Chicago braces for federal immigration enforcement operation while Trump criticizes local officialsNew Foto - Chicago braces for federal immigration enforcement operation while Trump criticizes local officials

Officials in Chicago are bracing for a major federalimmigration enforcement operationthat could begin as soon as this week, with the city's mayor signing an order over the weekend aimed at resisting the Trump administration's planned crackdown. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker said Sunday such a move would be an "invasion" and that he has had no communication with the Trump administration about reported plans to send National Guard troops to Chicago. "No one in the administration – the president or anybody under him – has called anyone in my administration, or me. So, it's clear that in secret they're planning this – well, it's an invasion with US troops, if they in fact do that," Pritzker said Sunday. The operation isexpected to kick offin Chicago by this Friday and could involve agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Customs and Border Protection, and potentially be backed by guard forces in a peacekeeping role, according to multiple sources familiar with the planning. "We've already had ongoing operations with ICE in Chicago and throughout Illinois and other states, making sure that we're upholding our laws, but we do intend to add more resources to those operations," Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on CBS News' "Face the Nation" on Sunday. An immigration operation in the city would further escalate a clash between the White House and Democratic-led cities and comes as President Donald Trump and his aides have repeatedly slammed Chicago over policies that limit cooperation between local authorities and federal immigration enforcement. Asked about expanding these operations beyond Chicago, Noem said that the Trump administration has "not taken anything off the table," and specifically named San Francisco and Boston in addition to Chicago. She suggested that Republican-led cities with crime problems were "absolutely" also being evaluated. Chicago has been preparing to try to resist Trump's planned immigration crackdown with Mayor Brandon Johnsonsigning an executive orderSaturday providing guidance and directives to the city's agencies and law enforcement "in the midst of escalating threats from the federal government." The mayor's order "affirms" that Chicago police will not "collaborate with federal agents on joint law enforcement patrols, arrest operations, or other law enforcement duties including civil immigration enforcement." It also "urges" federal law enforcement officers to use body cameras and refrain from wearing masks. "We may see militarized immigration enforcement. We may also see National Guard troops. We may even see active duty military and armed vehicles in our streets. We have not called for this. Our people have not asked for this, but nevertheless, we find ourselves having to respond to this," Johnson said before signing the executive order on Saturday. White House officials have made clear that these immigration enforcement plans are distinct from the ideathe president has floatedover the past week to use federal law enforcement and National Guard troops to carry out a broader crime crackdown in Chicago, similar to the current surge in Washington, DC. Trump took to social media Monday morning with a post celebrating what he called a massive victory over crime in the nation's capital and taking sharp aim at Democratic leaders across the country for refusing his floated plans for an aggressive federal anti-crime strategy in their states as well. He contrasted politicians who are resisting his plans with what he sees as a more welcoming stance from Washington DC's leadership. In theTruth Social post, Trump said DC Mayor Muriel Bowser's "statements and actions were positive, instead of others like Pritzker, Wes Moore, Newscum, and the 5% approval rated Mayor of Chicago, who spend all of their time trying to justify violent Crime, instead of working with us to completely ELIMINATE it." Trump officials have been quick to criticize the Illinois governor and defend potential federal policing in the state by pointing to crime statistics. Noem pointed to homicide statistics in Chicago on Sunday in a dig to the governor, saying Pritzker "can talk about what a great job he's doing as governor, but he's failing these families. … This seems like it's more about Gov. Pritzker's ego now rather than actually protecting his people." In a warning to Pritzker on Saturday, Trump told the governor to quickly "straighten" out crime in Chicago or the federal government will intervene. "Six people were killed, and 24 people were shot, in Chicago last weekend, and JB Pritzker, the weak and pathetic Governor of Illinois, just said that he doesn't need help in preventing CRIME. He is CRAZY!!! He better straighten it out, FAST, or we're coming!" Trumpposted on Truth Social. At least 56 people were shot – seven of them fatally – in Chicago over the holiday weekend. Roughly 34 shootings have been reported since Friday at 10:32 p.m., with victims ranging in age from 14 to 48, according to incident notifications published by the Chicago Police Department. Meanwhile, the Chicago mayor's office last weektouteda 21.6% decrease in overall violent crime and a 32.3% decrease in homicides so far this year. CNN's Angélica Franganillo Díaz, Betsy Klein, Priscilla Alvarez, Alayna Treene, Hannah Rabinowitz, Haley Britzky, Alejandra Jaramillo and Dakin Andone contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Chicago braces for federal immigration enforcement operation while Trump criticizes local officials

