This offseason, Cowboys QB Dak Prescott worked in the same program that has helped Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Jared Goff and Blake Bortles.
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Dak Prescott hopes a change in mechanics yields results
This offseason, Cowboys QB Dak Prescott worked in the same program that has helped Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Jared Goff and Blake Bortles.
Excerpt from:
Dak Prescott hopes a change in mechanics yields results
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – Neighborhoods demanding a crackdown on the dangerous synthetic drug K2 rallied today describing the way the narcotic poisons their communities. “Right here, where we stand for those of you who don’t know, it’s become ‘zombieland,’” said Council Member Andy King. The neighborhoods might be different but the effects are the same, reports CBS2’s Marc Liverman. CBS2 exclusive video taken back in 2016 show people on K2 passed out on chairs in the middle of the sidewalk, seen again in 2018 all around New York City . Others are seen leaning against buildings and nodding out as mothers pushed their strollers close by. That was in the Mott Haven section of the Bronx, and now it’s happening in Williamsbridge. Just ask pastor Janet Hodge. “Every morning that we arrive, we find that people have used the bathroom on our property,” she said. “Every day I come outside and I find that there are men and women loitering on our stoops and they are in a stupor.” “We have people walking around zombie-like, in catatonic states, up and down White Plains Road,” said State Senator Jamaal Bailey. At a rally Monday, local politicians and residents said enough is enough. King introducing new legislation that would hold landlords and area businesses accountable. “The store will be shut down and you will not be able to reopen the same business or rent it out to the same business,” he said. The new legislation would also slap on a $100,000 fine on any business caught selling the synthetic cannabinoid. Protesters marching in the area where they say they will see dozens of people high on K2 held to a common cry: “We are going to be on the streets, we are going to march in front of your property, we are going to close you down.” K2 is a problem running rampant all over the city. Videos show businesses and dealers getting busted for selling the illegal drug. Back in May, there were more than 50 overdoses in Brooklyn alone related to illegal K2 sales.
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Leaders Fed Up With K2 Turning Their Communities Into ‘Zombieland’
The constitutional lawyer and lifelong Democrat who attracted scorn on social media for defending President Donald Trump talks with Martha Teichner about why he believes the appropriate response to the president’s incivility is not more of the same.
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Alan Dershowitz: "President Trump encourages incivility"
The constitutional lawyer and lifelong Democrat who attracted scorn on social media for defending President Donald Trump talks with Martha Teichner about why he believes the appropriate response to the president’s incivility is not more of the same.
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Alan Dershowitz: "President Trump encourages incivility"
More than half of the 17 people killed when a tourist boat sank on a Branson lake were members of the same Indiana family
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Indiana family and Missouri couple are among the tour boat accident victims
“And since I've always been a huge R&B fan, we'll do an R&B song or two.” … At the same time, Thomas responded to R&B . “I grew up in the South, …
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BJ Thomas is still hooked on the feeling of music
Delicia Cordon’s attacker wanted the same expensive jewelry McCoy had been demanding she give back, her attorney says
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Details emerge about brutal attack on NFL star’s ex-girlfriend
CHINATOWN (CBSLA) — Elderly residents in a Chinatown apartment building are anticipating a change in their living situation as they await a rent increase some say will put people on the streets. “This rental increase will be the end of me,” said Lee Kushner, a 65-year-old resident of the 123-unit Metro Chinatown Senior Lofts at Alpine and North Spring streets. He is one of dozens of senior citizens who received a 30-day notice of the 8 percent rent increase last month. Kushner’s rent will increase to $831 effective August 31, according to a letter from resident manager Joseph Angulo. “That action will eliminate and put people’s lives in serious jeopardy,” Kushner told his fellow tenants at a meeting Thursday. “You will be unable to afford the expenses of living and pay rent at the same time, and those are the cold, hard facts.” The building, which is owned by Meta Housing Corp., is not a HUD property, but a tax credit building, which is allowed to raise the rent based on income in the area. Meta Housing markets itself on its website as “experts in securing and leveraging state and federal tax credits, and in arranging complex finance structures that ensure the highest and best use of available funds.” However, it’s purported “strong sense of social advocacy” might get lost on the tenants with these new onerous increases. “I really worry about them,” one woman said about her elderly parents who live there and both in their eighties. “There’s going to be a lot more homeless people if rents keep going on like this, and it’s going to be among seniors, people who are dealing with a lot of physical problems and fixed income,” said tenant Victoria Steele. Aside from the anger, resident Erich Hunt told CBS2 News the tenants feel a sense of helplessness, a sentiment expressed across Los Angeles, one of the most competitive housing markets in the country. “They’re scared, angry, at the same time they feel uniformally helpless, which is the most scary thing,” said Hunt. He organized Thursday’s meeting and invited L.A. City Councilman Gil Cedillo, who helped delay the last rent hike by a couple of months. “As councilman Cedillo helps take the lead on this issue, he’s not going to walk in front of you, but he’s gonna walk beside you, and we hope that the outcome is something that we all will be happy with,” Cedillo’s Chief of Staff Tony Ricasa told attendees. CBS2 reached out to both Meta Housing and the management company Western Seniors Housing, but they had not replied as of Thursday evening.
