Monday, August 5, 2013

FOOTBALL Romeo vs. Stevenson at Ford Field

Romeo's Page All Football Stories The Romeo Bulldogs varsity football team has been invited to play in the Gridiron Classic against Stevenson at Ford Field on Saturday September 28. The game will begin at noon.

Romeo-Stevenson will be one of three games that day held in downtown Detroit. The others are Walled Lake Northern versus Walled Lake Central at 3 p.m.; and Lake Orion-Troy at 6 p.m.

The Gridiron Classic is sponsored by Compton Strategies of Ohio.

Tickets will be on sale at the Romeo High School Athletic Department; at the Red and White scrimmage on Saturday, August 17; and at all home games.

Pre-sale tickets are available for only $10 until September 14. Game day gate tickets will be $13.

?Our kids are really excited about this opportunity to play a game in the great venue. We are looking forward in playing on center stage in downtown Detroit,? said Curt Rienas, the Romeo co-head coach.

?This is awesome; there is not a better place to play our respected rivals, Stevenson, (except at Barnabo Stadium). Our kids can?t wait,? exclaimed Jason Couch, co-head coach at Romeo.

For more ticket information please contact the Romeo High School Athletic Department at 586 281-1145.

Last Updated: 7/24/2013 9:39:56 PM EST

Source: http://miprepzone.com/macomb/results.asp?ID=5103

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China trounces US in first-lady fashion stakes

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Source: http://media.theage.com.au/news/world-news/china-trounces-us-in-firstlady-fashion-stakes-4630433.html

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MLK memorial: Disputed quote removed (+video)

MLK memorial disputed inscription: "I was a drum major for justice, peace and righteousness." The words are not an exact quote but a paraphrase from a Martin Luther King speech. Work to remove the disputed inscription from the MLK memorial began this past week.

By Brett Zongker,?Associated Press / August 3, 2013

A Chinese sculptor has removed a disputed inscription from the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial statue that he designed on the National Mall and said Thursday that he is working on a new finish for the side of the artwork.

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Plans call for sculptor Lei Yixin to carve grooves over the former words to match existing horizontal "striation" marks in the memorial. Lei said he is working to deepen all the memorial's grooves so that they will match.

The disputed inscription was a paraphrase from King's "Drum Major" speech. It read, "I was a drum major for justice, peace and righteousness."

Critics, including the poet Maya Angelou, argued that the quotation was taken out of context when it was paraphrased and shortened. Angelou said it made King sound arrogant.

The actual quote from a 1968 speech says: "Yes, if you want to say that I was a drum major, say that I was a drum major for justice. Say that I was a drum major for peace. I was a drum major for righteousness. And all of the other shallow things will not matter."

Lei said the corrective work was going well and is on track to finish before commemorations of the 50th anniversary of King's "I Have A Dream" speech at the March on Washington on Aug. 28.

"The difficulty is the new striations ? so they won't damage the integrity of the statue itself," Lei said through an interpreter.

Lei said there was not a high probability, though, of the new carvings causing any cracks.

"It's not a big problem because the striations are designed to appear on the sides," he said. "If it has some cracks, we could deal with them."

Lei said he heard about King when he was growing up in China. He called King a "world-class hero" who was well-known in China and said it was an honor to create the statue.

"Right now, as we see, the statue looks really good," he said through his son, who served as an interpreter. "He thinks Americans would not regret picking him as the sculptor."

More than 5.2 million people visited the memorial last year, according to the National Park Service.

National Mall Superintendent Robert Vogel said the work should be completed a few days before commemorations of the March on Washington anniversary between Aug. 24 and Aug. 28.

"The response to the memorial has been overwhelmingly positive" since it was completed, Vogel said. "People have come and wept at the base of the statue. I think people have seen it as a great work of art and a great addition to the National Mall."

The changes will cost between $700,000 and $800,000, Vogel said. The work will be paid for from funds raised to build the memorial that were transferred to the National Park Foundation for repairs and maintenance.

