Sunday, October 30, 2011

Mitch Talbot, Luis Valbuena lead Columbus Clippers past Indianapolis: Minor League Report

Also, St. Edward graduate Alex Lavisky has three hits, including a double and home run, in Mahoning Valley's loss to Auburn, N.Y.

mitch talbot.JPGView full sizeMitch Talbot, shown earlier this season with the Indians, had a strong outing Wednesday night for the Class AAA Clippers.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 2, Indians 1 RH Mitch Talbot (2-2, 4.45) threw seven shutout innings and SS Luis Valbuena (.300) doubled, scored a run and drove in another as Columbus won the International League game in Indianapolis.

Talbot allowed four hits and two walks while striking out eight. RH Josh Judy (3.31) worked around two walks in the ninth to earn his 22nd save.

RF Travis Buck (.269) had three hits for Columbus.

AA Akron Aeros

Baysox 7, Aeros 3 Akron LH Matt Packer (7-12, 4.36) got banged around for six runs in six innings and host Bowie (Md.) won the Eastern League game.

Packer coughed up nine hits and three walks.

1B Raul Padron (.232) led the Aeros with two hits.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Keys 6, Indians 2 1B Justin Toole (.262) had four hits and CF Tyler Holt (.260) had three but Kinston dropped the Carolina League game in Frederick, Md.

LH T.J. House (6-12, 5.31) started for Kinston and gave up three runs (all earned) on eight hits and one walk. He struck out seven.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Doubledays 6, Scrappers 5 St. Edward grad Alex Lavisky (.210) had three hits, including a double and his fifth homer of the season, but Mahoning Valley lost the New York-Penn League game in 10 innings to Auburn (N.Y.) in Niles, Ohio.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 7, Slammers 3 SS Andrew Davis (.336) and 1B Jason Taylor homered to lead Lake Erie to the Frontier League win in Joliet, Ill.

Davis' 12th homer of the season, a three-run shot in the eighth inning, broke a 3-3 tie.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/mitch_talbot_luis_valbuena_lea.html

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UJS's "radical, progressive" campaign? Sensible, or a cause for concern?

The Union of Jewish Students announced plans this week to launch a "radical, progressive" campaign, encouraging students to speak up for the rights and "liberation" of both Israelis and Palestinians.

It includes proposals to ask Jewish students arriving at universities in the coming weeks to support "two states for two peoples" and hand out Israeli and Palestinian flags.

The campaign has already led to online debate between students over how they want to be represented by UJS and what effect the proposals could have.

One Birmingham student commented this afternoon that the plan could boil down to students being told: ?Welcome to Jsoc - here's your Palestinian flag.?

Another said: ?I'm all for a two-state solution but asking me to wave a Palestinian flag is a bit much. I wouldn't expect a Palestinian to wave an Israeli flag either. It's an absurd idea, even if it is just a publicity stunt.?

Others believe the plans are a realistic approach for UJS to take given current events. ?If you really support a two-state solution then I suggest you get over whatever weird effect the Palestinian flag has on you, because like it or not, it's going to be their national flag," commented one former UJS worker.

The debate is likely to continue ? and no doubt grow in its intensity when students return to their campuses for Freshers? Week.

So what do you think? Are UJS right to take this ?bold approach?? Is quiet concern within the Jewish community well-placed? Leave your comments below.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/marcus-dysch/ujss-radical-progressive-campaign-sensible-or-a-cause-concern

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Girls soccer tournament: Hathaway Brown 1, Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin 0

Junior center-midfielder Lysette Roman scored the lone goal as the Blazers (11-5-2) won another district crown.

Hathaway Brown, last year's Division II state runner-up, claimed the University Heights District title.

Sophomore defender Beth Brzozowski assisted on the goal, while senior goalie Rachel Horton posted the shutout with five saves.

Source: http://highschoolsports.cleveland.com/news/article/4196441943263666111

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Western Daily Press commented £7.4m uncollected tax as Somerset council faces big cuts

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Gilad Shalit

Within hours of the news breaking that a deal has been done to secure the release of Gilad Shalit, the debate about whether it is proper to exchange hundreds of Palestinian prisoners for the sake of one Israeli soldier has re-erupted.

Israel has always held to the tenet that it will do anything and pay a very high price for its citizens, something it has demonstrated over and over again. Those who have suffered at the hands of terrorists are, understandably, unhappy about the swap: a former rabbi in the IDF has warned today that those who are being released will slide back into their old haunts and habits immediately, the better to wreak further havoc on Israel.

I was very struck by the comment on one website in which someone wrote that he did not know how the Shalit family would live with themselves when the next inevitable act of terrorism was committed by someone who had been released so that their son could be free. But who can judge the Shalit family in that way? Who can imagine the pain and suffering undergone by the family in the last five years? And who among us can comprehend the lonely, frightening situation of Gilad himself, never knowing if the next knock on the door was someone coming to kill him?

There is no right and wrong answer to this agony, except to be grateful that Gilad Shalit's long nightmare may indeed be coming to an end. May such a nightmare not be repeated by any other Israeli soldier.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/jenni-frazer/gilad-shalit

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Columbus Clippers gets two wins against Rochester: Minor League Report

The Kinston Indians, Lake County Captains and Lake Erie Crushers also get wins on Friday night.

nick hagadone.JPGView full sizeClippers pitcher Nick Hagadone.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 6-4, Red Wings 3-3 RH Brett Brach (1-0, 3.86) and LH Nick Hagadone (5.73, two saves) held Rochester (N.Y.) to two runs over six innings as visiting Columbus beat the Red Wings in the completion of a game suspended after three innings on June 10.

In the nightcap (regularly scheduled game), RH Zach McAllister (9-3, 3.27) recorded a quality start and 2B Cord Phelps (.301, 12 HRs) homered to lead Columbus to the wins.

McAllister allowed three earned runs on nine hits in 6 innings. He struck out six and walked none.

AA Akron Aeros

Fisher Cats 7, Aeros 1 RH Steven Wright (1-2, 6.35) gave up seven earned runs in six innings as Akron got pounded in Manchester, N.H.

3B Kyle Bellows (.229) had two of the Aeros' five hits.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 6, Red Sox 2 LF Tyler Cannon (.248) hit a three-run homer and LH Francisco Jimenez (3.66) threw one-hit ball for 4 innings as the K-Tribe won in Salem, Va.

