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Source: http://www.fannation.com/truth_and_rumors/view/381739
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Source: http://www.fannation.com/truth_and_rumors/view/381739
new orleans weather new orleans weather sparkle sacagawea new hope baptist church associated press foster friess
SPORTING NEWS AUTOMOBILES CLASSIFIED ADS. 1 PART EIGHT PAGES. NEW-YORK,' SUNDAY SPORTING NEWS AUTOMOBILES CLASSIFIED ADS. APRIL 6, 1913. PART EIGHT PAGES. THIRTY THOUSAND "FANS" GREET BASEBALL, OPEN NEW HOME OF BROOKLYN CLUB AND SEE SUPERBAS BEAT THE YANKEES Ebbets Field Jammed to the Last Scat, While Hundreds Are Turned Away at the Gates. GAME FAST AND SPARKLING Frank Chance and His Men ?Overcome Lead of Two Home Runs by Rally in the Ninth, but Lose at the End. Ttiii'' the ? :ns" satis ... their era* -' the great national game yes ii? i m n. v. bom ; ...h n club and i Bask? that opening worth while bj d - ' ? ? ii"!"...?- ninth h : to 2 had of what ba - aaeatu to tins ? ?\ win n it i.? told th.?: Iho ter s full twt gv? thousand had Jammed ll iro ami nil? ? and spa? tous stands, Borne ol |h< ? ? ? m home, bi i othi i" the bank >>nt stood !"? two hoar? or more, ? ,i g|lmp*-o fOlng .'II ill.?; i ' ol t\\.> cut' ovl? ' ? ? these als.? ? d. s?. Unit it is not ovei mating to say that thlrtj the ??' ?' ' truRglc and . It last. ,.; ; ....... v , . Boa in th? ?*?'? I ? ? r, a wi -.1 must the aam?. a hlch a kling playa and exciting sll latlons. The ? ? .- ,.s much b? nt at hung In ? Ian? ?. and the "fans" a Th? j ene? i?*?) and shout? d i ami even ?.i d th? umpii ? .ik. lettn | -. .1111. ..I d ? :?? ' T to home runs? one In the fifth Ii d the other In th? - by Captain lak? i ?aulx rt?wi total "i it" s. ..i Ing up to Inning. The Brooklyn "fans," who had .ing the J*s ? ... won as tli" New fork pi. .... - ??i?? t wa , oved i hat ?all i. Yankccs Rally in Ninth, ? ? ? . ? ", l 'rank ? 'ham i. i?.lii. 1 with a and ti"i tin m "i ? Hal ' 'hase, the d and th. 1 . ? 11111. .\. dk ff inn fur ? ' ? ... th (ils mai - BV ? ? nt ? t the t ? Im? , who had Nap" H ? ? i Ided the ball, but mad- a u.i?; thron !>? I Meyer ????as retrieving it In deep rlgl I Mtdkiff and Chance raced acroaa th? , I Then the tootett (rom Manhattan rose* n ih? li might an.i scti II Br?ooklyn brethren In railing for Just one more run t.? win. That run was . ertboomtna klyn i.."teis bad the lasi ami made i? the Bupe-rbas went to bal In their of the ninth Inning / ? Sa ? ?.'.'-.- mad? ? a lid thi o? to Hi ? ta i;, .ci off ? inn? i. ? a -. down t-j i >. ..-? gi t tha haul fit : Bsaltta alan i I -ill- Bast, and all Bro howled n glee, so the game was .,.tii.-r attractions than th? f ?.asfball to ac.ouiit for th? atar ? rowd which turned out to ae< it ion pane. Th.* Informal opening, if auch it may ba called, <>f Ebbet? Field, which ranks second to none In the coun? try, and th?* first appearance of Prank enhance In a New fork uniform wei ditioridi magnets. The "fans" went ? ? and i only ? few remt rved seats : Were vacant, while hundreds on the OUt? alla v . r.- . wmorlng la vain t" g? Ever* m.?v.. <?r the player? In the warm up practice was critically watched ?nd th? favoaitei app!aud?*d. Daubert. We?.-t ? has?- and CI ? ... i- .i chlei inter, at The new managai ol th? Yank?.-- In part., liai K"l L.-aitV ??!' i ? i ? took I ... Mrs. McKeever Raises the Flag. i. is lock th? [da) ei ?wer? ti ady to .,;,.. v. i? n ad] and th? for Use real fun t.. Bat Charles H. Ebl ? n ii?i v .ik and much won*) :' l?uil?li: -^ and pi. paring tins n? v. . m, had i . - hi on n "n the subji ct The AaMriean dar must be ral al ? ; huge ?.- in ileep ?entre fleltj, h? sal,I, an" ? r little fo-rmalitles attajaded to. and all ., ? U '.alMi'cv, " i ;, tieal ? ? of tir; "tan* to "Play .., ent unhi ? i. j McKeev? s i sdth Mr Bbbets m th rshlp ..f the i'.i???Ki?.i club, th?M i? - gure. Btrik . ? aat and bat, sic- ? i lank? i "n on ,ii. , :;..!..-t.- and on the ? Bband it took iitti? i.m i., walk ?"it t>. th. flagpole In j '!" !> ? Btrc field with the '?and and the I dm hind, and then it was j rered that the flag bad been fo* A boy rushed : ai ">-j tin field | : ... ?,,. staggering ??nt with s r.r pi.??.- ..f banting that would hav? ? laad i"i i?<> fall ?Ised mx ?'? Ms ?1 at th? ?Ceo? "I ?.peratinns in dusj time, and then as the band played ''The ?lar Bpaa?**lt*d Bannatf*" and the eroard red heads. Ml . M'K' eV. r atroMMsmu valiantly wiih the halyarda ?""i finally, with ? llttla Ba?detance, l".is.t.<j <d.| ?,|.,rv to in? top ?.f ii??- tatet That e/tret. Its? playera Uned up abreast. ?n-1 lead'?! bj t!i<- band and ESddl? Moore. Chief mascot <?f th?- l-ani, inaril."! hack the dMinond Misa Oenevlev? I... out ' tic n. ?-. ball i" i''<>u ?.| the umpires, Nap Ruck? i . . and the gam? eegaa It wa? u eood game, too. Hau; Wolter MUS i: i M'KEKVl R t.. mark f?p< home of thi I :n?..kl\ n ? . "Acuity In i!.?- -l.i i" ? i^h lus territory' f,,r h?>m< which, under ordinal conditl '"? n blocked off The Vai . In midsummer form. an?l the - - ? eras l . i ^.'.? The B their to? and iow< their followei I I I ?ill do n lot o fighting I r to * on ugly bound!11 balli and Ml ... the field I tlm? brilliant Th? ?' 3?# ? ? -, and Mill? ?. wa ? . th? form? . n and th - latt? : flv Players Shin? in Field. H.i ? ? ?n. Nap Ruckei pitched a ? 11 o, bile th? box, i "tn pro*? n.- '?? i clualvi i : read) for the ?? nnai I ? it ahould be aald in pai ;l ,i tjTAH !'?''" CHKH i ?? TH ? ' ? ? -, Some Bot ...i. i ..... larly fei ? .. ? ? .... . ol ! ! ? ? Story in Detail of How the j Superbas Beat the Yankees Stengel and Daubert Sh( the Way with Drive3 for the Circuit. . In 1 ome luck? ' fai ' In l e ? u 'i bou .?-.-.: He th? and i" : u ...i. ! lift? i .. hlRl and Hartzel wai - ;? ? ? i ? bat. He trapp? . ... ? . . .. ... ahot II ? ti"- dl mond for i'iank ? 'hance to - im" i'al'lv ? ii then foui mined single t.. ? ni an I Bei Me! ei tl ? -.