Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Ex- UConn hooper (W) get off the hook in doping troubles in Europe.

Thank goodness this gets behind her.

------Original Message------
From: SI com Alerts
To: mark@rauterkus.com
ReplyTo: cnnalerts@cnn.com
Subject: 2004 Athens Summer Games News
Sent: Feb 16, 2011 2:04 PM



Alert Name: 2004 Athens Summer Games News

Turkey lifts provisional doping ban on Taurasi
02/16/11 12:44 PM, EST
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Turkey's basketball federation lifted American star Diana Taurasi's provisional doping suspension Wednesday after a lab retracted its finding that she tested positive for a performance-enhancing substance.
Read the full story at http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/basketball/wnba/02/16/taurasi.ban.removed.ap/index.html

______________________________________________________________________

Receiving too many alerts?
Visit manage your alerts to narrow your topic further. Add words or
phrases in your alert criteria and refine your alert. You can also change
your delivery frequency to "daily" or "weekly" to receive your alerts to fit
your busy schedule. To edit your alerts, visit the manage alerts page:
http://audience.cnn.com/services/si/alerts/manageAlerts.jsp?source=si

______________________________________________________________________

2011 Cable News Network LP, LLLP.
A Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.


Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Fw: Tiger Polo Spring League

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: "Jim Staresinic" <jimstar@connecttime.net>
Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 09:30:57 -0500
To: <scottdmg@aol.com>; <mark.rauterkus@gmail.com>
Subject: Tiger Polo Spring League

With the assistance of a couple of club parents, we’ll be launching our marketing/communications for the Spring League this week. The competitions dates are:

 

April 3rd and 10th

May 8th, 15th and 22nd (on the 22nd we will be at Chartiers Valley

 

All but the last date will be at North Allegheny and times are TBD but likely noon to 4.

 

Entry deadline will be Monday, March 28th which will give us about one month for people to sign up. More details to come this week, but wanted to get you guys in the loop early so that you can start recruiting. We hope to make this much bigger than last year.

 

Jim

 

Loss of school pools linked to drownings | Stuff.co.nz

Loss of school pools linked to drownings | Stuff.co.nz"We are losing our culture of swimming education and it is having disastrous effects," she said.

"We really need the government to make this a priority... it is a life or death issue."

Monday, February 14, 2011

Pittsburgh schools want more students in AP courses

A HUGE mistake from Pittsburgh Public Schools.
Pittsburgh schools want more students in AP courses
They needd to say that more students are desired for AP and IB courses.

Airport here desires overflow from East Coast

Bribery and restrictions of freedom loom large.
Airport here desires overflow from East Coast

Fw: SSSNA E-Blast 2/14 - Meeting Tomorrow 2/15, Soup Contest this Saturday

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: South Side Slopes Neighborhood Association <sssnapgh@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 14 Feb 2011 07:10:32 -0500
To: South Side Slopes Neighborhood Association<sssnapgh@gmail.com>
Subject: SSSNA E-Blast 2/14 - Meeting Tomorrow 2/15, Soup Contest this Saturday

2/15 - SSSNA General Meeting -  
The next meeting of the SSSNA is February 15 at 7:00 PM.  The rescheduled program from our January meeting includes Dr Lindenbaum from UPMC Urgent care Center,  Zone 3 Police, and Councilman Bruce Kraus.  The meeting is held in the main lounge of St Paul of the Cross Retreat Center, 148 Monastery Ave. in the south Side Slopes.
  
2/19 South Side Soup Contest - Volunteers Needed
See below for a message from Jennifer Jeffers, Committee Chair for the Soup Contest:
 
The Seventh Annual South Side Soup Contest will be held on Saturday, Feb. 19, from noon to 3pm. 
 
Last year's event far exceeded expectations, raising over $20,000 and more than 1,000 canned food items for The Brashear Association Food Pantry.  This is a wonderful event that showcases the South Side neighborhood and a great opportunity for South Side residents and local business owners to work together for a good cause. 
 
