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Topics - kaliman2006

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31
Cricket Anyone / One Step Foward, Two Steps Back?
« on: November 20, 2010, 03:02:50 PM »
Hopefully not....

 :-[

http://www.espncricinfo.com/sri-lanka-v-west-indies-2010/content/current/story/488049.html

West Indies in Sri Lanka 2010-11
Shane Shillingford reported for suspect action

ESPNcricinfo staff

November 20, 2010

Shane Shillingford, the West Indies offspinner, has been reported for a suspected illegal bowling action following the first Test against Sri Lanka in Galle. He will have to undergo testing within 21 days.

Shillingford will have to submit to an independent analysis of his bowling action, which must be conducted by a member of the ICC panel of human movement specialists within 21 days. If he is found to have bowled with an illegal action during the analysis, Shillingford will be suspended from bowling in international cricket until he undertakes remedial action and is reassessed.

Until the WICB receives a report of the assessment, however, Shillingford will be allowed to continue bowling in international cricket, which means he will be available for selection for the second Test against Sri Lanka that begins on November 23 in Colombo.

Shillingford, who had figures of 4 for 123 and 1 for 79 in Galle, was reported by on-field umpires Steve Davis and Richard Kettleborough, along with third umpire Asad Rauf and fourth umpire Tyron Wijewardene. The umpires' report cited concern over the straightening of Shillingford's arm while he bowled some deliveries.

32
Football / Now this is DEFINITELY unaccetpable behaviour!
« on: October 26, 2010, 11:10:31 AM »
I know passions run high in football sometimes, but to threaten a referee AND his family is completely unacceptable!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/scot_prem/9128308.stm

Old Firm referee Willie Collum receives threats 
 
Collum was taking charge of his first Glasgow derby on Sunday.

Sunday's Old Firm match referee Willie Collum received a series of threatening phone calls at his home after the game.

In one of them a caller warned: "I'm coming to get you and your family."

The 31-year-old Fifa referee was offered police protection but declined as he did not want to make the situation any worse.

Senior officials at the Scottish FA say some referees have considered resigning because of the level criticism they receive from clubs, fans and the media.

Collum, in charge of his first Glasgow derby, became the focus of anger after he awarded Rangers a controversial penalty in the second half of the match, which they went on to win 3-1.

Another official, Steven Craven, resigned after criticism of his role in a reversed penalty decision the previous weekend.

And former Fifa referee Kenny Clark believes that people could be put off becoming officials if they are not treated with more respect.

"We're perhaps heading for a crisis unless people start to recognise that we must ease the pressures being put upon referees," Clark told BBC Scotland.

"If referees and assistants at the top level choose to resign then it diminishes the pool of officials able to handle matches in the Scottish Premier League and Scottish Football League.

 There have been occasions when referees have received threatening letters, letters with razor blades contained in them

Former referee Kenny Clark
"That impacts on referee recruitment, and young guys are going to be less inclined to take up refereeing if they see this kind of abuse directed at those at the top of the tree."

Clark, who retired from refereeing in 2008, says he never experienced death threats himself, although public abuse was not uncommon.

"Before my number was ex-directory I had a couple of abusive phone calls, and I frequently had to put up with abuse in the streets or at social occasions," he said.

"The really annoying thing is if that people seem to think they are somehow entitled to be abusive towards referees regardless of the fact you may be accompanied by your wife or children.

"Now is worse than it was, say, 10 years ago.

"There have been occasions when referees have received threatening letters, letters with razor blades contained in them, and we're aware of referees having windows smashed in their homes."

And he believes a top-down change in attitudes towards officials is needed in order to improve the situation.

"It's important that we change the mindset. In other sports they don't think it's legitimate to criticise refs to the same extent as they do in football.

 MY SPORT: DEBATE
Scottish top flight football needs professional referees

sakebhoy
"The immediate step that needs to be taken is that the clubs take steps to acknowledge the important part that refs play, and that without them they can't have games.

"Clubs need to take a lead," he said, "and sometimes managers need to be a wee bit more responsible."

"In the same way they don't expect perfection from their players they can't expect perfection from match officials.

"I'm certainly not going to criticise Steven Craven for taking his decision because I don't know how much abuse he has had to put up with. I don't know what his family have been subjected to.

Celtic manager Neil Lennon was furious that Dougie McDonald, the referee in the game on 17 October, first awarded a penalty then changed his mind after consulting with his assistant, Craven.

"We need to have as many people as possible coming into it and then you can sort out the good one from the poorer ones.

"Match officials' performances are analysed far more than the players' performances are. We seem to expect match officials to produce perfection in games where we don't expect that of players."

While admitting to being "a little surprised" that Collum had been put in charge of the first Old Firm match of the season, Clark felt that the referee had performed well.

"People are going to look at individual decisions, but over the piece I thought he did well to control a game in which the players did not offer him very much help and which probably threw up more contentious issues than any Old Firm game for quite a long time," he said.

As for the controversial penalty, awarded by Collum when Rangers defender Kirk Broadfoot fell to the ground after glancing the leg of Daniel Majstorovic, Clark said: "I think Willie was caught in the wrong position.

"I'm sure he would acknowledge that himself. He was then in a position where I think he only saw it out the corner of his eye."



 

33
General Discussion / German Singer Gets Suspended Sentence
« on: August 26, 2010, 11:50:24 AM »
Whey, this is why people can't be too careful nowadays.

 :-\

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11097298

Suspended sentence for German HIV singer Nadja Benaissa

Nadja Benaissa had faced up to 10 years in prison

An HIV-positive German popstar accused of infecting a former partner with the virus has been given a two-year suspended prison sentence.

Nadja Benaissa, 28, was found guilty on one count of causing grievous bodily harm and two of attempted bodily harm.

The No Angels singer had admitted having unprotected sex and keeping her HIV status secret, but denied deliberately infecting anyone.

At the trial, she said she was "sorry from the bottom of my heart".

"I wish I could turn back the clock and make it all not happen," she told the court in the western town of Darmstadt.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

    Today will be a turning point in her life, as she now knows that she will not be imprisoned. Her reaction was emotional because it was the end”

End Quote Oliver Wallasch Lawyer for Nadja Benaissa

As well as the two-year suspended sentence, Benaissa will be required to perform 300 hours of community service and attend regular counselling sessions.
'Cowardly'

Benaissa had sex with three people without telling them she was infected with HIV. One of them, a 34-year-old talent agent who was a plaintiff in the case, was confirmed as having contracted the virus.

Medical experts testified at the trial that they were in all probability infected with the same strain, as it was relatively rare in Germany.

She said she had not told anybody about her disease because she was afraid of the consequences for her career, which she conceded was a "cowardly act".

But she claimed she had been told by doctors that the risk of passing on the virus was "practically zero".

The BBC's Tristana Moore in Darmstadt says the singer looked nervous as the verdict was read out on Thursday, but she was clearly relieved that she was given a suspended sentence.

Presiding judge Dennis Wacker told the packed courtroom that she was guilty of grievous bodily harm because she had carelessly infected a former partner with HIV without telling him about her condition.

But the judge said Benaissa deserved a lenient sentence because she had confessed to her irresponsible behaviour, expressed remorse and "learned to be responsible and deal with her illness".
Nadja Benaissa performs on 23 May 2008 Benaissa was arrested in 2008, just before she was due to perform

Our correspondent says he described her troubled past - how she was a drug addict at the age of 14, became pregnant at 16, and then discovered she was HIV-positive at 17 during a routine blood test during her pregnancy.

At this point during the summing up, the singer broke down in tears, our correspondent adds. A court official gave her some tissues and she continued crying.

After the hearing, her lawyer said he was very satisfied with the verdict.

"We had a very fair and speedy trial. The aim of the defence and my client was to have a verdict which led to probation and this was the result," Oliver Wallasch told the BBC.

"Today will be a turning point in her life, as she now knows that she will not be imprisoned. Her reaction was emotional because it was the end."

A German Aids-awareness group criticised the verdict, saying Benaissa's partners also carried a share of the responsibility for becoming infected.

"If the responsibility for prevention is put entirely upon women and HIV-positive people, we are not recognising the combined responsibility of two people," Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe spokeswoman Marianne Rademacher said.

Benaissa was arrested at a nightclub in Frankfurt in April last year, just before she was due to perform a concert, and spent 10 days in custody.

No Angels were formed in 2000 on the international TV show Popstars, before recording a series of hits and emerging as Germany's most successful girl band.