-. .. itflelder, n ?n ivc to i Ight Zack VVh< at, filed t., "Birdie" ? 'too, ? i'i"- i ! ?ii a foolish attempt to at? al thtr .. the Aral ball pitch? d lo i 'api -, ? -, ank? ea made - ond frame, bul failed to ' i,.. ,;,. .1 al fir?! but H.i ' i... . singla to c< i.ti' and F*i. ni i 'hance pick? out i'"- Brat ball and han i Ighl Then cam? , : piaj. Bwee to R ? (-.'-i. v. ho ti appei ? 'has? oil thn'i i back I ih.. bag and ha illd -., ..- ? 'hanc? came charging <)"? i. from ond. Th? "peerless leader" ..?' ?red out, fol? lowing which Derrick retired th?- etdi with a line drive t?> Bt? i "Red ' Smith mad? s two-bagger for the Buperba. In their half, but it went f"i nothing, aa Daubori and Millet stru ?, .. t and i- laher rolled one t?> CaldWell Nothing developed In th? third inning exoepi that Dentela iras caught napping off hrat much t?> his disgust Harts? i opened the fourth for tbe ?ankeea aritli ? ? .?i., m 'h iv< to - " 'i and : ? ach >? third on aa< i it!'-' ? b) 'i ' ? and ? !hai i Hi left, however, as Chance Med to Bt?rngel Caldwell i?r.n?<! ins > k 111 and < ? ?i ? ? 1111?. r i m bo uncertain waj as the Buperbas strod? to th? plata Meyer waik??i a? a- ?tarter' I to I I . ... ... .. , . \? 1th none oui : In: ;. i U two, ' ' ?' 'bal thai ....,., itloi i ?. i foul? 'I lo H .ri* M Bi lo Derrick and ?? - n/ith fth Inning, bul wai forced then ? ? i -'i in mi ? ind, ai d Moran, ... but was ? . count tmnied Ihe ball or >?? hat un ned ?an to b? I hq ..,;: i ,.:i Han V%1, . ., rolled i" tbe t< not ?' it ? : ' \,? n ti "t- R' cker'a p?a os a n by] ... inn ipoi i iti-i. Th? Hartrell. ? OUM ; . | | he ball ? de the dl unond. did i la pal I to ????? **.?? ; . .-,, , ' un?- | ? . . home run ?A'olt? i mlgl I bave { II tbe sklnw d outBeld had not b ' "" I .' li m i'" C it baa - j .iii.l. U|.,i,.' Bweene) and i? rricb wi r? to?: ; ,?? ? n '""k Caldwi !. puv i ; . n j 0J tot Si ? v.'ik and ihren Brool : . ? -i pusslin? ihsl j ?The ? si 'n :l" ' i^1"1' ' tTame 'mi. i Plehei ?truck oui Daniels .',,.?,, , .,!?.. to - itre and Woltsr besiout. "?'?:.;','?;; ':<,,;"1. ? ?,, , '1 f? Zscl Un at. while Dauberi raced? '??" ' "?-a ?enas . , .. , ,. Bird!? - i- fool Only ?Soo Brookl ? ??"" ,a'"'1 ***** ? tssalr ' v.,:.k. - ??'?> '? ? '"'" 'n the ninth ., ,,,, ., ,.,:-? on ball*, two hita and a unir?a on ?> ,.,,.,,. ? -h.'-?? ?. i ?tart? r ::; u,:,, **???.!.m ???,??' :-. th? -;?"" "" ? l"a-t ?h Msnhstun hs? '" , "" ;??-.-??.?????????. .,,,. .,, centre, and h?.th runner? raced over tb? pi"" 'rbe? ***** mudo a V N. u >.'iK : "Il I i.-l !.. r struck out a , ? ? .,. t.. iklng thelt openins a I ?'? w i.-. i dump? from ??? thi pial - ? ? ,.. ' III .u to . ? t ? i ? e, bul im: ?i; i ? h Wi ? i h.'ii.. ? ith tin I 1-1 I - ?? - M\,,>. ? ? ? 01 "? ,40111 V ... ? . : : II, :; 1 l H? 11 t ...-. I ? r ?? " ? han ? i" 11 ? I I 0 t c . I 1, I ? . . : ? ? i. .\l!. n, ? ? Mlilkifl ? 1 '. ? , ? ? i m i'fth lan?as ? Rai . lui ,.. u u ? n i i | " ? . . S ni .. U II " Il ?I II \? fl "Il t...-. . \. 1% -) Il,. Iintth n ... ? I .m.i S i? MU . lui l?..ili. ? ? t I ??' ? ? ' " ' ? ? . . ? . i\ l-ill I ' I ??? ??. , ? . :..:? ? U I! i. !.. I 1 I Uli | lull, ? II,' :ii . |l lin?) '.'; Ul? 'L I lu ?? Il . -. I ? 11,1 - I 111-1, .1, I II.. BRAHE IN NO-HIT 6AME St. John's Schoolboy Shuts Oi Bay Ridge Without a Safety. i-Y.-.i Brsbe "t Bt John - Pn p i atoi B? li'iol. pttdMd a no-hit hui ii, k.'? against tb? Bs* Ridge High School o st John's Plaid, Brookljta, j? itorda : . ore waa fi to I Brshi pit? bed wll i 'i effi ctl*i eneas I bal be had .? re M iteen strikt outi to bia cri Oil ? ml four ?>f the Ba) Ridge boys reached bt? bass two "i. fr< ? pa sen and two by b. Ing luit by pitch? d baila < ine nf th? run rters ;4"t ?a far as third base, end i ; other t" se? ond, bul i><>tn were itranded The m Ott follows i: tl i: Ptm | g o o 1 o i o a-^-3 7 ' i'.;< Rtdse . ? ?i S " 0 " 0 ?i Bel ?? ? ? SI I..I.M -. ii: m .? .u,., i ii.ii I...II?. . i:,. l.i .. I .? ? m ??n I 1 Nil i ? \ i I le? ? R n i. ' .nu i - ?"? " ? I " l ? W 10 Opi - Wgb " " ?. ?' " o ;> ; BaiieriM Curt?a, kiri>-, g?d oaffeatxni i High, gtewart hihi iiuti-r ai laglaaida Part i: h g Fluahln? . - " " i " i I u i , i Pn i-?? 0 I " " " . j, l j Battartea Pteshla?. ~rotbin?haiu and si mon; Breoklya Prep.. Boa? aa?" i H-??aa ai <;?.:.i-ii i i: n E s, Paul'a.? '-' I ?"' ? ?"? ? _ ??If ? S llHrnHr.l ? I 0 0 1 . I I I II Batteries M. Paul'?, spencei -oui Power; Barnard, ?-.iia.-Ih- sad OT^ugblln PIRATES POUND TWO PITCHERS Kansas <'it>. a pi il B.?Batting two Kan? sas City pltober? out "f tb> i">\ sad taking advantage ol two error?, the Pltti burgh Plrat<*s defeated the Kansas ritj t? un here t?i-?la> by a score ol n to I. T .i ?cor? by Innings follow?: Pittsburgh . ? ? ? l -' -' ? ? ?'? " i* " Kansas ?'ity.'i It t I 0 ? ? ,v I ?? I Batteries?Adaata ?n.i Kelly; BcbUtsor, lU-agun and Murphy, Ki it? hell. MIS.-' GENEVIEVE EBBET8 Thro? h t out I ill. Phillies and Athletics Go Eighteen Innings Battle to a Tie in Longest Inter league Game on Record. FINAL SCORE IS 2 T? 2 Young Pitcher o? American League Team Remain** in Box Throughout. i- ? ? T ? ..... ... i l: ..-.? th.- At III I an.' r, pitched the entii I wa hit - Um t... n time* v. h ? Phllliea used Mexandei foi I'l.alm ? - ?..i two and i:' n I allow? .1 tht former wo -? i piona a total . i ..?.: ten : I The Am? 11 ma gol th? jump on I_ _ _ I ... I ? pi them from th.* i ' The Phtllt? their t? ? I . it.el t h u lid o. ? 'oilIns. ... i ? ? tlili ; ? ? ; I ? .- t.anis ? . ? ? Managei Dootn ... seventh ? -i .- hi? at Mua? le, In? ?| lie - ., . folio H 11 K ...i. >' a .. it " n ii i. . ;?? ! .o " h 2 0 a 0 '." ?' 3 IS J : :.a \ ? asad? r, , K ! II. ,noll>. O'DAY AN UMPIRE AGAIN Hank to Don Blue Uniform an Mask in American League. ? ? i.c . . , i link ? ?'Day, las! : ? a manager of I ? - ft ? u an umplr? -.- ? .1 a . onti.o i tu umpire in i ( lean i.- agu? h< r? toda* Hi ? have held off In the hoi i of | as scout i"i iic- ' i > i m . ag< nt ??i Mui on i" i" i I ?cad.