Tuesday, 30 July 2013

Pirates: Ford still confident Poole can plunder play-off berth

Pirates: Ford still confident Poole can plunder play-off berth

MATT Ford insists Pirates can boost their Elite League points tally at Belle Vue tonight as they bid to maintain their remarkable play-off push.

Pirates have overcome a series of major injury problems this year to remain in the race for a place in the end-of-season silverware showdown.

After losing Robert Miskowiak early on, Pirates have also had to cope without Darcy Ward, Tomas H Jonasson and Chris Holder for extended periods in 2013.

But with legendary two-times world champion Greg Hancock replacing stricken skipper Holder and Ward and Jonasson back to fitness, Poole now have high hopes.

Ahead of tonight?s trip to Belle Vue, Pirates are three points behind fourth-placed Lakeside and two ahead of King?s Lynn, although both have a meeting in hand.

Poole promoter Ford told the Daily Echo: ?We know the last place is between King?s Lynn, Lakeside and ourselves. We have ridden more matches than both of those clubs but having said that, they have got to ride each other twice and we have also got to face Lakeside at home and away.

?I certainly feel that we need to go to Belle Vue and score something and all being well, with Greg in the team, I believe we can certainly achieve that.

?We genuinely need some good fortune rather than bad. We are still in there fighting, which is quite incredible, given our injury problems this year.?

While Pirates are hoping Hancock?s paperwork will be completed in time for the trip north, they are set to be boosted by the return of Jonasson following chest, rib, shoulder and collarbone injuries.

Pirates star Maciej Janowski will feature after scoring 10 points in the first European Championship final on Saturday.

Belle Vue: (from) Cook, A Dryml, R/R for Nieminen, Ostergaard, Wolbert, Zagar, Zetterstrom.

Pirates: (from) Dyer, Grajczonek, Hancock, Janowski, Jonasson, Tungate, Ward.

Source: http://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/sport/10577002.Pirates__Ford_still_confident_Poole_can_plunder_play_off_berth/?ref=rss

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wildsting: The Black Privilege Checklist



Peggy McIntosh wrote a White Privilege Checklist which I found ridiculous.? In order to paint a clearer picture of my reality and the reality of the silent majority (whites and black conservatives), I decided to compile a black privilege checklist.? Viola:

1??? 1. Affirmative action

2 ?? 2.? Black only scholarships

3??? 3. SSI

4??? 4. TANF

5??? 5. No Child Left Behind

6??? 6. Censorship

7 ?? 7.? Hate crime legislation

8??? 8. Usage of nigger versus cracker (or faggot, bitch, ho, cunt, dirty Jew, chink, etc.)

9 ?? 9.? Obamacare

1?? 10. Medicaid

1?? 11. Food stamps

1?? 12. Publicly funded school lunches

L?? 13. Low income/HUD housing

1?? 14.?? SSDI

1?? 15.?? Black only organizations, including: National Association of Black sin Criminal Justice, The National Association of Black Journalist, National Association of black Owned Broadcasters, National Association of Equal Opportunity in Higher Education, Conference of Minority Public Administrators, Black Psychiatrists of America, Black Causes of the American Library Association, American Association of Blacks n Energy, National Back Media Coalition, National Black Police Association, National Black Staff Network, National Coalition of Black meeting planner, National Conference of Black Mayor, National Council of Black Engineers and Scientists, National Forum for Black Public Administrators, and the National Minority Supplier Development Council

1?? 16.?? Diversity management/training including the Roosevelt Thomas?s Institute or Managing Diversity 1994 conference, which cost $1,500 a head

1?? 17.?? Discrimination lawsuits

1?? 18.?? Over-representation in the media in positive roles

1 ? 19.?? Redistricting/proportional representation

2?? 20.?? Afrocentric schools including Marcus Garvey Elementary School

2?? 21.?? Afrocentric curricula at predominantly white school

2?? 22.?? High self-esteem

2?? 23.?? Fewer body image issues

2?? 24.?? Versatility of hair styles

2?? 25.?? Multiculturalism

2?? 26.?? Anti-colonial or Third World Scholarship

2?? 27.?? Deconstructionism

2?? 28.?? Busing

2?? 29.?? Civil Rights Establishment lawsuits/shakedowns including the $90 million discrimination lawsuit against Lucky Stores for having their employees compile a list of minority stereotypes

3?? 30.?? Proliferation of the cool-pose/hip hop culture

3 ? 31.?? Solidarity, the one-drop rule

3?? 32.?? Aggressive temperament, black rage, white guilt

3?? 33.?? Anti-racist groups including: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), People for the American Way, and American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), National Conference of Black Mayors, National Black Caucus of State Legislators, Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), National Action Network, Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, and the National Education Association

3?? 34.? ?Exaggerated accusations of racism?

3?? 35.?? Rigging of standardized tests including: Scholastic Aptitude/Assessment Test (SAT), Law School Admissions Test (LSAT), Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT), Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery, Graduate Record Exams (GRE), Foreign Service Entrance Exam, General Aptitude Test Battery (GATB) (used for job references), ACT, and MCAT

3? 36.?? Remedial training, costing $30 billion a year

3? 37.?? Backing of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), who could care less about white or Asian grievances

3? 38.?? Popularity of black hate groups/philosophies, including Nation of Islam and melanin theory (a theory that the black race is more evolved than the white race)

4 40.?? All attempts at a dialogue on race becoming one-sided, with hostility on the part of black liberals and leftists who then dominate the conversation

As you can hopefully glean, my list has many more important elements in it than McIntosh?s dopey list.? What would you rather do: lament the dearth of flesh-colored Band-Aids and the difficulty of isolating yourself, or consider yourself fortunate and empathize with your fellow Americans for once, the few whites who are willing to speak up about this?

Source: http://wildsting.blogspot.com/2013/07/the-black-privilege-checklist.html

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Saturday, 27 July 2013

Five questions that will be answered by UFC on Fox 8

The UFC returns to network television with Saturday's UFC on Fox 8 bouts. What will we learn from these fights? Check it out.