They re-formed in 2007 and competed in the 2008 Eurovision Song Contest, finishing 23rd.

34
Cricket Anyone / Courtney Browne is now a West Indies Selector
« on: August 05, 2010, 07:31:02 AM »
I hope that he is better at this job than his batting and wicketkeeping.

http://www.cricinfo.com/westindies/content/current/story/471025.html


Courtney Browne appointed as West Indies selector
Cricinfo staff

August 5, 2010
 
The West Indies Cricket Board has approved the review committee's recommendation to include former wicketkeeper Courtney Browne in the West Indies selection panel. The decision was taken at the last meeting of the board of directors in St Lucia, as the previous selection panel's term concluded on July 31. Browne replaces former West Indies spinner Raphick Jumadeen in the three-member panel, while chairman Clyde Butts and Robert Haynes have been reappointed for the next two-year term.

Butts thanked the WICB for being reappointed, and extended a welcome to Browne. "I'm pleased to be reappointed chairman of the selection panel and I am confident that we will work closely as a group as we continue on a restructuring pathway.

"I welcome Courtney to the panel and look forward to working with him and Robert, along with head coach Ottis Gibson as we put our best efforts together to move West Indies cricket forward," Butts said.

Browne made his West Indies debut in 2005, playing 20 Tests and 46 ODIs in a ten-year long stop-start career during which he was one of the first-choice wicketkeepers. "It is a privilege to be afforded the opportunity to serve West Indies cricket again. I feel honoured and I will put my best foot forward," Browne said.

"I would have played cricket with some of the players who are still in the West Indies team and there is a lot more involvement in cricket now and so I think I will be able to relate to the players a lot better."

Browne had served as an alternate selector on the previous selection panel alongside former players Stuart Williams and Nehemiah Perry. The one-time Barbados captain has also served as the chairman of the Barbados Cricket Association selection panel for the past two years, in addition to being the team's manager.

Browne's tenure begins in a period when West Indies cricket has hit unforeseen lows on the field, having managed only 18 Test victories since January 2000. Against this background, the board has set out to prepare a selection policy document with guidelines chalking out the WICB's action plan with regards to selection.

The review committee comprising Ernest Hilaire, Joel Garner, Clive Lloyd and WICB chief cricket operations officer Tony Howard, interviewed several candidates before recommending Browne.

35
General Discussion / Elian Gonzalez- 10 years later
« on: April 06, 2010, 11:15:47 AM »
What a difference ten years makes.

Thoughts?


Cuban government releases photos of teenaged Elian Gonzalez

Elian Gonzalez AP – Elian Gonzalez attends the UJC, Union of Young Communists, congress in Havana Sunday April 4, 2010. …

    * Elian Gonzalez Slideshow:Elian Gonzalez

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59 mins ago

Ten years ago this month, the saga of a Cuban boy named Elian Gonzalez captivated the nation and much of the world. Elian, 6, was found floating on an inner tube off the coast of Florida, after his mother drowned trying to reach America.

The Cuban immigrant community in Florida embraced the boy as a symbol of the struggle of ordinary Cubans to flee the oppression of Fidel Castro's communist regime, and rallied behind the boy's extended family in Miami, which sought custody of young Elian.

But U.S. immigration officials insisted that the boy be returned to his father in Havana. Agents of the Immigration and Naturalization Service conducted an armed raid on Elian's adoptive Miami home - yielding a powerful image of paramilitary forces in America menacing a frightened 6-year-old. Florida's Cuban immigrant community brandished that infamous photo as a reminder of what they considered American power effectively doing the bidding of a heartless Castro government.

A decade later, however, there are new photos of a nearly grown-up Elian Gonzalez - and they present a very different kind of propaganda image.


(AP)

The new pictures show a serious-looking 16-year-old sporting a closely cropped haircut, wearing an olive-green military school uniform with red shoulder patches, as he attends a Young Communist Union meeting. The Cuban government press released the images under the none-too-subtle headline "Young Elian Gonzalez defends his revolution in the youth congress."

Since winning Elian's return to Cuba in 2000, the Castro regime has closely tracked the boy and his father. (Indeed, Cuban State Security has a monitoring station next to their home.) In his homeland, Elian Gonzalez is hailed as a national hero who embodies the triumph of Cuba over the United States. Every few years, the Cuban government has floated news updates and photographs trumpeting Elian's progress as a model young citizen of the Castro regime.

In 2004, NBC's Keith Morrison traveled to Cuba to interview Elian's father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, and filmed footage of a communist museum that houses a bronze statue of Elian raising a clenched fist. After Elian's return home, his father was made a member of the Cuban National Assembly, and Castro has been known to show up at Elian's birthday parties and school graduation ceremonies. In 2005, in an interview with CBS' Bob Simon for "60 Minutes," Elian referred to Castro "not only as a friend, but also as a father." In 2008, Elian joined Cuba's Young Communist Union.

While Cuba has played up Elian Gonzalez's symbolic value in stoking nationalist sentiment,  he still remains a more divisive figure in the United States, provoking fierce reactions on the American left and right. After the latest batch of photos went public Monday, the  American Thinker weighed in with a rallying cry from the right, no doubt seconded widely in the Cuban immigrant community:

If Elian had been granted asylum, today he would be a teenager preparing to go to college with every opportunity for success ahead of him. Instead, on the cusp of adulthood, Elian poses for propaganda photos sandwiched between Cuban army soldiers attending the Union of Young Communists congress in Havana...The youthful Gonzalez should have been wrapped in the America flag. Instead a boy who once represented the quest for the God given right to be free, waves a Cuban flag symbolizing poverty, ppression, authoritarianism and misinformation.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_ts1481
 





36
General Discussion / Former President Clinton Is Rushed to Hospital
« on: February 11, 2010, 06:03:17 PM »
I just heard the news fifteen minutes ago.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/12/us/politics/12clinton.html?hp

WASHINGTON — Former President Bill Clinton was taken to a New York hospital on Thursday after experiencing chest pains, and doctors there inserted two stents into one of his coronary arteries, his office said.

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More Politics News“Today President Bill Clinton was admitted to the Columbia campus of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital after feeling discomfort in his chest,” said a statement issued by Douglas Band, his longtime adviser.

Mr. Clinton, who serves as the United Nations special envoy to Haiti, has been spending much of his time in recent weeks trying to coordinate relief and recovery efforts for the Caribbean island after a devastating earthquake claimed more than 200,000 lives. Mr. Clinton just returned a few days ago from his second trip there since the earthquake.

“Following a visit to his cardiologist, he underwent a procedure to place two stents in one of his coronary arteries,” Mr. Band’s statement said.

“President Clinton is in good spirits and will continue to focus on the work of his foundation and Haiti’s relief and long-term recovery efforts.”

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton learned of her husband’s condition after she had concluded a meeting with President Obama in the Oval Office.

An associate of Mrs. Clinton’s said that she was still in Washington but making plans to head to New York City late Thursday afternoon to join their daughter, Chelsea, and her fiancé, Marc Mezvinsky, at the hospital.Mr. Clinton, 63, has a history of heart trouble. He had quadruple coronary artery bypass surgery in 2004. He never had a heart attack, but the surgery then was similarly prompted by his complaints about chest pain and shortness of breath.

He later developed rare complications affecting his lungs that required another operation six months later, in March 2005. Scar tissue and fluid had built up in the lung and had given Mr. Clinton breathing difficulties.

Since then, Mr. Clinton has been active in charity efforts and in 2008 had a rigorous schedule campaigning on behalf of his wife’s unsuccessful presidential campaign.

Mr. Clinton’s health has been a concern ever since the 2004 heart operation. By his own account, he had never been entirely the same. “It changed me,” he told the New York Times last year. “One of the things I noticed is that on normal days ever since I had that heart surgery, I’m a lot more laid back and a lot more relaxed and a lot more healthy.

“But I also noticed since I had the surgery — and this is what you picked up in the campaign — that if I’m really tired, it’s more difficult for me than it was when I was back in politics before I had the heart problem,” he said. “I have no explanation for why that is. I’m just observing it. It’s neither an excuse for any mistake I made or anything else. I’m just explaining. It’s something I’ve noticed. My life has changed.”

Although he has had less energy than he used to, Mr. Clinton has still maintained a pace that would be punishing for a man half his age. He worked in Haiti in tandem with former President George W. Bush. David Sherzer, a spokesman for Mr. Bush, said that the former president had spoken with Chelsea Clinton Thursday afternoon “and was glad to hear that her father is doing well and that his spirits are high. President Bush looks forward to continuing to work with his friend on Haiti relief and rebuilding. President and Mrs. Bush send their prayers for a speedy recovery.”