Chicago braces for federal immigration enforcement operation while Trump criticizes local officials Officials in Chicago are bracing for a m...
New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026New Foto - New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic Rep.Jerry Nadlerof New York says he will not run for reelection next year, according to an interview published Monday night by The New York Times. Nadler told the Times that watching then-President Joe Biden's truncated reelection campaign last year "really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that." He suggested a younger Democratic lawmaker in his seat "can maybe do better, can maybe help us more." Nadler, 78, is serving his 17th term in Congress. He was chairman of the House Judiciary Committee from 2019 to 2023, then served as ranking member on the panel after Republicans won House leadership. He stepped down from that role late last year. Nadler'sdecision to relinquish that spotcame a day after fellow Democratic Rep.Jamie Raskinannounced his bid for the job and quickly amassed support from colleagues. "I am also proud that, under my leadership, some of our caucus's most talented rising stars have been given a platform to demonstrate their leadership and their abilities," Nadler wrote then in a letter to Democrats that was obtained by The Associated Press. Without naming names, Nadler suggested to the Times that some of his Democratic colleagues should also consider retirement. "I'm not saying we should change over the entire party," Nadler said in the interview posted Monday. "But I think a certain amount of change is very helpful, especially when we face the challenge of (PresidentDonald) Trump and his incipient fascism."

New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026

New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026 WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic Rep.Jerry Nadlerof New York ...
Dallas Cowboys QB Dak Prescott facing more pressure after Micah Parsons tradeNew Foto - Dallas Cowboys QB Dak Prescott facing more pressure after Micah Parsons trade