A Lake County Captains

Captains 4, Loons 3 1B Chase Burnett (.196) hit a two-out double in the bottom of the eighth to rally Lake County past visiting Great Lakes.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Cyclones 10, Scrappers 6 St. Ed grad Alex Lavisky (.207) had two hits and two RBI but Mahoning Valley lost to visiting Brooklyn (N.Y.)

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 9, Otters 5 Lake Erie won at Evansville (Ind.) to extend its franchise-record winning streak to 10.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/columbus_clippers_gets_two_win.html

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Columbus bats snooze, waste strong pitching by Joe Martinez in loss: Minor-league report

Chun's homer not enough as Aeros fall; Tyler Cannon's pinch-hit RBI wins it for Kinston; Lake County nips South Bend in 11; Scrappers doubled up by Williamsport; Lake Erie triumphs.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Bats 2, Clippers 1: Joe Martinez (8-8, 3.86) had seven strikeouts in seven innings pitched and allowed just two runs, but Columbus managed to score only one run and the Clippers fell to host Louisville. Chad Huffman doubled in the fifth inning and Luke Carlin brought him home on a fielder's choice hit.

AA Akron Aeros

Phillies 7, Aeros 1: Matt Rizzotti had two home runs to lead Reading (Pa.) over Akron at Canal Park. The Aeros' only run was a Chen Chun homer to start the second inning.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 2, Keys 1: Pinch hitter Tyler Cannon knocked in the winning run in the bottom of the ninth and Kinston beat Frederick (Md.)

A Lake County Captains

Captains 4, Silver Hawks 3: Ronny Rodriguez singled in the top of the 11th inning, advanced to second on a walk and then scored on a wild pitch and Lake County held on to win at South Bend (Ind.)

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Crosscutters 4, Scrappers 2 Tribe first-round pick Francisco Lindor scored on a sacrifice fly by Todd Hankins, but Mahoning Valley fell at Williamsport (Pa.) Lindor got on base on an error by the second baseman.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 5, Wild Things 4: Lake Erie scored five runs on 10 hits and beat Washington (Pa.) in Avon.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/columbus_bats_snooze_waste_str.html

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Shin-Soo Choo goes 0-2 in first rehab start at Lake County: Indians Insider

Choo played six innings, grounded out weakly to second and took a called third strike in two plate appearances. Meanwhile, Carlos Carrasco goes on DL with elbow issues.

choo-gloves-atbat-vert-cc.jpgView full sizeShin-Soo Choo went hitless in his first rehab game at Lake County, but is eager to help the Indians down the stretch of the 2011 season.

EASTLAKE, Ohio -- On the eve of the Indians' big three-game home series with Detroit, attention shifted temporarily 18 miles east, to a man and his thumb.

Shin-Soo Choo, on the disabled list since breaking his left thumb after being hit by a pitch on June 24 in San Francisco, made his first rehab appearance Monday with the Lake County Captains. Choo played six innings, grounded out weakly to second and took a called third strike in two plate appearances. In the field, he flagged down a long fly to the fence in right.

Choo said he was a little nervous and his timing is a little off, but otherwise felt comfortable at the plate and felt no pain. He hasn't heard from the Indians about when he might rejoin the club.

"I really want to play. The next six games against Detroit and Minnesota are big series I really want to play," he said. "My body's ready, but I'll see more pitches here, make sure everything feels good."

At the time of his injury, Choo was batting .244 with 10 doubles, two triples, five homers, 28 RBI and 11 stolen bases in 72 games.

Choo batted third and wore number 25 instead of his usual 17. Fans at Classic Park greeted him with the familiar "Chooooo" as he stepped to the plate each time.

Facing Dayton Dragons left-hander Mitch Clarke, Choo swung at the first pitch of his first at-bat, bouncing it foul past first, then took a called strike on the outside corner. On an 0-2 count, he sent a weak chopper to second and was thrown out by a step.

In the top of the second, Choo, who turned 29 last month, chased down a long sacrifice fly to the fence.

Choo's second plate appearance came with the Captains down, 3-0, in the fourth. He was called out on strikes on a 1-2 fastball, looked back at the umpire and gave his bat a little kick as he walked back to the dugout.

Before his injury, Choo's batting average had climbed 13 points in 10 days -- suggesting he might be regaining his form from 2010 and 2009, in which he hit .300 and at least 20 homers each season. He once called 2010 "the greatest year in my life."

This year? Not so great.

The thumb required six screws to stabilize. It's scarred and discolored.

Besides the batting slump and injury, he was fined $775 and had his driver's license suspended for 180 days late last month for driving drunk on May 2 in Sheffield Lake.

The Captains were three-hit and lost 3-0. But Choo's appearance bumped attendance to 6,105, compared to 4,500 to 5,000 for a typical Monday "Buck Night" promotion.

Elbow sidelines Carrasco: The Indians placed starter Carlos Carrasco on the 15-day disabled list Monday with inflammation in his right elbow, temporarily voiding his six-game suspension for throwing at Kansas City’s Billy Butler.

Carrasco was suspended for six games on Aug. 1 for throwing at Butler’s head in a July 30 game. Carrasco intended to serve his ban following his Aug. 3 start against Boston. However, Carrasco felt discomfort in his elbow after facing the Red Sox, according to an Indians release.

The Indians also reinstated third baseman Jack Hannahan from the paternity list. Hannahan was not with the Indians for their three-game weekend series in Texas, staying with his wife for the birth of the couple’s first child.

Carrasco’s injury leaves the Indians without a starter for Saturday’s home game against Minnesota. The most likely candidate is left-hander David Huff, who is 1-1 with a 0.51 ERA in three starts.

By the numbers: With the Tigers and Indians opening a big three-game series, here are some numbers and facts to remember:

• The Tigers have lost 11 straight at Progressive Field.

• The Indians and Tigers will play each other 12 times, six in August, six in September. They will end the season with a three-game series at Progressive Field starting Sept. 26.

• Tigers GM Dave Dombrowski and manager Jim Leyland had their contracts extended on Monday. Until then, they'd been working in the final year of their contracts.