Mr. Clinton runs a multilayered foundation with 1,100 staff members and volunteers to fights HIV/AIDS, climate change and global poverty. He also hosts an annual Clinton Global Initiative conference that brings together some of the world’s most prominent figures in politics, business and the arts to collaborate on solutions to the world’s ills.

The United Nations just asked Mr. Clinton to extend his mandate to reconstruction but he tried to downplay any suggestion that he would be running anything. “I want to build the capacity of the country to chart its own course, so they can trust me not to be a neocolonialist,” he told CNN during his visit. “I’m not interested in doing that, and I’m too old. What I want them to do is be able to dream their own dreams and then make them real. That’s my goal.”


37
General Discussion / Global Cooling?
« on: January 09, 2010, 09:10:53 AM »
As all the foreign-based forumites know, especially those residing in the Temperate Zone, we have had quite a harsh winter so far.

But yuh know things are serious when it is thirty-two degrees farenheit (!!!) in Tampa, FL (this is the temperature at the time that I am writing). My Aunt and Uncle live down there and tell me that snow is in the forecast for Florida today!

Could some of the more knowledgeable members explain to me what the heck is going on?!

38
Cricket Anyone / Could Sehwag Break Lara's Record?
« on: December 03, 2009, 10:40:41 AM »
This man rell mashing up Sri Lanka:

http://www.cricinfo.com/indvsl2009/content/current/story/437873.html

Virender Sehwag pulverises Sri Lanka

The Bulletin by Sidharth Monga

December 3, 2009
Text size: A | A

India 443 for 1 (Sehwag 284*, Vijay 87, Dravid 62*) lead Sri Lanka 393 (Dilshan 109, Mathews 99, Paranavitana 53, Harbhajan 4-112) by 50 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

   Virender Sehwag connects for maximum again, India v Sri Lanka, 3rd Test, Mumbai, 2nd day, December 3, 2009

Even a bad back couldn't slow him down. Virender Sehwag batted like the nearby Arabian Sea in high tide - and when Sri Lanka tried to plug one hole, he rushed in through the other. He ended the day 16 short of becoming the first man to score three triple-centuries in the history of Test cricket but he'd already broken a string of records - the most double-centuries by an Indian, the second-highest scorer of 250-plus scores, the most runs by an Indian in a day (breaking his own record) - and given India enough time to push for a huge lead and then an innings win. All this despite starting the innings more than half an hour into the day.

Sehwag's was no monotonous power hitting but a delightful and clever exercise in finding gaps through defensive fields for most of the innings. Think Twenty20 highlights, but with the batsman playing lovely inside-out chips, straight lofts, reverse-sweeps to beat leg-side fields, flicks to beat off-side fields.

Part of Sehwag would have felt for Sri Lanka (he says he feels sorry for the bowlers when he bats this well); more helpless bowling units would be hard to find. Sri Lanka could manage only four maidens between them out of 79 painful overs. M Vijay, playing his second Test because of Gautam Gambhir's absence, and Rahul Dravid scored 149 runs between them in 242 balls, but they were distant second fiddles.

Nothing, though, told the story like Muttiah Muralitharan's plight. He was the last of the specialist bowlers tried, in the last over before lunch. By that time Sehwag had already reached his fifty and India had scored 85 in 17 overs. He bowled the first ball with a long-on in place and never looked like creating any opportunity in 19 succeeding overs.

When Murali started his ninth over, Sehwag had reached 110 off 107 deliveries, Vijay 83 off 111, and India 198 in 36 overs. Murali bowled a doosra, Sehwag took his front foot out of the line, and lofted it over extra cover. The next ball Murali shortened the length, Sehwag read the doosra again, went back into the crease and presented the deadest of defences. Murali dropped his wrists in exasperation and went back to brood over figures of 9-0-56-0, which would only become worse. He has now bowled 69 consecutive overs without a maiden.

And as the innings progressed, and the field spread, Sehwag's scoring kept getting faster and faster. Hard as it is to believe, Sehwag had scored just 15 runs off the first 31 balls he faced. And then he opened up, cutting Chanaka Welegedara for a four, and lofting Rangana Herath for six in his first over. Since then, the longest he went without a boundary was 12 balls - moving from 166 to 172 - and showing Welegedara, the pick of Sri Lankan bowlers, a semblance of respect.

By then Sehwag had seemed to recover from the back trouble that threatened to pull him down just before tea. He was seen leaning on the bat, falling over, and holding onto his back while taking singles. By tea he had reached 151 off 131 deliveries - the last 50 in 30 balls.

If Sri Lanka were hoping for relief because of the back, they had another hope coming. To the first ball after tea, bowled by Herath from over the wicket with a leg-side field, and pitching well outside leg stump, Sehwag stepped out, made room and chipped over extra cover. Not one single did he turn down, not one double was compromised because of tiredness.

If anybody was tired, it was the fielders. Angelo Mathews, one of the more athletic fielders, couldn't bend down in time and gave away a boundary in the 57th over. The ball had already been beaten out of shape by then. It was the second back-to-back boundary of that over. Sehwag leg-glanced the next delivery for another four, flicked the next and scampered through for two, and lobbed the next one to midwicket boundary to move from 184 to 202 in five deliveries.

With both Vijay and Dravid batting solidly around Sehwag, Sri Lanka had forgotten what an edge looked like. In the 71st over, with Sehwag on 264, they finally saw one. Mathews bowled a slower one, and if you had seen how Sehwag had batted the whole day before that, like a religious believer you would say he hung his bat out and let the ball hit the edge so that it could go fine of third man for four. In the next over, Murali drew an edge that landed safe. In the next, Tillakaratne Dilshan got one that Mahela Jayawardene couldn't hang onto. It could be argued that no sane man would have been expecting an edge by then.

Sehwag did slow down after that edge and as stumps approached but as a parting shot he crashed Dilshan through covers for his 40th four, to go with seven sixes. That's when Dravid came in, and took the majority of the strike till close of play. A fair time, then, to acknowledge Vijay, who at some other time would have been the story of the day. But when Sehwag bats like he did, you feel sorry for the bowlers, put the other batsmen in the footnote, and move on.

39
General Discussion / Prison Officer Jailed for Affair With Inmate
« on: November 13, 2009, 09:28:46 AM »
Please comment

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/beds/bucks/herts/8358597.stm

Inmate-sex prison officer jailed
Kelly-Anne McDade
Kelly-Anne McDade gave birth to a baby boy in February

A former prison officer who had a baby with an inmate has been jailed for 30 months after pleading guilty to misconduct in a public office.

Kelly-Anne McDade, 31, who worked at HM Aylesbury Young Offenders' Institution, in Buckinghamshire, gave birth to a baby boy in February.

It followed a relationship with Nelson Delgado, 21, described as a "dangerous offender", Aylesbury Crown Court heard.

Judge Christopher Tyrer described her behaviour as "disgraceful".

McDade also admitted taking three mobile phones into a young offenders' institution on 17 March this year.
   
Your training would have warned you what to do if your feelings for him, as they did, crossed the line
Judge Christopher Tyrer

She was sentenced to 18 months in prison for trying to smuggle the mobile phones, to be followed by a further 12 months for misconduct in public office.

The court was told McDade was arrested by Thames Valley Police after she sold her story to Closer magazine for £1,000.

A proceeds of crime hearing will be held next year to deal with the payment Ms McDade received from the magazine.

The court heard she had worked at the institution for three years when she started the sexual relationship with Delgado in 2008.

She resigned after she was seen on CCTV opening his cell door on 10 August 2008 when all doors at the institution had been closed for the night.

Nigel Ogborne, prosecuting, said other staff were already aware of her pregnancy.

He said: "She was asked by the prison authorities about the pregnancy and she indicated that it was as a result of a relationship on a foreign holiday."

'Love no excuse'

Richard Germain, defending McDade, told the court: "There is no doubt it was an inappropriate relationship, but Ms McDade would say 'You can't help who you fall in love with'."

He said the case was "unique" and added: "At some point in the future, she and Mr Delgado hope to set up home together and bring up the child together."

The court heard McDade tried sending three mobile telephones concealed in a stereo in March this year, so she could contact Delgado at Swinfen Hall Young Offenders' Institute, Staffordshire, after the birth of their child.

Judge Tyrer told McDade: "Your training would have warned you what to do if your feelings for him, as they did, crossed the line."

