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Acton-Boxborough boys track places 2nd in Div. 1, girls 5th – Wicked Local Acton

On Saturday Feb. 18 qualifying athletes from the Acton-Boxborough indoor track teams participated in the MIAA Division 1 championships at Bostons Reggie Lewis Center. Competing against all Division1 schools from across Massachusetts, the A-B boys placed second, and the girls tied for fifth.

Highlighting the meet for the girls was junior Samantha Friborg who won the 600 meters in 1 minute, 33.69 seconds, 3.47 seconds ahead of the second-place runner. Friborg broke the A-B school record that she set last year and also set Division 1 record.

Friborg was also the anchor for the 4x400 relay team (with Samantha Cannarozzi, Sara Mitchell, and Stella McDermott), which placed second behind Andover at 4:05.47, their best time of the season. Cannarozzi placed fifth in the long jump at 16-6, and fourth in the 55-meter dash at 7.47.

In the 1,000, Mitchell placed seventh at 3:04, and Ellen Malloy placed 11th at 3:14. Danielle Beerman tied for sixth in the high jump (4-10) by making the height on her first attempt. McDermott was 18th in the long jump at 14-7.

Senior Annika Maas had a personal best time in the 55-meter dash at 7.85. Friborg, Cannarozzi, and Mitchell in their individual events, as well as the 4x400 relay team, advance to the All-State meet on Sunday to compete against athletes from all Massachusetts divisions.

Coach Kenneth Feitsaid, We had another outstanding meet. Everyone performed great, and again came to compete. We are looking forward to next Sunday.

The A-B boys earned 47 points to place second behind Newton-North. Contributing to the teams second-place team finish were four second-place medal earners: Colin Grip in the 1,000 at 2:29 (a school record), Matt Antes in the 300 at 35.71, Adam Yang in the 55-meter hurdles with a seasonal best time of 8.01, and the 4x200 relay team (Antes, Will Collins, Brendan Flaherty, and Grip) at 1:31.

The 4x400 relay team (Collins, Flaherty, Gabe Lundy, and Grip) earned a third-place medal with a season-best time of 3:26. In the 2-mile, Patrick Nero placed fifth at 9:45, and Jackson Hamilton ran a personal best at 10:05. Lundy placed seventh in the 600 at 1:26.

In addition to the relays, Collins ran the 300 at 37.20, and Antes placed sixth in the 55-meter dash at 6.77.

Coach Brian Crossman said, The boys were strong and brave in the way they competed at the D1 meet. Just about every boy did their seasonal best. The 4x800 team of Winston Thompson, Brent Wang, Justin Klatt, and Otis Robb ran hard.

The 4x200 and 4x400 relay teams, Nero in the 2-mile, Antes in the 300, Grip in the 1000, and Yang in the 55-meter hurdles advance to the All-State meet on Sunday.

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Acton-Boxborough boys track places 2nd in Div. 1, girls 5th - Wicked Local Acton

Here’s Why Donald Trump Won’t Be Watching The Oscars – Huffington Post

President Donald Trump likely wont be watching the Academy Awardson Sunday night because, duh.

But well let White House press secretary Sean Spicer share the official reason why:

I think Hollywood is known for being rather far to the left in its opinions, and Ive got to be honest with you, I think the president will be hosting the Governors Ball that night. Mrs. Trump looks forward to putting on a phenomenal event. And the first ladys put a lot of time into this event, in welcoming our nations governors to the capital, and I have a feeling thats where the president and first lady are going to be focused on Sunday night.

MARK RALSTON via Getty Images

The former reality star has fired up feuds with the likes of Meryl Streep (whos nominated) and has also gotten roasted at previous award shows, so he probably isnt feeling chummy with show business right about now. Plus,given the anti-administration yuks that will likely spill forth at the Oscars, perhaps Trump wants to spare his ego.

While he may not tune in, we have a sneaking suspicion that the commander-in-chief wont tune out what transpires on Oscar night. Got that, Twitter?

He apparently hasnt been such a fan of the ceremony anyway, tweeting in 2014 that it was amateur night and bullshit. In 2015, he issued this politicized critique:

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Here's Why Donald Trump Won't Be Watching The Oscars - Huffington Post

Nikki Haskell Learns the Social Cost of Supporting Donald Trump – New York Times


New York Times
Nikki Haskell Learns the Social Cost of Supporting Donald Trump
New York Times
But now she is facing what may be the most difficult challenge of her life: maintaining her position in the social hierarchies of liberal New York and Los Angeles while serving as a cheerleader for one of her oldest friends, Donald J. Trump, whom she ...

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Nikki Haskell Learns the Social Cost of Supporting Donald Trump - New York Times

Poll: More Americans Trust The Media Than Donald Trump – Forbes


Forbes
Poll: More Americans Trust The Media Than Donald Trump
Forbes
Despite President Donald Trump's relentless attacks on the fake news media, a new poll from Quinnipiac University finds that more Americans trust the media than Donald Trump. A majority of Americans, 52%, said they trust the news media over Donald ...
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Poll: More Americans Trust The Media Than Donald Trump - Forbes

Here Are All The Favors Donald Trump Has Performed For Wall Street – Huffington Post

Donald Trump built his presidential campaign around two ideas: 1) a corrupt financial establishment had swindled the middle class, and 2) immigrants and foreigners are dangerous.

Some combination of these two sentiments has fueled every Americanpopulist movementdating back to President Andrew Jackson. Populists can take credit for plenty of economic progress: child labor laws, universal public education, the eight-hour workday, the abandonment of the gold standard and all modern antitrust and bank regulations. The dark side of populism can be blamed for the Trail of Tears, the Chinese Exclusion Act and the incarceration of Japanese-Americans during World War II.