- i - ? ... lid th ! big pit. her I In flm LONG TOUR FOR ItHLETES American Team to Go to ."Vus tralia and New Zealand. San I': .H I ISCO, April ? : 0 in<*< IT waa made h \ .m. s. .-r.-t.it y-u . .?? . i of th? Aic.it. i Athletic I'm.m. that an trat k and field team wo Australia ami Neu Zealand thl? ... Th? team . .... for At -H.i'ia m i ?? t. tarn In April William I'nmat k, a wi I i on ?mat? in spot is .m tin* pa nul a natt* a ..f Ausl ralla, will manag? t be I ism GOLFERS A BIT RESTLESS Many Try Out Summer Greens at the Baltusrol Club. MOTS than 138 in.-ml" i all t;.iif Club sei/...| the opportunit) >?< to try nut th.. recently mowed summer greens on the links there. Th.?Urse wsa declared in tu.indltlon and thoroughly lit for ?i long campaign. a dost n or more with s preference for competition mad.- up a bail -rw**epet*tkss, in which \\. U Garey, with a card of M U U, was the wimi' f. I'. A. I.'lli.n: medien s a - ae? ond u Ith 1(N ; i M NAVY BEATEN AT LACRO?SSE. Annapolis, Md April .'.. In a close 11? era i gam? thai i ? oulr? d I a ?> extra I points before tb? It? wa broken Lshigh I to-dai defeated Navy by a sen.- of itol 'RESULTS OF BOXING BOUTS Alberts H;-.s a Bit the Better of Sullivan in Ten Bounds. I ii ? ....;? ? i ? - torn? s bat j the i- ? >? . "?" Paddy Sullivan, of the u ? a! inds Del . i ?? i .1 i ? \;... : ; ' i.ii .ieii las! lil?;lit ' AI be 11 .?.i- : ,.? fasti . and mon - .' his - rival and s. "i., p..int? thai I i' ne ' . . .. .! V. .it t lie \tiil, ti. i 'tub ..: The n "? * f a... i ? floored Ins man for i ? co nt ol Ii back m i,..."i form and easll) evened the Bert Papp outpoint d Kr?e Kauf- ! ' mann In the - ml -flnal bout "i ten i ounds, ; ' Mi ? lovei n had the !" ttei ef ; man m ten round? at Brown's -a LCUISVILLE DEFEATS TIGERS. Louisville April ?". ?'aid hitting by ?sth ...:urc "i' ti..- exhibition ;.is betwosh th.* I??ti.iit i Xjgi and ' he loi ?" t?*am nt the Aimi**? ..inn., a.... ?un bj a s.ore t?f I s |,. .. Th? i were ten hits for extra I ha'.?, - ' ... .i "f i?' unit led with h j triple and a double. Timel) errors "f thel ? Bid? -I I."in* ville Inninga follows r it i: I . i ? i t : -, *. -, i ? ll.liull . . ?I.' I 1 '.' 8 I ?i '.' I ; >. i Ret? m. i .-,..i i c? Boehl? Hall sas] Btaasg? and Qlb ? SENATORS BEAT THE BRAVES, j "A'sahlngten, April I Washington won Ond and last ?/ame wilh the Hos i.iii Bravee in their exhibition -sirisa here i., ,i.. b) a score ..: - to I Th.. ?-aaa? ?as sh.w and untnt?resttng, Th.- score by Inninga follows: i: r i,* , n . i i .. i ?_? s ii i 1 h I h 1 >. ti l n 7 *. Z\ cut.in- CSahk?, Uroem ?ad Am-anlil. and I WUIlsnisi Perdu? sad Devegbi sad l*arld?sa I BALTIMORE Wi FOE FOB GIANTS McGraw's Men Bat Riotously and Pile Up Runs Without Difficulty Against the Minor Leaguers. TESREAU ON HIS METTLE Oiark Bear Hunter Holds Oppo? nents Scoreless for Five Innings ? Wiltse Pulls Up Lame and Matty Finishes. Baltimore, April k- Lending hi? team Ifor the first Urn? thii season agslast an -r. gatton of baseball player? who rom<-i ?i least give .? semblance of soase his sue st.iff. McOraw forgsd saother i.Hi-it,i,- vi. tor> for th. (Hants when th" Kaltlraore Oriole? were tt pit lead bar? thai afternoon by s aeora ot H to I Tbe Kante was spotted sera and then ?ith costly errors, most of whfek were com? mitted by tbe bom? team arMla al th* ?am? ton?- tbe champion? ?>f Um National League held another one of ih.^ir batting "?1 ebrafJona, lacing ???it .?ixtrrn safe hits. jamon? whleh nestled nine double? an? ti' ? ??? till 1? s. BI? Jeff. Teorema ?ras fnt meted artth the t. . ?it twirling Ken York ta s reniai y. ind although be bad ? litt!? trouble Im I managed td bold his "tfj-ponenta scorekt? i for tii.- tiv inning? h? worked Two alts rere mad? off hla delivery, ?rkMe ?Il bata* ; mon \> ' ii' forced to l?o 1 to th,- SU| ? : merit? ??t the apttboll and Can the ah The beat hunter was paralmonloua with his passes and ? J>. 1 nof, transport aay aw to Brat Qeorge Wiltse wsa selected to gassh tbe game, but v\as conip?ll<-<d t?i retira In ths laeventh after working <?ni> on?- frame, la ; which a ?Ingle and a double worn bunebed for Baltimore'? first run. When Uta v.-t < m n southpaw batted In the -wreath b? de a quick Ktari t.i firs* aftet bitting the ball and pulled up lame, ?0 thai ate* 1 O..W look him'out after Mala? 1 had stank ?I In the seventh. Matt] wem Into Um bei thout being thorougMy warmed up and his opponents nick? 'i him for two tuts and is many runa After be one? go! under way b< was n??t p ired upon, although b? v- .- hit safely ?veiy Inning. Hh iwkey, - 1er ? Ith co . but muck I? ss < v,...i li net ? ? the and ?-'-?i alone w? II 1 nough m I ? ?'..if,-, but i ? dkl not ling? 1 long ? ?it- tbe visitors began to sample ht? 1 n- was handicapped by pom? ? fron aupport, < Soon? r In < ? ntre ? . ? tiibutin? two-mlsplays at time? when the! ? dan - Helped ?lo I .. three pass?. th? (llanta ha'd little dlfBculty In making their ais hita count for ova runs in Um Brst four it Theieupon Bhaarke] waa ?helved In ?? troi of Roth, ? ho bad an 1 mbn ? ball ; ertory n hieb badi fair I > t give trouble for .? mom .it Howe after tanning two ?>i" the Brst three men to lace him Roth had to lowi 1 I under at avalan? be of four two-baa? hit?, contributed by Merkle, Ifeyera, Tearaau and Bnodgrass, 11 ttlng three runs Th?* ?st- r tightened ni? In th? next frasas and 1 tired Burn?, I toj ?? ? I Mui ?trlkes, but tbe effort taxed hi? itn -1 ? to auch ?n extent he was able to do little more meritoriou? work ano Um visitors hit ht.ii almost ai w m. Ton bit? ?ad ?even runa aren bar reeled ? > t R ?? Herfck ?rai ths leading bltti r of th* day.? -.ii'.-ti'S. two doubles and a triple, - oaaing the plate three Unwi ? . .\i. ? rs ---.it In two hits of lusty pro? portions, bouncing one of thorn off tha fence In ?'ft Held. Burn? and Bnodg I picked up 1 '"!?' ? apiece loafer misiu 1 ,,.... made foui bit? to-day bad Us given bim ? chance, but after be ha'i ibled In Um Scat he was bsnded tbre? I tase?, so bis opportunlUe? for atickwesk wen s .? Running Up again?! a :eal team for tii? :irst tiiii?'