A large event such as this takes a lot of time and energy, which is why we're reaching out for volunteer support.  Right now, we're specifically in need of Soup Captains.  The Soup Captain acts as the onsite manager at each of the soup stops overseeing volunteers, checking in contest attendees, and monitoring soup and other supplies.  In addition, the Soup Caption will be the direct point of contact for the event management staff.  The Soup Captain must be present at the retail location for the duration of the event and are integral to the management and success of the event.
 
Below is a link to WQED OnDemand, who did a feature on last year's event.  The short video provides further information about the contest and the Brashear Association's Food Pantry.
 
http://www.wqed.org/ondemand/onq.php?id=734
  
If you're interested in being a Soup Captain this year, please contact me.  There will be a Soup Captain Orientation meeting on Wednesday, February 16th at 6pm at the Brashear Association, where we will go into further detail.  If you aren't able to be a Soup Captain but would still like to volunteer, please let me know.  We have many duties available for our volunteers.  Any time that can be offered is greatly appreciated! 
 
For more information about the South Side Soup Contest, please visit www.southsidepgh.com.
 
Thank you for your time,
 
Jennifer Jeffers
Committee Chairperson
jeffersjh@hotmail.com
 
 
 
Thank you for being a part of the South Side Slopes Neighborhood Association - Neighbors working together to make the Slopes a more livable, beautiful, and safe community.  The SSSNA hopes to keep the community informed about upcoming events, news in the Slopes, and volunteer opportunities through this E-Blast.  If you do not wish to receive this E-Blast, reply to this email and you will be removed. Feel free to forward to any neighbors you think may be interested.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Helmets and heads

Sports such as hockey and football should start to use throw-away helmets, much like bike helmets. A bike helmet works once. Then it breaks or cracks. Then it is worthless and needs to be tossed away.

In hockey, some have called for the removal of helmets to make the game safe. Rather than remove the helmet, make it a helmet that breaks if it has an impact that is too hard. Then the player and his broken helmet would need to sit out the rest of the game.

I favor throw away helmets, not toss away players.
Post-Gazette.com: ".

After rejecting a proposal that would have forced players to sit out at least one play if their helmet is dislodged, the committee decided to gather data on how prevalent the problem is in college football."

The Eagle gives insights into Wikipedia and some kid named Donovan

The Eagle: "Wikipedia Ain’t So Bad, and Yes, I’m a Geek

-Ah Wikipedia, it’s the first thing up when you Google something, it contains more than 17 million articles, and has more than 365 million readers. Almost every kid in America has seen its white pages at least once in their lives. Wikipedia even has its sister sites that range from anything that focuses from video games to military secrets. But in schools Wikipedia and all of its sister sites are shunned, exiled, and segregated from the other articles on the internet. Teachers, or at least some of them, believe that Wikipedia will contain false information. And they don’t want anything Wikipedia-related in a student’s work. But just how reliable is Wikipedia?"

Chuck Tanner: The Last World Series Manager That Mattered


Yesterday, Major League Baseball lost a unique player, marvelous manager, and an incredible man.

Rest in Peace Charles William Tanner.

Welcomed to this world in New Castle, PA on the 4th of July in 1928, Chuck Tanner was born to be a baseball man. A left-handed and hitting left-fielder, Chuck Tanner recorded a unique feat. On April 12, 1955, in his first at-bat for the Braves, Chuck Tanner laced a home run in Milwaukee. It was a statistic that would be remembered countless times, and duly so.

After a journeyman career, Tanner transitioned to a managerial career, starting in 1963 in the minor leagues. In 1970 his Major League Managerial career began with the Chicago White Sox. He piloted that team for five years before being fired. He immediately was hired by Oakland in 1976. His team recorded a ML record 341 stolen bases that year but Chuck didn't impress.

In another one of the most unique twists in Major League history, Chuck Tanner—a manager—was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Two years later, Tanner's “We Are Family” Bucs, lead by Wilver Dornell Stargell, won the World Series when Omar Moreno snagged a rather routine fly-ball in Baltimore.

Baseball in Pittsburgh has not been the same since.

Tanner had his share of ups-and-downs in the remaining six seasons of his Pirates career. He was let go for young Jim Leyland and moved on to Atlanta for three more seasons. Tanner's major league managerial career was 1,352 and 1,381.

