Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Ask the Pro: How to hit out of the tall, wet rough the spring weather has produced

This week, PGA/LPGA professional Kathy Cassese of Airport Greens in Willoughby Hills demonstrates how to hit out of the tall, wet rough the spring weather has produced across the region. Watch video

Local pros solve your golf problems in a weekly instruction video at cleveland.com/golf with Plain Dealer columnist Bud Shaw and videographer David I. Andersen.

This week, PGA/LPGA professional Kathy Cassese of Airport Greens in Willoughby Hills demonstrates how to hit out of the tall, wet rough the spring weather has produced across the region.

Need help with your game? Explain your problem to golf@plaind.com in an email. We will select one each week. All the videos dating back to 2010 are archived.  

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/golf/index.ssf/2011/05/ask_the_pro_how_to_hit_out_of_the_tall_wet_rough_the_spring_weather_has_produced.html

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Ring of steel goes up as work begins

The countdown to this year's Glastonbury Festival is well underway as work began on the site this week.

The infamous fence has been put up, encircling the fields of Worthy Farm – and some fields borrowed from neighbours – in a ring of steel.

Meanwhile, dozens of bin painters are hard at work, ensuring that even the rubbish will look its best during the festival.

This year, U2, Coldplay and Beyonce have been announced as the headliners, with hundreds of other acts, including Flogging Molly, Queens of the Stone Age and Plan B performing across the site.

Tickets have sold out completely for the festival which runs between June 22 and 26.

Source: http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/glastonburyfestival/Ring-steel-goes-work-begins/article-3593222-detail/article.html

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Swans clinch place in Premier League with play-off win over Reading

SCOTT Sinclair struck a hat-trick as Swansea City survived a second-half fightback from Reading to clinch promotion to the Barclays Premier League after an enthralling Championship play-off final.

Sinclair's 25th and 26th goals of the season in a devastating two-minute spell midway through the first half set Swansea on their way — the opener coming from the penalty spot — before Stephen Dobbie added a third.

But in another thrilling clash befitting the Wembley showpiece, Reading displayed plenty of never-say-die spirit and hauled themselves right back into it through Noel Hunt and Matthew Mills.

But Sinclair, signed from Chelsea last summer, smashed home his second penalty of the afternoon in the 80th minute to become only the second player, behind Clive Mendonca, to bag a play-off final treble at Wembley and ensure Swansea are the first non-English club to compete in the Premier League since its formation in 1992.

Victory ends a 28-year wait for top-flight football for Swansea and — aside from the estimated �90 million windfall — completes an astonishing eight-year turnaround for the club after they narrowly avoided relegation from the Football League.

For manager Brendan Rodgers, it was victory against the club he served for a total of 14 years as player, youth coach, reserve coach and an unsuccessful six-month stint as boss in 2009.

His replacement 17 months ago, Brian McDermott, was able to call upon influential winger Jimmy Kebe after he passed a fitness test on a thigh injury.

Rodgers kept faith with the same line-up who saw off Nottingham Forest 3-1 in the second leg of their semi.

That meant defender Alan Tate and midfielder Leon Britton walked out for the club having been part of that dramatic final-day survival in 2003.

And once the fireworks had gone off and the red carpet had been tucked away, it was the anticipated free-flowing, passing football which failed to materialise in the opening exchanges.

Swans skipper Garry Monk survived an appeal for handball in the penalty area, and no sooner had he got off the hook then Zurab Khizanishvili brought down Nathan Dyer at the other end.

It left Sinclair to send Adam Federici the wrong way from the spot and the Georgian centre-back lucky to avoid a second yellow card.

And just 60 seconds later, with 22 minutes on the clock, it was 2-0.

Khizanishvili was having an afternoon to forget and he was left standing by Dobbie on the right who squared the ball into the danger area and Federici's weak hand failed to stop it travelling to Sinclair who tapped home at the far post.

Swansea's lead was further strengthened five minutes before the break as Dyer used his pace down the right and his cross was only half cleared by Khizanishvili to the grateful Dobbie who fired home a third from the edge of the area.

Reading's 25-goal top scorer Shane Long then miss-kicked a glorious opportunity wide just before the break.

