to further deteriorate civilians’ access to safety and aid”.

Save the Children has reported almost 100 air raids counted by its staff at the weekend – five times as many as in the whole first week of October.

The poorest country in the Arab world, Yemen is now home to what the UN calls the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

According to the UN, at least 10,000 people have been killed since the coalition entered the conflict.

The death toll has not been updated in years, however, and is likely to be far higher – the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, an independent watchdog, recently said around 56,000 Yemenis had been killed in the violence.

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Champions League Hype Tuesday 6

  • Champions League Tuesday Is Huge 😍

    Liverpool, Barca and PSG all ready to throw down

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Red Star vs. Liverpool
    Monaco vs. Brugge
    Atletico vs. Dortmund
    Spurs vs. PSV
    Schalke vs. Galatasaray
    Napoli vs. PSG
    Porto vs. Lokomotiv
    Inter vs. Barcelona

    Today 😍 https://t.co/6VRpdrl6Dg

  • Neymar Needs to Bring All This Today 😎

  • Messi vs. Icardi: It Is On 🍿

    UEFA Champions League @ChampionsLeague

  • Barca Beat Inter 2-0 in Last Gameweek

    Today, they meet again

  • Barca: ‘Messi Might Play’ vs. Inter

    via Bleacher Report

  • Full Odds and Predictions for Champions League Tuesday 🔥

    via Bleacher Report

  • It Is Time 🏆

    Pick you poison, what game will you be watching?

    B/R Football @brfootball

    🎧 All the big names 💉 #UCL https://t.co/6GDUz0qG6m

  • Napoli-PSG Will Be Big

    Last game ended 2-2

  • Preview: Napoli vs. PSG

    via Goal

  • Griezmann or Reus?

    Who will prove pivotal in Atletico vs. Dortmund?

    UEFA Champions League @ChampionsLeague

    🗓 Atlético v Dortmund
    ⚽ Griezmann or Reus?

    #UCL https://t.co/1JplnD2Zcl

  • Dortmund Destroyed Atleti Last Time 💀

    Time for Atletico’s revenge?

  • Preview: Atletico vs. Dortmund

    via Thehardtackle.com

  • Tottenham vs. PSV: Spurs on Verge of UCL Knockout

    via BBC Sport

  • When Inter Took Down Barca…

    Can the Serie A side do it again?

    UEFA Champions League @ChampionsLeague

    ℹ Inter 3-1 Barcelona, April 2010

    ⚽ 19′ Pedro Rodríguez
    ⚽ 30′ Wesley Sneijder
    ⚽ 48′ Maicon
    ⚽ 61′ Diego Milito

    🤔 Who will come out on top this time?

    #UCL https://t.co/m1IlHxWCaO

  • Griezmann Is So Up for It

    UEFA Champions League @ChampionsLeague

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    Egypt: Archaeologists discover artifacts dating back 4,000 years

    Archaeologists in Egypt have seen a number of important finds in recent years [Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities via AP Photo]
    Archaeologists in Egypt have seen a number of important finds in recent years [Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities via AP Photo]

    Archaeologists working at a dig in Cairo have found several fragments of stone slabs with inscriptions that could be 4,000 years old, Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquities said.

    Some of the limestones date to the 12th and 20th dynasties, of the Middle and New Kingdoms, the ministry said on Tuesday.

    German Egyptologist Dietrich Raue, the head of the mission, said one inscription refered to Atum, an important and frequently mentioned god, as being responsible for the flooding of the Nile River in the Late Period between 664 and 332 BC.

    Matariya, in eastern Cairo, was once part of the ancient city of Heliopolis, or the city of the sun.

    A photo released by the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities shows part of a stone slab that was discovered at a dig in eastern Cairo [Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities via AP]

    Egypt has seen a haul of archaeological finds over the past two years.

    A sandstone sphinx dating to the Ptolemic Dynasty was found in the southern city of Aswa in September.

    The Ptolemaic Dynasty ruled Egypt for roughly 300 years – from around 320 to about 30 BC.

    In May 2017, Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquities announced the discovery of what is believed to be the 3,700-year-old burial chamber of a pharaoh’s daughter in a suburb of Cairo.

    Archaeologists also found 12 cemeteries that are believed to be about 3,500 years old.

    Another 17 mostly intact mummies were found that month in central Egypt. These mummies were thought to be from Egypt’s 600-year Greco-Roman period, which began in 323 BC.

    Egypt frequently announces archaeological discoveries, hoping this will spur interest in its ancient treasures and revive tourism, called the “lifeblood” of its economy, which declined following a failed revolution in 2011, the military coup that put President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in power and a series of extremist attacks.