No taxpayer dollars will be used to make the repairs, Vogel said.

The removal of an inscription or piece of a memorial is rare in Washington, but debate and controversy often accompanies every memorial construction project.

This situation was unusual in that the shortened version of the inscription was not formally approved by two panels that oversee architecture and design in the nation's capital, Vogel said. Angelou also served on a panel of historians who recommended this memorial's inscriptions.

Harry Johnson, who led the group that built the memorial, said he was pleased everyone had agreed on a solution.

"There's controversy every time you build a memorial," he said. "I can't explain it. All I can say is we're here to take care of it and make sure it's done correctly."

___

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/MpWBMgOi8pI/MLK-memorial-Disputed-quote-removed-video

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Powerball jackpot at $400M after no weekend winner

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) ? No one hit the Powerball jackpot on Saturday, so the money will roll over: A cool $400 million for the next drawing.

While hefty, the prize for Wednesday's drawing is still well below the record $590.5 million jackpot won in May by an 84-year-old Florida woman.

The winning numbers Saturday were 21, 24, 36, 42 and 45; the Powerball was 15.

The odds of matching all six numbers are 1 in 175.2 million.

Powerball is played in 43 states, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

___

Online:

www.powerball.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/powerball-jackpot-400m-no-weekend-winner-134154580.html

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Twitter hostilities between players from Oakland A's, Texas Rangers ends peacefully

OAKLAND ? The social media hostility on Twitter between Rangers pitcher Matt Garza and A's second baseman Eric Sogard and his wife, Kaycee, is over, apparently with no lasting damage.

Garza was unhappy that Sogard bunted home a run against him in the seventh inning Saturday. The A's were up 3-2 at the time, but Garza hadn't allowed a run since the first inning, and the A's decided to exploit the fact that Garza isn't particularly good at fielding his position.

He yelled at Sogard at the time, and after the game, a 4-2 A's win, Garza responded to Kaycee Sogard's tweets about Eric's successful bunt with a series misogynistic of tweets that talked about baseball being ``a man's game,'' suggesting that Kaycee Sogard ``keep your trap shut,'' and telling Eric Sogard ``to keep your wife out of it.''

On Sunday, Garza issued an apology on his twitter feed and apologized when talking to the media.

The Sogards were with A's teammates and their spouses at an A's charity bowling event Saturday night while the altercation took place. Sogard said Sunday morning he had a couple of teammates mention something to him during the bowling, but he didn't get the full picture until he and Kaycee went home.

``We got home last night and talked about it and we thought it basically it was pretty funny,'' he said. ``It was like `Can you believe this is happening?' But it did happen.''

Garza's media apology and his twitter apology were basically the same.

``All I want to say is I let my competitive spirit cross outside the lines, and that shouldn't happen,'' Garza said. ``I let my passion, my fire, carry over, and that's not the way this game should be played. For that, I apologize to the Sogards for anything that was said through my Twitter. Regret what happened and looking forward to a great game today.''

Rangers assistant general manager Thad Levine, who called Garza's twitter outburst ``totally inappropriate,'' called the A's to personally apologize. And he and several members of the Texas front office talked with Garza, who was recently acquired from the Cubs to beef up the Rangers' starting rotation.

``We had a conversation with him (this morning.),'' Levine said. ``I certainly did, and individually a number of people have had discussions with him. He's been very conciliatory. Those are the type of conversations where you expect to sit down and work out some emotions. He was contrite right from the outset of the conversation.''

One of Levine's suggestions to Garza was that he get off Twitter, and he said Garza ``seemed to go along with it.''

For their part the A's aren't asking any of their players to tone down their tweets in any way and manager Bob Melvin said he didn't see any long-term impact.

``Will it make the rivalry (more intense?) I don't know,'' Melvin said. ``It's already at a pretty high intensity.''

Rangers manager Ron Washington, a very old school guy, not only isn't on Twitter (Melvin was for a bit in spring training but isn't now), but he said he wasn't exactly sure what Twitter was.