Dak Prescottalready has enough pressure. There's the matter of theDallas Cowboysquarterback delivering bang for the buck as the NFL's first $60 million man. The challenge of returning to form after half of last season was wiped out by a torn hamstring. A date to open the season amid the typical raucous crowd at The Linc in Philadelphia on Thursday night when theEaglesraise another Super Bowl banner. And, of course, check-back-in-January heat persists for Prescott as a walking punching bag that reflects his franchise's championship drought with his 2-5 playoff record. Now this:Micah's gone. The stunning trade last week that sent three-time All-Pro defensive end Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers added another thick layer of pressure on Prescott because…well, just because. Dealing the defensive centerpiece certainly increases heat on team owner Jerry Jones and his front office. It tightens the screws on new coach Brian Schottenheimer and D-coordinator Matt Eberflus, too. You know, scheme up pass-rush pressure. Yet fair or not, nobody in the Cowboys universe assumes more pressure than Prescott, given his presence as the most scrutinized player on the NFL's most over-exposed band of underachievers. See, with or without Parsons, the expectation for Prescott was seemingly cast in stone a year ago when he signed a four-year, $240 million contract extension that averages 60 mil. Let it sink in for a moment. Prescott, who entered the NFL in 2016 as a fourth-round pick, is, Bless him, the highest-paid player in NFL history. With strings attached. "I didn't make him the highest-paid player thinking he wasn't going to win a Super Bowl," Jones told USA TODAY Sports during a training camp interview. "If I didn't think he would win a Super Bowl, I wouldn't have paid him." Jones made those comments before the bizarre contract negotiations with Parsons concluded with the trade that netted defensive tackle Kenny Clark and two first-round picks for the Cowboys. Yet the money to Prescott has already been paid (or at least committed, with $231 million guaranteed), which cements the expectation. No, a great quarterback alone doesn't win a Super Bowl. Look at the lineup of wanna-be champs beyond Prescott: Lamar Jackson. Josh Allen. Joe Burrow. And then some. It's a team thing, which is why the greatness of Patrick Mahomes in winning three rings comes with an average of $45 million and the type of below-market deal that, like Tom Brady years earlier, intentionally allows the Kansas City Chiefs to keep or acquire premium talent around the star quarterback. Then again, there are always choices and projections and creativity in managing the salary cap. In time, we'll find out if Jerry, even with his delusional Herschel Walker trade comparison, was totally out to lunch in dealing away Parsons. Or not. As much as he disputes it, it sends a message that it was less about winning now and geared more to future reloading. MORE:'I bust my (expletive)': Jerry Jones defends Cowboys' marketing over winning Maybe Parsons has a DeMarcus Ware post-Dallas experience and helps to win a Super Bowl. Or perhaps he doesn't hold up physically to justify a record-breaking deal. We'll see. Yet while Jones determined in previously assessing the long-term quarterback plan that there was no other available option to supplant Prescott – and that conclusion will be proven or not over time, too – the thinking on Parsons included spread-the-wealth dynamics. Parsons wound up with a four-year, $186 million deal with the Packers that, according to Spotrac.com, averages $46.5 million. It makes him the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history. In pondering such a payday for Parsons before the trade, Jones told USA TODAY Sports: "When you pay one player that kind of money, it's costing you four players. Premium players. When you have two of them – the highest-paid offensive player and the highest-paid defensive player, or something like that, you could have had eight players." That thinking, though, hardly lowers the bar of expectations for Prescott, who is in range of setting several key franchise passing records. He knows. For a franchise that hasn't even advanced to another NFC title game in the 29 years since it claimed its last Super Bowl triumph, the noise has intensified around the recent postseason setbacks. Think Prescott takes his mediocre playoff record personally? "I'd better take it personally," Prescott told USA TODAY Sports during a training camp interview. "You're the leader of this team, the leader of that group. Whether it's that record or another record, nobody should be happy with a losing record. "That's something I'm not proud of at all, but I understand. I know who I am. I know what I can and cannot do. I know each of those games are independent, right? Sure, some of it has been on me, some of it hasn't." And so goes the noise. In reacting to the big news over the weekend, Prescott maintained to local reporters that he didn't think the Cowboys would trade Parsons. That might have been the teammate or football strategist speaking. Reflecting the reality, with the series of dramatic twists and turns that included Parsons' trade request and hold-in, and public salvos from Jones, Prescott also maintained that he was not "completely surprised" that the star player was traded. "It seemed like it got personal," Prescott allowed. Which for better or for worse, is part of the equation that has surely turned up the heat for the Cowboys' high-profile quarterback. Contact Jarrett Bell atjbell@usatoday.comor follow on social media: On X: @JarrettBell On Bluesky: jarrettbell.bsky.social This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Cowboys QB Dak Prescott facing more pressure after Parsons trade

Dallas Cowboys QB Dak Prescott facing more pressure after Micah Parsons trade

Dallas Cowboys QB Dak Prescott facing more pressure after Micah Parsons trade Dak Prescottalready has enough pressure. There's the matte...
8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss'New Foto - 8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss'

