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Hochman: Nuggets president Kroenke proud that Rams drafted Michael Sam

Print   Email   Font ResizeBenjamin HochmanBy Benjamin Hochman
The Denver PostPosted:   05/11/2014 12:01:00 AM MDTUpdated:   05/11/2014 12:08:05 AM MDT
Josh Kroenke Josh Kroenke (John Leyba, Denver Post file)

The NFL draft pick gently kissed his boyfriend on national TV, and right then, as quick as a blind-side hit, he changed the game — more than any game-winning tackle or orchestrated sound bite could.

This was raw, real, American, and now — you're going to have to accept it — "NFLian."

"It's the future of the world, it's the society we live in today, and like (St. Louis Rams coach) Jeff Fisher said, we're honored to be a part of it," Nuggets and Avalanche president Josh Kroenke explained to The Denver Post. Kroenke's father owns the Rams, who Saturday drafted Michael Sam, the first openly gay NFL player. "I'm proud to be a Missourian, proud to have grown up in the state of Missouri, knowing that Michael Sam went to the university, was embraced by the university and now is embraced by the St. Louis Rams."

Josh Kroenke had nothing to do with the Rams' actual seventh-round selection of Sam, but Kroenke has numerous strong connections to this man he has never met. The 34-year-old was a highly recruited basketball player at the University of Missouri, where Sam later played football. Kroenke grew up in Columbia, Mo. His father, Stan, bought the Rams when Josh was a teenager, and later bought our town's Nuggets and Avalanche, the two Denver teams now run by his son.

And perhaps most powerfully, Josh Kroenke joined the new guard, a man who runs multiple pro sports teams in Denver and is proud of the progress made involving gays in sports. This is a moment. Some of you might think this is repugnant. Hopefully moments like the Sam kiss, or even this open-minded president representing your favorite team, will change the way people perceive homosexuality in sports. If anything, maybe 50 years later we'll look back at this kiss, and hopefully the kids of people who thought the kiss was repugnant will think their parents' mind-set was.

"At the end of the day, it's all going to come down to who can play and who can't play, and it doesn't matter what falls in between that," Kroenke said. "That's what people are going to be judged on — wins and losses. I think it's a tribute to the direction of society in general, with Michael Sam being confident enough to come out, (Brooklyn Nets center) Jason Collins being confident to come out. I've had the privilege of meeting Jason, and he's a great guy, and he's providing a role on a veteran team in the NBA playoffs right now."

Understandably, not every one will accept it. I tweeted a screenshot of Sam's kiss, which retweeted so often that @hochman was actually trending nationally. The comments sent to me varied from euphoric to abhorrent, with the Bible being used to defend both sides. As one person tweeted, "Some of the responses you received to this great picture make me lose hope in humanity."

Old ways die hard. We are, after all, coming off the heels of the Donald Sterling fiasco. The longtime owner of the Los Angeles Clippers, who made numerous racist remarks, was banned from the NBA for life in late April.

"Mr. Sterling's words," Kroenke then said in a statement, "have absolutely no place in our working family or in a global sport that values inclusion, diversity and tolerance of people regardless of race, gender, religion or sexual orientation."

Tolerance of sexual orientation. Now it's football's turn. Saturday was a step. One giant kiss.

Benjamin Hochman: bhochman@denverpost.com or twitter.com/hochman

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Ukraine warns eastern provinces against secession vote

As two of the most tense regions in eastern Ukraine prepare to vote on declaring sovereignty, the country's acting president is warning them against self-destruction.

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Sunday's ballots seek approval for declaring so-called sovereign people's republics in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, where pro-Russia insurgents have seized government buildings and clashed with police and Ukrainian troops.

At least seven people died Friday in clashes in the city of Mariupol. The city remained on edge Saturday, with barricades of tires blocking some streets in the city center.

The referendums are being conducted by the insurgent movements and are not regarded as legitimate by Kiev or the West. The elections chief of the insurgents in Donetsk, Roman Lyagin, was quoted by news agencies as saying voting in Mariupol and one other district had begun early because of rising tensions there. He did not elaborate.

Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov, in comments posted on the presidential website Saturday, said supporters of independence for the east "don't understand that this would be a complete destruction of the economy, social programs and general life for the majority of the population."

"This is a step into the abyss for the regions," he said.

The hastily arranged referendums are similar to the March referendum in Crimea that approved secession from Ukraine. Crimea was formally annexed by Russia days later.

But organizers of the eastern vote have said that only later will a decision be made on whether they would use their nominal sovereignty to seek full independence, absorption by Russia or to stay part of Ukraine but with expanded power for the regions.

Turchynov and Ukraine's interim government came to power in February following the ouster of Russia-friendly president Viktor Yanukovych after months of protests in Kiev. Moscow and many in Ukraine's east denounce the government as a nationalist junta and allege that it intends to trample on the rights of eastern Ukraine's Russian-speakers. More than 30 people have been reported killed as Ukrainian forces mount offensives to retake some eastern cities now under control of the insurgents.