Dombrowski's deal was extended for four years and Leyland was signed through 2012. Could it be a coincidence that the extensions were announced the day before the Tigers try to extend their four-game lead?

• In case you're wondering, manager Manny Acta is signed through 2012 with a club option for 2013.

Date with destiny: After going 3-4 on a trip against Boston and Texas, Acta said the Indians were going home to "take care of their own destiny."

The Indians will play 39 of their remaining 50 games in the own division. They are 16-18 in the AL Central and will need to go on quite a run to make the postseason.

"The schedule is mapped out for us to make any kind of run we want to," said rookie second baseman Jason Kipnis. "We can be 10 down or 10 up by the end of the season."

Closer Chris Perez said this series with the Tigers is important, but not in a sweep-or-go-home sense.

"We play them a lot," he said. "We just need to stay close, within striking distance, and not let this thing get too far out of reach for us. We've still got a lot of games left with them.

"This series at home is going to be huge. We've got our horses lined up."

The Indians are starting Justin Masterson, newcomer Ubaldo Jimenez and Fausto Carmona against the Tigers.

Added reliever Joe Smith, "If we take care of business when we get home, we'll be all right come September and, hopefully, make it a race down to the end."

The next 12 games are in the AL Central, six against the Tigers, three against the Twins and three against the White Sox.

Testing, testing: The Tigers gave former Indians catcher Victor Martinez the day off Sunday after he sprained his left knee Saturday against Kansas City trying to avoid a tag at the plate. With Monday's open date, there's a chance Martinez will be in Detroit's lineup during the series.

Sign here: The Indians have signed 14th round pick Cody Anderson, a right-hander from Feather River (Calif.) Community College, and 38th round pick shortstop Yhoxian Medina, who just completed his sophomore season at Southeastern (Iowa) Community College. Teams have until midnight Aug. 15 to sign their draft picks.

Staff writer Paul Hoynes contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/shin-soo_choo_goes_0-2_in_firs.html

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Lookback: September Lookback - Changeable but with a brilliant finish, Oct 03 - 16:32

September 2011 was a changeable month redeemed by a spectacularly warm and sunny ending. For most of the month low pressure and southwesterly winds dominated; it was the sixth most south-westerly September in 139 years of records.

The average maximum temperature ranged from 21.8°C at Swanscombe (Kent) to 13.3°C at Fair Isle (between Orkney and Shetland), while the average minimum temperature varied between 14.8°C at St Catherine's Point (Isle of Wight) and 8.0°C at Braemar (Aberdeenshire). Daytime readings ranged from 2 °C above normal in the Midlands and East Anglia to near normal in western Scotland, while night-time temperatures were 1-2 °C above in all regions. The Central England Temperature (CET) of 15.2°C was 1.5 °C above the long-term mean making this the warmest September since 2006.

The highest individual maximum in the UK was 29.2°C at Sutton Bonington (Notts) on the 30th, while the lowest minimum was minus 0.4°C at Tyndrum (Stirlingshire) early on the 15th. The lowest daytime maximum was 9.6°C at Lerwick (Shetland) on the 15th, and the warmest night was that of the 9th/10th with a minimum of 18.1°C at Olympic Park (London).

Rainfall averaged over England and Wales during September was 57mm which is 69 per cent of the average for the standard reference period 1971-2000, the lowest for just two years; in the last 100 years 66 Septembers were wetter while 34 were drier. The equivalent figures for Scotland were 112mm and 129 per cent of the normal amount, and for Northern Ireland 94mm and 115 per cent. Monthly totals ranged from 529mm at Cluanie Inn (Wester Ross) to 9mm at Cranwell (Lincolnshire).

Sunshine averaged over England and Wales during September was 155 hours which is 108 per cent of the 1971-2000 mean and higher than the figure for August. In the last 100 years 41 Septembers were sunnier while 59 were duller. The equivalent figures for Scotland were 115 hours and 108 per cent, and for Northern Ireland 121 hours and 107 per cent. Largest total in the UK was 197 hours at Thorney Island (West Sussex) and the smallest was 41 hours at Kinlochewe (Wester Ross).

The windiest day of the month was the 12th when ex-hurricane "Katia" crossed Scotland, with a peak gust of 70 knots at Capel Curig (Caernarvon).

© Philip Eden


Source: http://feeds.weatheronline.co.uk/~r/weatheronline/~3/_OrFzcJmRiU/reports

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Talk of a curse is Madden-ing to Peyton Hillis, Cleveland Browns

Browns players think discussion of the Madden NFL '12 video-game cover curse is hogwash. But with Hillis missing games because of strep throat and a strained left hamstring, and add in a contract squabble, it is disconcerting ... isn't it?

peyton hillis.JPGView full sizePeyton Hillis isn't buying into the "Madden" curse, but things certainly haven't gone that well after his appearance on the cover of the video game.
BEREA, Ohio — Peyton Hillis rolled his eyes and smirked at the notion that anything sinister might be at play this season, that some kind of dark shadow is following him, that the reason for injury, illness and missteps can be traced back to a video game.

That there is truly such a thing as the "Madden Curse."

"I'm not even worried about that," Hillis scoffed earlier this week.

Joshua Cribbs looked as if he had just whiffed a nose full of manure when the suggestion was floated that Hillis' photo on the front of Madden NFL 12 might have anything to do with anything going on with the 3-3 Browns.

"Curse? I don't believe in curses," Cribbs scoffed.

Even Kathy Curran, a priestess and the owner of Lakewood's Goddess Blessed, doesn't believe in curses -- even if she knows the remedy for banishing them.

No one believes in the Madden Curse, least of all the reigning cover boy, Hillis. His Browns teammates think it's a bunch of hogwash.

Even the people who produce the game at EA Sports are quick to discount the superstitious suggestion that nearly every player who has appeared on the cover of the Madden video game has been befallen by either substantial injury or failure the following season.

madden game.JPGView full size

But how else can you explain it? How do you explain that in six Browns games this season, Hillis has already missed one game because of strep throat, a full game and half of another with a strained left hamstring, and reaggravated his injury after returning to practice this week so that his status for Sunday's contest in San Francisco is in doubt?