Alamy An 8-year-old boy is recovering from a shark bite after being attacked while snorkeling in Florida on Monday, Sept. 1 Local media outlet 7 News Miami reported that the child suffered a "significant amount of blood loss," citing emergency dispatch audio Police confirmed the 8-year-old was airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami following the incident An 8-year-old boy is recovering in the hospital after being attacked by a shark in Florida. On Monday, Sept. 1, the Monroe County Sheriff's Office confirmed in apost on Facebookthat the boy had been bitten off the coast of Key Largo, Florida, and had subsequently been airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. "An 8-year-old male was reportedly snorkeling when he was bitten by shark at approximately 3:24 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, off Key Largo, Florida on the oceanside," the post read in part. "The U.S. Coast Guard and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission were notified of the incident." Monroe Sheriff Rick Ramsay said the child was snorkeling on Horseshoe Reef when the incident occurred, according to theMiami Herald. He was in surgery Monday evening, Ramsay added. According to emergency dispatch audio obtained by7 News Miami, authorities said the 8-year-old patient was "pale" and had suffered a" significant amount of blood loss." Getty Authorities told the outlet and theMiami Heraldthat the child was bitten above the knee before a dive vessel nearby stopped to help him. "He's been applied two tourniquets, we also put [inaudible] bandage to control the bleeding," the emergency dispatch said, per 7 News Miami. "We're on the process of getting some vital signs." The emergency scanner traffic recorded first responders saying the boy's "injury is significant," per theMiami Herald. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The boy's condition is described as severe, according to 7 News Miami. PEOPLE has contacted the Monroe County Sheriff's Office and the U.S. Coast Guard for further comment. Alamy The news comes afterPEOPLE previouslyreported about an 8-year-old girl who received 13 staples after being bitten by a shark in Texas over Labor Day weekend. On Saturday, Aug. 30, Harper Ochoa was in shallow waters off of Galveston when something grabbed the back of her leg, according to CBS affiliateKWTX. After screaming and pushing the shark away, her relatives were alerted to the incident. She was then helped out of the water by her family, who noticed a large chunk of flesh missing from her leg. "It was just so much blood it was hard to tell what was going on," Harper's mom, Christa Ochoa, told KWTX. "Then when they were able to kind of get it to stop bleeding, the doctor was able to confirm that it looked like something from a shark." Despite the incident, the little girl appeared to be unfazed as she requested to return to the beach the next day, according to the outlet. Read the original article onPeople

8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss'

8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss' Alamy ...
Putin says Russia has never opposed Ukraine joining the EUNew Foto - Putin says Russia has never opposed Ukraine joining the EU

MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Moscow had never opposed Ukraine's potential membership of the European Union, and dismissed claims that Moscow was somehow planning to attack Europe. Putin told Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico at a meeting in China that Western countries and the NATO military alliance were trying to absorb the entire post-Soviet space, and that Russia had no other goals but to protect its interests. (Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Lucy Papachristou; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

Putin says Russia has never opposed Ukraine joining the EU

Putin says Russia has never opposed Ukraine joining the EU MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Moscow ha...
Pennsylvania Democrats attract some buzz in the party's bid to take back the US HouseNew Foto - Pennsylvania Democrats attract some buzz in the party's bid to take back the US House