In the remarks issued Saturday, Turchynov said the government was willing to negotiate with representatives of the east, but not with anyone he called "terrorists whose task is the destruction of the country, a task put forth by their masters." Kiev claims Russia is fomenting or directing the unrest in the east, with the goal either of destabilizing Ukraine or finding a pretext for invasion.

During the unrest, insurgents have seized or detained journalists, activists and others including seven foreign military observers for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe who were held for more than a week. On Saturday, the Ukrainian Red Cross said one of its workers and eight volunteers were held in Donetsk for several hours before being released.


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Small plane with French tourists crashes in Arizona, one dead

n">(Reuters) - A small plane carrying a group of French tourists crashed in Arizona on Saturday, killing one person and injuring at least four, one critically, local television reported.

The Cessna plane, owned by Salt Lake City-based American Aviation, which provides sightseeing tours, was approaching Page Municipal Airport when high winds pushed its tail down into sand before the runway, causing it to flip over, KSAZ television reported.

One of the group was killed and another listed in critical condition, according to the report. The station said five tourists were aboard in addition to the pilot, but other local media reported it carried as many as seven passengers.

Officials did not provide names nor hometowns of the tourists nor those of the pilot.

Police in Page, on the border of Arizona and Utah about 100 miles northeast of the Grand Canyon, were investigating along with the National Transportation Safety Board.

(Reporting by Chris Michaud; Editing by John Stonestreet)


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From China with love: mementos of adoption

Annabel Stockman says her project of photographing the clothes of newly adopted children began the day she met her son. Stockman laid out the clothes her 15-month-old had been given by his orphanage in her hotel room in Hangzhou, China. “They made a kind of shape of his existence; they encapsulated his existence until then and his life from then. It seemed to be a moment of a new life.”

Stockman has since photographed the belongings of more than 70 children born in China and adopted into families in Britain. “Hand Me Over Hand Me Downs”, a collection of her photographs, is to be displayed at the V&A Museum of Childhood in London.

Stockman, a film-maker and artist who lives in London, adopted her daughter from an orphanage in China in 1998. In 2001 she went back to adopt a son from the same orphanage, but, after two years of paperwork, she and her husband arrived to find that the boy they intended to adopt was very ill with cerebral palsy. They had not been told.


Hunan Spring 1998 (Annabel Stockman)

Stockman and her husband had been approved to adopt a healthy baby, so, devastated, they had to leave the boy behind. They were persuaded to stay by the authorities and eventually travelled to a different orphanage to adopt another boy. (Thankfully, the first boy was adopted nine months later by an American family.)

“Our little boy was in a cot with a bamboo mat,” she says. “He was sharing a teddy on a string with his neighbour.” Stockman’s son is the only boy whose belongings she has photographed – all of the others are girls’.

READ: Home education: a class apart

Stockman sees her photographs as a way to record what is an overwhelming moment for the individuals who have cared for a child as well as for the adoptive parents and child.


Aside from her son, all of the clothes Stockman photographed belonged to girls; Hubei Winter 2000 (Annabel Stockman)

Like the other children whose clothes Stockman has photographed, her son was given special clothes and gifts – some home-made and recycled – by his carers to take with him to his new life, a kind of “dowry”, she says. One of the items her son was given was a padded cotton vest with buttons made of carefully varnished cardboard.

As well as the clothes, carers gave the children presents such as good-luck charms, in some cases little packets of earth. “I think those people know that once the babies are living in the West they may not ever come back, they may not be interested in anything Chinese.”

Stockman’s description of meeting her daughter perhaps demonstrates why so many parents lent her clothes to photograph. The moment, she explains, is so fraught that it can be impossible to know how to commemorate it.


Hubei Winter 2006 (Annabel Stockman)

Beforehand, she says, “You are given a photograph of a tiny baby, perhaps three months old, and asked if you are going to accept this child.”? She did not meet her daughter for a further nine months. There was no “settling in” period: the very first time Stockman met her daughter was the moment the child became hers.

“My daughter had travelled for three hours in intense heat. Her carer, who was in love with her really, had hidden the car keys so they couldn’t leave the orphanage.” Paperwork is signed, the baby’s foot is inked and stamped, the parents must swear never to abandon the baby – all while the baby looks on “bewildered”. “Every parent has a lot to say about that moment,”?she says.

Through the organisation Children Adopted from China, Stockman met other parents who let her photograph the clothes their children wore when given to their families. They are rich in texture and colour but very worn, having been used and reused. Some are worn “almost to a powder” at the back because the babies had spent so much time lying on their backs. “It’s about a certain kind of poverty, but on the other hand this is an archive of survival. It’s about very strong babies, and very strong women looking after them, making their clothes, cuddling them as much as they could.”

“Hand Me Over Hand Me Downs” is at the V&A Museum of Childhood, London E2, from 24 May to 31 August (museumofchildhood.org.uk)

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