How do you explain how the monstrously tough runner who likes to pull pickup trucks as part of his off-season training program is averaging only 3.5 yards per carry and a total of 211 yards this season -- directly after his breakout 1,177 yards for 4.4 yards per carry a year ago?

What other explanation is there for the fact that Hillis and the Browns cannot agree on the terms of a contract extension, that he controversially relied on his agent's medical advice to skip a game and that the running back has suddenly become quiet and serious around media this season?

Cribbs, for one, has a fairly simple explanation for it all.

"Every time you have a breakout year, the next year, everybody keys you," he said. "Everybody is expecting you to have that same year or better. Everybody's keying you now. You're not going to do as good when everybody's looking for you. Last year, ain't nobody worried about stopping Peyton. They didn't know who he was until after a couple games. You can't expect a guy to do it when everybody's looking for him to."

Still, the fear of the curse was enough to drive Green Bay Packers fans to crusade to ensure their quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, didn't appear on the cover of the game. Though Rodgers, who led the Packers to victory in the 2011 Super Bowl, was the top seed in a fan vote deciding the cover, Hillis beat him handily when they were matched head-to-head.

"They don't want to mess with it," said Anthony Stevenson, EA Sports' senior product manager. "Whether we believe in it or not, some fans do believe in the curse. There [were] literally Packer forums saying, 'Vote against Aaron.' Then you've got all the Cleveland fans saying if the Cleveland Browns are cursed and Peyton's cursed, two negatives make a positive."

The history of the Madden Curse goes back more than a decade, when the first cover boy, Barry Sanders, abruptly retired during training camp.

Michael Vick suffered a broken leg the day after the video game was released with his mug on the cover. Steelers safety Troy Polamalu missed all but five games after he shared the cover with Arizona receiver Larry Fitzgerald -- who, admittedly, had a career year. Even Brett Favre, who supposedly was retired and immune from the curse when he appeared on the cover in 2008, opted to return to the league, was traded to the New York Jets and led his team to implosion in the final games of the season.

Curran, the local priestess, isn't a believer in curses, either. But she acknowledged that if enough people believe in something, it can manifest itself as true.

"Sometimes, it is karmic liability," Curran said. "I believe in self-responsibility. But if enough people believe in something, it can be true to them."

Her advice for removing the curse? Burn a black candle, sit in quiet meditation and transfer all negativity to the candle.

Though Hillis chuckled at that suggestion earlier this week, Curran said the recipient of the curse doesn't have to be the one to burn the candle.

Browns fans can help remove the curse, independently, with their own black-candle ceremonies.

Hillis, who was married earlier this week, often refers to his faith in interviews and again resurrected his common recitation about what has happened to him this season.

And it has nothing to do with the Madden Curse.

"The Lord puts you through things for a reason, and it all works out for a purpose," he said. "No matter what happens, you've got to keep a positive mindset. From here on out, you just gotta take it and roll with the punches."

And hope that, somehow, the curse lifts for the remainder of the season.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: jvalade@plaind.com, 216-999-4654

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/browns/index.ssf/2011/10/talk_of_a_curse_is_madden-ing.html

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Kabul suicide bomber kills thirteen Americans

Attack on military convoy near Darulaman Palace in Afghanistan kills 17 people, including US troops, civilian contractors and police officer

US forces in Afghanistan have suffered their deadliest insurgent attack in months after a car bomb filled with explosives rammed into the side of an armoured bus shuttling troops between Nato bases in Kabul.

The International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) initially said 13 of their troops died in the attack but, after further identification, it confirmed that five service members and eight civilian contractors had been killed.

Afghan and western officials privately confirmed that all of the dead soldiers were from the US.

That makes the bombing the heaviest loss of US life since a Chinook helicopter was shot down by the Taliban in August, killing 30 Americans and eight Afghans.

Four Afghan civilians were also killed in Saturday's attack, which the Taliban claimed responsibility for in a text message.

The Taliban said they had filled up the vehicle with around 700kg of explosives which struck at around midday on a thoroughfare overlooked by the iconic hulks of old royal palaces wrecked by Afghanistan's civil war in the 1990s.

One eyewitness said a red Toyota Corolla had been seen driving at high speed, in an apparent attempt to catch up with the heavily fortified bus.

The explosion was sufficient to rip the heavily armoured Rhino bus apart and throw it several metres, over the central reservation of the major road.

Many of the windows in a building half a kilometre away, that is used by Afghan MPs, were smashed.

"It was a huge blast," said Mohammad Wali, a student who had crossed the road just ahead of the Isaf convoy. "It threw the bus about 10m from the blast and sent shrapnel all across the area."

The vehicle had just begun a long journey across the city from Camp Julien, the home of a counterinsurgency school that teaches Afghan troops how to fight guerrilla warfare, to Camp Phoenix, a base that houses US trainers who work with the Afghan army and police.

Kabul's deputy police chief said eight civilians were wounded in addition to the four killed, while one of his own policemen was also killed.

A policeman at the scene, who did not wish to give his name, said he saw three dead school-age children with severely burned bodies.

In a separate incident, three Australian troops lost their lives in the southern province of Uruzgan when an Afghan soldier opened fire on them. Two died immediately, while a third died later of his wounds.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/oct/29/kabul-suicide-bomb-deaths

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David Huff picks up another win as Clippers breeze: Minor-league report

Phelps has four hits in Columbus romp; Lynchburg's Simmons has 7 RBI in rout of Kinston; Lake County punchless in shutout loss; Scrappers coast past Auburn.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 11, Bats 3: David Huff (9-3) allowed six hits and three earned runs over 6 innings as the Clippers won in Louisville, Ky., in an International League game. Cord Phelps (.307) went 4-for-4, including a double and a triple, drove in two runs and scored one. Chad Huffman (.234) and Beau Mills (.271) each went 3-for-5 with a home run.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Hillcats 11, Indians 6: Andrelton Simmons drove in seven runs and scored one while going 3-for-5 as host Lynchburg (Va.) routed Kinston in a Carolina League game. Justin Toole (.259) went 2-for-4 with and RBI and scored twice for the Indians.