Can flyweights put on a bout people will want to watch? Small fighters usually have more energy in the cage. Their technique is usually better because they can't rely on muscling their opponents. They fly around the octagon with speed heavyweights and light heavyweights can only dream of. But is that enough to get people to tune in? Saturday's card is headlined by a flyweight title bout between Demetrious Johnson and John Moraga. Will you tune in?

Is Jake Ellenberger deserving of a welterweight title shot? He has just one loss in his last eight fights. His last win was a memorable knockout of Nate Marquardt, but it wasn't enough to earn a title shot. On Saturday, he's facing off with Rory MacDonald. With an impressive win, Ellenberger can get closer to the UFC belt. Will he get it?

Can Liz Carmouche rebound from her loss to Ronda Rousey? For her first UFC fight, Liz Carmouche was under an intense spotlight. As one of the first two women to fight in the UFC, she was expected to put on a thrilling fight. She delivered, but lost to current bantamweight champ Rousey. Now she will fight Jessica Andrade in a slightly lower-profile fight. Will Carmouche get her first UFC win?

Was Robbie Lawler's win over Josh Koscheck a fluke? At UFC 157, Lawler earned a Knockout of the Night bonus for his first-round KO of Koscheck. But after years of inconsistent fighting in Strikeforce, did the knockout win mean Lawler is a true contender? We will find out as he takes on Bobby Voelker on Saturday.

Is this Melvin Guillard's last fight in the UFC? Guillard is 1-4 in his last five fights. He admits not only is he lucky to still have a place in the UFC, but only has it because he took the fight with Donald Cerrone. If he doesn't beat Danzig, he doesn't expect to have a job.

"I've got one foot in [the UFC] and one foot out, but I'll be damned if I let both feet get kicked out. Right now, I'm fighting for my job. I'm not going to get cut from the UFC. I'll die in that ring on July 27th before I let Danzig take my job from me," Guillard told ESPN.

Will that determination be enough for a win, or is this the last fight in the UFC for Guillard, who debuted with the promotion in 2008?

Check out Cagewriter on Facebook and Twitter for more UFC on Fox 8 discussion.

Related coverage on Yahoo! Sports:
? Super prospect Rory MacDonald still seeking defining win
? Flyweight contender John Moraga's title quest forged by tragedy
? What MMA fans need to know about Fox Sports 1
? Ronda Rousey to appear in movie with Sly Stallone

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/five-questions-answered-ufc-fox-8-152740183.html

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European court says Russia's Khodorkovsky case not political

STRASBOURG (Reuters) - A European court ruled on Thursday Russia had a legitimate case against ex-oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and business partner Platon Lebedev over alleged tax fraud, rejecting suggestions it had been political motivated.

But the European Court of Human Rights found that their trial had been unfair and that their 2005 sentencing to a remote jail near the Arctic Circle was unjustified.

Khodorkovsky, a staunch critic of President Vladimir Putin and once Russia's richest man, was arrested in 2003 and handed alongside Lebedev 13 years jail on charges of multi-million dollar tax evasion and money laundering.

"Charges against two Russian business executives had a sound basis, but the hearing of their case was unfair, and their placement in remote penal colonies unjustified," the Strasbourg-based court said.

Judges from the court ordered Moscow to pay 10,000 euros ($13,200) to Khodorkovsky in damages.

The punishment, which in December was reduced by two years allowing the two men to walk free in October 2014, was seen by supporters as a politically-motivated act of revenge.

Thirteen people have been freed so far as part of an amnesty for Russia's jailed entrepreneurs intended to correct failures in Russia's legal system, which has often seen entrepreneurs jailed on trumped-up charges.

However it applies only to those who have been convicted once and agree to repay damages - ruling out Khodorkovsky, who was convicted of fraud again in 2010.

Khodorkovsky, now 50, was one of the young tycoons who built fortunes after the Soviet Union's 1991 collapse.

Both sides have three months to appeal the court's decision.

(Reporting By Gilbert Reilhac; writing by John Irish; editing by Mark John)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/european-court-says-russias-khodorkovsky-case-not-political-100040092.html

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Friday, 26 July 2013

IMF explains itself on Argentine debt case

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Source: www.argentinanews.net --- Thursday, July 25, 2013
The International Monetary Fund today tried to justify why it reversed course on filing a brief at the US Supreme Court on the Argentine Debt case, saying that the institution?s political neutrality was at stake. During a press briefing in Washington, IMF spokesman William Murray told reporters that it wouldn?t have been appropriate "at this stage" to file a brief without ... ...

Source: http://www.argentinanews.net/index.php/sid/216065924/scat/d9ed072d737073b4

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Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Mayor?s Fitness Council winners named for 2013

Mayor Julian Castro has announced the winners of the 2013 Healthy Heroes Campaign.

Mayor Julian Castro has announced the winners of his Fitness Council?s 2013 Healthy Heroes Campaign.

These seven winners will represent the Mayor?s Fitness Council by promoting and encouraging healthy living at home and their workplaces.

The seven Healthy Heroes were chosen from 151 nominations that were submitted across San Antonio.

? Cesar Canizalez won in the youth individual health and fitness improvement ? weight loss category. In order to maintain an active lifestyle in high school, Canizalez plays band at Churchill High School.

? Sarah Cazares won in the adult individual health and fitness improvement category. She completed half marathons and the tower climb all with lower lung capacity due to cystic fibrosis.

? Ivan Bermejo won in the youth peer health and fitness influence category. He helped overhaul the school lunch program at Edison High School to introduce more fruit and vegetable and whole grain options.

? Irma Garcia won in the adult peer health and fitness influence category. She volunteers and mentors co-workers at Baptist Medical Center to participate in healthy activities in the workplace.

? Makayla and Alyssa Esparza won in the youth community health and fitness influence category. These two elementary school sisters established Fitness FUNatics as a way to encourage neighborhood children to exercise in a fun, safe environment.

? Irma Bijarro won in the adult community health and fitness influence category. Bijarro participated in a city program to sell more fruits and vegetables at corner stores but also went a step further by eliminating the sale of beer and cigarettes at her Westside store.