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti on Tuesday announced a bid for Congress in Pennsylvania, adding yet another competitive Democrat to the 2026 midterm election lineup in a state that gives her party perhaps its best chance to gain multiple seats withoutredrawing congressional lines. The ranks of Democrats now running for Congress in Pennsylvania include a prominent mayor and a state labor leader, and give the party the kind of candidate-recruitment buzz it needs ahead of next year's congressional elections. At stake is a controlling majority in the U.S. House. Cognetti, a mainstay on stage when national Democrats campaign in her working-class city, has long been viewed as the party's best candidate to try to unseat freshman Rep. Rob Bresnahan. The district is full of Democrats who more recently have backedPresident Donald Trump. Cognetti will campaign as an independent-minded Democrat and can-do corruption-fighting mayor who beat the party's nominee in 2019 to grab the top office in Scranton, a heavily Democratic city. "People here are sick of self-serving politicians," she said in an interview. "I've shown in Scranton that we can build government for people and be honest with people. I have done it with an independent streak and I think we will be able to take that successfully to the whole district." Seats like Bresnahan's will be of prime importance in 2026: Democrats need just three seats to flip control of the U.S. House and party leaders say the road to the majority likely goes through Pennsylvania. The state holds four of the 35 seats nationwide that Democrats are targeting. Three of those — including the neighboring districts now represented by Bresnahan and fellow freshman Republican Rep. Ryan Mackenzie — were among thenarrowest racesin the country last year. Without Trump on the ballot next year to bring out his loyal voters — and given the long history of midterm defeats for the party of the president — Democrats have reason to feel good. Redistricting not an option For Democrats in Pennsylvania, redrawing the state's congressional boundaries to increase their chances of picking up seats isn't an option. That requires legislation and no such bill would be likely to pass the state's politically divided Legislature. That means the party is relying on recruiting good candidates, a task involving Gov.Josh Shapiro,himself a potential 2028 contender for the White House. The Scranton-based district Cognetti is running in is often a destination during presidential campaigns, with its split electorate attracting candidates from both parties. It is also thebirthplaceof former President Joe Biden. Cognetti, 45, has experience in the U.S. Treasury Department and with the Scranton school board and is viewed by party operatives as a rising star in Pennsylvania. As mayor of Scranton, Pennsylvania's 7th-biggest city, she has a good relationship with Shapiro and is a sought-after figure at political rallies and during presidential visits, whether greeting Biden or former Vice President Kamala Harris on the airport tarmac or warming up crowds at their rallies. 'The future of the Democratic Party' Her task isn't an easy one: the district has voted for Trump in the last three presidential elections and the Democrat who held it until last year, Matt Cartwright, was aperennial targetof Republicans. Cognetti was at the top of practically every Democrat's list to succeed Cartwright. "Top down, going into next year, I have been blown away by recruitment," said Brittany Crampsie, a Democratic campaign strategist in Pennsylvania. "People want to run in seats where we had to do strong-arming to get candidates to say 'yes' last year, three years ago." Crampsie said people like Cognetti are "the future of the Democratic Party." Cognetti's candidacy is the second big get for Democrats in one week. Last week, the head of Pennsylvania's state firefighters' union, Bob Brooks, declared his candidacy to challenge Mackenzie. The Allentown-area district already has five Democrats running. But Brooks has Shapiro's support, as well as backing from a pair of labor unions, U.S. Rep. Chris Deluzio and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. He's talking up his working-class roots as a career firefighter and union guy who runs his own landscaping and snow-plowing company. His campaign is playing up his volunteerism as a youth baseball coach and his tattoo: a bulldog in a fire helmet. "The party of labor, I believe, is the Democrat Party, but I don't think the Democrat Party talks about or to the working class people anymore, and I think we need to get back to that," Brooks said in an interview. "The Republicans, they talked about us, they talk to us, but then they go down to DC and they vote against us." ___ Follow Marc Levy on X at:https://x.com/timelywriter

Pennsylvania Democrats attract some buzz in the party's bid to take back the US House

Pennsylvania Democrats attract some buzz in the party's bid to take back the US House HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Scranton Mayor Paige Cognet...
Bill Belichick's awful North Carolina debut shows Chapel Hill's 'New Hope' needs to go back to the drawing boardNew Foto - Bill Belichick's awful North Carolina debut shows Chapel Hill's 'New Hope' needs to go back to the drawing board