In the years since, Tanner had been a regular site at Three Rivers Stadium, and then PNC Park. Most recently, Tanner was a Senior Advisor to management. He could be seen leaving the ball park early, taller than you might expect, thin and always in a good mood.

As a kid, Chuck Tanner was seen exclusively as a good man and a fantastic motivator. When Phil Garner, then the manager of the Houston Astros, managed the National League All-Stars in the game at PNC, he chose Chuck to be a special guest coach. Tanner also threw out a ceremonial first pitch.

A couple of years ago, I'd see Chuck leave PNC Park. One day in particular I excitedly saw him talk with the ticket takers near the Home Plate Gate, as I worked Security just outside the gate. I was impressed that a “Big League” personality by any gauge, was talking to the part-time workers in red vests. I couldn't imagine Tony LaRussa or Lou Pinella (who also was traded once as a manager) talk to the riff-raff at the ball park.

Then Chuck Tanner came my way.

“Hello Mr. Tanner, how are you?”

“I'm good. How are you?”

Chuck stopped in his tracks.

I extended my hand and he shook it.

“Do you know what I refer to you as,” I asked.

He looked inquisitive and smiled.

I smiled broadly back to him.

“You are the manager of the last World Series team THAT MATTERED.”

With that, Chuck Tanner registered the words. And smiled ever more broadly.

As I remember, he reached out and put his left hand on my shoulder.

Chuck Tanner then laughed with me and said, “Thank you.”

It was a light-hearted moment between two guys who loved the Pittsburgh Pirates.

At that moment, Chuck Tanner treated me like a friend.

Just like he has countless other baseball fans. They too were his friends.

The Pittsburgh Pirates, one of the most storied teams in the history of all baseball, lost one of its most storied managers. A true leader. A Man. Rest in Peace Chuck Tanner. And thanks.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Murphy pushes bill to shield U.S. from China's currency

Over-reaching looks like this.
Murphy pushes bill to shield U.S. from China's currency

After their efforts were rebuffed at the end of the last Congress, Rep. Tim Murphy, R-Upper St. Clair, and Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, reintroduced a bill Thursday targeting China for its allegedly undervalued currency.

Read more: http://post-gazette.com/pg/11042/1124607-84.stm#ixzz1Deq2l2rd
Murphy's meddling isn't what I want him to do.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Fw: [school-discuss] Open Source (and Open Data) bills in NH

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: Joel Kahn <jj2kk4@yahoo.com>
Sender: owner-schoolforge-discuss@schoolforge.net
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2011 14:24:43 -0800 (PST)
To: <schoolforge-discuss@schoolforge.net>
ReplyTo: schoolforge-discuss@schoolforge.net
Subject: [school-discuss] Open Source (and Open Data) bills in NH

I don't know how many of you are following the activities of
Open Source for America, so I figured it wouldn't hurt to
pass this along. Hopefully, it will at least provide more
useful material for discussions--so spread the word.
I'm wondering if this could somehow come up during the
fight for the 2012 New Hampshire presidential primary.... :-)

Joel

--- On Thu, 2/10/11, Cohn, Seth <Seth.Cohn@leg.state.nh.us> wrote:

From: Cohn, Seth <Seth.Cohn@leg.state.nh.us>
Subject: [state-local-wg] Open Source (and Open Data) bills in NH
To: state-local-wg@opensourceforamerica.org
Date: Thursday, February 10, 2011, 5:47 AM

Open Source (and Open Data) bills in NH

Greetings, I actually have hearings today on my New Hampshire legislative bills for Open Source and Open Data.

If you'd like to weigh in... emails in support to
~HouseExecutiveDepartmentsandAdministration@leg.state.nh.us
would be most appreciated (don't have to be today, but the next few days would be good...)
The more they hear from folks in other states with successful use of Open Source,
the better the chances of this bill... (and the Open Data bill wouldn't hurt either... but it's outside this mailing list's scope slightly)

http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2011/HB0418.html
http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2011/HB0310.html

Please cc: me, so I can follow up with you...