Matters went from bad to worse for the Royals at half-time as first-team coach Nigel Gibbs was sent to the stands and substitute Jay Tabb also dismissed for something said to referee Phil Dowd.

But the Berkshire outfit were given a glimmer of hope within four minutes of the restart as Hunt narrowly got in front of Joe Allen at the front post to head home Jobi McAnuff's corner.

And the Wembley roof was soon raised yet again as Matthew Mills made it 3-2 in the 57th minute.

Swansea once more failed to deal with a McAnuff corner from the left and the Reading skipper rose highest to head home from six yards.

Rodgers's side were rocking and Jem Karacan saw his low 25-yard effort deflected against the foot of a post.

The clash remained firmly balanced as it approached the final quarter, but that all changed 10 minutes from time as Andy Griffin brought down Fabio Borini in the area, leaving Sinclair to beat Federici for the second time from 12 yards.

And the strike was the cue for over 40,000 visiting Swansea supporters to party.



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Out to launch at UJIA educational conference

The launch of a major new publication was the highlight of the second UJIA conference on research in UK Jewish education.

UJIA research director Helena Miller is the senior editor of the International Handbook on Jewish Education, which spans more than 1,300 pages in two volumes.

"It's the first time that any serious contemporary book on Jewish education has come out of the UK," Dr Miller said.

Leo Baeck College vice-principal Michael Shire and Limmud director Raymond Simonson have also contributed chapters.

Conference topics ranged from educational questions raised by last year's Institute of Jewish Policy Research survey on attitudes to Israel to the impact of development aid charity Tzedek's work in schools and chedarim.

The conference is a sign of growing professionalism in the expanding educational network.

Doctors Miller and Shire were once the only two home-grown professionals with a doctorate in Jewish education. But now "seven of the people at the conference are working on PhDs in Jewish education, which is amazing".

Source: http://www.thejc.com/community/community-life/49553/out-launch-ujia-educational-conference

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Tesco ban on the Protocols

Tesco has stopped selling The Protocols of the Elders of Zion after a shopper threatened to boycott the supermarket until it removed the controversial book from its website.

Rachel Amdurer, a 44-year-old teaching assistant from Halifax, was searching for Jewish books when she saw the antisemitic forgery for sale.

Mrs Amdurer, a member of Bradford Synagogue, said: "I was disgusted to discover Tesco's online book list included a vicious antisemitic fraud. To add insult to injury, it was located in the Judaism section. I was shocked that any respectable association would offer this book for sale."

After she complained, she initially received a response from Elaine Mollison, customer service manager at Tesco Direct. She said: "I appreciate the book includes vicious antisemitic fraud. This said, at Tesco Books we are offering our customers a choice rather than appointing ourselves as censors or moral guardians."

But after the JC contacted Tesco, a spokesman said the book would be removed within 24 hours.

A spokesman said: "We apologise for any offence. We are taking immediate action to remove this book from our website. "

Source: http://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/49523/tesco-ban-protocols

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Jim Tressel resigns at Ohio State having paid the price for his sins of omission - Bill Livingston

Hypocrisy proves to be the downfall for Buckeyes' greatest coach since Woody Hayes.

jim tressel.JPGJim Tressel has resigned after 10 seasons at Ohio State.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The greatest football coach at Ohio State since Woody Hayes, Jim Tressel leaves under the cloud of scandal, just as Hayes did in 1978.

The difference between the two is that Hayes was fired after he lost his temper and threw a punch in the Gator Bowl on national television at a Clemson player named Charlie Bauman. Tressel's wrongdoing was private until Ohio State officials unearthed incriminating emails and phone records in the coach's cover-up of the memorabilia sale scandal. It was deliberate. It was a calculated attempt to evade the rules by playing ineligible players.

Woody Hayes was a genuine educator who was brought down by his emotions. His fall was almost preordained by highly public tantrums in the past.

Tressel's downfall surprised true believers who felt his sins of omission in the monitoring of first Maurice Clarett, then Troy Smith and finally Terrelle Pryor and the rest of the memorabilia hawkers were aberrations, not the norm. Those who knew Tressel were skeptical of this.