He said: "Not only did you frequently have a sexual relationship with him, but you became pregnant by him and that means that you abused your position as a prison officer, and the trust placed with you by your colleagues, your superiors and the public.

"Love is not an excuse."

40
Cricket Anyone / ICC Urges the WICB to Resolve its Dispute with WIPA
« on: October 05, 2009, 09:25:34 AM »
If this doesn't work, I'm not sure what will.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2009/oct/04/west-indies-cricket-board-dispute


Top nations tell West Indies to end players' dispute

• Champions Trophy second team was last straw
• Caribbean officials feel wrath via teleconference

Cricket's leading nations have told the West Indies board to solve the dispute with their leading players and stop heaping embarrassment upon the game. International Cricket Council chief executives, meeting in Johannesburg during the final stages of the Champions Trophy, were so angry that the West Indies had sent a second team to the event that a teleconference was arranged on Saturday so the West Indies board could understand the strength of their views.

Suggestions that the 2010 World Twenty20 could be removed from the Caribbean are premature, but the ICC has told the West Indies board that the dispute must be solved by the end of the month. The West Indies squad to tour Australia is due to be named by then, and the launch of the World Twenty20 is set for Barbados on 31 October.

Tim May, the chief executive of FICA, the international players' association, said: "I think we will see a greater urgency on this issue now. The West Indies players have made themselves available so you would like to think that the West Indies board would make some better decisions. If they go to Australia with a second-string team it will be as if they are airing their dirty laundry in public, and I don't think Cricket Australia would be too happy.

"There is a complete breakdown of trust between the players and the board. It is all well and good for the players to come back to the fold but that trust has to be rebuilt."

The Champions Trophy schedule – a condensed tournament featuring the top eight teams in the world – has won many plaudits, and nations such as England and India recognise that the gradual decline of West Indies cricket would undermine the top-eight format.

Cricket's appetite for expansionism has declined since an unwieldy 2007 World Cup in the Caribbean received heavy criticism, but the expansionists are also desperate for a solution to the West Indies problem, believing that long-held ambitions to spread the game in the United States require a vibrant game in the Caribbean.

Ernest Hilaire, who took over as the WICB's chief executive on 1 October, the fifth such appointment in nine years, has promised to confront the contractual stand-off that threatens to hasten the decline of West Indies cricket.

May praised his appointment, calling him "a professional, smart and intelligent man who I hope will bring fresh ideas to the table".

41
This is absolutely disgraceful.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/27/world/asia/27china.html?_r=1&hp

Files Vanished, Young Chinese Lose the Future
Gilles Sabrie for The New York Times

Xue Longlong, on the street where he lives in Xian, China. When his academic records vanished in Wubu, he lost out on a high-paying job, and the woman he hoped to marry abandoned him.

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By SHARON LaFRANIERE
Published: July 26, 2009

WUBU, China — For much of his education, Xue Longlong was silently accompanied from grade to grade, school to school, by a sealed Manila envelope stamped top secret. Stuffed inside were grades, test results, evaluations by fellow students and teachers, his Communist Party application and — most important for his job prospects — proof of his 2006 college degree.
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Wubu is a struggling town of 80,000 banked by steep hills and coal mines.
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Gilles Sabrie for The New York Times

Wang Jindong, who had a shot at a job at a state chemical firm, is a construction day laborer, earning less than $10 a day.
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Everyone in China who has been to high school has such a file. The files are irreplaceable histories of achievement and failure, the starting point for potential employers, government officials and others judging an individual’s worth. Often keys to the future, they are locked tight in government, school or workplace cabinets to eliminate any chance they might vanish.

But two years ago, Mr. Xue’s file did vanish. So did the files of at least 10 others, all 2006 college graduates with exemplary records, all from poor families living near this gritty north-central town on the wide banks of the Yellow River.

With the Manila folders went their futures, they say.

Local officials said the files were lost when state workers moved them from the first to the second floor of a government building. But the graduates say they believe officials stole the files and sold them to underachievers seeking new identities and better job prospects — a claim bolstered by a string of similar cases across China.

Today, Mr. Xue, who had hoped to work at a state-owned oil company, sells real estate door to door, a step up from past jobs passing out leaflets and serving drinks at an Internet cafe. Wang Yong, who aspired to be a teacher or a bank officer, works odd jobs. Wang Jindong, who had a shot at a job at a state chemical firm, is a construction day laborer, earning less than $10 a day.

“If you don’t have it, just forget it!” Wang Jindong, now 27, said of his file. “No matter how capable you are, they will not hire you. Their first reaction is that you are a crook.”

Perhaps no group here is more vilified and mistrusted than China’s local officials, who shoulder much of the blame for corruption within the Communist Party. The party constantly vows to rein them in; in October, President Hu Jintao said a clean party was “a matter of life and death.”

Critics contend that China’s one-party system breeds graft that only democratic reforms can check. But China’s leaders say the solution is not grass-roots checks on power, but smarter oversight and crime-fighting.

Public policy specialists say China is shifting its emphasis from headline-grabbing corruption cases to more systematic ways to hold officials accountable. The government opened an anticorruption hot line last month to encourage whistle-blowers. A few localities require that officials disclose their family assets to the party.

But in Wubu, a struggling town of 80,000 banked by steep hills and coal mines, citizens say that local officials answer to no one, and that anyone who dares challenge them is punished.

“When the central government talks about the economy and development, it sounds so great,” said Mr. Wang, the day laborer. “But at the local level, corrupt officials make all their money off of local people.”

Student files are a proven moneymaker for corrupt state workers. Four years ago, teachers in Jilin Province were caught selling two students’ files for $2,500 and $3,600; the police suspected that they intended to sell a dozen more. In May, the former head of a township government in Hunan Province admitted that he had paid more than $7,000 to steal the identity of a classmate of his daughter, so his daughter could attend college using the classmate’s records.

While not quite as important as in Communist China’s early days, when it was a powerful tool of social control, the file, called a dangan, is an absolute requirement for state employment and a means to bolster a candidate’s chances for some private-sector jobs, labor experts say. Because documents are collected over several years and signed by many people, they are virtually impossible to replicate.

So in September 2007, when one Wubu graduate sought work at a local bank and discovered that his file was gone, word spread fast. For the next two years, his parents and a group of other parents in similar straits said, they sought help at every level of the bureaucracy.

The government’s answer, they said, was to reject any inquiry, place the graduates’ parents under police surveillance and repeatedly detain them. Last February, they said, five parents trying to petition the national government were locked in an unofficial jail in Beijing for nine days.

“We are so exhausted,” said one tearful mother, Song Heping. “Our nerves are about to snap from this torture. The officials who were responsible not only have not been punished, they have been promoted.”

Wubu officials did not respond to repeated inquiries. One Chinese television journalist said they told him they had resolved the matter simply by creating new folders. But families say the folders held nothing but brief, error-riddled résumés that employers reflexively reject as fake.

The parents are uniformly poor: one father drives a three-wheel taxi, earning just 15 cents per passenger.

Mr. Xue’s parents sacrificed even more than most, in the belief that education would lead their children out of poverty. They earn just $450 a year growing dates, and live near a dirt mountain path, drinking well water and cooking over a wood fire.

Mr Xue, the oldest child, wore secondhand clothes and skipped meals throughout high school. When he won admission to a university in Xian, 400 miles away, his parents borrowed to cover the $1,500 in annual expenses. Initially, it seemed the bet would pay off: he said he had had a chance to work at an oil company with a monthly salary of $735.

But the job evaporated with his dangan. “It was a catastrophe,” he said. Now he earns a base salary of $90 a month as a door-to-door salesman and lives in a tiny, dingy room in a Xian slum.

The woman he hoped to marry left him because her parents said he would never have a stable job. His mother suffered a nervous breakdown, and the family debt ballooned. his father, Xue Ruzhan, said he owed more than $10,000 — more than twice what his property is worth.

“What is the point of continuing to live?” the father said. “Sometimes I want to commit suicide. These corrupt officials destroyed all our hopes.”

Including, it seems, the hopes of Longlong’s younger sister, Xiaomei, an 11th grader who once thought she would follow him to a university degree.

No more. “I want to quit,” she said during a school lunch break. “My brother graduated from college. What good did it do him?”

Zhang Jing contributed research from Wubu, China, and Yang Xiyun from Beijing.

42
Cricket Anyone / This is why Australia are so good.
« on: June 24, 2009, 11:24:58 AM »
I know that this only a tour match against first class opposition, but check out the scores of the lower order batsmen; Australia's lower order has been pulling it out of bad positions for years now.