James Aldridge oversees online content of the newspaper; edits and reports stories for the online edition.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_33/~3/i0432K3n85c/mayors-fitness-council-winners-named.html

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Monday, 22 July 2013

Exclusive: U.S. congressional hurdles lifted on arming Syrian rebels (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/321087757?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Latest Minnesota news, sports, business and entertainment

MINNEAPOLIS FATAL SHOOTING

Man fatally shot in chest in Minneapolis

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? A 23-year-old man who was fatally shot in Minneapolis has been identified.

A release from the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's office says DeShaun Guilmant of St. Cloud was shot multiple times in the chest Friday night. He died on scene.

According to the Sunday news release, the Minneapolis police department is investigating the shooting as a homicide.

ST PAUL POLICE LAWSUITS

St. Paul pays $1M in 2012 for police lawsuits

(Information in the following story is from: St. Paul Pioneer Press, http://www.twincities.com)

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) ? The city of St. Paul paid about $1 million in total costs for lawsuits alleging police misconduct last year.

The St. Paul Pioneer Press reports that's the largest amount in at least 17 years.

Of the eight lawsuits settled in 2012, half the incidents occurred during Chief Thomas Smith's tenure. The other half were during John Harrington's time as chief. His six-year term started in 2004.

City Attorney Sara Grewing says larger conclusions shouldn't be drawn from the recent cases because the decision to settle is based on what's in the best financial interest of the city.

President of the St. Paul NAACP, Jeff Martin, says an officer who costs the city and taxpayers this sort of money should be held to a higher standard.

STABBING DEATH-DULUTH

Minn. teen to be tried as adult in veteran's death

(Information in the following story is from: Duluth News Tribune, http://www.duluthnewstribune.com)

DULUTH, Minn. (AP) ? A Duluth teen charged with killing a United States Army veteran who suffered more than 50 wounds to his head, face, neck and back will be tried as an adult.

Enrique "Ricky" Robert Giner IV had been charged in a juvenile delinquency petition with second-degree murder in the March slaying of 27-year-old Bryan Alan Starnes in Duluth. He was 17 at the time. Giner turned 18 on July 7th.

The Duluth News Tribune reports a judge accepted Giner's waiver into adult court and ordered he be moved from Arrowhead Juvenile Center to the St. Louis County Jail. He will be charged with the same crime in an adult criminal complaint.

Starnes was an Army veteran who served a tour of duty in Afghanistan.

PHOTOGRAPHY STORE-HOMICIDES

Trial to start for Minn. man in double homicide

(Information in the following story is from: La Crosse Tribune, http://www.lacrossetribune.com)

LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) ? The trial for a Minnesota man accused of killing a La Crosse photography store owner and his son last September is set to begin this week.

Prosecutors are expected to argue that outstanding debt from a prior felony case drove Jeffrey Lepsch, a hobby photographer, to rob May's Photo on September 15th and shoot 56-year-old Paul Petras and his 19-year-old son A.J.

The La Crosse Tribune reports jury selection is set for Tuesday and Lepsch's trial is expected to last nine days.

His three public defenders have not revealed the defense.

The 40-year-old from Dakota, Minnesota is charged in La Crosse County with two counts of first-degree intentional homicide, armed robbery with use of force and possession of a firearm.

Lepsch remains jailed on a $2 million cash bond.

FRAC SAND DEMAND

Demand for frac sand falls in Wis., Minn.

(Information in the following story is from: Winona Daily News, http://www.winonadailynews.com)

WINONA, Minn. (AP) ? Short-term demand for frac sand in western Wisconsin and eastern Minnesota has fallen because there's more sand available than the industry currently needs.

The Winona Daily News reports demand had exploded several years ago, spurring companies to open mines and processing facilities and ship across the country for fracking operations.

Paul van Eijl works on purchasing land for Superior Sand Systems in the region. He says until demand increases the company's new facility in Wabasha, permitted in December 2012, will likely remain idle.

The Freedonia Group, a market research organization, estimates that the annual demand for silica sand will increase by at least 4.8 percent every year at least until 2016.

Winona County planning and environmental services director Jason Gilman says he suspects the stabilization is only temporary.

MINNESOTA WATERFOWL

Minnesota breeding duck population rises

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) ? Despite a record late ice-out, spring waterfowl surveys show that Minnesota's breeding duck population has improved from last year.

The Department of Natural Resources estimates the state's breeding duck population at 683,000 compared with 469,000 last year. This year's estimate is 10 percent above the long-term average.

This year's Canada goose population is estimated at 250,000, considerably less than last year's 416,000. The DNR says cold temperatures and April snowfall combined with a late ice-out reduced nesting success. But DNR wildlife section chief Paul Telander says the goose population remains higher than managers want it to be.

So Minnesota will hold its first-ever August Canada goose season from August 10th through 25th in a special zone in west-central Minnesota.

The DNR will announce this fall's waterfowl hunting regulations later this summer.

Source: http://www.newstalkradiowhio.com/news/ap/military/latest-minnesota-news-sports-business-and-entertai/nYyjh/

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KC animal shelters reduce adoption fees

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. - The Kern County Animal Control announced a week-long adoption promotion for Monday, July 22 through Saturday, July 27.

The initiative, called "Make a Match and Save a Life," allows people to adopt pets at reduced fees.

Dog adoption fees were reduced to $20; cat adoption fees were reduced to $10.

Fees include spay/neuter surgery, microchip, vaccines and one year dog license for eligible dogs.

People adopting pets can participate in games for addition discounts.

The Kern County Animal Control shelters in Bakersfield, Lake Isabella and Mojave are participating.

The Kern County Animal Control has had over 1,600 adoptions this year and rescued over 2,100 animals.

?

Copyright 2013 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.turnto23.com/news/local-news/kern-county-animal-control-shelters-hosting-adoption-week-long-drive-reduce-fees-072113

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Sunday, 21 July 2013

Japan PM heads for election victory amid policy concerns

By Linda Sieg

TOKYO (Reuters) - Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's ruling bloc looks set for a handsome upper house election win on Sunday, cementing his grip on power and setting the stage for Japan's first stable government since the charismatic Junichiro Koizumi left office in 2006.

The victory would give the hawkish leader a stronger mandate for his recipe to revive the economy and spell his personal political redemption after he led his party to a defeat in a 2007 upper house election. That poll allowed the opposition to block legislation and led to Abe's resignation two months later.