His every hair was always in place. His American flag pin was always skewered to a stylish lapel. His organizational skills were formidable. His planning was impeccable. Negligence was not an option in his lifestyle.

But hypocrisy proved to be.

Tressel, too, was an educator. The academic record of the football team improved dramatically after the shambles of his predecessor, John Cooper.

Tressel also wrote books, teaching life lessons. His latest is "The Winner's Manual: For the Game of Life." Released by a Christian publisher, it includes inspirational stories and the "Block O of Life," a Buckeye take on the late UCLA basketball coach John Wooden's "Pyramid of Success." Nowhere in it does Tressel suggest that withholding information on player wrongdoing from superiors, lying to the NCAA in writing, and knowingly playing ineligible players are behaviors worthy to be emulated.

From the start, Tressel promised strict accountability for wrongdoers. "The only excuse for missing a class is a death in the family -- your own," he said in his role as the new sheriff in town on the day he was hired.

The accountability was always overstated for the players, though.

Tressel was in the business of winning football games. The inattention that verged on willful ignorance of Clarett's lavish lifestyle was followed by "Minimum Jim's" absurdly lenient one-game suspension of linebacker Robert Reynolds in 2003 for choking Wisconsin quarterback Jim Sorgi on the bottom of a pile of tacklers. It was a mean, nasty game on both sides of the ball, with players spitting at each other, but that is no excuse for such a dirty play nor is it justification for such a ridiculously light penalty. OSU was still in the hunt to defend its national championship then, and expediency trumped severity in punishment.

For nine months in 2010 and early 2011, Tressel covered up the particulars of the memorabilia sale scandal. He signed a preseason NCAA form, averring that he knew of no rules violations. He emailed and telephoned star quarterback Terrelle Pryor's hometown mentor, as well as the Columbus whistle-blower who alerted him to the scandal. He said he was uncertain whom to contact at Ohio State with the same information, although the compliance office and that of his boss, Athletic Director Gene Smith, were only steps away in the Woody Hayes Athletic Center.

Tressel's alleged motives for the cover-up -- the players' safety, confidentiality for the tipster, chain-of-command uncertainty -- seemed to shift and change with every telling, like the earth above a growling, buckling fault line.

It is hard to ascribe lofty motives to his duplicity. Tressel thought last season that the Buckeyes were going back to the BCS Championship Game, the "little hump" over which Pryor promised to get him. The hump would have looked like the Himalayas without the five players involved in the memorabilia scandal.

Arrogance, not good intentions, finally undid Tressel. He thought he could get away with the cover-up because he had gotten away, untainted, in the other scandals that involved his elite players, both at Ohio State and Youngstown State before that. Powerful men have been tripping over that little hump since the ancient Greek playwrights made "hubris," or pride, the tragic flaw of great men.

Now it has all crumbled. The "death in the family" was the exile of the man who was the face of the flagship program in an iconic conference's flagship sport.

Ohio State's reputation is damaged, after only grudgingly increasing a series of wrist-slap measures to him. The chance is gone for the second national championship that would have put Tressel in a tie with Joe Paterno and other elite coaches, and in far less time than the almost geological scale of the Penn State coach's career.

In flames is Tressel's legacy as a winner with a moral compass and the Big Ten's view of its own exceptionalism in ethical conduct.

On the field, Tressel was indisputably a great coach. He was 9-1 against Michigan. It was a Christmas present record, only to be dreamed of before him, a vision dancing like sugar plums in Ohio State fans' heads.

The Michigan program went through convulsive changes when it committed to the doctrinaire game plan of a spread offense guru named Rich Rodriguez. But Tressel arrived at OSU in the noon-time of coach Lloyd Carr's ascension, on the heels of John Cooper's atrocious 2-10-1 record against Michigan. Tressel soon eclipsed Carr and drove him into retirement.

A conservative man, often criticized for buttoning down his players' flair when he got the lead, Tressel in fact used surprise plays to win some of his biggest games.

In 2002, the only option play Ohio State used all season, originating in a formation inviting Michigan to overshift the wrong way, resulted in Maurice Hall's 2-yard game-winning run with Craig Krenzel's pitchout.