    SOURCE:
    Al Jazeera and news agencies

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    Demaryius Thomas on Broncos Trade: ‘I’m Emotional. I’m Empty. I’m Empty Still’

    DENVER, CO - NOVEMBER 4:  Wide receiver Demaryius Thomas #87 of the Houston Texans stands on the field during warm ups before a game against the Denver Broncos at Broncos Stadium at Mile High on November 4, 2018 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)

    Justin Edmonds/Getty Images

    Demaryius Thomas spent the first eight-plus years of his NFL career with the Denver Broncos, and following his trade to the Houston Texans last week, the veteran is “hurt” by the way his tenure in the Mile High City ended.

    Thomas recently went on 760 AM and said: “It just hurt me. I’m emotional. I’m empty. I’m empty still,” per ESPN’s Jeff Legwold.

    He also felt misled (h/t 9News’ Mike Klis):

    “Before the season started, the trade talk was still going, and nobody said anything to me. Why come to me Monday when it’s the same talk? When [Denver coach Vance Joseph] said that to me, I said, ‘How is it not true? My agent [Todd France] called me today and said [general manager John Elway] wanted a fifth-round pick for me.’ So, we’re telling stories to each other now? I thought we were going to be men about this.

    “…Listening to that from him and then another couple of coaches coming up to me saying, ‘It’s all fake; it’s all fake,’ and then it really happens, it’s like, ‘Man.’ It is what it is, though.”

    The 2010 first-round pick, who was the longest-tenured member of the Broncos, also believes the team was “so disrespectful” by giving some of his snaps to rookie DaeSean Hamilton, who Thomas has nothing but “love” for. While the 30-year-old Thomas said he remained a team player, he also felt the organization did him wrong by not naming him a team captain despite the players allegedly voting for him.

    Thomas said he has tried to move on, but he has heard the Broncos’ decision-makers believed he was to blame for some of the offense’s struggles. That didn’t sit well with him:

    “You know what bothers me—I don’t want to stir any pot—but it bothers me…I had people from Denver saying like, ‘They really said they got rid of you because you were the problem on offense, and they said they wanted to better the offense. I’m like, ‘Really, bro?’ People just kept stirring it on.

    “I heard they were saying that Vance was saying something, and Elway was saying something. I did so much for this organization and never had nothing bad to say about anybody—none of the players I played with. I just did my job and kept it as professional as I could. For you all to say that I was one of the reasons that the offense wasn’t going, and say this and that, man, that hurt.”

    Even though his time in Denver ended on a low note, Thomas said “it was an honor” to play for the Broncos. With five Pro Bowl selections and a Super Bowl championship, he has plenty of fond memories.

    It’s time for him to move on, and he was able to start the process by hauling in three catches for 61 yards in a 19-17 victory over Denver in his first game with Houston. Now, the focus is on helping the 6-3 Texans make the playoffs and compete for a Super Bowl.

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    Iran official: Sanctions seek ‘to impose US nationalism’ on world

    London, UK – The latest US sanctions against Tehran are an attempt by Washington to impose a vision of American nationalism upon the rest of the world, and are not just about Iran, a senior Iranian diplomat has said.

    Seyed M Kazem Sajjadpour, deputy foreign minister, made the comments in London on Tuesday, a day after the United States reimposed sanctions that were originally lifted after the signing of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – widely known as the Iran nuclear deal – in 2015.

    His comments echoed the defiant response of other Iranian leaders to the move by the administration of US President Donald Trump, who defied international opposition in May to unilaterally abandon the agreement.

    “The JCPOA and the sanctions are not just about Iran but about a transformative process in the international community whereby you have either international law, organisations, diplomacy, negotiations – or you have imposition, you have American policy versus the rest of the world,” Sajjadpour said during in a talk at Chatham House think-tank.

    “It is about Europe also: we all know what they think about Europe, even about their allies.”

    His remarks provide an insight into Iran’s diplomatic response based on an effort to isolate the US by driving a wedge between it and European countries.

    “Our policy is not just to aim at isolating the US; the US by itself is isolated, not economically – the US lacks legitimacy globally. What we are doing is practising a form of strategic patience.”

    Sajjadpour said that a “political civil war” was under way in the US between an internationalist school of thought and supporters of Trump asserting a new and “narrow-minded definition of American nationalism which negates the interests of the rest of the world”.

    He added: “Now you have a nationalist approach which thinks the United States should be at the top of everything and not just ‘America First’ but American interests, and no other interests, and also that the US achieves the re-establishment of US hegemony.

    American nationalism is very narrow-minded, it is based on xenophobia of the others – even of Europeans, he (Trump) is against Europe.”

    Although commentators have suggested that the latest round of sanctions will hurt Iran, Sajjadpour suggested that they would have a limited impact.

    He argued European leaders had now put behind them a period of “appeasement” of Trump in order to develop the special purpose legal mechanism that they hope will enable companies to get around the US penalties.

    “It is an interesting procedure but what is lacking is speed and efficiency,” said Sajjadpour. “What we need is speed and a process which is result-oriented, because it is about results.”