A Lake County Captains

Dragons 3, Captains 0: Mitch Clarke (3-1) held Lake County to two hits and stuck out six over six innings as Dayton beat Lake County in a Midwest League game in Classic Park in Eastlake. Shin-Soo Choo was 0-2 in his first rehab assignment. Mike Goodnight (5-11) took the loss, allowing three runs -- one earned -- on three hits, walking two and striking out four. The Captains committed five errors.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 7, Doubledays 2: John Barr (.239) went 3-for-5 and scored two runs, and Jake Lowery (.260) went 2-for-4 with two RBI as Mahoning Valley won a New York-Penn League game in Auburn, N.Y. Reliever Nathan Striz (3-3) allowed one hit over three innings to earn the victory.

AA Akron Aeros

The Aeros were off Monday. They open a three-game series against the Sea Dogs in Portland (Me.) Tuesday at 7.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

The Crushers were off Monday. They open a three-game series against the Florence Freedom Tuesday at All Pro Freight Stadium in Avon.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/david_huff_picks_up_another_wi.html

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An Israeli Autumn?

A major dilemma is fast looming for that larger part of the diaspora which, if not subservient to the slogan 'Israel right or wrong', feels emotionally, ideologically, even, it might be said, tribally committed to total support of the Jewish State, certainly when face-to-face with a critical non-Jewish world. But it is going to be different and the adjustment will demand new approaches and mind-sets for, if we are not on the edge of an ?Israeli Spring,? we are imminently going to see challenges to the Israeli government and the ruling parties which are without precedent.

Within the last few days, Israel has experienced acts of civil disobedience unparalleled since the 'fifties and 'sixties. Thousands have marched and demonstrated in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Haifa against the dearth of affordable housing. Roads have been blocked, tent cities have sprung up, and young families have taken to the streets in protest on a scale which has not been seen previously on a civil issue. These are not the disaffected ?Black Panthers? of the Sephardi protests in earlier years. These are young men and women who are most decidedly in the mainstream.

They have now been joined in protest, a different protest, by doctors, headed by the president of the Israel Medical Association, who say that the once highly-regarded Israeli health service is near collapse, with doctors being overworked and insufficient funds being invested to keep the service viable. The IMA head is himself planning to start a hunger strike on Monday to draw attentiom to the situation. There is even talk of a national strike on August 1 and the Prime Minister has called off a visit to Poland in which he wanted to seek support against UN recognition of a Palestinian state.

The diaspora's dilemma? With whom do you stand, with the government of Israel which is being called to account for its inability to competently deal with domestic issues (while seeming to lack creativity on foreign ones), or with Israel's future which claims it cannot afford to live decently and bring up its children in the Jewish State and the doctors who say they are at the end of the life-preserving road? An exaggeration of where things are heading? I am sure someone will say so. But, OK, call me to account when we reach the Israeli Autumn.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/geoffrey-paul/an-israeli-autumn

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Israel's forgotten man?

Travelling around northern Israel a couple of weeks ago something caught my eye.

Along the motorways, in the shopping malls, in villages, I saw dozens of posters and billboards featuring a man's face and offering a $10,000,000 reward.

It was a face I was entirely unfamiliar with. ?Who,? I asked my Israeli friend, ?is that??

The answer shocked me. ?He?s a missing IDF soldier,? he said. ?Majdi Halabi. He?s a Druze soldier who has been missing for six years.?

While we are all (rightly) well aware of the campaign urging Hamas to release kidnapped Gilad Shalit, Private Halabi?s name meant nothing to me, and I doubt many of you were familiar with his plight either.

Returning to England I looked online to find out more about him. (Completely coincidentally my first search uncovered this story by my colleague Jennifer Lipman, written on the very day I had been near Halabi's home village and first learnt of his disappearance.)

Halabi was last seen near Mount Carmel on May 24, 2005. At the time he was 19. This was a year before Gilad Shalit?s kidnapping.

Volunteers searched for Majdi but after a fortnight with no new information and no leads, the Israeli government declared him missing.

His parents believe he was kidnapped, and were told three years ago by a prisoner that their son had indeed been abducted and taken to the West Bank.

But no more has ever been found out, and other than a smattering of news stories about Majdi, usually around the anniversary of his disappearance, coverage of his case has paled in comparison to that of Gilad.

Four years ago one Israeli news site said he had been ?all but forgotten, nationally and internationally?.

The only previous mention of him in the JC came in a short story last September confirming that Orthodox rabbis had been informed it was possible to pray for the Druze soldier, and a one paragraph letter from a congregant at Mill Hill Synagogue who pointed out that while others were unaware of Halabi?s disappearance, those davening at the shul were already regularly including him in their prayers.

Perhaps the lack of definitive information about what happened has made it difficult to raise the level of awareness or orchestrate a campaign to keep him in the national conscience.

But my Israeli friend raised another, more concerning point ? has Halabi been forgotten because he is a Druze? Would Gilad Shalit have been forgotten if he were not a Jewish IDF soldier?

I hope not.

Druze soldiers make up around one per cent of the IDF?s total number, but there is a Druze reserve battalion ? the Herev ? and young Druze soldiers have volunteered to fight alongside Jewish colleagues to defend Israel since the birth of the nation.

According to the American Enterprise Institute?s Center for Defence Studies, around 83 per cent of eligible Druze men serve in the IDF, compared to only 72 per cent of eligible Israeli Jews.

Israeli?s Druze community ? which numbers around 125,000 ? has seen 369 people fall in Israel?s wars and conflicts. A strong bond has developed between Druze soldiers and their Jewish comrades.

I?d be amazed ? not to say disgusted ? if the Israeli public was prepared to discriminate, on religious grounds, between those who defend the country.

Dozens of initiatives continue to work hard to encourage Gilad?s release ? while in Israel I also visited his family?s stall outside Bibi Netanyahu?s house in Jerusalem and saw the truly international scale of the appeal.

Credit is due to the Zionist Federation for attempting to raise awareness of Halabi in this country. Time will tell whether their efforts are successful.

Today marks the 2,276th day since Majdi Halabi disappeared. Let?s hope he, and Israel?s other missing soldiers, are not forgotten and can soon be reunited with their family and friends.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/marcus-dysch/israels-forgotten-man

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Paolo Espino leads the way for Aeros' shutout of Portland: Minor-league report

Kluber struggles in Clippers loss; Aguilar's first homer powers Kinston; Captains fall in 12 innings; Scrappers split doubleheader; Crushers extend win streak to eight.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 3, Sea Dogs 0: RH Paolo Espino (6-0, 2.44) threw five scoreless innings and four relievers finished out the shutout for Akron in Portland, Maine. Espino allowed four hits, walked one and struck out seven.