After a string of revolving-door leaders, Abe, 58, returned to power following a big win in December's lower house poll for his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and coalition partner the New Komeito. He has said he will remain focused on fixing the economy with his "Abenomics" mix of hyper-easy monetary policy, fiscal spending and structural reforms.

But some worry that Abe's resolve for economic reform could weaken in the face of a resurgent LDP. A landslide victory could bolster opposition to regulatory reform from LDP lawmakers with close ties to industries that would suffer from change.

Abe could also shift his focus to the conservative agenda that has long been close to his heart, and concentrate on revising the post-war pacifist constitution and recasting Tokyo's wartime history with a less apologetic tone.

Such a shift -- along with moves to strengthen Japan's defense posture -- would further fray ties with China and South Korea, where bitter memories of Japan's past militarism run deep. Tokyo is already engaged in tense territorial rows with Beijing and Seoul over tiny, uninhabited islands.

Abe has declined to say whether he will visit Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine for war dead, where Japanese leaders convicted by an Allied tribunal as war criminals are also honored. A visit on the August 15 anniversary of Japan's defeat in World War Two would spark outrage in the region.

A Reuters poll showed Japanese firms generally want the LDP to win the election but worry that a landslide victory will allow Abe to prioritize nationalist policies at the expense of the economy, as critics charge he did during his troubled 2006-2007 term as prime minister.

Voting begins at 7 a.m. (2200 GMT) and closes at 8 p.m. (1100 GMT) when media will project the outcome based on exit polls. Final results will be known late Sunday or early Monday.

Media forecasts show the LDP and New Komeito are on track to win more than 70 of the 121 seats up for grabs in Sunday's poll for the 242-seat upper house.

With the coalition's uncontested 59 seats, that would hand it a hefty majority, solidifying Abe's grip on power and raising the chances of a long-term Japanese leader for the first time since the reformist Koizumi's rare five-year term ended in 2006.

Forecasts also show the LDP has a shot at winning an upper house majority in its own right for the first time since 1989, although analysts and politicians say the conservative, pro-business party is unlikely to dump its partner because it relies on it to help get votes.

But the LDP and two smaller parties that back Abe's drive to revise Japan's pacifist constitution to legitimize the military looked likely to fall short of the two-thirds majority needed to take revisions of the charter to a public referendum. Those parties already have two-thirds of the lower house seats.

Media have also forecast that the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan, which surged to power in 2009 to end more than half a century of almost non-stop LDP rule only to be ousted last year, could suffer its biggest drubbing since its founding in 1998.

That would raise concerns about prospects for a competitive two-party democracy.

(Reporting by Linda Sieg)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japan-pm-heads-election-victory-amid-policy-concerns-210648593.html

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0


Samsung tries to make a product for everyone: every size, every price, every feature. The Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 ($299.99) tries to hit the sweet spot for small tablets, but ends up straddling an uncomfortable fence?more expensive than?the Google Nexus 7, but less capable than the?Apple iPad mini and the outstanding Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0. It's a very good tablet, buoyed by its multitasking and universal remote abilities, but it's outflanked by competitors. ?

Design and Features
The Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 looks like a comically large Galaxy S4?you get the same all-plastic construction, glazed finish, and faux-metal accents around a strikingly similar silhouette. Fortunately, the Tab 3 8.0 also mimics the S4's thin bezels and slim dimensions, measuring 8.26 by 4.87 by 0.28 inches (HWD) and weighing 10.9 ounces. That's right in line with the iPad mini (0.28 inches thick and 10.9 ounces) and a good deal thinner and lighter than the 7.8-by-4.7-by-0.4 inches, 12-ounce Nexus 7. This tablet is eminently comfortable to hold, despite packing a larger screen than most Android competitors.

The 8-inch, 1,280-by-800-pixel LCD is excellent. It's sharper than the iPad mini's, appears brighter side by side, and has really high contrast. The contrast isn't quite as high as Samsung's OLED displays, but you also get far more accurate color representation here. Below the display is a physical Home button flanked by capacitive Menu and Back buttons. Along the left edge is a flap covering the microSD card slot, while the opposite side houses the Volume and Power buttons, as well as an IR-emitter for remote control functions. Along the bottom edge are two speaker grilles and, thankfully, a microUSB port in lieu of Samsung's older proprietary port.

This is a Wi-Fi only tablet that connects to 802.11b/g/n networks on both the 2.4GHz and 5GHz frequencies. I had no trouble connecting to multiple routers in our lab, and where many tablets only have a weak signal from my desk, the Tab 3 8.0 consistently held onto a strong connection. Also on board are Bluetooth 4.0 and satellite GPS, but not NFC. Samsung offers the Tab 3 8.0 in single 16GB model for $299.99, and our 32 and 64GB SanDisk microSD cards worked without issue.

Performance and Android
The Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 isn't a speed demon like its pen-wielding stablemate, the Note 8.0, but it gets the job done. Powering the Tab 3 is Samsung's dual-core 1.5GHz Exynos 4212 processor, Mali 400 GPU, and 1.5GB RAM. In our overall system benchmarks, the Tab 3 8.0 turned in numbers just shy of the Nexus 7, but gained ground in our graphics tests, outpacing the aging Tegra 3-powered tablet. Anecdotally, the Tab 3 8.0 felt very smooth in operation, whether it was flicking through heavily populated homescreens, switching between running apps, or scrolling through various websites. There was the occasional stutter and lag when opening more resource-hungry apps, but that's the case with nearly every Android tablet. My biggest complaint here is somewhat finicky touch input. The slim bezels are great for keeping this portable, but the palm rejection that worked so well on the Note 8.0 seems to be less effective here. I noticed errant touches, zooms instead of scrolls, and other inconsistencies when not careful about my hand placement.

In our battery test, which loops a video with screen brightness set to maximum and Wi-Fi switched on, the Tab 3 8.0 lasted 6 hours, 48 minutes. That's close to the Kindle Fire HD's 7 hours, but falls well short of the Nexus 7's 10 hours, 50 minutes on the same test. Battery life shouldn't be an issue, but it's not a strong point here.