Thanks in advance,

Rep. Seth Cohn
Merrimack 6, State of New Hampshire
legislator and open source geek

_______________________________________________
state-local-wg mailing list
state-local-wg@opensourceforamerica.org
http://opensourceforamerica.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/state-local-wg

435 volunteers

Steve's idea makes sense:
With redistricting we will have 435 new US congressional districts by 2012.

How about creating a loose network of 435 non-partisan, non-aligned Facebook
Pages for each district?

Each page would be designed for people who live in the new district to
exchange views across the political spectrum.

My experience is that participation in each page will need to be built and
someone(s) needs to tend the garden so to speak to remove spam and really
abusive stuff IF you want sustained quality participation. (If you prefer
pitched battles among the most partisan 1% then run it on auto-pilot.)

So, why not have each page built as a student project with students from
different ideological perspectives working together to make it work and
learn how to facilitate and recruit online. Key is seeding discussions with
news and links of direct relevance to the district and local implications of
national policy.

Anyone want to take this idea and run with it? Contact us:
http://e-democracy.org/contact team@e-democracy.org

(P.S. There is actually an example of a virtual parlimentary constituency
discussion in Kenya like this. Why not in the U.S.?)

My mentor, Fletcher Gilders, talked about as a glory day flashback from Kenyon College

Fletcher was the best. I miss him greatly.
Kenyon Vaults Back ino Diving After a Decade of Rest - The Kenyon Collegian - Sports: "It wasn't until the mid-1980s that the diving program really came into its own. 'The diving team of the mid '80s up to the late '90s was better than any team in that time,' Steen said. The reason? The hiring of the 'best diving coach of all time,' according to Steen — Fletcher Gilders. Gilders, an NCAA Division I record-setting national champion for Ohio State University, was one of the most successful divers in collegiate history. He was so successful as a diver that his national record, set while at OSU, was not overturned until Greg Louganis came along. After a very successful and decorated career as the swimming and diving coach at Ohio University (developing three Olympic divers and winning eight Mid-American conference titles), he came to Gambier to coach the diving squad in 1985. During his 12 years coaching at Kenyon, Gilders produced three Division III champions and won three NCAA Division III Coach of the Year honors. Now deceased, he is remembered much fondness and respect.

The diving team took a turn for the worse after Gilders' retirement. Without such a dedicated, consistent and 'high-caliber, absolutely adored' coach as Gilders, according to Steen, the program had since fallen into somewhat of a rut for the latter part of the '90s and into the 2000s."
Fletcher retired -- but really, he died way too young. The guy was a lot like the recently departed Jack LaLane. Fletcher was shorter, fit like a bull, functional in his problem solving, and clever with his insights as to what movements to coach and what to ignore until later.

Raja for Commissioner - Raja’s Story

Raja for Commissioner � Raja’s Story: "A first generation American, Raja was born in Bangalore, India, known as the “Silicon Valley of India.” After graduating from the region’s leading university with a degree in electrical engineering, he moved to Pittsburgh to attend graduate school earning a Masters in Computer Science from the University of Pittsburgh and an MBA with Honors from Carnegie Mellon."

Allegheny Grows funds first-year projects in Wilkinsburg, Bellevue and Penn Hills

Hold the hoe!
Allegheny Grows funds first-year projects in Wilkinsburg, Bellevue and Penn Hills: "Penn Hills officials are providing a water truck and leaf-mulch compost for a community garden on the site of a former municipal ballfield. The tract had been planted as a garden last year by a youth group. Produce grown through this year's effort will benefit up to three local food pantries."

I love the garden efforts. But let's not take over any more ball fields.

Where is this field turned garden, exactly?

Voters Choice Act is introduced in PA again

For more information, please contact Bob Small (610-543-8427) or Ken Krawchuk (267-496-3332)

The Pennsylvania Ballot Access Coalition (PBAC) is pleased to report that their Voters' Choice Act has been introduced in the Pennsylvania Senate as Senate Bill 21.

