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Gcth Bob Iger says content library will set Disney Plus apart from other streaming services
The family of a New York City college student fatally stabbed in a city park last week is blasting a police union head for claiming the young woman was in the park to buy marijuana. Tessa Majors, an 18-year-old freshman at Barnard College, died after being stabbed in Morningside Park on Wednesday night.                Tessa Majors                      Police on Thu <a href=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk>stanley cup</a> rsday took into custody a 13-year-old who admitted he was part of a group that went to the park to rob someone, and said he watched as his friend stabbed and choked the young woman, CBS News correspondent Errol Barnett reported.Police said Majors was able to stagger her way up a set of stairs where a school security guard came to her aid and called 911. She later died at a hospital. The NYC medical examiner said Monday that she suffered stab wounds to the torso and ruled her death a homicide.                                        On Sunday, Sergeant <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup</a> s Benevolent Association president Ed Mullins drew outrage when he told radio host and businessman John Catsimatidis:  We have a <a href=https://www.stanleymug.us>stanley cup</a> n 18-year-old college student at one of the most prestigious universities in the country murdered in a park. What I m understanding is she was in the park to buy marijuana. In a statementreleased Monday to the New York Daily News, Majors  family called the comments  deeply inappropriate, as they intentionally or unintentionally direct blame onto Tess, a young woman, for her own murder.  Police have not said why Majors was in the park and have no Bpib Obama decries  inexcusable  rhetoric against Muslim Americans
The Los Angeles Rams and Philadelphia Eagles, whose lackluster on-field performance has disappointed fans for years, are likely willing to gamble millions of dollars by choosing a quarterback in Thursday night s first round of the NFL Draft, even though the track record for such picks is problematic.According to sports economist Brian Goff of Western Kentucky University, data  <a href=https://www.adidas-samba-adidas.es>adidas samba</a> shows that that half of 58 quarterbacks picked as first-round picks since 1990 have underperformed, and 18 of them have proven to be total busts. Indeed, some potential Hall-of-Famers were overlooked or mis <a href=https://www.conversede.de>converse</a> sed entirely by the draft in recent years.Quarterback Tom Brady of the New England Patriots, who has led his team to four Super Bowl victories, wasn t chosen until the sixth round in 2000. Kurt Warner, who led the St. Louis Rams to victory in the 2000 Super Bowl and was a four-time All-Pro, wasn t drafted. And neither was Tony Romo of the Dallas Cowboys, who has also made four Pro Bowls since he became a starter in 2006.                                         The first 10 picks, you may overpay but if you look over the years the first rounders, the second rounders -- they dominate the Hall of Fame,  said Goff.  So, the higher up you go, the more likely it is that you re going to find that great, great player.                                                                   <a href=https://www.adidassamba.com.de>adidas samba</a>                                        Why Roger Goodell thinks  deflategate  case is so important          08:52                
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