Camera performance is pretty basic?you get the same lackluster 5-megapixel rear-facing and 1.3-megapixel front-facing cameras found on the Note 8.0. Images looked flat and devoid of finer detail, regardless of lighting conditions. Exposure is a problem for stills and video, as the Tab 3 8.0 tends to overexpose scenes. Video maxes out at 720p and looks pretty mediocre even in good lighting, and pretty bad in low light scenarios. The front-facing camera is serviceable for video chats, and that's all I'd recommend using it for.

The Tab 3 8.0 is running the latest Android 4.2.2 "Jelly Bean," which already gives it a leg up on most tablets that are still stuck on 4.1.2. ?Samsung is relentless when it comes to its Android skin TouchWiz, but while purists might cry out, the modifications here don't really get in the way and are, for the most part, pretty useful. You get the usual bevy of pre-loaded apps and Samsung tie-ins. These include ChatOn, Samsung's chat service; Samsung's app, game, and music stores; Group Play and Samsung Link for sharing between Samsung devices; S Planner, S Translator, and S Voice; and various other apps and services.

The great pen support of the Note is missing, but there are still a number of useful modifications to Android itself. You get Samsung features like Smart Stay that keeps the screen on when you're looking at it and Voice Commands for easily pausing videos or snoozing alarms. Even the excellent Multi Window multitasking support is here, letting you run two apps side by side in split screen mode. Not every app is supported, but there's a good selection of Samsung apps and Google apps like Chrome and Gmail that make this a pretty useful feature.

Multimedia and Conclusions
Samsung has done a good job with multimedia support and features for its Galaxy tablets. For video, the Tab 3 8.0 supports MP4, H.264, DivX, Xvid, and WMV files at up to 1080p resolution. For audio you get MP3, AAC, FLAC, OGG, WAV, and WMA support. You can also mirror your screen using DLNA with supported HDTVs or use an MHL adapter to connect the Tab 3 8.0 with an HDMI cable.

IR emitters are becoming the norm for Galaxy devices, and the Tab 3 8.0 benefits from the same universal remote control features found on the Note 8.0. You can use the pre-loaded WatchON app from Samsung or Peel Smart Remote app to browse local TV listings and control a variety of home entertainment devices, from HDTVs to set top boxes. Both apps worked in my tests, but neither can schedule recordings for DVR boxes.

The Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 gets so much right, from the thin and light design to the multitasking to the built-in remote control features. But it's amazingly forgettable. There's just something utterly bland about this tablet, lacking the ineffable desirability that leads to an Editor's Choice. It's priced much higher than capable Android competitors like the Nexus 7, and just a little too close to the iPad mini with all the great tablet apps that come with iOS. The Tab 3 8.0 fills a void that may not exist. Some will find it absolutely perfect, at a price they can stomach. Most, however, will be better served stepping up or down to an iPad mini or Nexus 7.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/3bQPLya71P4/0,2817,2421847,00.asp

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Boston mob boss trial watchers wonder: Will 'Whitey' talk?

(Note: Paragraph 15 contains language that may offend some readers)

By Scott Malone

BOSTON (Reuters) - For six weeks, James "Whitey" Bulger's trial has played out like a movie. The longtime Boston mob boss has angrily cursed in open court, his own lawyer has described him as a mobster, and a potential witness turned up dead on the side of a road.

As prosecutors prepare to wrap up their case in the next few days and hand it over to the defense, the biggest question on observers' minds is whether the 83-year-old defendant will raise the dramatic ante by taking the witness stand.

Bulger, whose story inspired the 2006 Academy Award-winning film "The Departed," emerged as one of Boston's most feared criminals in the 1970s and 80s. He ran a gang that prosecutors allege sold drugs, extorted bookies and murdered competitors, suspected informants and innocent bystanders.

"There's a significant likelihood of a fairly out-of-the-box experience, and that is Whitey using the opportunity to testify as his final moment in the sun and a chance for score-settling ... embarrassing old foes and old rivals," said former federal prosecutor Mark Pearlstein, a partner in the Boston law firm McDermott Will & Emery.

Bulger, who has lost the shock of light-colored hair that earned him the nickname "Whitey" in his youth, has pleaded not guilty to all charges. But for decades, he has been notorious for his reign as head of South Boston's Winter Hill gang.

Those years of murder and mayhem have been on display during the trial, as witnesses described how the gang smuggled drugs and firearms, extorted a variety of people from bookies to business owners, and murdered rivals, suspected informants and innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire.

On Thursday, police said one of Bulger's extortion victims, who had hoped to testify at the trial, had turned up dead. The body showed no signs of trauma but authorities are conducting an autopsy and doing toxicology tests.

Defense attorneys often advise their clients not to take the stand. The risk of alienating the jury or causing jurors to doubt the honesty of the accused is said to outweigh any benefit of the defendant telling his side of the story.

But given Bulger's reputation and after six weeks of testimony from dozens of witnesses ranging from former mob associates to relatives of murder victims, he may feel he has nothing to lose.

Bulger may also want a chance to publicly dispute the accusation that appears to bother him most: that he acted as an FBI informant.

In his opening statements, lead defense attorney J.W. Carney described Bulger as an extortionist, drug dealer and loan shark who ran an "unbelievably lucrative criminal enterprise."

What the defense has not acknowledged, and has spent much of its time trying to discredit, is that Bulger cooperated with the FBI, specifically corrupt agent John Connolly. The former agent is now serving a 40-year prison sentence on murder and racketeering convictions.

Bulger contends he paid Connolly for information but provided none of his own. The mob boss regards talking to the authorities, or being "a rat," as the worst offense a gang member could commit. Prosecutors contend Bulger murdered several people he believed were talking to the FBI.

One of Bulger's notable outbursts in the trial came when Connolly's former FBI boss, John Morris, was on the stand describing a cozy relationship between Bulger and the bureau.

"You're a fucking liar," Bulger shouted.

Trial watchers point to outbursts like that as signs that Bulger believes he has little chance of beating charges that carry the possibility of life in prison.

"I will be very surprised if 'Whitey' Bulger testifies," said Thomas Peisch, a partner with Boston law firm Conn Kavanaugh and a former state prosecutor. "However, it does not appear that he has anything to lose and his ego may carry the day."