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Senior Citizens In Chinatown Unsure Of Housing Fate As Rent Hike Looms
CHINATOWN (CBSLA) — Elderly residents in a Chinatown apartment building are anticipating a change in their living situation as they await a rent increase some say will put people on the streets. “This rental increase will be the end of me,” said Lee Kushner, a 65-year-old resident of the 123-unit Metro Chinatown Senior Lofts at Alpine and North Spring streets. He is one of dozens of senior citizens who received a 30-day notice of the 8 percent rent increase last month. Kushner’s rent will increase to $831 effective August 31, according to a letter from resident manager Joseph Angulo. “That action will eliminate and put people’s lives in serious jeopardy,” Kushner told his fellow tenants at a meeting Thursday. “You will be unable to afford the expenses of living and pay rent at the same time, and those are the cold, hard facts.” The building, which is owned by Meta Housing Corp., is not a HUD property, but a tax credit building, which is allowed to raise the rent based on income in the area. Meta Housing markets itself on its website as “experts in securing and leveraging state and federal tax credits, and in arranging complex finance structures that ensure the highest and best use of available funds.” However, it’s purported “strong sense of social advocacy” might get lost on the tenants with these new onerous increases. “I really worry about them,” one woman said about her elderly parents who live there and both in their eighties. “There’s going to be a lot more homeless people if rents keep going on like this, and it’s going to be among seniors, people who are dealing with a lot of physical problems and fixed income,” said tenant Victoria Steele. Aside from the anger, resident Erich Hunt told CBS2 News the tenants feel a sense of helplessness, a sentiment expressed across Los Angeles, one of the most competitive housing markets in the country. “They’re scared, angry, at the same time they feel uniformally helpless, which is the most scary thing,” said Hunt. He organized Thursday’s meeting and invited L.A. City Councilman Gil Cedillo, who helped delay the last rent hike by a couple of months. “As councilman Cedillo helps take the lead on this issue, he’s not going to walk in front of you, but he’s gonna walk beside you, and we hope that the outcome is something that we all will be happy with,” Cedillo’s Chief of Staff Tony Ricasa told attendees. CBS2 reached out to both Meta Housing and the management company Western Seniors Housing, but they had not replied as of Thursday evening.
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Senior Citizens In Chinatown Unsure Of Housing Fate As Rent Hike Looms
Over the last few years, the Chicago-based musician — equal parts … Phoelix's brew of neo-soul, funk, R&B, and rap exists in the same realm as his …
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Phoelix, the man helping shape the sound of rap talents like Saba, Smino and Noname, steps out …
KENTWOOD, Mich. (CBS Local) – Twin sisters Monica Sparks and Jessica Ann Tyson are so much alike that both are running for public office in Michigan. However, the similarities between the sisters probably end there as Jessica is running as a Republican and Monica is running as a Democrat. Jessica is running to become Kent County Commissioner in the 13th district. Motivated by the decision, Monica entered the race to become commissioner of the 12th district. “The reason that I’m standing as a Democrat is funny because she said the same thing but we just see through two different lenses,” Sparks said, via KFVS . Twin sisters run for office – one as Republican, one as Democrat https://t.co/eaQhdfDiqy pic.twitter.com/RqhSLVyzbP — KFVS News (@kfvsnews) July 18, 2018 The sisters tell local reporters that they are devoted to their respective parties and are endorsing each other’s challenger. “She’s my biggest cheerleader, and right now, I don’t have my biggest cheerleader,” Tyson explained. The twins, who were separated from their mother as children and raised in foster care, say the pain of their childhood fuels them to do good for Kent County. “It’s so amazing just to be able to sit here and run for county commissioner,” Sparks added. “Left wing and the right wing belong to the same bird.”
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Twin Sisters Are Both Running For Office, But In Opposite Parties
While country, pop, rock and classic rock shows play the St. Louis market with regularity, the story's not the same for major hip-hop and R&B tours, …
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15 concert tours we wished hadn't skipped St. Louis in 2018
Air Force One is an iconic symbol of the American presidency, but President Trump reportedly wants to update the design on the jet with a “more American” look. The current colors date back to the early 1960s. Ten presidents before Mr. Trump traveled with the same design. From outside the White House, Kris Van Cleave reports.
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President Trump pushes for Air Force One makeover
FanDuel announced it will open a 5,300-square-foot sportsbook Saturday at the Meadowlands Racetrack in New Jersey, on the same property as the stadium where the New York Giants and Jets play.
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FanDuel to open sportsbook at Meadowlands
The Saints’ dynamic duo has been speaking the same language for 12 seasons, producing one of the most sophisticated attacks in NFL history.
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Class in session: Sean Payton, Drew Brees teach NFL Lingo 101