. th? ?liants also fac^d some real fans.' who expreseei themsehre? In Um . tool ?PI rOOBd ba??hall ntann?^r. S110U grase, of coursa 1>??s sipotifd i-onsider ,,i,i. ?bus? tins ?prlng after the ansia, tun?s of last fall, but ?o far Im has ?ot ?ff lightly, Bhafer, of tb? perfumed note? rep itatlon, beim Um target foi most of Um com m? I? Th? Battlmore "fana a ?*? ?a Arthur 11?.m the beginning of the gam? until thi . ,..| l..,ri I to) M has a h->sf ?f a?lmir. ? I In town who lint**** that be asead ?la tin-..- between Innings out n?-ar the right ti. l.i bleacher?, wham they ? oui?i talk i" inn!. That ?action of Um crowd stood BP ?ir, the bench?? ?very tir"?' Lnrrjr caaM M bat and gar? tin- valiant second biisem?n ;, regal reception although tbe ?reether ?as a tt if.?- COOl, ?? many as five thon aand apectatora were out th?.- stands b? Ing ?early filled. The ?cor? follow?: \r.\v rORK gALTIMORB Ut r h l"> "?<*' aiirhpn*? ,-t.cf t ? : t ?? Cooper, et.?* ' I II 1 iso rwombij n? ?i 1 ; "?A .f ? 1 : 1 0 1 Corro?an, If ? 0 1 0 1?? Doyle' ft :? 1 ? - I* UutO, Tt .400401 , ray rf 4 0 t 1 01 Homer, ih 41) I ? on rf 1 t ' I ?? Parent, tb 1110 4? 1 1 110 I o Matad, s? . 41 .-.,,.,; 1 ? n 1 T-f-n . . ; o 0 ?? 3 o ??hawkey, ;> 1 o o 1 so i:"h '?' ,rt t ? I? 1 . ?.;.... hrnan 1 >? o o 00 .... ,, 1 o n o 1 o T?tala ?! U M ? U 1 Tottis *?? *?lfl -'15 * ??Batted f."1;- Roth m aiath taatag \. ? T? ri Huill?n??!?' 0 i) 0 ? I S S-1 ' ? rt s rtra* baae aa enera- N'.1?- tors, 1 Balti? more, 1 bail an baaei New \r>..u. i; naiti? 1 u m ?. ballt ??ff ?hawkey, s off Roth " Struek out -B? Te-weao. ": by Hhawkey. -' by Roth, ?i. by Wlltae. 1; b> - m 1 Thr.but hiu Doyl . M-rk.-. D?vore Two-baae hlti Bhal r, Marrar? \'' ' Merkl? ..''. Teareau BnodirraM It), r-v?in i h Heuaer. Sacrifice fly?Meyer?, st^l"?* - ?fer, Merkle. Pa oti ha_-_<T-fa. Mh? off Hhawkey, I In ? inaitiR?. ??ff Tturtmu. I in ;. Innln**: ""' Wiltte, 3 In 1 ?naiag. Isa pin -vickera. Thae?Ift attajntaaea l?W THORPE FANS FOUR TIMES. Chattanooga, Tenu?, ABtfl 0.-Jim Thorpe struck out earh of the four timen ho went to bat in the gBSM hwo to-day botW-MO th?> s^coiiil team of the ?iiants and Chattanooga, of the Southern League Kew V"ik won hf a score of .'? to 4 lu ten innings HARVARD WINS AT SOCCER. Cnmbridga ?lass., April I.?Harvard de? feated iiavrrfoni it so???-i her? to-day by a score of 1 to 2.Source: http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1913-04-06/ed-1/seq-13/
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MECHELEN, Belgium (AP) ? From his city hall under Belgium's most imposing cathedral, Mayor Bart Somers is wracking his brains trying to figure out how to keep young Muslims from going to fight "holy war" in Syria against the Assad regime.
Through much of western Europe, scores of Islamic youths have heeded the call to take up arms for a cause that is only a few hours away by plane. The phenomenon has alarmed authorities amid signs that the insurgency is becoming increasingly radicalized, with strong infiltration by al-Qaida. European authorities see a double danger, one that's summed up by Somers who describes the youths as "cannon fodder" in Syria ? and potential "full-blown terrorists" if they make it back home alive.
But it all raises a conundrum: In a free society, how can you prevent these young people from packing up and leaving?
"The major challenge of each democrat is to see what we can do in the fight against fundamentalism without sacrificing our own democratic laws," said Somers. "Otherwise we play into the hands of the terrorists."
That dilemma was again put to the test two weeks ago when Belgian authorities organized a major anti-terror sweep seeking to weed out agitators inciting young Muslims to fight against the Assad regime. In a high-profile raid of four dozen homes, police put six people behind bars, raising criticism among some that they had overstepped their bounds by infringing on freedom of speech.
In the Brussels municipality of Schaarbeek, the mayor even banned a soup kitchen for the needy, among them young Muslims, fearful that the charity workers were inciting youths to fight in Syria. The action came after two Muslim schoolboys disappeared, apparently to Syria ? departures that Mayor Bernard Clerfayt linked to soup kitchen recruitment.
There have been mounting calls to confiscate passports from youths who seem on the verge of leaving, something that many civil libertarians criticize as an anti-democratic restriction on movement.
Those who do go to fight often leave behind distraught parents. At least one Belgian father went to look for his son, to no avail. Concerned families seek any help to prevent the outflow of young people to Syria.
"We do not want people to go, especially the young men," said Abu Yamen, a Syrian who runs the El Rass pharmacy in Schaarbeek.
But the daily suffering shown on television can push the young into extreme, foolhardy decisions, mayor Somers said. The fighting has exacted a huge toll on the country, killing more than 70,000 people, laying waste to cities, towns and villages, and forcing more than a million people to seek refuge abroad. It has all created an opportunity for al-Qaida to win new converts to its cause, as the hardcore Syrian regime has also tried to present itself as one of the Middle East's most secular.
Insurgencies in Iraq and Libya also attracted foreign fighters. What is different in Syria is the extent to which fears are rising of the rebellion being hijacked by radical Islamist elements under the thumb of al-Qaida.
At Friday prayers in Brussels, Sheikh Mohamed El Tamamy has sought to discourage youths from leaving. "Some of these youngsters think that is jihad, when youngsters go from Belgium or Holland to Syria," he said. "But in truth, jihad in Islam has conditions and rules. For jihad, you must get permission from the authorities."