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — When the general assembly decided to build a state university here 235 years ago, they named the town for a church built by the British. The little chapel on the hill was actually called New Hope. Though the site has been knocked down and built over in the subsequent centuries, the spirit of that name has been the fundamental underpinning of North Carolina football. Without a new hope emerging every few years, promising to wake up this perpetually sleeping giant, they'd have razed this program to the ground too. As history has shown, neither the Church of England nor the football field has been a great place for faith in the North Carolina Piedmont. But on Monday night, the latest iteration of New Hope could be found stalking around the 50-yard line at Kenan Stadium in a gray hoodie with the sleeves cut down. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Since he took the job last December, having been thoroughly rejected by the NFL despite his six Super Bowl Rings, the football world has been wondering what 73-year-old Bill Belichick would look like coaching a college team. It subsequently became a nine-month journey of interest in his personal life, a book tour, a series of awkward interviews and a branding initiative led by his 24-year-old girlfriend. What we didn't hear much about was the football team he had to coach. Maybe now we know why. North Carolina's 48-14 drubbing Monday night at the hands of TCUwas evidence that $10 million for the most accomplished coach in the history of the sport may not go as far as it used to. In the NFL, we can debate where Belichick ranks among names like Vince Lombardi, Bill Walsh and Chuck Noll. As a college coach, Belichick's debut was more in the realm of his former Patriots assistant Charlie Weis, who once described his recruiting pitch at Kansas thusly: "Have you looked at that pile of crap out there?" Belichick, of course, is too buttoned up to provide such a juicy sound bite. But his assessment of the proceedings Monday was direct and in character. "They just outplayed us, they outcoached us and they were better than we were. That's all there is to it," Belichick said, speaking in front of a backdrop of balloons that seemed far too festive for the occasion. "They did a lot more things right than we did. Give them credit for being the better team." While it would be imprudent to declare the Belichick experiment a failure already, you get this kind of honeymoon only once. As kickoff approached Monday, idyllic Chapel Hill looked like something it has never been: A real college football town with packed tailgates and bars, Tar Heel celebrities likeMichael Jordan and Mia Hamm jetting in to be part of the atmosphereand ESPN treating the game like a national event. Instead, it quickly turned into a social media pile-on. After scoring easily on their first scripted drive to take a 7-0 lead, the Tar Heels played like they have the potential to end up one of the worst teams in FBS. There's no further analysis needed for what happened on the field. North Carolina did nothing well, wasn't physically competitive along the line of scrimmage and was outgained 542-222. By the fourth quarter, Kenan Stadium had emptied out to such an extent that the fans who were given bracelets to be part of a light show looked more like they were participating in a brownout. "We have to be tougher as a team," defensive back Kaleb Cost said. "It's definitely disappointing, but it's back to the drawing board. We'll go hard every day this week and make sure it never happens again. Obviously we're angry as a team but we're going to use that." If any enthusiasm remains for the Belichick era after this dud, it will largely be contained to two groups: Those who already paid to sell out UNC's season ticket allotment this year and the line of college coaches like TCU's Sonny Dykes who will be able to tell their grandkids about the time they put a licking on the GOAT. And let's be real: In North Carolina's current form, Belichick is going to take a whole lot of losses. When media members arrived at their seats in the Kenan Stadium press box, they found cards that normally have some type of depth chart as a little cheat sheet to follow the game. Instead, North Carolina's had blank spaces underneath every position. It seemed like a pure Belichick play: Say as little as possible, treat every personnel decision like a nuclear-grade secret. Instead, after seeing his team play, this seemed less like a rebuild and more like a reveal. Just like the card said, North Carolina's roster has a whole lot of nothing. "Too many three-and-outs, too many long plays on defense and two turnovers for touchdowns," Belichick said. "You can't overcome that." Whatever reason Belichick had for wanting this job — money, ego, putting his two sons on the coaching staff, trying to prove to NFL team owners they made a mistake thinking he was over the hill — his tenure at North Carolina immediately takes on a very different tone. Singing the fight song and regaling the media with stories about growing up around the Naval Academy doesn't prove that you belong on a college campus. You know what does? Getting good players to wear your uniform. Belichick and his general manager, Michael Lombardi, obviously failed on that account. As much as North Carolina underachieved in the past several seasons under Mack Brown, he never in his entire career recruited a team as lacking in talent and skill as this one. That does not mean this is doomed to be an expensive disaster North Carolina will regret for the next decade. But it's undeniably true that coaches with far fewer credentials than Belichick have taken over worse rosters and found a way to be a lot more competitive out of the gate. "We just keep working and keep grinding away," Belichick said. "We're better than what we were tonight, but we have to go out and prove it. Nobody's going to do it for us." In many ways, it's the story of North Carolina football itself. The program is always supposed to be better than what it's been, but nobody's been able to prove it. Even the great Belichick. At least not yet. But this entire place exists because of a church named New Hope. That's part of the fabric of this place, and obviously this football program. All these years later, though, nobody's found physical evidence of the church's remains. New Hope is just a symbol, but one that has endured over hundreds of years and many awful North Carolina football regimes. If Monday was any indication, Belichick may be the coach that finally tests the limits of hope in Chapel Hill.

Bill Belichick's awful North Carolina debut shows Chapel Hill's 'New Hope' needs to go back to the drawing board

Bill Belichick's awful North Carolina debut shows Chapel Hill's 'New Hope' needs to go back to the drawing board CHAPEL HILL...

 

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