    Sajjadpour’s said his country remained confident that it would survive the latest setback, almost 40 years since the Iranian revolution, and had endured significantly harsher circumstances in periods such as during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

    “Times are not as challenging as they have been … Sanctions are about psychology, that you want to dominate the other, but I can inform you that Iran is self-confident.”

    The country had developed a “100 percent homemade” security system that was more independent than any other country in the world, and did not rely upon alliances.

    “Our politics is very domestic – it’s not as if Washington coughs and we get a cold,” he said. “We are not worried who is in the White House.”

    The Iranian official insisted the country had cooperated fully in the implementation of the JCPOA, but could not tolerate having to abide by the agreement but also endure sanctions.

    “Cooperation has its own limits and frames – on the JCPOA we have been cooperating and we have been abiding with the regulations, but Iran cannot have both sanctions and cooperation together.”

    Protecting the terms of the JCPOA was important not just for Iran but the global community, he added, making it necessary for other countries to counter not just the US sanctions but the ideas behind them.

    “Resistance is not just a concept exclusive to Iranians – although we like this concept and we focus on it. It is a global concept.”

    The diplomat suggested that countries were beginning to see through the frequent use of the Iranian threat by the US and its allies in shaping Middle East policy.

    The murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi last month had been a “game changer” because it exposed what has been going on in the region under the banner of the “Iranian threat”, he said.

    For regional rival Saudi Arabia, the Iranian threat had become a “commodity” used to justify foreign policy interventions such as the conflict in Yemen, which Riyadh blames on Tehran.

    Sajjadpour appealed to his audience: “Please, please don’t buy the Iranian threat, it is really a dangerous commodity which can be used for covering all the deficiencies which some of the players in the region have.”

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    Carly Rae Jepsen Brings ‘Party For One’ And An Intimate Dance Party To TV



    Getty Images

    The reign of the self-actualized bop continues, thanks to Carly Rae Jepsen. Late last week, she dropped the glimmering celebration of self “Party For One,” just about a week after Robyn’s magnificent Honey album, and a few days later, Ariana Grande followed it up with one of her own, the much-discussed “Thank U, Next,” a true anthem of loving yourself and realizing you’re the best one for you.

    To extend the party, Carly has returned, this time bringing her song to the national spotlight with an appearance on The Tonight Show Monday night (November 5). There were no solo hotel-room fantasies or impromptu parties stemming from emergency blackouts, like in the video. It was just a black-clad CRJ and her squad, delivering the song and beckoning people to dance.

    Let’s take a second to shout out the live-band arrangement of this track, which really helps with the dancing impulses. Live drums, man. Does it get any better than that? No offense against backing tracks, but come on. Nothing will get you on your feet faster than some analog percussion.

    Also, on a personal level, I appreciate the black wardrobe commitment while singing a song that could very easily be represented with a pastel or neon palette.

    “Party For One” is the first taste of an impending new Carly Rae album, due sometime in 2019. In the meantime, watch the wintry, dance-like-we’re-in-a-snowglobe performance above.

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    Israeli army wounds iconic Palestinian protester

    “If I get killed, I want to be wrapped in the same flag,” Abu Amro earlier told Al Jazeera [Mustafa Hassona/Anadolu]

    Israeli soldiers have wounded a young Palestinian man whose photo has become recognised worldwide as a symbol of Palestinian resistance.

    With a Palestinian flag in one hand and a slingshot poised in the other, the photo of 22-year-old A’ed Abu Amro has drawn comparisons with the iconic French Revolution painting, Liberty Leading the People.

    Abu Amro was taking part in protests at the northern Gaza border against Israel’s 11-year-old land, air and sea blockade when Israeli troops intervened. Abu Amro was wounded in the leg by live bullets during the clashes.

    He protests every Friday and Monday with friends.

    “If I get killed, I want to be wrapped in the same flag. We are demanding our right of return, and protesting for our dignity and the dignity of our future generation,” Abu Amro told Al Jazeera late last month.

    The photo, which went viral on social media and attracted worldwide attention, was taken by Anadolu Agency photojournalist Mustafa Hassona during a demonstration demanding the lifting of Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip.

    “I don’t go to protests to get pictures of me taken, but this has encouraged me to continue demonstrating,” he earlier told Al Jazeera.

    For nearly seven months, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have protested along the fence with Israel demanding their right to return to the homes and land their families were expelled from 70 years ago.

    They are also demanding an end to Israel’s crippling blockade of the Gaza Strip, which has gutted the coastal enclave’s economy and deprived its two million inhabitants of many basic commodities.

    Since the Great March of Return demonstrations began on March 30, more than 200 Palestinians have been killed and thousands more injured by Israeli troops deployed along the other side of the fence.

    SOURCE:
    Al Jazeera and news agencies

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