Anchorman Fired in His Debut Newscast
Life imitates art as this Anchorman outdoes Will Ferrell.
Link:
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/watch_tv_anchor_drops_bomb_in_debut_nPxz6wqZW0eNTxgVYcDyBN
Based in Atlanta, GA - Rick Limpert is an award-winning writer, a best-selling author, and a featured sports travel writer.
Named the No. 1 Sports Technology writer in the U.S. on Oct 1, 2014.
Life imitates art as this Anchorman outdoes Will Ferrell.
Link:
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/watch_tv_anchor_drops_bomb_in_debut_nPxz6wqZW0eNTxgVYcDyBN
What the NCAA and voters want-- they get.
Voters in North Dakota on Tuesday overwhelmingly endorsed a proposal to abolish the state university's "Fighting Sioux" nickname and Indian head logo, banned under a national college sports policy that deems such symbols as racially offensive.
More than 67 percent of voters supported the move that will allow the University of North Dakota to end its use of the nickname and logo - based on a Native American caricature - in order to avoid possible sanctions by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
However, supporters of the symbol have said they will continue their fight to retain the "Fighting Sioux" name and logo after years of appealing to alumni and to the state Legislature, which just last year passed a law to keep the images, only to then reverse itself with a repeal.
The university's alumni association and foundation had stayed neutral on the topic for decades, but in early February stepped in to support retiring the nickname and logo, spending $250,000 on the issue.
"The issue wasn't preference. If that were the case than clearly the name would be staying," said Tim O'Keefe, executive vice president and CEO of the alumni association and foundation. "It was about the significant price the University of North Dakota athletic program would pay under NCAA sanctions."
The NCAA, which governs college sports, adopted a policy in 2005 to bar images considered offensive by some Native American groups, but allows schools to use them if they gain approval from namesake groups.
It bars schools that don't from hosting championship events or wearing uniforms with the images during NCAA playoffs.