West Indies Cricket board take note.

http://www.cricinfo.com/engvaus2009/engine/current/match/350038.html



Australians 349/7 (90.0 ov)

Sussex

Australians won the toss and elected to bat

Stumps

    * Australia tour of England and Scotland - Tour Match
    * 2009 season
    * Played at County Ground, Hove
    * 24,25,26,27 June 2009 (4-day match)

                     
   Australians 1st innings    R    M    B    4s    6s    SR
   PJ Hughes    b Sandri    15    35    26    3    0    57.69
   
   SM Katich    c Yardy b Sandri    49    137    98    8    0    50.00
   
   RT Ponting*    c †Hodd b Wright    8    22    16    2    0    50.00
   
   MEK Hussey    lbw b Kirtley    32    79    48    6    0    66.66
   
   MJ Clarke    c & b Rayner    45    131    78    4    1    57.69
   
   MJ North    c †Hodd b Sandri    1    5    6    0    0    16.66
   
   BJ Haddin†    c Sandri b Rayner    69    117    119    7    3    57.98
   
   B Lee    not out    47    98    80    5    1    58.75
   
   NM Hauritz    not out    65    95    78    12    0    83.33
   
   Extras    (b 5, lb 3, w 1, nb 9)    18                
                  
   Total    (7 wickets; 90 overs)    349    (3.87 runs per over)
To bat PM Siddle, SR Clark, BW Hilfenhaus
Fall of wickets1-35 (Hughes), 2-48 (Ponting), 3-113 (Katich), 4-113 (Hussey), 5-114 (North), 6-228 (Haddin), 7-232 (Clarke)
                        
   Bowling    O    M    R    W    Econ       
   RJ Kirtley    18    4    61    1    3.38    (5nb)    
   
   PSE Sandri    13    1    73    3    5.61    (3nb, 1w)    
   
   LJ Wright    10    2    33    1    3.30    (1nb)    
   
   RSC Martin-Jenkins    12    2    56    0    4.66       
   
   OP Rayner    26    4    66    2    2.53       
   
   WAT Beer    11    0    52    0    4.72       
   
         
   Sussex team         
MH Yardy*, AJ Hodd†, RJ Hamilton-Brown, LJ Wright, RSC Martin-Jenkins, PSE Sandri, WAT Beer, RJ Kirtley, CD Hopkinson, OP Rayner, CD Nash, EC Joyce
Match details
Players per side 12 (11 batting, 11 fielding)
Toss Australians, who chose to bat
Umpires SJ Malone and G Sharp

43
Cricket Anyone / Chirs Lewis Imprisoned for 13 Years
« on: May 20, 2009, 02:58:11 PM »
Hopefully his luck will change when he gets out...

But then again he is a massive backside for getting mixed up in drugs.

http://content.cricinfo.com/england/content/current/story/405212.html

ngland news

Chris Lewis found guilty of drug smuggling

Cricinfo staff

May 20, 2009
   Chris Lewis pictured in court on charges of drug smuggling, Leeds, December 16, 2008
Chris Lewis at the time of his first court appearance last December © Associated Press

The former England allrounder, Chris Lewis, has been sentenced to 13 years in prison after being found guilty of smuggling cocaine into the country.

Lewis, 41, was arrested at Gatwick in December last year after a flight from St Lucia, when customs officials found five cans of fruit juice in which cocaine had been dissolved.

He had been travelling with a friend, Chad Kirnon, a former basketball player for London Towers, arriving back from holiday in St Lucia, although the pair were stopped independently at the airport. Lewis said that Kirnon had later offered to take the blame in return from £100,000 from Lewis. Both men received the same 13-year sentence.

Jurors heard that the cocaine, which was found dissolved in the liquid contents of five tins, would at 100% purity weigh 3.37kg, giving the haul an estimated street value of £140,000. Traces of cannabis residue were also found in Lewis's luggage, and while he told the jury at Croydon Crown Court he had smoked cannabis while in St Lucia, he said he was "completely innocent" of knowingly smuggling drugs to the country.

He told the jury that Kirnon had asked him to carry the tins of fruit as he was concerned his luggage might be overweight. "I don't necessarily believe that Mr Kirnon wanted me to get caught, but if you infer by Mr Kirnon giving me the cans that he set me up then yes," Lewis said. "Generally throughout my life, my cricket career, when things have gone wrong it's gone wrong in a very public way."

Tom Wilkins, prosecuting, told the court that Lewis had been stopped shortly after 5am on 8 December. "When the customs officer pulled him over, Mr Lewis stated that he was travelling alone and had been in St Lucia visiting friends and family," he said. When Lewis's luggage was inspected, the Puma cricket bag was found to be labelled with Kirnon's name, Wilkins told the court.

Lewis's former England team-mate, Angus Fraser, reacted with sadness to the news, and said that the case should serve as a warning to all players of the trappings of fame. "I suppose this highlights how difficult it can be for players to cope once they stop playing cricket," he told Cricinfo. "They get used to a lifestyle and a certain standard of living, and a lot of cricketers don't plan for what to do when they stop playing."

"As a person, Chris liked the nice things in life, the clothes and the cars, but once his playing days were over, his means of income was reduced. He needed the money and it appears he got dragged into something like this. It's very sad."

Lewis is currently in High Down prison where he revealed he is now the anti-bullying representative, as well as working as his block's race-equality rep. "It's a simple one: either you did it and you knew or you didn't," he said. Lewis added that Kirnon, who is also at High Down, had approached him in prison and asked him for £100,000 in exchange for taking the blame.

"Until that point it was a simple case," he said. "You had given me the juice, just say so, story's over. Now he's trying to get a bit of cash out of me."

© Cricinfo


44
General Discussion / Ahmadinejad has gone and done it again!
« on: April 20, 2009, 09:36:34 AM »
Dis man real like to provoke people oui.

The video also accompanies the story in the BBC link that I have posted.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8008572.stm

Diplomats walk out of the summit and protesters heckle Iran's leader

Diplomats have walked out of a speech by the Iranian president at a UN anti-racism conference after he described Israel as a "racist government".

Two protesters, wearing coloured wigs, briefly disrupted the beginning of the speech by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad but he continued speaking.

Shortly afterwards a stream of Western delegates walked out when he attacked the creation of the state of Israel.

France, which had warned of a walkout, described it as "hate speech".

Some of those who stayed clapped as Mr Ahmadinejad continued his speech.

The walkout is a public relations disaster for the United Nations, which had hoped the conference would be a shining example of what the UN is supposed to do best - uniting to combat injustice in the world, says the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Geneva.

UN dismay

The walkout by about 40 delegates happened within minutes of the speech starting on Monday.

   
Imogen Foulkes
Imogen Foulkes
BBC News, Geneva

When it became clear what direction the speech was going, they [the ambassadors] walked out to huge cheers from a large number of pro-Israeli groups in the audience who had already tried to disrupt the proceedings.

It is hugely disruptive and very damaging to the United Nations which had really wanted this conference to be an example of what the UN is good at - uniting the international community against injustice and racial discrimination.

It is difficult to see how this conference can get back to that agenda after today's scenes.

Moments earlier security guards escorted two protesters from the conference hall after one threw an object at the Iranian president and they yelled "racist, racist" as he stood at the podium.

Mr Ahmadinejad, the only major leader to attend the conference, said Jewish migrants from Europe and the United States had been sent to the Middle East after World War II "in order to establish a racist government in the occupied Palestine".

He continued, through an interpreter: "And in fact, in compensation for the dire consequences of racism in Europe, they helped bring to power the most cruel and repressive racist regime in Palestine."

French Ambassador Jean-Baptiste Mattei said: "As soon as he started to address the question of the Jewish people and Israel, we had no reason to stay in the room," Associated Press reported.

British ambassador Peter Gooderham, also among those who left, said Mr Ahmadinejad's comments were "offensive and inflammatory".

"Such outrageous anti-Semitic remarks should have no place in a UN anti-racism forum," he said.

   
RACISM CONFERENCE

UN conference on racism - draft outcome [90.6 KB]
Most computers will open this document automatically, but you may need Adobe Reader
Download the reader here

Mardell blog: Italy's anger at split
Fault lines split summit

The US, Israel, Canada, Australia, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and New Zealand had all boycotted the conference being held in Geneva, in protest at Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's appearance, and Israel recalled its ambassador to Switzerland.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner had warned that French delegates would walk out if the forum was used as a platform to attack Israel.