After a month in office, its pretty clear which strain of populism Trump takes seriously. Hes ordered the construction of a border wall with Mexico and plans to hire 5,000 new border patrol agents and 10,000 Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. Hes also attempted to ban Syrian refugees and travelers from seven Muslim-majority nations from the country.

In the meantime, Trump has embraced American financial titans as some of his closest allies. Wall Street is making its peace with people like Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon, the former Breitbart News executive chairman, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, whos been repeatedly accused of racism,as the crackdown on immigrants intensifies.

Trumps affinity for Wall Street is most obvious in his choice of personnel. His top economic adviser, Gary Cohn, his treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, and Bannon are all Goldman Sachs alums. Trumps nominee to run the Securities and Exchange Commission is Jay Clayton, a Wall Street lawyer who has represented Goldman Sachs as a partner at Sullivan &Cromwell, a law firm so close to Goldman it is sometimes jokingly referred to as the legal wing of the bank.

Trumps pick for commerce secretary is private equity billionaire Wilbur Ross, whose wheeling and dealing included stewardship over American Home Mortgage Servicing and Option One, mortgage companies that paid millions to settle charges of relying on forged signatures and fabricated documents to push through foreclosures. Mnuchins bank, OneWest often referred to as a foreclosure machine also pursued improper evictions by robo-signing key documents, a fact Mnuchin lied about in his confirmation hearing.

Within two weeks of taking office, Trump was already delivering policy favors to Wall Street. He feted banking kingpins likeJPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon at the White House before signing a flashy executive order calling for a review of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law.

The signing ceremony was essentially symbolic regulatory agencies dont need an executive order to rewrite the regulations required by the law. In fact, they dont really need to rewrite the rules they can simply refuse to enforce them.

Trump Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao was a master of this approach when she served as Labor Secretary for President George W. Bush. As The Huffington Posts Dave Jamieson has reported, a Government Accountability Office investigation found that Chaos agency simply didnt investigate serious complaints about labor violations. The GAO determined this by registering several fake and outrageous complaints, and monitoring the departments response. In the most outlandish case, Chaos agency didnt follow up on a report that children were operating meat grinders and circular saws at a meat-packing plant during school hours.

All Trumps appointees have to do to gut Dodd-Frank is follow Chaos example. But the symbolism of the signing ceremony matters. Trump was sending the strongest signal possible to Wall Street that he will not interfere with their quest for profit, however reckless or ill-gotten it may be.

Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The same day Trump attacked Dodd-Frank, he signed another executive order with more immediate consequences. The Obama administration had crafted a fiduciary duty rule that required retirement account professionals to manage their funds in their clients best interests. Most people think their retirement advisers have to work on their behalf, but many pick and choose investments based on special perks and financial gains that accrue to the adviser or his firm.

As far as Wall Streets bottom line was concerned, the rule was a bigger nuisance than the vast majority of Dodd-Frank. The Obama administration had calculated that Americans lose $17 billion a year to conflicted retirement advice and Goldman Sachs projected the rule would cost the investment industry $7 billion a year, plus $13 billion upfront.

Trump erased the rule. He invited Rep. Ann Wagner (R-Mo.) to the signing ceremony to explain the move. Wagner, who raises about $900,000 every election cycle from the financial sector (more than quadruple her haul from any other industry), declared: This is about Main Street this is a big day, a big moment for Americans. It was true. It was also a big rip-off.

This executive order was not the most harmful of Trumps early activities, but it may be the dumbest. Any administrative agency that wants to write a new regulation under president Trump will have to identify two existing regulations that it will eliminate.

This is, of course, completely arbitrary. It is also short-sighted. Over the course of a presidency, bad things happen. And one way that presidents can make themselves appear attentive to those problems is by having regulatory agencies respond with new rules. Those rules might not be worth much, but Trumps executive order makes it harder for the administration to even pretend to paper over future problems.

Even if deregulation is your lodestar,this executive order doesnt really help. Killing enforcement is just as effective as deleting a rule. But like the Dodd-Frank review, the deregulation rule carries real symbolic value. Trump was telling members of the corporate establishment to feast on whatever spoils they can secure.

Shortly after the Senate Banking Committee advance the nomination of former neurosurgeon Ben Carson as the secretary of housing and urban development, the agency raised prices on mortgages for low-income people. It was a windfall for private mortgage insurance companies that compete with the Federal Housing Administration.

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

The Securities and Exchange Commission appears to have received Trumps deregulatory message. Former President Barack Obama left the agency understaffed only two of the five commissioners appointed by the president were in office when Trump assumed the presidency.

The December resignation of SEC Chair Mary Jo White perhaps Obamas most embarrassing regulatory appointment for her deference to CEOs and dark money left Republican Commissioner Michael Piwowar in charge of the agency. And Piwowar has unleashed a reign of corporate favoritism that would make even White blush.

Piwowar has already directed the agency to scuttle a Dodd-Frank-mandated rule that would require corporations to report the pay discrepancy between their CEOs and a typical worker.

He has done the same for another Dodd-Frank regulation requiring companies to audit their supply chains to determine whether they relied on conflict minerals mining resources that enrich warlords engaged in long, violent campaigns in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The rule would also have required American companies to tell consumers whether their products were conflict-free.

The conflict minerals rule was partially overturned in a controversial federal court decision, but Piwowar is apparently not one for half-loaves. His first public statement as acting SEC chair effectively called for killing what remained of the rule. You do you, failed state butchers.

Piwowar is also moving to revoke the power of the SECs enforcement division to issue subpoenas launching investigations.

Correction: A previous version of this article stated that Carson had been confirmed as HUD Secretary. He has been voted through the Banking Committee, and is yet to receive a confirmation vote on the Senate floor.

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Here Are All The Favors Donald Trump Has Performed For Wall Street - Huffington Post