RF Ben Copeland (.275) and LF John Drennen (.242) homered for Akron.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Indians 8, Clippers 1: RH Corey Kluber (6-8, 5.91) got shelled for six runs in seven innings as visiting Indianapolis blasted Columbus.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 4, Hillcats 3: DH Jesus Aguilar (.205) broke a 3-3 tie in the top of the 10th with his first homer of the season for Kinston to lead the K-Tribe past host Lynchburg (Va.)

A Lake County Captains

Loons 6, Captains 4: Lake County RF Carlos Moncrief (.245) had three hits and two RBI but the Captains lost to visiting Great Lakes in 12 innings.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

ValleyCats 4-0, Scrappers 3-4: LH Danny Jimenez (2-3, 2.70) pitched five scoreless innings to help Mahoning Valley split a pair of seven-inning games with Tri-City in Troy, N.Y.

Tri-City won the opener on a walk-off home run in the bottom of the seventh off RH Will Crasne (2-2, 5.57).

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 3, Freedom 2: Kellen Kulbacki singled in the winning run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth as Lake Erie beat Florence (Ky.) for its eighth straight win.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/paolo_espino_leads_the_way_for.html

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Talking won't make all the bigots shut up

Ten days on from the horrific massacre at a Norwegian youth camp and the debate about the far-right, extremism and multiculturalism continues to rage on the comment pages and blogosphere.

Libby Purves, writing in The Times on Monday, raised a good point, arguing that compulsory English lessons would integrate immigrants and undermine the extremist cause.

She writes: "One thing would - and must - make a difference, and that is language. Communication. Humans are social animals, and once you converse with a person - however different - you create a bond and open the way to partnership, even friendship.

"Because of all the things we could do to defuse racial hatred and the risk of crazy bigots running mad, the smallest and the greatest is conversation."

I'm all for encouraging people to learn to converse with those around them when they choose a new country to call home and I'd agree that communication is fundamental. The more you can understand someone, the more you're likely to build an emotional connection that would overcome fear or uncertainty.

But isn't it a little na�ve to assume that if everyone just talked to each other, those crazies would stop with their crazy thoughts and deeds?

Sure, a refusal to engage with society (such as by learning the language) is fodder for the bigot.

But bigots don't always need fodder. Extremists aren't always quite so rational and assuming they are ? that their extremism comes from something tangible - gives them a mask to hide behind.

Assimilation didn't offer much protection to the worldly and cosmopolitan European Jews in the 1930s, the ones who spoke the same language and lived in the same world as their neighbours (many of them the very same neighbours who later turned against the Jews).

In the end, they were no better than those who only spoke Yiddish.

That's not to say communication shouldn't be a priority ? it should be.

But language lessons are only one part of the solution, and we'd be wrong to overlook the fact that sometimes, some people hate other people for absolutely no reason at all.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/jennifer-lipman/talking-wont-make-all-bigots-shut

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From Oxford to Ramallah

An unexpected spanner has been thrown into the intention of Ramallah to seek recognition of a Palestinian state at the UN later this month. A leading Oxford academic and legal expert has warned that, by pushing ahead with their bid for recognition of a Palestinian state, the PLO leadership may well hazard any right of Palestinians to return to what is now Israel and disenfranchise every Palestinian living outside the area currently under the control of the Palestine Authority.

Professor S Goodwin-Gill, a barrister and senior research fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, in an opinion requested by a member of the Palestine National Council, a sort of Palestinian inner cabinet, has cautioned that:?Until such a time as a final settlement is agreed, the putative State of Palestine will have no territory over which it exercises effective sovereignty, its borders will be indeterminate or disputed, its population, actual and potential, undetermined and many of them continuing to live under occupation or in States of refuge.

?While it may be an observer State in the United Nations, it will fall short of meeting the internationally agreed criteria of statehood, with serious implications for Palestinians at large, particularly as concerns the popular representation of those not currently present in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.?

Professor Goodwin-Gill, in his conclusion to an opinion which is already exercising international lawyers in Europe, the US and the Middle East, says that ?current moves to secure recognition of statehood do not appear to reflect fully the role of the Palestinian people as a principal party in the resolution of the situation in the Middle East.

?The interests of the Palestinian people are at risk of prejudice and fragmentation, unless steps are taken to ensure and maintain their representation through the Palestinian Liberation Organization, until such time as there is in place a State competent and fully able to assume these responsibilities towards the people at large.?

In short, replace the PLO, which is now taken internationally to represent the Palestinian people wherever they may reside, with a Palestinian state without borders and state power, and you have yielded your right to speak on behalf of those Palestinians living outside the area controlled by the PLO, a recognised legal entity.

The next few days may show where the UN bid is going. if anywhere. But given that lawyers are deeply involved....

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/geoffrey-paul/from-oxford-ramallah

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Friday, October 28, 2011

South Wales Evening Post published Scarlets out to banish the memories of painful defeat

Article

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This is SouthWales published Work kicks off on £7m healthcare centre plan in Swansea's...

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Christine Hemming handed suspended prison term for kitten theft

MP's wife who snatched cat from lover's home given community service and told to pay �1,000 costs

An MP's wife has been given a nine-month suspended jail sentence for snatching a kitten from the home of her husband's mistress.

Christine Hemming, 53, from Moseley, Birmingham, was convicted of burglary by a jury at the city's crown court last month.

She was captured on CCTV stealing a four-month-old tabby from the home of Emily Cox, the long-term lover of the Liberal Democrat John Hemming.

Hemming was told her sentence would be suspended for 12 months.

She was also ordered to complete 150 hours of unpaid community work, and pay costs of �1,000.

She made no comment as she left the court after the hearing.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/oct/28/christine-hemming-suspended-prison-kitten-theft

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It's a no-hitter (again!): Joliet's Andrew Moss stymies Lake Erie Crushers, 10-1 -- Minor-league report

Columbus manages just one hit in loss to Syracuse; Trenton's early runs top Akron; Holt has three hits in Kinston defeat; Wetmore's six hitless innings lead Lake County, Lavisky's fourth homer helps fuel Scrappers win.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Slammers 10, Crushers 1: Joliet's Andrew Moss (3-3, 3.67) no-hit Lake Erie in the Frontier League game in Avon.