Many Europeans, however, fear fighters coming back more than volunteers heading to Syria.
The EU's law enforcement agency, Europol, said in the EU Terrorism Situation and Trend Report it published last Friday that returning fighters "have the potential to utilize their training, combat experience, knowledge and contacts for terrorist activities inside the EU."
The International Centre for the Study of Radicalization, an international group of five major academic institutions, estimates that up to 590 Europeans have left, accounting for about 10 percent of the foreign fighter total in Syria. Europol said Friday that in 2012, "Syria emerged as a destination of choice for foreign fighters."
This month's bombings at the Boston Marathon reinforced Europe's fears about youths leaving the West to be radicalized overseas, and coming back to carry out attacks. U.S. authorities are investigating whether one of the suspects, ethnic Chechen Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was influenced by religious extremists when he spent six months in Russia's Caucasus in 2012.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said after a meeting with his Belgian counterpart, Didier Reynders, that "we just had a young person who went to Russia and Chechnya who blew people up in Boston. So he didn't stay where he went, but he learned something where he went and he came back with a willingness to kill people."
It's a trajectory that some Europeans fear carries parallels to the youths traveling to Syria to fight in the insurgency.
"We have to follow them to protect our society," said Reynders. "We have a real terrorist risk because of such behavior."
In the neighboring Netherlands, anxiety has spread to the historic city of Delft, until recently known for its blue-and-white pottery, canals, and burial site of kings and queens. Now, you can add suspected jihadists as well.
In the Netherlands, as in Belgium, there has been alarm over some Muslim youths leaving for Syria, with estimated departures going as high as 100. "It was known that some Delft youngsters were radicalizing," Delft mayor Bas Verkerk wrote to his city council, after unconfirmed reports that two fighters from Delft had died.
And last month the nation raised its terror alert to "substantial," with the terrorism coordinator citing "signs of youngsters radicalizing in the Netherlands and the increased number of jihad travelers to Syria."
As a liberal, Somers is hesitant to choose between freedom and added security and intrusion into people's lives. But he is also sensitive to the need for strong surveillance ? and is seeking compromises.
Somers says he wants security personnel to be "the eyes and ears in our cities" to see who plans to leave ? "and then we try to influence him in a positive way."
"We try it with the police and the secret service. We try to find out who is behind those people," he said. Somers is now coordinating surveillance and outreach efforts with the mayors of Antwerp and Vilvoorde, which is close to Brussels.
But some human rights organizations argue that fundamental rights are being trampled in the process.
"We are talking about views that these youngsters hold, and you cannot change opinions with a repressive approach," said Jos Vander Velpen, the chairman of the Belgian League of Human Rights. "To the contrary, they will become even more convinced, and win more status because of it."
___
AP videojournalists Bishr Eltouni and Mark Carlson contributed to this article.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/euro-mayors-try-keep-youths-going-syria-154244490.html
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Average fuel economy of all cars in the US reached 24.6 miles per gallon ? not high for your average hybrid, but the highest it's ever been.?
By Antony Ingram,?Guest blogger / April 6, 2013
Chris King fills up his truck at a gas station displaying a price of $4.59 for a gallon of self-service regular gas last month. Average fuel economy for US vehicles reached an all-time high in March.
Gregory Bull/AP/File
EnlargeIf you're used to driving around in a Prius then average miles per gallon of 24.6 will sound a little poor in comparison.
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But that's the average economy of all cars, light trucks, minivans and SUVs purchased in the U.S. in March--and it's an all-time high.
24.6 mpg is 0.2 mpg higher than January and February's revised figures, both the previous record holders. Rising average fuel economy is a consistent trend at the moment, with several months last year also setting records.
The data is sales-weighted, so the highest-selling models have the greatest effect on the figures--it'll be a while before the high MPGe figures of electric vehicles are represented to any degree by statistics such as these.
Even so, the constant upwards movement reflects the impressive efforts of automakers to improve the efficiency of their vehicles. From hybrid and electric vehicles through increasingly popular diesels and improved gasoline engines, today's cars aren't just cleaner than ever, they're more fuel efficient too.
The most recent figures are 4.5 mpg higher than those of October 2007, the first month that University of Michigan's Transportation Research Institute (UMTRI) started recording data.
That year's average was just 20.8 mpg, which rose to 23.5 mpg overall in 2012.
Average sales-weighted fuel economy figures do tend to fluctuate throughout the year, peaking in spring and summer, before falling in the colder months--so it's likely 2013's average highs won't be much greater than the current 24.6 mpg. But overall, 2013's average fuel economy should be even better than that seen in 2012.
UMTRI also keeps data for what it calls the Eco-Driving Index (EDI). This figure considers the fuel used per distance driven and the frequency of driving, to calculate average monthly emissions generated by the individual U.S. driver.
This crept up to 0.83 in January (the data is a few months behind, and lower numbers are better) but overall the figures show a 17 percent improvement since records started in 2007.
We've still a long way to go to really cut down on fuel use and emissions (and huge truck sales figures bring down the overall average) but the important thing is, we're still moving in the right direction.
The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best auto bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger,?click here.?To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link in the blog description box above.
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Apr. 7, 2013 ? New research into Thonis-Heracleion, a sunken port-city that served as the gateway to Egypt in the first millennium BC, will be discussed at an international conference at the University of Oxford (15-17 March).
This obligatory port of entry, known as 'Thonis' by the Egyptians and 'Heracleion' by the Greeks, was where seagoing ships probably unloaded their cargoes to have them assessed by temple officials and taxes extracted before transferring them to Egyptian ships that went upriver. Before the foundation of Alexandria, it was one of the biggest commercial hubs in the Mediterranean because of its geographical position at the mouth of the Nile. The conference will also explore the wider maritime trading economy during the Late Period (664 BC until 332 BC).
The first traces of Thonis-Heracleion were found 6.5 kilometres off today's coastline by the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology (IEASM) under the direction of Franck Goddio in 2000. The Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology at the University of Oxford is collaborating on the project with IEASM in cooperation with Egypt's Ministry of State for Antiquities.
In the ports of the city, divers and researchers are currently examining 64 Egyptian ships, dating between the eighth and second centuries BC, many of which appear to have been deliberately sunk. The project researchers say the ships were found beautifully preserved, lying in the mud of the sea-bed. With 700 examples of different types of ancient anchor, the researchers believe this represents the largest nautical collection from the ancient world.
'The survey has revealed an enormous submerged landscape with the remains of at least two major ancient settlements within a part of the Nile delta that was crisscrossed with natural and artificial waterways,' said Dr Damian Robinson, Director of the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology at the University of Oxford. Dr Robinson, who is overseeing the excavation of one of the submerged ships known as Ship 43, will discuss his first findings about the Egyptians' unique shipbuilding style. He will also shed new light on why the boats appear to have been deliberately sunk.
'One of the key questions is why several ship graveyards were created close to the port. Ship 43 appears to be part of a large cluster of at least ten other vessels in a large ship graveyard about a mile from the mouth of the River Nile,' explained Dr Robinson. 'This might not have been simple abandonment, but a means of blocking enemy ships from gaining entrance to the port-city. Seductive as this interpretation is, however, we must also consider whether these boats were sunk simply to use them for land reclamation purposes.'
The port and its harbour basins also contain a collection of customs decrees, trading weights, and evidence of coin production. The material culture, for example, coin weights, will also be discussed at the conference, placing this into the wider narrative of how maritime trade worked in the ancient world.