The prime sponsor of the Act, originally authored by the PBAC in 2005, is state Senator Mike Folmer (R-48) of Lebanon. According to Folmer, "Both the federal and state Constitutions begin with the same three words: 'We ThePeople.' In order to give the people a stronger voice in their state government, we need to eliminate barriers for candidates seeking office. No state makes it more difficult for third party and independent candidates to run for office than Pennsylvania. My 'Voters' Choice Act' significantly eases these restrictions. "The Act offers greater freedom of choice to Pennsylvania voters by making it much less difficult for independent and third party candidates to get their names on the November ballot.

Under current law, Democratic and Republican candidates are required to collect between 1,000 and 2,000 signatures to get their names on the statewide ballot, while all others must collect as many as 67,000 signatures in recent years. But under the Voters' Choice Act, independents and candidates of political bodies would need to collect the same number of signatures as the candidates of the two old parties, and once a third party registers 0.05% of the electorate as members of that party(approximately 4,200 voters), their candidates may be nominated according to the party's rules, and at the party's expense, without having to collect signatures.

Ken Krawchuk, a Libertarian member of the PBAC and two-time candidate for Pennsylvania governor, applauded Sen. Folmer's initiative. "Why should one candidate be forced to collect thirty-three times as many signatures as another?" Krawchuk asked. "The only thing the existing law does is stifle competition at the ballot box and prevent new ideas from being introduced into the political debate. In a land that's known for freedom, how can such a thing be fair?"

According to Carl Romanelli, a Green Party member of the PBAC, "Passage of the VCA will demonstrate that legislators are serious about reform and leveling the playing field. It is heartening to see support for this legislation among Greens, Libertarians, Constitutionalists, Reformers and independents. We are respectfully requesting all PA Senators of goodwill to lead this effort for Pennsylvania. "The PBAC encourages all citizens to contact their state senators and request that they co-sponsor the Voters' Choice Act, Senate Bill 21.

The Pennsylvania Ballot Access Coalition is a group of individuals and organizations committed to building better government in Pennsylvania. Formed shortly after the 2004 election cycle, the Coalition includes leading members of the Libertarian Party, the Green Party, the Constitution Party, the America First Party, the Reform Party, the Prohibition Party, the Socialist Party, the Unified Independent Party, the New American Independent Party, the Social Democrats USA, and the Ralph Nader campaign, among others. The purpose of the Coalition is to reform the restrictive Pennsylvania ballot access laws and bring them in line with the constitutional mandate that "Elections shall be free and equal."

More information about the Coalition and the Voters' Choice Act can be found at http://PaBallotAccess. org.
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Better late than never - news - the-press | Stuff.co.nz

In sports news elsewhere, a promise is made -- broken -- and fixed. Sounds like the NFL and those 400 tickets to the Super Bowl -- but it isn't.
Better late than never - news - the-press | Stuff.co.nz

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Penguins, city discuss redevelopment

This is what lies look like.
Penguins, city discuss redevelopment

"We understand and respect [the historic review] process," he said. "We think that waiting until that is done doesn't make a whole lot of sense in terms of" being ready to start development once a decision has been made.

Read more: http://post-gazette.com/pg/11039/1123834-53.stm#ixzz1DOSdUIHf

Monday, February 07, 2011

Our 30 Year Mistake

Our 30 Year Mistake

I hope that Egyptians are able to work toward a more free and just society. Unfortunately, much of the blame for the unrest in Egypt and the resulting instability in the region rests with US foreign policy over the past several decades. The US government has sent more than $60 billion to the Egyptian regime since the Camp David Accords in 1978 to purchase stability, including more security for the state of Israel. We see now the folly of our interventionist foreign policy: not only has that stability fallen to pieces with the current unrest, but the years of propping up the corrupt regime in Egypt has led the people to increase their resentment of both America and Israel! We are both worse off for decades of intervention into Egypt’s internal affairs. I wish I could say that we have learned our lesson and will no longer attempt to purchase – or rent – friends in the Middle East, but I am afraid that is being too optimistic. Already we see evidence that while the US historically propped up the Egyptian regime, we also provided assistance to groups opposed to the regime.

Work & Life Balance