Speaking after the walkout, he said: "The defence of human rights and the fight against all types of racism are too important for the United Nations not to unite against all forms of hate speech, against all perversion of this message.

"Faced with attitudes like that which the Iranian president has just adopted, no compromise is possible."

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has expressed dismay at the boycotts.

45
Football / Just when I thought I've heard and seen it all...
« on: April 06, 2009, 07:18:09 AM »
 This is bordering on the ridiculous and farcical.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/manchester/7984554.stm

Footballer puts wind up referee

A referee ordered a penalty to be retaken in a Sunday league football game when an opposition player broke wind as the ball was kicked.

The Chorlton Villa player got a yellow card for the noise which was classed as "ungentlemanly conduct".

The team, who conceded a goal on the second take, went on to win the match 6-4 against International Manchester FC at Turn Moss in Stretford, Manchester.

Villa manager Ian Treadwell said their conduct was "normally exemplary".

   
We are not a dirty team and we like to play football
Chorlton Villa manager Ian Treadwell

"One of our players 'broke wind' and only the referee heard it and he booked the player," he said.

"The other player had the penalty saved because it was a bad penalty; it was nothing to do with any noise. They were as shocked as we were as to why."

Mr Treadwell said he was waiting for the Football Association to contact them after it had received a report.

The Manchester Publicity league club faces total fines of £97 for three dismissals and two yellow card bookings from the game.

'Just hilarious'

Mr Treadwell said: "We are not a dirty team and we like to play football.

"While I won't condone the actions of the players, it is an emotive game and some of the players were sent off for entering into conversation with the referee.

"This has come at a bad time in the season as we don't have sponsor and we are looking for a new sponsor for next season."

Pauline Riley, secretary and treasurer of International Manchester FC, said both team were "very friendly".

"There's no animosity. It was just hilarious," she said.


46
Cricket Anyone / West Indies v England 2nd ODI
« on: March 22, 2009, 08:24:40 AM »
Hi everyone,

This is your resident cricket enthusiast here. Here's the thread for the 2nd ODI between West Indies and England. West Indies have won the toss (for once) and elected to bat first and are currently 45/2 after 12.1 overs.

Chris Gayle was bowled by Anderson for 20 and Lendl Simmons was caught behind by Prior off the bowling of the same bowler.

I am sorry for the lateness of this thread.

Better late than never I guess

47
Cricket Anyone / West Indies v England 1st ODI
« on: March 20, 2009, 07:31:52 AM »
Good Morning Everyone,

Here's the thread for the first 50-over ODI at Providence Stadium in Guyana.

England have won the toss and decided to bat (is it me or have England been lucky with the toss this entire series).

Anyway, here's the thread.

48
General Discussion / Woman bites off partner's tongue
« on: March 05, 2009, 01:12:35 PM »
Wow, I guess one has to be careful these days.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/tyne/7923986.stm


Woman 'bit off' partner's tongue
Tracy Davies
Ms Davies had been to the pub with her partner to celebrate his birthday

A Tyneside woman deliberately bit off her boyfriend's tongue during a drunken birthday kiss, a court has heard.

Tracy Davies, 40, bit a third of Mark Coghill's tongue off, Newcastle Crown Court was told.

They were celebrating Mr Coghill's 45th birthday at his Newcastle bedsit in October 2008, when she grew upset because she was not pregnant.

Ms Davies of Sunderland Road, Gateshead, denies one count of causing grievous bodily harm with intent.

The court heard how they went to a supermarket on 10 October, buying two bottles of vodka and food for the evening, before going to a pub together.

They returned to Mr Coghill's home but Ms Davies grew upset because she wanted a baby but was not yet pregnant.

As Mr Coghill moved to comfort her, she asked him to kiss her, the court heard.

   
I will never enjoy a curry again - I can't distinguish between cheese and toast, and just toast
Victim Mark Coghill

Julian Smith, prosecuting, said: "He did so and within a few seconds, she bit down hard on his tongue.

"Obviously this caused him pain, he pulled back, and the tongue had come clean off in her mouth.

"She had the piece of tongue in her mouth, he saw her take it from her mouth, and it fell to the floor."

Mr Coghill, a former customer service advisor, told the court he could no longer work, struggled to speak, and had lost many of his taste buds.

"I will never enjoy a curry again," he said. "I can't distinguish between certain foods, like the difference between cheese and toast, and just toast.

"I can't use my tongue for eating. Those are things you take for granted."

'You're joking'

After the attack Ms Davies called an ambulance and paramedics then alerted police.

Mr Smith added: "She told police, 'We have had a domestic. I have bitten his tongue off. Here it is'."

He added that Ms Davies was surprised when police arrested her, telling officers: "You're joking".

Mr Coghill was treated at Newcastle General Hospital, but surgeons decided against trying to re-attach the torn section because of the danger of infection.

The trial continues. 

49
Cricket Anyone / Test Match 4- West Indies v England
« on: February 26, 2009, 07:58:47 AM »
Good Morning folks (as I furtively look around the corner),

Here is the 4th test match thread.

England have won the toss and decided to bat.

Kensington looks gorgeous. After the Antigua debacle, it is heartening to see that this ground looks as lush and as well prepared as any international ground and the wicket looks good.

Let's hope that our guys play with discipline and application for every session of this test match.

50
Looks like there is still hell to pay for the Antigua debacle.

Dem fellas better get it together yes.

http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/ci-icc/content/current/story/392295.html

ICC holds hosting board responsible

West Indies board to blame for Antigua farce

Cricinfo staff

February 25, 2009

   
The responsibility for ensuring the delivery of a venue fit for the purpose of international cricket rested with the host member board © Getty Images
 
The West Indies Cricket Board was responsible for the shambles of the abandoned Test at the Sir Viv Richards Stadium, according to the ICC chief executives' committee. The announcement came after the second day of their meeting in Johannesburg.

The executive committee reconfirmed that the responsibility for ensuring the delivery of a venue fit for the purpose of international cricket rested with the host member board. Until now, the WICB has been reluctant to accept that it and not the local board was at fault for not ensuring the venue was up to standard.

The committee recommended that from now on all boards would be required to notify the ICC in February of each year the identity of all venues they intended to use for international matches in the following 12 months. This would need to be accompanied by a declaration that the grounds were up to standards already agreed by the ICC.

With regards to the outfield in Antigua, this is currently the subject of an ICC investigation and the WICB has been asked to submit its own report. The ICC has the power to impose a sanction ranging from a warning or a fine up to a suspension of international status for the venue.

© Cricinfo

51
Cricket Anyone / Test Match 3- West Indies v England
« on: February 15, 2009, 03:06:52 PM »
Thank you weary69 for reminding me that the second test match was abandoned and that this is indeed the third test.

So with in mind, here is a thread for the thord test match.

52
General Discussion / Utterly Disgraceful- Couple Murders Toddler
« on: January 27, 2009, 08:39:06 PM »
Now I know we all get our share of licks growing up, but this is despicable and uncalled for...

The girl was TWO YEARS OLD for crying out loud!

Some people are not meant to have children.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090128/ap_on_re_us/child_s_remains

Jurors weep at details of 'Baby Grace' torture
         Buzz Up Send
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Digg Facebook Newsvine del.icio.us Reddit StumbleUpon Technorati Yahoo! Bookmarks Print By JUAN A. LOZANO, Associated Press Writer Juan A. Lozano, Associated Press Writer – 2 mins ago Play Video 11 News Houston  – Baby Grace trial under way
 Play Video Video: Mom pleads not guilty to 'Baby Grace' murder AP GALVESTON, Texas – Jurors wept Tuesday watching a woman describe how teaching her 2-year-old daughter proper manners turned into a daylong torture session in which the toddler was beaten with belts, dunked in cold water and flung across a room so violently that she died.

Kimberly Trenor, 20, detailed the abuse in a videotaped statement played for jurors during the first day of her capital murder trial.

Trenor, 20, told investigators in the statement that she hit her daughter with a thick leather belt to teach her to say "please" and "yes, sir."

The little victim was dubbed "Baby Grace" by investigators who worked to identify her decomposed remains after the body was found in a plastic container in October 2007 on a tiny island in Galveston Bay.

Trenor's 25-year-old husband, Royce Zeigler II, is to be tried separately on murder charges. His attorney argues that Trenor is responsible for the child's death.

But Trenor insisted it was her husband who became so enraged when the toddler didn't behave better that he hurled her several times across a room, ultimately fracturing her skull and killing her.