Elsbeth van der Wilt, working on the project from the University of Oxford, said: 'Thonis-Heracleion played an important role in the network of long-distance trade in the Eastern Mediterranean, since the city would have been the first stop for foreign merchants at the Egyptian border. Excavations in the harbour basins yielded an interesting group of lead weights, likely to have been used by both temple officials and merchants in the payment of taxes and the purchasing of goods. Amongst these are an important group of Athenian weights. They are a significant archaeological find because it is the first time that weights like these have been identified during excavations in Egypt.'
Sanda Heinz from the University of Oxford will share her findings on over 300 statuettes and amulets from the Late and Ptolemaic Periods, including Egyptian and Greek subjects. The majority depict Egyptian deities such as Osiris, Isis, and their son Horus. She said: 'The statuettes and amulets were all found underwater, and are generally in excellent condition. The statuettes allow us to examine their belief system and at the same time have wider economic implications. These figures were mass-produced at a scale hitherto unmatched in previous periods. Our findings suggest they were made primarily for Egyptians; however, there is evidence to show that some foreigners also bought them and dedicated them in temples abroad.'
Franck Goddio, Director of the European Institute of Underwater Archaeology and Visiting Senior Lecturer in Maritime Archaeology at the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology, commented: 'The discoveries we have made in Thonis-Heracleion since 2000 thanks to the work of a multidisciplinary team and the support of the Hilti Foundation are encouraging. Charts of the city's monuments, ports and channels are taking shape more clearly and further crucial information is gathered each year. The conference at Oxford University will present interesting results and might bring new clues and insights of the fascinating history of Thonis-Heracleion."
Franck Goddio will make a comprehensive presentation of the sacred topography of Thonis-Heracleion resulting from12 years of archaeological works on site.
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Rory McIlroy
The PGA leaderboard for the Valero Texas Open is crowded at and near the top as play is underway on Saturday as the tournament before the 2013 Masters heads into golf's traditional moving day.
Many eyes were on Rory McIlroy to start the day, the former number 1 golfer on the PGA Tour is playing this weekend in San Antonio to try to win and to prepare for the 2013 Masters golf tournament next weekend in Augusta, Ga.
Rory finished with a 5-under-par 67 and moved within three shots of leader Billy Horschel yesterday.
On Friday, Horschel had six birdies, including a stretch of four in five holes midway through the round, and he did so despite hitting only seven of 14 fairways.
A group of three players -- Daniel Summerhays, Charley Hoffman and Steven Bowditch -- were two shots back at 6 under and six others were tied at 5 under (including McIlroy).
Play is underway Saturday, see a current leaderboard below and a live leaderbaord here.
US golfer Charley Hoffman has taken the lead with an early 3 under par score for Saturday's play so far.
Overall, Hoffman now stands alone at the top at minus 9.
Leaderboard Valero Texas Open (Apr 4 - 7)
Course: AT&T Oaks Course Par: 72 Yardage: 7,435
Pos Name 1 2 3 4 Today Thru Total Strokes
1 Charley Hoffman 71 67 29 - -3 8 -9 167
2 Billy Horschel 68 68 32 - E 8 -8 168
T3 Bob Estes 72 69 52 - -4 14 -7 193
T3 Jim Furyk 69 70 34 - -2 9 -7 173
T5 Ryan Palmer 71 71 59 - -4 16 -6 201
T5 Steven Bowditch 69 69 36 - E 9 -6 174
T7 Padraig Harrington 68 73 49 - -2 13 -5 190
T7 Rory McIlroy 72 67 40 - E 10 -5 179
T7 Daniel Summerhays 69 69 33 - +1 8 -5 171
T10 Marcel Siem* 76 67 60 - -3 16 -4 203
T10 Martin Laird 70 71 50 - -1 13 -4 191
T10 Jeff Overton 69 72 50 - -1 13 -4 191
T10 K.J. Choi 72 67 37 - +1 9 -4 176
T10 Ben Kohles 69 70 37 - +1 9 -4 176
T15 Bud Cauley 71 71 62 - -1 16 -3 204
T15 Nathan Green 69 72 48 - E 12 -3 189
T17 Martin Flores* 71 72 62 - -1 16 -2 205
T17 Nicholas Thompson* 71 73 61 - -2 16 -2 205
T17 David Lynn 72 70 60 - E 15 -2 202
T17 Ken Duke 73 68 57 - +1 14 -2 198
T17 Charl Schwartzel* 72 73 45 - -3 12 -2 190
T17 D.J. Trahan 70 71 45 - +1 11 -2 186
T17 Brendon de Jonge 70 69 39 - +3 9 -2 178
T24 Jason Kokrak 74 68 68 - +1 17 -1 210
T24 Shane Lowry 70 72 64 - +1 16 -1 206
T24 Steve LeBrun 72 69 62 - +2 15 -1 203
T24 Joe Durant 70 71 50 - +2 12 -1 191
T24 Jason Gore 69 71 47 - +3 11 -1 187
T24 Lee Janzen 70 69 44 - +4 10 -1 183
T24 Joe Ogilvie* 71 74 38 - -2 10 -1 183
T24 Andres Romero* 69 76 38 - -2 10 -1 183
T32 William McGirt 70 72 69 - +2 17 E 211
T32 Paul Haley II* 73 70 64 - +1 16 E 207
T32 Kevin Chappell* 75 69 60 - E 15 E 204
T32 Fredrik Jacobson* 70 74 60 - E 15 E 204
T32 Aaron Baddeley* 74 70 56 - E 14 E 200
T32 Richard H. Lee* 74 70 52 - E 13 E 196
T32 Brendan Steele* 72 72 52 - E 13 E 196
T32 Matt Bettencourt 67 73 44 - +4 10 E 184
T32 Ben Curtis* 74 71 39 - -1 10 E 184
T32 Henrik Norlander* 74 71 39 - -1 10 E 184
T32 Retief Goosen 70 69 41 - +5 9 E 180
T43 Justin Leonard 72 71 74 - +2 F +1 217
T43 Brad Fritsch* 70 73 65 - +2 16 +1 208
T43 Jeff Gove* 71 73 61 - +1 15 +1 205
T43 Bryce Molder 68 74 63 - +3 15 +1 205
T43 Brian Harman 72 69 55 - +4 13 +1 196
T43 Seung-yul Noh* 73 71 53 - +1 13 +1 197
T43 Matt Kuchar* 74 70 53 - +1 13 +1 197
T43 Charlie Beljan* 71 74 48 - E 12 +1 193
T43 Alistair Presnell 69 72 52 - +4 12 +1 193
T43 Brian Gay 71 70 52 - +4 12 +1 193
T43 Peter Tomasulo 67 73 49 - +5 11 +1 189
T43 Neal Lancaster* 75 70 45 - E 11 +1 190
T43 John Mallinger* 73 72 45 - E 11 +1 190
T43 Gary Woodland* 71 74 40 - E 10 +1 185
T43 Russell Knox* 73 72 40 - E 10 +1 185
T43 Todd Baek* 73 72 36 - E 9 +1 181
T59 Scott Stallings 73 70 75 - +3 F +2 218
T59 Harris English 68 75 70 - +3 17 +2 213
T59 Luke List* 73 71 62 - +2 15 +2 206
T59 Stuart Appleby* 75 69 58 - +2 14 +2 202
T59 Chris DiMarco* 75 69 58 - +2 14 +2 202
T59 Brian Davis 69 72 61 - +5 14 +2 202
T59 Peter Hanson 70 71 56 - +5 13 +2 197
T59 John Merrick* 74 71 49 - +1 12 +2 194
T59 John Peterson* 70 75 41 - +1 10 +2 186
T59 Justin Bolli* 76 69 37 - +1 9 +2 182
T69 John Huh* 74 69 67 - +4 16 +3 210
T69 Troy Matteson* 76 69 50 - +2 12 +3 195
T69 Matt Every* 70 75 47 - +2 11 +3 192
T69 Brendon Todd* 73 72 42 - +2 10 +3 187
T73 Cameron Percy 72 71 77 - +5 F +4 220
T73 Scott Langley 73 70 72 - +5 17 +4 215
T73 Jimmy Walker* 71 73 56 - +4 13 +4 200
T73 Ian Poulter* 70 75 51 - +3 12 +4 196
T73 D.A. Points* 74 71 51 - +3 12 +4 196
T78 Greg Chalmers 72 71 73 - +6 17 +5 216
T78 Wes Short Jr. 71 71 74 - +7 17 +5 216
T78 Kyle Stanley* 74 70 57 - +5 13 +5 201
T78 Johnson Wagner* 74 70 57 - +5 13 +5 201
82 Joey Snyder III* 72 73 65 - +13 13 +14 210
T83 Chad Campbell 75 71 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Will Claxton 76 70 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Donald Constable 76 70 MC MC - - - 146