Bulger fled Boston and eluded capture for 16 years after Connolly tipped him off in 1994 that arrest was imminent. He appeared on the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted" list, but many in Boston thought he would never be found. Agents found him in June, 2011, living in a seaside apartment in Santa Monica, California.

Now that he is back in the spotlight, Bulger may seek a last chance to beef up the myth of a straight-shooting mobster, who lived by a code of rough justice and silence.

"If he does end up taking the stand, it's because he knows it's over and there might be some rough going, but he wants that wrestling match, he wants to shout back at the prosecutors," said Richard Lehr, author of a book on Bulger titled "Black Mass" and a professor of journalism at Boston University.

(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Paul Thomasch and David Gregorio)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boston-mob-boss-trial-watchers-wonder-whitey-talk-110426366.html

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Stephen Rakes' Death 'Suspicious': Police Investigate After Whitey Bulger Trial Witness' Body Found

Authorities say that the death of a man who was on the witness list in the trial of mobster James "Whitey" Bulger is suspicious.

The body of Stephen "Stippo" Rakes was found on Wednesday in Lincoln, Mass. The cause of death is yet unknown, and the Middlesex district attorney's office reported that there were "no obvious signs of trauma."

An unnamed law enforcement source told New England Cable News that the death is being investigated as suspicious. The cause of death is pending a complete autopsy and toxicology results.

The timing of Rakes' death was noteworthy, given that he was prepared to testify against one of the country's most notorious fugitives. Bulger, 83, is on trial for 19 murders, racketeering, and other charges.

Rakes, 59, was prepared to testify that he was threatened, with a gun, to sell his South Boston liquor store at below-market value in 1984 so that Bulger and the Winter Hill Gang could use it as a front, according to NBC News. He alleged that Bulger placed the gun on his kitchen table and made demands.

"One of my daughters picked up the gun and that's when I called my wife to say we were selling the store," he told HuffPost Crime last month.

Last week, however, Bulger's former associate Kevin Weeks testified that Rakes was trying to shake down the gangsters for cash, sparking the gun incident.

Rakes waited for decades for the opportunity to testify against Bulger, but was told after Weeks' testimony that he was taken off the witness list. It's yet unclear why his name was dropped.

His body was found at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. He didn't have a wallet or identification with him, WHDH reports.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/19/stephen-rakes-death-suspicious_n_3623782.html

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Saturday, 20 July 2013

With Detroit bankrupt, is 'blue model' to blame?

One-party machine politics, high-priced civil service pensions, and racial strife all contributed to Detroit?s bankruptcy filing. Is it a warning signal for the progressive model of governance, or are its problems too unique to extrapolate?

By Patrik Jonsson,?Staff writer / July 20, 2013

The sun sets on Detroit, Thursday, July 18, 2013. State-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr asked a federal judge for permission to place Detroit into Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection Thursday.

Paul Sancya/AP

Enlarge

Did the progressive ?blue model? of city governance destroy Detroit? And if so, is Detroit?s bankruptcy a deeper concern to progressive cities like Chicago, Oakland, and Santa Fe, which are beginning to teeter under the weight of unsustainable pension liabilities?

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To be sure, Detroit?s multi-decade fall into despair, disrepair and ultimate bankruptcy had myriad causes: the shrinking US-owned auto industry, unsustainable pension deals, and city council investments in gee-whiz development deals instead of a focus on basic maintenance and services.

But critics say the failure of the Democratic one-party machine in Detroit to build racial peace, control crime, and boost business, in fact, represents a cautionary tale for more robust but politically similar ?blue? cities like Chicago, which took a three-notch credit rating hit at the same moment Detroit leaders announced its Chapter 9 bankruptcy intentions.

?Progressive politicians, wonks, and activists can only blame big corporations and other liberal bogeymen for so long,? writes Walter Russell Mead, in the American Interest magazine. ?The truth is that corrupt machine politics in a one-party system devoted to the blue social model wrecked an entire city and thousands of lives beyond repair. The sooner blues come to terms with this reality, the greater chance other cities will have of avoiding Detroit?s fate.?

RECOMMENDED:?Detroit retooled

Reaction to Detroit?s bankruptcy is part of a greater teetering of political and economic philosophies, roughly translated into ?red? right-to-work Southern states ? yes, the very ones who stole Detroit?s thunder by providing incentives for foreign automakers to build factories in Alabama and South Carolina ? and ?blue? unionized Northern states struggling to rebuild from the ruins of the industrial muscle it build up during World War II, when Detroit built 75 percent of America?s war machine.

The clash of skyrocketing debt with pension deals secured with key constituencies, including civil servants, has become a major narrative in cities, states, even Washington, where Republicans and Democrats continue to grapple over debt and liabilities that some say are choking national economic momentum.

Closer to home for Detroit and Chicago, that struggle was at the heart of the upheaval in Madison, Wisconsin, in 2011, as a Republican governor, Scott Walker, pushed through controversial laws giving the state and cities greater flexibility to adjust union contracts.

Indeed, a major significance of Detroit?s bankruptcy is that Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican, and the legislature, dominated by rural and suburban lawmakers, refused to lend a helping hand. Following in Gov. Walker?s footsteps, Mr. Snyder signed a 2012 law giving municipalities more autonomy and power in rewriting union pension and benefit deals.

"Detroit getting into trouble? Not a surprise. State of Michigan not coming to help? It is a big surprise, and I think I am not the only one to say that," Richard Larkin, director of credit analysis at HJ Sims, tells Reuters.

Indeed, pension liabilities have become a key culprit. A large cohort of cities, many of them in deep-blue California, have pension liabilities up to five times their operating revenue.

But behind the crime rate and falling property values, which accelerated to the exodus of people from the crumbling Motor City metropolis, the real culprit that doomed Detroit is bad governance, said Kevyn Orr, the emergency manager appointed by Gov. Snyder.

Quoting Mr. Orr as saying that Detroit must impart ?best practices of 21st century government,? Washington Post columnist Rick Plumer notes: ?Detroit has been a one-party city run by Democrats since 1962.?