The 24-year-old Moss walked six, struck out seven and has a 4-3 record in nine starts for the Slammers.

“That might have been the ugliest no-hitter of all time,” a happy Moss said. “I walked six guys, hit one, but we were able to get the job done and get the win. My defense was amazing and its always easier to pitch when your offense scores 10 runs.”

Moss walked the bases loaded in the seventh and gave up a run on a sacrifice fly by Jason Taylor. He retired the first 11 batters he faced, getting some help from center fielder Bobby Leeper when he made a diving catch in the first inning to take a hit away. In the sixth, shortstop Brad Netzel made a leaping catch of a line drive.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Chiefs 2, Clippers 0: On the day its major-league affiliate was held hitless and one day after Justin Germano pitched a perfect game for the Clippers, Columbus was held to one hit and lost an International League game Wednesday in Syracuse, N.Y.

DH Beau Mills (.188) had the Clippers' hit. RH Jeanmar Gomez (10-4, 2.34) pitched seven innings, allowing two earned runs on six hits. He walked none and struck out six.

AA Akron Aeros

Thunder 5, Aeros 1: Trenton (N.J.) roughed up Akron starter Joe Gardner (7-8, 4.99) and won the Eastern League game at Canal Park.

Gardner, a righty, gave up five earned runs on 10 hits in 51/3 innings. 3B Kyle Bellows (.227) hit his second homer of the season for Akron.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Dash 7, Indians 3: LF Tyler Holt (.264) had three hits and stole his 24th base of the season, but the K-Tribe lost the Carolina League game in Winston-Salem, N.C.

RH Marty Popham (4-1, 3.88) started and allowed six earned runs on eight hits. He walked one and struck out six.

A Lake County Captains

Captains 9, Hot Rods 4: LH Kirk Wetmore (2-0, 6.38) threw six hitless innings, SS Ronny Rodriguez (.241) hit his eighth homer of the season and 2B Nick Bartolone (.219) had three hits and scored three times as Lake County beat Bowling Green (Ky.) in a Midwest League game in Eastlake.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 5, Spinners 3: Catcher and St. Ed grad Alex Lavisky (.204) hit his fourth homer of the season and scored two runs and RH Rob Nixon (3-3, 4.19) threw five innings of one-run ball to lead Mahoning Valley to the New York-Penn League win over Lowell (Mass.) in Niles, Ohio.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/07/clippers_held_to_one_hit_in_lo.html

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Brunswick, Medina football teams to square off in season finale

Brunswick will host rival Medina tonight in Northeast Ohio Conference Valley Division football action in the season finale.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/sun/all/index.ssf/2011/10/brunswick_medina_football_team.html

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Matt LaPorta homers, singles in Columbus Clippers' victory: Minor League Report

The Class AA Akron Aeros and the Class A Mahoning Valley Scrappers also get victories on Friday.

matt laporta.JPGView full sizeMatt LaPorta

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 4, Mud Hens 3 1B Matt LaPorta (.500) homered and had a run-scoring single, and RH Zach McAllister (12-3, 3.32) allowed two runs in seven innings as host Columbus edged Toledo in International League play Friday. SS Luis Valbuena (.305) had three hits for the Clippers. RH Chen Lee (2.27) allowed one run in two innings for his first save.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 7, Senators 1 Five pitchers combined on a four-hitter, and 2B Karexon Sanchez (.218), LF John Drennen (.241) and C Chun Chen (.261) each drove in two runs as Akron won an Eastern League contest in Harrisburg, Pa. Sanchez tripled, singled and had two walks. Drennen homered and singled. Chen doubled, singled and walked. Aeros RH Bryan Price (2.79) got the start and allowed two hits in three scoreless innings. RH Rob Bryson (2-0, 3.26) went two innings to get the victory, RH Bryce Stowell (2.00) also pitched two innings, and LH Kyle Petter (0.00) and RH Dale Dickerson (9.00) each worked an inning of relief.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Keys 10, Indians 0 RH Clayton Cook (9-9, 4.56) could not get out of the first inning, allowing six runs on six hits and one walk in of an inning, and host Kinston (N.C.) got three-hit in a Carolina League loss to Frederick (Md.), the K-Tribe's last regular-season game at Grainger Stadium. Keys LH Jacob Pettit (7-0, 1.62) allowed one hit in five innings, and RH Ryan O'Shea (3.09) gave up two hits in four innings.

A Lake County Captains

Whitecaps 3, Captains 0 RH Jordan Cooper (2-9, 4.73) allowed just two runs in seven innings for host Lake County, but three West Michigan pitchers combined to four-hit the Captains. Whitecaps LH Kyle Ryan (6-10, 3.15) gave up four hits in six innings. West Michigan RH Kevan Hess (two innings) and RH Michael Torrealba (one) teamed for three perfect innings of relief.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 8, Jammers 4 3B Jordan Smith (.305) had a three-run double and LF John Barr (.234) a two-run double during a seven-run third inning as Mahoning Valley won a New York-Penn League game in Jamestown, N.Y. Scrappers RF Bryson Myles (.309) tripled, singled, walked, drove in a run and scored two runs.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Beach Bums 9, Crushers 3 LH Paul Fagan struggled, and Lake Erie fell behind by seven runs by the fourth inning in losing a Frontier League contest in Traverse City, Mich.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/09/matt_laporta_homers_singles_in.html

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Beau Mills' error costly in Clippers loss to Buffalo: Minor-league report

T.J. McFarland shelled in Akron loss; Kinston's Francisco Jimenez sharp in shutout win; Rocky Gale's 4 RBI lead Lake County; Jeremy Patton's tie-breaking double lifts Scrappers.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Bisons 6, Clippers 4: A fielding error by Columbus first baseman Beau Mills allowed two unearned runs in the second inning and visiting Buffalo (N.Y) went on to win by two. Jeanmar Gomez (10-7, 2.55 ERA) gave up seven hits in six innings, allowing four earned runs. Jared Goedert and Cord Phelps homered for Columbus. Tim Fedroff hit an RBI double.