T83 John Daly 76 70 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Tim Herron 77 69 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Robert Karlsson 73 73 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Michael Letzig 77 69 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Nick O'Hern 74 72 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Rod Pampling 71 75 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Chez Reavie 75 71 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Chris Stroud 73 73 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Cameron Tringale 77 69 MC MC - - - 146
T83 Aaron Watkins 78 68 MC MC - - - 146
T96 Robert Allenby 75 72 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Jonathan Byrd 73 74 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Zack Fischer 75 72 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Tom Gillis 74 73 MC MC - - - 147
T96 James Hahn 76 71 MC MC - - - 147
T96 J.J. Henry 73 74 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Jerry Kelly 73 74 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Jin Park 74 73 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Tim Petrovic 74 73 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Jordan Spieth 71 76 MC MC - - - 147
T96 Lee Williams 76 71 MC MC - - - 147
T107 Jamie Donaldson 74 74 MC MC - - - 148
T107 Scott Gardiner 76 72 MC MC - - - 148
T107 Justin Hicks 77 71 MC MC - - - 148
T107 Brandt Jobe 74 74 MC MC - - - 148
T107 Colt Knost 74 74 MC MC - - - 148
T107 D.H. Lee 73 75 MC MC - - - 148
T107 David Lingmerth 77 71 MC MC - - - 148
T114 Gary Christian 77 72 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Gonzalo Fernandez-Casta 75 74 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Ross Fisher 76 73 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Tommy Gainey 72 77 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Bobby Gates 76 73 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Andres Gonzales 75 74 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Morgan Hoffmann 73 76 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Billy Mayfair 77 72 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Dicky Pride 76 73 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Patrick Reed 74 75 MC MC - - - 149
T114 Duffy Waldorf 76 73 MC MC - - - 149
T125 James Driscoll 76 74 MC MC - - - 150
T125 Hunter Haas 79 71 MC MC - - - 150
T125 Scott McCarron 77 73 MC MC - - - 150
T125 Tag Ridings 73 77 MC MC - - - 150
T125 Vaughn Taylor 75 75 MC MC - - - 150
T130 Ricky Barnes 79 72 MC MC - - - 151
T130 Scott Brown 75 76 MC MC - - - 151
T130 David Duval 79 72 MC MC - - - 151
T130 Troy Kelly 78 73 MC MC - - - 151
T130 Steve Marino 76 75 MC MC - - - 151
T135 Cameron Beckman 78 74 MC MC - - - 152
T135 Jason Bohn 76 76 MC MC - - - 152
T135 Eric Meierdierks 77 75 MC MC - - - 152
T135 James Shindler 74 78 MC MC - - - 152
T135 Darron Stiles 79 73 MC MC - - - 152
T135 Robert Streb 77 75 MC MC - - - 152
T135 David Toms 75 77 MC MC - - - 152
T142 Rich Beem 76 77 MC MC - - - 153
T142 Roberto Castro 79 74 MC MC - - - 153
T142 Shawn Stefani 78 75 MC MC - - - 153
T145 Arjun Atwal 76 78 MC MC - - - 154
T145 Derek Ernst 80 74 MC MC - - - 154
T145 Jim Herman 79 75 MC MC - - - 154
T145 David Mathis 76 78 MC MC - - - 154
T145 Charlie Wi 77 77 MC MC - - - 154
150 Carl Cooper 80 75 MC MC - - - 155
151 Mathias Gronberg 82 74 MC MC - - - 156
152 Heath Slocum 80 77 MC MC - - - 157
153 Bill Lunde* 79 31 CUT CUT - - - 110
154 Andrew Svoboda* 12 CUT CUT CUT - - - 12
155 Sang-Moon Bae 83 WD WD WD - - - 83
156 Jeff Maggert* 15 CUT CUT CUT - - - 15
Source: http://www.nationalledger.com/pop-culture-news/pga-leaderboard-valero-texas-406062.shtml
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JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa will send troops to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) as part of a U.N. mission to neutralize armed groups in the conflict-torn east of the country, a South African military spokesman said on Sunday.
The deployment comes as South Africa is coming to grips with its worst military setback since the end of apartheid in 1994. Thirteen of its troops were killed last month in a shootout with rebels in the neighboring Central African Republic (CAR).
"The DRC deployment has nothing to do with the CAR. Neither did the CAR incident influence the decision to send the troops into the DRC. They are two different issues," Brigadier General Xolani Mabanga told Reuters.
The size and timing of the deployment will depend on the terms set by the United Nations, he added.
The Security Council unanimously adopted in late March a resolution establishing the so-called intervention brigade as part of the existing 20,000-strong U.N. force in Congo, known as MONUSCO.
It is the first time the United Nations has created such a unit within a traditional peacekeeping force.
Congo's army is fighting M23 rebels in a conflict that has dragged Congo's east back into war and displaced more than half a million people.
The 13 soldiers killed in the Central African Republic were buried at the weekend as questions swirled over whether they had been sent to protect the financial interests of President Jacob Zuma's ruling African National Congress.
Zuma last week defended his decision to send them, saying they had died fighting for Pretoria's foreign policy, not his party's investments.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; editing by Andrew Roche)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africa-send-troops-join-u-n-mission-120837995.html
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Legendary Movie Critic Roger Ebert Dead At 70
Rogert Ebert, the film critic and longtime Chicago Sun-Times contributor lost his battle with cancer on Thursday. The 70-year-old had just announced he would be cutting back on his work on Tuesday, revealing his cancer had returned. Ebert?s struggle with cancer began in 2002. He had operations for cancer of the thyroid, salivary glands and ...
Legendary Movie Critic Roger Ebert Dead At 70 Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News
Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/04/legendeary-movie-critic-roger-ebert-dead-at-70/
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It's a good day for those of you who have waited on a widget for the excellent Agenda Calendar. (Be sure to check out our full look at Agenda Calendar.) We now, in fact, have a widget. Actually, it's a resizable widget, which any self-respecting widget connoisseur knows is the best kind of widget to have.
And this is what it looks like. Not a whole lot more to say about it -- it's a big black-and-white widget with some colors thrown in depending on the calendar sync. Tap a listing to see it in Agenda, and hit the big + button in the top right to add a new event. Tapping a day (or date) opens that day in the Agenda app.
You could argue that there's a little wasted space here. But, truth be told, the Agenda widget looks a little different on different launchers. In the example above, we've got it set as a 4-by-3 widget on top of Action Launcher. By default, you get a 2-by-3 widget. And the spacing is different on, say, the Nexus 4. So you might have to futz with it a little.
We've been using the Agenda Calendar widget for a couple days now in place of our old standby, Pure Calendar (Agenda). This one's much simpler to set up, but that also means it's not quite as full-featured. That's not really a strike against it, though. There's much to be said about that simplicity, and the overall design is more sophisticated.