On that note, says New York Times conservative columnist David Brooks, appearing on PBS NewsHour Friday night: ?[Y]ou? look at some of the bad urban policies that were attempts at revival, fancy downtown office buildings, it's not about building ? that's not what you do. You build families. You give families a reason to build there and stay there. The crime, the education, it's just one thing after another ? the corruption.?

To be sure, much of the havoc in Detroit and other cities has been caused by a stubborn economy, which has taken years to drag out of the Great Recession that took hold in 2008.

While some debt-burdened ?blue? cities are considering following Detroit into bankruptcy in order to reorganize overwhelming debt, the Motor City to some urban experts remains a specialized case, whose plight can be avoided if the national economy keeps improving, thus quenching thirsty municipal coffers.

"Detroit should not be seen as emblematic of cities or as a harbinger of what's to come," Clarence Anthony, executive director of the National League of Cities, told Reuters.

RECOMMENDED:?Detroit retooled

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/aQyasFwgLMA/With-Detroit-bankrupt-is-blue-model-to-blame

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5 things to know about Helen Thomas

FILE - In this Aug. 2, 2006, file photo, President Bush, right, greets veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas during the final briefing in the press briefing room in the West Wing of the White House in Washington before its renovation. Thomas, a pioneer for women in journalism and an irrepressible White House correspondent, has died Saturday, July 20, 2013. She was 92. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 2, 2006, file photo, President Bush, right, greets veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas during the final briefing in the press briefing room in the West Wing of the White House in Washington before its renovation. Thomas, a pioneer for women in journalism and an irrepressible White House correspondent, has died Saturday, July 20, 2013. She was 92. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

Here are five things to know about Helen Thomas, the groundbreaking White House correspondent, who died Saturday at age 92:

1. SHE WAS AMONG THE FIRST WOMEN TO COVER HARD NEWS AT THE WHITE HOUSE

Her journalism career started in 1943, an era when female reporters were confined to stories about presidents' kids, wives, their teas and their hairdos.

2. HER BIG BREAK CAME IN PALM BEACH IN 1960

She was sent by UPI to cover the vacation of President-elect John Kennedy and his family.

3. THE BARRIER SHE BROKE THROUGH IN 1974

As United Press International's White House bureau chief, she became the first woman in that role for a wire service.

4. THE DAY SHE WAS SCOOPED BY A FIRST LADY

It was Pat Nixon who announced Thomas was engaged to Douglas Cornell, chief White House correspondent for the archrival Associated Press. They married in 1971.

5. THE COMMENT ABOUT ISRAEL THAT ENDED HER CAREER IN 2010

"Tell them to get the hell out of Palestine," she told a rabbi who was interviewing her. "Remember, these people are occupied and it's their land. It's not Germany, it's not Poland." She soon retired from her job as a Hearst columnist.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-07-20-Helen%20Thomas-5%20Things%20To%20Know/id-7333d37b4e3a4331b47fe6b346e78f9c

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Friday, 19 July 2013

Origami for iOS and Android: A Better Way to Share With Family

Origami for iOS and Android: A Better Way to Share With Family No one wants their parents on their Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or any other social media site they might be busy embarrassing themselves on. They surely don't want to see pictures of you on the verge of consciousness every night and you certainly don't want them posting embarrassing things in a public forum. Origami keeps things private, so everyone wins.

What does it do?

Lets you share photos, albums, videos, and text messages with other members of your designated family. In addition to being an app, you also get the domain of [yourfamilyname].origami.com, where you get all the functionality of the app versions. Both the mobile app and the website have the same, familiar timeline-style feed. It will even send you a daily newsletter (if you so choose) with all of your family's latest happenings.

Why do we like it?


Not only are parents or grandparents joining social media sites often a point of contention, but there are some images, videos, and memories in general that you want to make sure stay within your family. And it doesn't really feel like adding an extra burden onto your social media plate, because for the most part (especially if you're the type of family that would use this app), you're already sharing these things anyway. Origami just simplifies it. However, the service is $5 a month, and with all the free?even if less convenient?options out there, it's probably not worth it for people who don't regularly keep up with their family online. But if you've got a family that loves and/or needs to use the internet to stay connected, this is a wonderfully private, easy way to do it.

Origami, Download this app for: iOS, Android; $5/month (free for first 30 days)

The Best: Confidence that everything is only being seen by family

The Worst: Subscription-only

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/origami-for-ios-and-android-a-better-way-to-share-with-830613222

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Pakistani accused of poisoning to death 22 in feud

(AP) ? Police have arrested a cook in central Pakistan who is accused of poisoning to death 22 people as part of a political feud between two branches of the same family, a local police chief said.

The incident in the town of Mailsi in Punjab province followed recent provincial elections in which Arsal Khan Khichi lost to his cousin Jehanzaeb Khan Khichi, police chief Sadiq Dogar said late Thursday.

Arsal Khan Khichi is accused of paying a cook, Mohammad Rafiq, 50,000 rupees ($500) to poison food at his rival's home on June 9, Dogar said. Nearly 50 people became sick and were taken to the hospital, and 22 died. Jehanzeb Khan Khichi was not at home when the incident occurred, Dogar said.

Rafiq has confessed to poisoning the food, Dogar said. Police waited to arrest him until they received medical reports that confirmed the dead had been poisoned. Arsal Khan Khichi is still on the run, and a murder case has been registered against him as well, Dogar said.

Politics are often a family affair in Pakistan, where it is not uncommon to have members of the same clan running against each other as members of rival political parties.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-19-AS-Pakistan-Poisoning/id-b9232555702540a4aae29eef01289d1d

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Leeds Utd star in Twitter row with Huddersfield fan after he is fined for dumping rubbish in layby

LEEDS United striker Ross McCormack has been ordered to pay more than ?1,000 for illegally dumping Christmas waste in a layby.

The striker, who lives in Bardsey, Leeds, was identified by Leeds City Council enforcement officers after they were called to the littered layby on the A58 Wetherby Road after Christmas.

The 26-year-old left packaging, cardboard delivery boxes and plastic bags next to bins at some point between Christmas 2012 and January 3, which was found blowing into nearby hedges and fields.