``What's Twitter anyway?'' Washington asked. ``People's opinions?''

The Texas manager said he didn't expect there to be any carryover and that he wouldn't ask his players to abandon Twitter.

Source: http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_23794131/twitter-hostilities-between-players-from-oakland-texas-rangers?source=rss

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

China, India See Interests Converge in Upholding Nepal Stability

Traditionally competitors for influence in neighboring Nepal, China and India are now signaling readiness to join forces to pull the Himalayan nation out of its chronic political instability.

The contours of a formal cooperation framework are yet to emerge. But academic and media circles in China and India suggest a growing convergence of interest in preventing instability from spilling across Nepal?s borders. ...

Source: http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/13129/china-india-see-interests-converge-in-upholding-nepal-stability

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Cars banned as Rome moves to protect Coliseum - World News

Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

Pedestrians swarm around the Coliseum in Rome Saturday after cars were banned from part of the Via dei Fori Imperiali.

By Claudio Lavanga, Correspondent, NBC News

ROME -- The Coliseum in Rome was arguably the most beautiful traffic circle in the world. For decades, thousands of cars and vespas zipped around the ancient amphitheater every day. But from Saturday, all that is history.

Exhaust fumes slowly blackened the amphitheater?s once shiny marble, and experts worried the tremors caused by traffic could threaten the fragile monument.?

Part of Via dei Fori Imperiali -- the spectacular cobblestone avenue that leads to the Coliseum -- was closed to traffic apart from public transport Saturday and turned into the ?most stunningly beautiful boulevard in the world.?

Romans and tourists will finally be able stand in front of the most famous symbol of ancient Rome without fearing they will be run over by impatient motorists -- though some nearby roads are still open.

?Visitors will walk where Julius and Augustus Caesar walked, in the shadows of the Campidoglio Hill and magnificent Coliseum,? Ignazio Marino, the newly elected mayor of Rome, said. ?In this location of truly stunning beauty, once more we witness history in the making.?

In a way, Marino has made history of his own.

The pedestrianization of Via dei Fori Imperiali and the Coliseum has been a talking point for decades, but the idea never took off due to the absence of alternative routes for the 1,200 motorists an hour that used it during peak times.

However, Marino turned his election pledge into reality just seven weeks after he took office in June.

?The project came about and has developed thanks to the participation of the men and women of Rome, as a measure which shall enhance quality of life and kindle a new-found love of the city,? Marino boasts on the official project website.

But not all ?men and women of Rome? think the pedestrianization will ?enhance the quality? of their life.

Hundreds people who live on or around roads that will take the bulk of the diverted traffic oppose the project and blame Marino for throwing them to the lions.

On nearby Via Merulana, an avenue already plagued by heavy traffic, smog and noise pollution, locals shook their heads at the sight of police reducing parking spaces to make room for the expected increase in traffic.

A hundred yards away, city council workers drew an extra lane, turning the already bustling road into a kind of inner-city highway.

Fearful that the fast-moving traffic, lack of parking spaces and the general ensuing chaos would drive clients away, angry shopkeepers and others formed a pressure group to stop, or at least modify, the project.

?This can only end badly for us,? Michele de Angelis, a local newsagent, said. ?With fast-moving traffic, nobody is going to be able to stop by, even to buy a newspaper. And traffic will be so bad soon people will simply decide to avoid the area.?

Despite the residents? fears, Marino plans to press on. He plans to kick out the mobile food carts, illegal vendors and costume-clad wannabe gladiators who turned the amphitheater into a tourist trap.

And next, he dreams of closing down surrounding areas to traffic, including the bustling Piazza Venezia.

Marino also hopes to get money from the European Union to start digging in around the forum to turn it into the ?biggest archeological area in the world.?

He may have been mayor of Rome for only seven weeks, but some see a hint of the emperors of old in his ambition and drive.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/08/03/19848343-cars-banned-as-rome-moves-to-protect-coliseum?lite

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