All in all, this is a $1.99 that's definitely worth trying out now.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/c8KL3DxGJnQ/story01.htm
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GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) ? Hamas says it has elected Gaza's prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, as the deputy leader of the Islamic militant group.
Senior Hamas figures this week re-elected longtime leader Khaled Mashaal to another four-year term. On Wednesday, the group announced it had elected Haniyeh, 50, as Mashaal's deputy.
Hamas, founded in Gaza in 1987, also has branches in the West Bank and outside the Palestinian territories.
Haniyeh's election signals a shift in the group's center of gravity toward Gaza, the territory the group has ruled since a violent takeover in 2007. Traditionally, top Hamas leaders have been exiles. Haniyeh is the first Gazan to rise to the No. 2 spot.
Last year, Hamas hard-liners in Gaza balked at Mashaal's attempt to reconcile with his political rival, West Bank-based Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gaza-premier-elected-no-2-hamas-leadership-204502205.html
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By David Alexander and Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel warned the military to brace for more belt-tightening on Wednesday as he conducts a review that could cut the number of generals, pare back the civilian workforce and stem the spiraling cost of new weapons.
Hagel, in his first major policy speech as Pentagon chief, told students at the National Defense University that the United States could not allow its current budget crisis to force it to retreat from the world. But he underscored the limits of U.S. military power.
"We need to challenge all past assumptions, and we need to put everything on the table," Hagel said. "Any serious effort to reform and reshape our defense enterprise must confront the principal drivers of growth in the department's base budget - namely acquisitions, personnel costs and overhead."
Hagel's remarks come as the Pentagon is struggling to deal with a $41 billion budget cut that went into effect on March 1, part of a $500 billion reduction that could slice defense spending by $50 billion a year for the next decade.
His comments marked a shift in tone at the Pentagon, which for months harbored hope that Congress and the White House would rescue it from spending reductions beyond a $487 billion cut approved in 2011.
"The speech ... represented a bit of a turning point for the Pentagon because he acknowledged that further cuts in defense spending are likely, if not inevitable, and that DoD should begin preparing for them," said Todd Harrison, a defense analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments think tank.
Hagel, a Vietnam veteran who took office in late February, faced pointed questions from his audience.
One woman asked why the department was moving ahead with a decision to put civilian employees on unpaid leave later this year, essentially slashing their pay by 20 percent for 14 weeks as part of its effort to cut spending.
"In case your advisers haven't told you, it is affecting morale," she said.
Questioned about how soon defense personnel might face reductions in benefits, Hagel said the military would fulfill commitments it had made so far. But he also said the Pentagon would ask for higher fees on some benefits like healthcare, a move Congress has rejected in the past.
He emphasized that the system ultimately would have to change.
'I WISH IT WAS OTHERWISE'
"If you play this out over a 10-, 20-year period, we're not going to be able to sustain the current personnel costs and retirement benefits. There will be no money in the budget for anything else," he said.
"I'm sorry. I wish it was otherwise," Hagel said. "But that's a fact of life and the longer we defer these things, the worse it's going to be for all of us."
He said the department had to come to grips with factors that are driving up long-term costs, like a big bureaucracy, high personnel costs and unwieldy weapons-development programs.
"In many respects, the biggest long-term fiscal challenge facing the department is not the flat or declining top-line budget, it is the growing imbalance in where the money is being spent internally," Hagel said.
He expressed concern that the military was looking at "systems that are vastly more expensive and technologically risky than what was promised or budgeted for" as it attempts to modernize weapons.
While recognizing the sacrifices of troops and their families over nearly a dozen years of war, Hagel said "fiscal realities demand" the Pentagon take another look at the number and mix of military and civilian personnel it employs.
"Despite good efforts and intentions, it is still not clear that every option has been exercised or considered to pare back the world's largest back-office," Hagel said, referring to the Pentagon's bureaucracy.
He said the military's hierarchies needed re-examination as well.
"Today the operational forces of the military - measured in battalions, ships and aircraft wings - have shrunk dramatically since the Cold War era," he said. "Yet the three- and four-star command and support structures sitting atop these smaller fighting forces have stayed intact, with minor exceptions, and in some cases they are actually increasing in size and rank."
(Editing by Philip Barbara and Xavier Briand)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hagel-tells-u-military-brace-further-belt-tightening-230258216--business.html
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'If I didn't tell him 'Yes you can do this' or 'touch this,' he refused to do it, like he's a southern gentlemen,' Minaj tells MTV News.
By Christina Garibaldi
Lil Wayne and Nicki Minaj in her "High School" music video
Photo: Young Money
Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1704811/nicki-minaj-lil-wayne-high-school-kiss.jhtml
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Getty ImagesFormer Dolphins quarterback Pat White wisely dismissed his concussion lawsuit (actually, he filed two of them) before returning to the NFL, signing with the Redskins.? But maybe he didn?t need to do that.? After all, two other players made comebacks without scrapping their own lawsuits against the league.
A league source advises that former Jaguars, Rams, and Falcons center Brett Romberg, a plaintiff in one of the original concussion lawsuits filed in July 2011, re-signed with the Falcons the following month, after a year out of football.
Cut in early September 2011, Romberg again re-signed with the Falcons later that month, remaining with the team for the balance of the year and appearing in two games.
We?ve also confirmed, as first reported by Nathan Fenno of the Washington Times, that defensive end Patrick Chukwurah signed with the Seahawks last season after filing suit for concussions suffered earlier in his career.
While not binding on the many other former players who have sued, this dynamic supports the notion that plenty of the concussion plaintiffs view the litigation as a lawyer-driven strategy for finagling a little extra money from a former employer, and that many of the players would welcome the chance to make more money playing football despite the brain damage they?ve supposedly sustained.
As Ross Tucker aptly put it earlier today on Twitter, ?Pat White situation makes me wonder how many guys on concussion lawsuit would bail if a team offered them contract??? We know Pat White would, because Pat White did.? Despite allegedly permanent injuries, White was perfectly fine when he had to be.
Even though that?s only one out of 4,000 plaintiffs, it does far more damage to the concussion lawsuits than any permanent harm White ever suffered in the NFL.
Especially since we now know that he actually suffered none.
Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/02/jay-zs-new-agency-connected-cruz-with-caa/related/
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Former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford thanks his fiance Maria Belen Chapur as he addresses supporters in Mount Pleasant, S.C., on Tuesday, April 2, 2013, after winning the GOP nomination for the U.S. House seat he once held. Sanford is trying to make a comeback after his political career was derailed four years ago when he disappeared from the state only to return to admit the couple was having an affair. Sanford's wife, Jenny, later divorced him. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)
Former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford thanks his fiance Maria Belen Chapur as he addresses supporters in Mount Pleasant, S.C., on Tuesday, April 2, 2013, after winning the GOP nomination for the U.S. House seat he once held. Sanford is trying to make a comeback after his political career was derailed four years ago when he disappeared from the state only to return to admit the couple was having an affair. Sanford's wife, Jenny, later divorced him. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)
MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (AP) ? The race for a vacant South Carolina congressional seat has turned into the big-name contest political junkies had hoped for.
Former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, a Republican trying to make a comeback after his political career was derailed by his admission of an extramarital affair four years ago, faces Democrat Elizabeth Colbert Busch (KOHL'-buhrt), the sister of political satirist Stephen Colbert (kohl-BEHR'). The special election is May 7.
Sanford defeated former Charleston County Councilman Curtis Bostic in the GOP primary runoff Tuesday, clearing another hurdle in his quest for political redemption.
Colbert Busch, a businesswoman, has long aspired to political office. She says jobs is her top priority.
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