AA Akron Aeros

Baysox 9, Aeros 1: T.J. McFarland (9-8, 3.98) allowed four runs on five hits in 5 innings and Akron lost on the road to Bowie (Md.) John Drennen scored the Aeros' lone run when Raul Padron grounded out to pitcher Oliver Drake who recorded the win. Joe Mahoney hit a two-run homer for the Baysox in the seventh off the Aeros' Rob Bryson.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Keys 2, Indians 0: Kinston's Francisco Jimenez held host Frederick (Md.) scoreless through 61/3 innings until Dale Mollenhauer's RBI single for the Keys. Jimenez was replaced by Trey Haley, whose wild pitch allowed Steven Bumbry to score from third.

A Lake County Captains

Tincaps 6, Captains 1: Rocky Gale drove in a career-high four RBI as Fort Wayne (Ind.) defeated Lake County at Classic Park. The Captains Nick Bartolone extended his hit streak to a season high seven games. He doubled in the fifth inning to score Chase Burnette.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Muckdogs 3, Scrappers 2: Jeremy Patton's line-drive double in the bottom of the eighth broke a 2-2 tie and host Batavia beat Mahoning Valley. The Scrappers scored two in the second on runs by Jordan Smith and Zachary MacPhee but were blanked the rest of the game.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

The Crushers were idle on Monday.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/beau_mills_error_costly_in_cli.html

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David Cameron, Durban and dancing at the UN

Political life often seems to be something of a dance, a complicated balancing act in order to offend no-one, appease everyone and commit yourself to nothing.

So kudos to David Cameron for (finally) deciding that Britain won't take part in the tenth birthday party of the Durban conference, an event supposedly about challenging racism that turned into the political equivalent of putting a kid in the middle of the playground and standing around pointing and mocking.

Cameron said he doesn't want to commemorate a conference (actually, two, the 2009 review affair was also something of a hate-fest) associated with "open displays of unpleasant and deplorable antisemitism".

Good on him. And yet, as pleased as I am, I don't want to be too optimistic.

As I said, politics is a dance.

Cameron wants the support of the Anglo-Jewish community, but he also wants the backing of all the other "political forces" as well.

At the General Assembly session, there's another controversial item on the agenda; the Palestinian plans to bid for statehood.

The unilateral move, already avowedly opposed by the White House, has been backed by many, many other groups including a number of EU bigwigs. Britain's approach to the bid has yet to be officially revealed.

The savvy politician wants to please everyone. And if he can't, what's the next best thing? Ameliorate the critics in one area because you know you're going to go against their wishes in another?

Rant about Israel in Turkey then make nice with the Jews at a formal dinner? Cameron would never?oh, wait.

Maybe Cameron won't back the Palestinians (despite the pleas of Israel and Jewish groups worldwide) in what seems to be a largely symbolic move without any hope of helping the peace process on the ground. Maybe this is not a cynical move.

But, he wouldn't have got to this point in British politics without being a consummate dancer.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/jennifer-lipman/david-cameron-durban-and-dancing-un

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Just how far are the IRB out of touch

Donal Lenihan 

WRITING in last Monday’s Irish Examiner after the drama of the two semi finals, I expressed the following opinion: “The Welsh could even have been cynical and withdrawn replacement prop Paul James who was savaged in the scrum after the departure of Jones, with some form of injury and insisted on uncontested scrums to ease their plight.

“That would have enabled them to keep their most potent attacker Jamie Roberts positioned in midfield instead of utilising his considerable bulk to stabilise their scrum on every Welsh put in. I can think of other sides that would have had no hesitation in going down that route.”

It is worth remembering that England had two of their coaches suspended in this tournament for ball tampering allegations.

No surprise then to hear Warren Gatland declare yesterday when announcing the Welsh team to face Australia in the bronze final that he and his fellow coaches discussed faking injury in the front row after Adam Jones had been forced from the field, thus leading to uncontested scrums.

In the end, to their credit, they decided not to because it would not have been the right thing to do. Compare that to the whole Bloodgate saga surrounding Leinster’s Heineken cup semi-final win over Harlequins in 2009 when Dean Richards and his coaching staff stepped completely over the mark and even compounded the problems in the aftermath by fabricating the issues surrounding the event.

That was completely and utterly unacceptable. However in relation to the issue of uncontested scrums in the circumstances that the Welsh found themselves, I’m not so sure others would have been so pure. The IRB have dug the hole for themselves with this one. Uncontested scrums have no longer become an issue in the Rabo Direct or Heineken cup as you are required to carry two props on the bench. This allows for a specialist tight head and loose head to be accommodated and as a consequence an injury to one of the starting props is adequately catered for.

For whatever reason, and my information is that it could well be financial, international rugby only caters for one prop on the bench. Therefore the nominated replacement is one that has experience of playing on both sides of the scrum even though he may not be your second choice on one of those positions. Tom Court has filled the role for Ireland even though he is primarily a loose head prop.

Wales ran into this problem on Saturday with Paul James. He regularly appears at loose head for the Ospreys with Adam Jones at tight head with the same club. Therefore when Jones was forced off after only ten minutes the last day, James was thrown into action on a side of the scrum that he has seen little or no action for some time. Against the French that is crucial at the best of times but with only seven forwards, it proved catastrophic and Jones was eaten alive.

In addition I felt Wales got it wrong in using Jamie Roberts to bolster their scrum. They needed him in midfield and would have been better off putting Mike Phillips on the side of the scrum on their put in — he played in the back row until his late teens — and shifting Shane Williams to scrum half where he also played for much of his career. Indeed in the past he has covered that position for Wales in an injury crisis.

It now transpires that the IRB are privately stunned with Gatland’s revelations, despite the fact he added “morally, I made the decision that it wasn’t the right thing to do”. I can tell you there isn’t a club, provincial or international side who haven’t discussed that situation at some stage and many who have manipulated the situation to introduce uncontested scrums. For the IRB to declare themselves privately stunned says something about just how far out of touch they are with reality especially when this whole scenario could be solved overnight by catering for two replacement props on the bench. When will they ever learn?

Source: http://feeds.examiner.ie/~r/iesportsblog/~3/AvGHXkud0q4/post.aspx

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