"I said we have to get her to a hospital. (Zeigler) said, 'No we can't. We'll go to jail,'" Trenor said in the videotape, crying. "There came a point where she stopped breathing. He started doing CPR on the floor. He took her ... and handed her over to me. I could just feel her going cold."

At the defense table, Trenor's eyes teared up as she watched the videotape on a large screen. Several jurors wiped away tears.

Riley Ann Sawyers tried to stop her mother and stepfather from beating her to death by reaching out to her mother and saying, "I love you," assistant district attorney Kayla Allen told jurors earlier in the day during her opening statement.

The toddler's pleas didn't stop her mother from brutalizing her, the prosecutor said.

Allen said that on July 25, 2007, Trenor and Zeigler disciplined Riley by whipping her with a belt, pushing her head against a pillow and holding her head under water. She said Zeigler tossed Riley across the room, fracturing her skull. An autopsy concluded the fractures caused her death.

Allen said the adults did nothing to help even as Riley lay dying.

Instead, the couple bought a plastic container, stuffed Riley's body inside and stored it in a shed for a month or two before setting it out to sea, the prosecutor said.

Defense attorney Tommy Stickler Jr. told the jury that Trenor never intended to kill her daughter and that things just "spun out of control."

Stickler portrayed Trenor as a scared 19-year-old girl who had moved to Texas from Ohio to marry a man she met while playing an online game. She said Riley's father, her former boyfriend, had assaulted her and Zeigler was her "knight in shining armor."

"I don't want to use the word accident, but this wasn't something that was intentional," Stickler said.

Trenor could receive an automatic sentence of life in prison without parole if convicted of capital murder. The jury could also convict her of a lesser charge.

Prosecutors declined to seek the death penalty because they didn't think they could prove that either one would be a future danger, as required.

53
Trinbago, NBA & World Basketball / Mercy Rule in Basketball?
« on: January 23, 2009, 12:20:45 PM »
I made a mistake and put this in the "Cricket Anyone" section.

Anyway, what allyuh think about this story?

MORE: RivalsHigh100 Hoops Rankings | Top 150 prospects for 2009

DALLAS -- A Texas high school girls basketball team on the winning end of a 100-0 game has a case of blowout remorse.

Now officials from The Covenant School say they are trying to do the right thing by seeking a forfeit and apologizing for the margin of victory.

   
Samantha Peloza grabs a rebound in practice a week after their 100-0 win.
"It is shameful and an embarrassment that this happened," Kyle Queal, the head of the school, said in a statement, adding the forfeit was requested because "a victory without honor is a great loss."

The private Christian school defeated Dallas Academy last week. Covenant was up 59-0 at halftime.

A parent who attended the game told The Associated Press that Covenant continued to make 3-pointers -- even in the fourth quarter. She praised the Covenant players but said spectators and an assistant coach were cheering wildly as their team edged closer to 100 points.

"I think the bad judgment was in the full-court press and the 3-point shots," said Renee Peloza, whose daughter plays for Dallas Academy. "At some point, they should have backed off."

Dallas Academy coach Jeremy Civello told The Dallas Morning News that the game turned into a "layup drill," with the opposing team's guards waiting to steal the ball and drive to the basket. Covenant scored 12 points in the fourth quarter and "finally eased up when they got to 100 with about four minutes left," he said.

Dallas Academy has eight girls on its varsity team and about 20 girls in its high school. It is winless over the last four seasons. The academy boasts of its small class sizes and specializes in teaching students struggling with "learning differences," such as short attention spans or dyslexia.

There is no mercy rule in girls basketball that shortens the game or permits the clock to continue running when scores become lopsided. There is, however, "a golden rule" that should have applied in this contest, said Edd Burleson, the director of the Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools. Both schools are members of this association, which oversees private school athletics in Texas.

"On a personal note, I told the coach of the losing team how much I admire their girls for continuing to compete against all odds," Burleson said. "They showed much more character than the coach that allowed that score to get out of hand. It's up to the coach to control the outcome."

In the statement on the Covenant Web site, Queal said the game "does not reflect a Christ-like and honorable approach to competition. We humbly apologize for our actions and seek the forgiveness of Dallas Academy, TAPPS and our community."

Covenant coach Micah Grimes did not immediately respond to a message left by The Associated Press on Thursday.

Queal said school officials met with Dallas Academy officials to apologize and praised "each member of the Dallas Academy Varsity Girls Basketball team for their strength, composure and fortitude in a game in which they clearly emerged the winner."

Civello said he appreciated the gesture and has accepted the apology "with no ill feelings."

At a shootaround Thursday, several Dallas Academy players said they were frustrated during the game but felt it was a learning opportunity. They also said they are excited about some of the attention they are receiving from the loss, including an invitation from Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban to see an NBA game from his suite.

"Even if you are losing, you might as well keep playing," said Shelby Hyatt, a freshman on the team. "Keep trying, and it's going to be OK."

Peloza said the coach and other parents praised the Dallas Academy girls afterward for limiting Covenant to 12 points in the fourth quarter. She added that neither her daughter nor her teammates seemed to dwell on the loss.

"Somewhere during that game they got caught up in the moment," Peloza said of the Covenant players, fans and coaches. "Our girls just moved on. That's the happy part of the story."

54
Cricket Anyone / Pollard in trouble over incident in the recent ODI
« on: January 07, 2009, 09:12:34 AM »
Although this action is disgraceful and unacceptable, at least Pollard seems to care...Maybe it's just me, but the other players seem indifferent to the current fortunes of the West Indies team..or maybe they're resigned to them.

http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/nzvwi2008_09/content/current/story/385649.html

New Zealand v West Indies, 3rd ODI, Wellington

Pollard reprimanded for damaging dressing-room door

Cricinfo staff

January 7, 2009

   
A security guard picks up the shattered remains of Kieron Pollard's action © Getty Images
 

West Indies batsman Kieron Pollard has been officially reprimanded for breaching the ICC Code of Conduct during his third ODI against New Zealand in Wellington.

Pollard was pulled up for damaging the glass panel of a dressing-room door, an incident which occurred soon after his dismissal. Adjudged lbw by umpire Mark Benson, Pollard left the field visibly disappointed - swinging his bat in disgust - and ended up venting his frustration in the pavilion. He had scored only 1, which continued his poor run in the ODI series - seven runs in three innings.

After a hearing at the end of the game, Javagal Srinath, the match referee, found Pollard to have violated Level 1.2 of the code which relates to "abuse of cricket equipment or clothing, group equipment of fixtures and fittings".

Level 1 offences carry a minimum penalty of an official reprimand and a maximum penalty of a fine equivalent to 50% of a player's match fee. Pollard, 21, was let off without a fine. "The player pleaded guilty to the charge and apologised for his actions to New Zealand Cricket," Srinath said. "This apology and the fact he is relatively early in his career were taken into consideration."

The incident was brought to the attention of the match referee by both New Zealand Cricket's cricket administrative manager Tim Murdoch and West Indies manager Omar Khan.

Srinath reached his decision after a hearing attended by the player, Omar Khan and Murdoch.

55
General Discussion / Marcus Garvey's 121st Birthday
« on: August 17, 2008, 10:59:34 AM »
I was just browsing the net and found this article.

This man was truly a visionary ahead of his time.

Learning from Marcus Garvey
published: Sunday | August 17, 2008


Martin Henry, Contributor

Today marks the 121st anniversary of the birth of the most influential black man of modern times, and by modern times, I mean the last 500 years, the Age of Globalisation. Marcus Garvey was born on August 17, 1887, at 32 Market Street in St Ann's Bay. There is more Garvey memorabilia and more attention given to Garvey overseas, particularly in American centres of Afro-American and African studies, than in the land of his birth.

IRIE-FM, that brash roots radio station broadcasting from his parish, and which has adopted Garvey, is staging commemorative activities today on the grounds of the station. One of their disc jocks has done an excellent imitation of Marcus Garvey in the promo of the event. Yes, Garvey's voice has been preserved on a 78 rpm long-playing record. He spoke seamlessly at the speed of an automatic weapon on rapid fire, but with crisp clarity. Like his live audiences, I was electrified when I first heard a playback of that voice.

Garvey was a man of immense action, most of which ultimately failed. I am not convinced that those failures can simply be marked down to the hostility of the white and colonial establishments. Garvey had his deficiencies as leader and manager and seemed to have been quite impractical about many things. But more important, Garvey was a great man of great ideas and was an exceptionally mature thinker from early in life.