McCormack was handed a ?200 fine, ordered to pay ?883.25 in costs and a ?20 victim surcharge at a hearing at Leeds Magistrates? Court yesterday.

Reacting to the verdict Coun Mark Dobson, the council?s executive member for the environment, said: ?Our recycling centres are open throughout the festive period to specifically allow people to recycle the extra waste that?s created at that time of year. In fact, our recycling centres only shut three days a year.

?While the items in this case may have been left by litter bins with the misdirected idea that they?d be picked up as litter, this is a simple case of flytipping. Litter bins are for litter, not household waste.

?We?re determined to stamp out this kind of lazy behaviour and we will take action against those who fail to help us keep Leeds clean and green.?

After the hearing, the Whites striker got involved in an angry exchange with a Huddersfield Town fan.

McCormack is thought to have taken offence when the fan took a photo of him while at court, before the fan took to Twitter to voice his displeasure.

The fan, known on Twitter as @MattyBermingham, tweeted expletives at the striker before McCormack said: ?Why didn?t u say that to my face 30 mins ago.?

He then went on to say: ?Just remember I now know your face.?

The Town fan replied: ?Hahahahaha I really hope young kids who look upto you don?t turn out the same #PoorRoleModel.?

? Keep abreast of news from your club, plus complete live match data and stats, with our new FREE apps. Versions for iPhone and Android.

Source: http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/leeds-utd-star-in-twitter-row-with-huddersfield-fan-after-he-is-fined-for-dumping-rubbish-in-layby-1-5871277

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Thursday, 18 July 2013

Olympic inclusion important to growing softball in Canada

Caitlin Lever is not ready to give up on her dream of competing in another Olympics.

But for the veteran softball outfielder, and for others from Canada, the U.S., Australia and Venezuela competing in the Canadian Open Fastpitch tournament this week, it won?t just be the usual issues of age, health, and performance that determine a player?s place in the Games.

More Related to this Story

Politics will also come into play.

Softball has not been played in the Olympics since 2008 as a result of an International Olympic Committee vote in 2005. But the IOC will decide in Buenos Aires on Sept. 8, whether to bring it back for the 2020 Games.

Lever, 28, played for Canada at the 2008 Beijing Games but she does not know if she will be competing in seven years. She is starting to move on with her life, having taken an assistant coach?s position at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas.

But if not for herself, Lever hopes softball makes a comeback for the sake of her younger teammates, and the sport.

?It?s such a big sport, and it?s worldwide and there?s so many kids that play it and dream it,? said Lever, whose team faced Japan in an evening game Thursday.

?The future is bright, and it?s just starting. We?re just breaking the mould now of what softball?s capable of.?

Currently, Canada?s top players chase dreams of playing internationally in tournaments, fledgling pro circuits in the U.S. and Japan, and playing in the world championships, held every two years.

Lever, the American-born daughter of former NHLer Don Lever, said an Olympic presence will make a large difference when it comes to growing the sport in Canada.

?I think the love for the game will always be there and will keep the sport going,? said Lever. ?But I think it?s important to have something like that to reach, to keep people in the sport longer. I think we can retain more if they knew that was somewhere they could go, especially top, elite athletes that can pick several sports. It?s important to keep them here.

?It always sounds a bit sweeter when you?re trying to get kids to come play or vets to stay on board instead of moving on with their lives and jobs. When you?ve got that cherry there in front of you, it?s a hard thing to pass up.?

Acting Canadian head coach Dave Paetkau said having softball in the Olympics will also help grow Canada?s powerhouse program. Team Canada is ranked fourth in the world and stands to gain financially if the sport returns to the Games.

?(Sport Canada) funding for Olympic programs is a lot higher, so it makes a big difference,? said Paetkau. ?I know when (softball) was in Olympics, there was a big push (in terms of interest) in Canada. And with us being ranked in the top four in the world, there?s a good chance for us to get a medal at the Olympics, which would be great for Canada.?

Paetkau, who is running the team while head coach Mark Smith prepares for the upcoming Canada Summer Games, said a return to the Olympics will help raise the talent level here and elsewhere.

?It brings in more players to play the game, which means we have a better chance of having top athletes playing softball, and that?s what we?re looking for to compete at the international level,? said Paetkau. ?And that will happen with most of the countries if softball does get back in the Olympics. It will just pick up the game and make it more exciting.?

Softball?s exclusion from the Olympics is a source of discontent even for players who were not with the program when Canada placed fourth in Beijing.

?It was really upsetting when it got taken out to begin with,? said pitcher Sara Plourde, who is in her first season with Team Canada. ?I think many people were very upset by that, so I think 2020, it?s going to be huge to see the sport back there, even (for) the girls this age, knowing that eventually they can play on an Olympic team again.?

Canada entered Thursday?s play with a 2-0 mark following a 3-0 victory over Australia on Wednesday. The Canadians, who have just two losses, are off to one of their best starts to a season.

It remains to be seen how many players will be with Team Canada in 2020, but a favourable IOC vote will drive some to keep chasing their Olympic dreams.

?With and without it, I absolutely have the incentive to keep playing, but (a possible Olympic berth) is definitely a booster to keep playing,? said Plourde, a Bristol, Conn., native who, like Lever, plays for Canada by virtue of dual citizenship. ?I would love to play in the Olympics one day. I?ll be 30, we?ll see. You never know.?

Paetkau, who runs a softball academy in Abbotsford, B.C., expects most potential Olympians to be recruited from the current teenage talent pool. He said softball?s inclusion and increased Sport Canada funding would enable players to train for up to 30 hours per week without having to worry about working elsewhere.

IOC members will decide whether to return softball and baseball, also dropped after 2008, and reinstate wrestling after it was excluded from the 2016 Olympics. Squash is a candidate for first-time entry.

Vetern infielder Jen Yee, a 26-year-old with a masters in engineering, is postponing her career while she toils on the diamond. Yee does not know how much longer she will compete, but shares Lever?s desire to see softball back in the Games.

?I think we?re all in the same boat,? the Surrey, B.C., native said. ?We?re just hoping.?

Source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/more-sports/olympic-inclusion-important-to-growing-softball-in-canada/article13295866/?cmpid=rss1

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