,b>World-class philosopher

This man, amazingly with only an elementary-level formal education, was a world-class philosopher. Garvey has been included in the book Fifty Major Political Thinkers. Garvey scholar Rupert Lewis notes in reviewing the book, "With the external recognition being given to Garvey, it may be that more of his own people will begin to appreciate what an enormous intellectual legacy he has left the world." The point, to adopt a Marxist dictum, is not to agree with Garvey or to worship him, but to critically understand him and to learn from him.

One of the major problems with black people, and with the post-colonial Caribbean in particular, is that we are not sufficiently in love with wisdom (which is what 'philosophy' means in the Greek: philos, love; sophia, wisdom). We do not cultivate our own lovers of wisdom. And we do not invest sufficiently in the enterprise of reflection. We worship sports and entertainment. We push politics and social activism. We don't back thought. We want results. There is not, to my knowledge, a single Jamaican private foundation or other entity dedicated to investing in thought.

Public Opinion ran an obituary on Marcus Garvey on June 15, 1940, five days after his death in London at only 53. That balanced obituary reflects my own more distant assessment of the man: "No Jamaican, except perhaps Bustamante, has exercised so astonishing an influence over the masses as the late Marcus Garvey. That influence was not always wisely exercised, and the most superb showmanship could not prevent this from being seen. Nonetheless, Garvey never lost his hold. Even when he was 4,000 miles away, his name still had power. With this knack of attracting and holding loyalty, Mr. Garvey combined more solid qualities which were never put to their full use. He remained too much of the adventurer. The political backwardness of the people he wished to help prevented him from ever climbing into that effective power which mellows the adventurer and knocks off the sharp corners of his personality."

Clear prose

Few, if any, Jamaicans have written as much as Marcus Garvey. Garvey thought about almost everything and wrote up his ideas in grand, clear prose - reflecting "the sharp corners of his personality", Garvey wrote, for example: "The Negro has become his greatest enemy. Most of the trouble I have had in advancing the cause of the race has come from Negroes ... The Negro fights himself too much. His internal conflicts constitute the puzzle of our age ... Every other day he is smashing up what he has made ... He never permanently constructs."

Garvey vindicated his bluntness by declaring: "I have done my duty. I will still continue to do that duty, not by deceiving the Negro, but by telling him the truth - the cold, blunt truth, so help me God."

How much of Garvey's 'blunt truth' has been learned is an open question. We have a distinct preference to pick from his copious words that which makes for flattering race pride while burying his utterances of chastisement hurled from "the sharp corners of his personality". I hope those who want Garvey taught in schools also mean this side of the man. Devon Dick, himself a Bogle scholar and now armed with a Warwick PhD in Caribbean cultural studies, I know, is working with the University of Technology towards establishing a research fellowship in National Heroes studies.

The Bustamante Industrial Trade Union is often spoken about as the country's first trade union, as some think the People's National Party is the first political party, forgetting Garvey's trade union and his People's Political Party (PPP) going back to the 1920s.

Marcus Garvey presented a remarkably progressive manifesto for the times for his PPP - and went to prison for it. Garvey articulated self-government, labour reform, including an eight-hour day, an insurance scheme for workers, and a minimum wage. He advocated building "native industries", land reform, justice reform and prison reform, a library and high school in every parish capital for free education, and a 'Jamaica university and polytechnic', and an academy of music and art. Garvey proposed city status for Montego Bay and Port Antonio [the leading banana ports of the time], a national park like Hyde Park, public health and housing, and an electricity system. This is 1929!

Hauled before the courts

Garvey was hauled before the courts for item 10 of the manifesto: "A law to impeach and imprison judges who, with disregard for British justice and constitutional rights, dealt unfairly. He was fined £100 and sentenced to three months in the Spanish Town District Prison. And he lost the election for the St Andrew seat in the Legislative Council, as one sympathetic commentator described it, "a rum war [and] money scramble".

Martin Henry is a communications consultant. Feedback may be sent to medhen@gmail,com or columns@gleanerjm.com.


http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20080817/cleisure/cleisure2.html

56
Cricket Anyone / Jane McGrath dies aged 42
« on: June 22, 2008, 10:18:28 AM »
This is quite a sad story indeed. My condolences are with the McGrath family.

http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/australia/content/current/story/355681.html

Australian cricket

Jane McGrath dies aged 42

Cricinfo staff

June 22, 2008

 
 
Glenn and Jane McGrath at the 2007 Allan Border Medal © Getty Images
 
 
 


Jane McGrath, the wife of former Australia cricketer Glenn McGrath, has died after complications resulting from surgery. McGrath, 42, battled breast, hip and brain cancer and became well-known for setting up with her husband the McGrath Foundation, which aimed in part to increase nursing care for breast cancer sufferers.

"It is with deep sadness that the family and friends of Jane McGrath, beloved wife of former Australian cricketer Glenn and loving mother of James and Holly, must announce she passed away at her home this morning," a statement issued by the McGrath Foundation said. "With Glenn and their two children by her side, Jane's wonderful life ended peacefully after a sudden decline in her health over the past week."

Ricky Ponting, speaking on behalf of the Australian team currently on tour in the West Indies, expressed his deepest sympathy. "Jane was a wonderful person who fought and maintained grace and dignity during her long-term illness," he said. "She was an exceptionally friendly and lovely person who displayed great courage and stoicism during her illness. She was a tremendous mother to James and Holly and shared a very special and deep relationship with Glenn in the time they had together.

"All of us are thinking about Glenn and their children at this very sad time. We all wish to convey that our best wishes go with him and to know our heartfelt sympathies are with the family at this time. Jane will be very fondly remembered by all of us."

Australia's Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, paid tribute to McGrath while offering his condolences to the family. "Jane's courageous struggle touched all Australians," he said. "Jane was an inspiration whose legacy will continue to benefit so many others."

James Sutherland, the CEO of Cricket Australia, also paid tribute. "Jane was well-known, loved and admired throughout Australian cricket and was one of the most respected and admired members of the Australian cricket team family group during Glenn McGrath's playing days," Sutherland said.

"All of us who met her were charmed by her dignity and good humour as she tackled her battle with her illness for more than ten years. We also greatly respected the work she and Glenn did through their foundation, work which brought and will continue to bring tangible comfort to so many others."

© Cricinfo

57
This article is a reflection of the general attitude towards spin bowling in the Caribbean.

Garner labels West Indies attack 'lazy'

Richards calls for Barbados pace battery

Cricinfo staff

June 11, 2008

 
 
Viv Richards wants West Indies speed while Joel Garner has demanded greater fitness © Getty Images
 
 
 

Viv Richards wants West Indies to retain their bulging pace attack to take advantage of a Kensington Oval pitch that is expected to help the fast men in Thursday's third Test. The home side did not pick a spinner in the drawn second match against Australia and Richards wants more of the same.

"We will have the conditions that should suit fast bowling - Antigua was not," Richards said on Cana News. "West Indies have to try and find the best fast bowling attack that is possible, and bring back some memories of what it used to be like at Kensington Oval." West Indies need to win the match to level the series, but the Frank Worrell Trophy has already been re-captured by Ricky Ponting's team, which leads the contest 1-0.

While Richards has confidence in the hosts' attack, his former team-mate Joel Garner said the current bowlers were "lazy". "Fitness is a major part of their problem," Garner said in the Courier Mail. "If you are physically fit you are mentally fit. They aren't.

"The mental attitude is not right. I would say they are lazy. The intensity is only there for 1½ sessions and then they go to sleep. They bowl in bursts which is not what is needed."

Richards said the team had taken "great strides" recently, but "we can only keep on speaking about potential for so long". "There comes a time when you are measured by winning," he said. "Sometimes we make a little progress this year and then, for some reason, we take a few strides back the following year."

© Cricinfo

58
Cricket Anyone / This is what makes Australia such a great side
« on: January 02, 2008, 08:58:23 PM »
For all those who may wonder what sets Australia apart from the rest, check out the most recent scorecard from the second test match against India which is currently in progres

http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/ausvind/engine/current/match/291352.html

Take note of how many runs the Australian tail contributed to their eventual 1st innings total. For any team to be able to compete with Australia, it needs to have bowlers who are capable of making fifty-plus runs at the bottom of the order.

59
Just when I thought I've seen and heard everything, then there's this...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7125580.stm

60
General Discussion / Is Chivalry dead?
« on: November 21, 2007, 10:13:58 AM »
I know that this is a strange topic for this site, but I was wondeirng, is it still important for men to open doors for women and observe all of the traditional rules of chivalry?

What do you think?

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