In the epic 2006 Michigan game, pitting No. 1 OSU vs. No. 2 Michigan, on second-and-inches at the Michigan 39 -- from a formation heavy with tight ends, power blockers and thundering running back Beanie Wells -- Troy Smith faked to Wells and threw to a wide-open Ted Ginn Jr., hiding as a tight end, for a critical touchdown. All season, OSU had run Wells up the middle from that formation in short yardage, but this time, on a quick count, Ginn went unobserved by the Wolverines' defense. A season of patiently setting up Michigan for one moment and one play had been rewarded.

A breakneck, hurry-up offense for the entire first half staked the Buckeyes to a halftime lead that barely held up in Tressel's last game, a thrilling Sugar Bowl victory over Arkansas.

After Tressel's fall, a lot of northeast Ohioans are hurting. Tressel was one of our own. The son of a coaching father, Lee Tressel, who himself won a Division III national championship at Baldwin-Wallace, Jim Tressel was connected to the fans by shared loyalties to Cleveland teams and a lifelong fascination with Cleveland sports legends. As a boy, Tressel held the ball when no less than Lou "The Toe" Groza, his neighbor in Berea, practiced kicking field goals.

In Ohio, the birthplace of the NFL, the forum for the Buckeyes' 60 years of Big Ten dominance, football is hard-wired into the populace. Jim Tressel was practically part of the game's DNA. He was an underdog, hauled from the old Division I-AA ranks at Youngstown State, in an unheard-of promotion for a school as prominent as Ohio State. His best team, in 2002, won half its 14 games by a touchdown or less, coming from behind time and again, and won the national championship in double overtime over the Miami Hurricanes, the era's dynasty.

It was Tressel who puffed Cleveland fans' chests with pride after all the years of downtrodden teams and disappointed sports hopes. The Impossible Dream had become the art of the possible.

The only evidence in Tressel's defense was not to exculpate, but to mitigate. Tressel has done good work out of the limelight for good causes for years. He has touched many players' lives and made a positive difference to many people outside the white lines as well.

Fiercely patriotic, he has visited the troops in the Middle East. He could summon many character witnesses to his substantial acts of generosity, thoughtfulness and kindness. Tressel took Ohio State to heights unscaled since Hayes was the coach. Of course Tressel, like Hayes, was not without flaws. Neither angel nor demon, Tressel is only a human being. Still, on the question of his active involvement in a major ethics scandal, he is really, most sincerely guilty.

Many coaches in the past probably handled player violations in the same way. But the times have changed, and the mania to say "Gotcha!" in the media has intensified. The time for Tressel's own accountability arrived today.

That such grubby, small violations by his players led to Tressel's resignation saddens those of us who liked and admired him. A good man in many ways, Tressel had to pay with the things he valued most, outside his family and his faith -- his job and his reputation.

On Twitter: @LivyPD

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/livingston/index.ssf/2011/05/jim_tressel_leaves_ohio_state.html

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Latest figures reveal 18 kids in Llanelli hospital after drug OD

EIGHTEEN children were taken to hospital in Llanelli suffering from drugs overdose last year, latest figures reveal.

Eight of the youngsters were admitted to Prince Philip Hospital after consuming large amounts of Paracetamol, according to statistics released under the Freedom of Information Act.

Half of the youngsters overdosing on the over-the- counter painkiller were aged 16, while the youngest was just 12 years old.

The information, provided by the Hywel Dda Health Board showed that 10 children, including three babies and toddlers, were also admitted to A&E suffering from "other" overdoses during 2010, and 26 youngsters needed care for accidental poisoning, prompting a child welfare charity to speak out about the problem.

Katrina Phillips, chief executive at the Child Accident Prevention Trust, said: "Every day 12 young children are admitted to hospital in the UK alone, as a result of swallowing something that could be poisonous.

Harmful

"Sadly the majority of these incidents could have been prevented by following some simple safety advice, for example by ensuring potentially harmful substances, such as tablets, detergents, cleaning products and even items like nail varnish remover are kept safely out of reach, by fitting carbon monoxide alarms in rooms with gas appliances or open fires, or by educating children, from a young age, about the dangers of alcohol."

Alcohol abuse and alcohol intoxication left 13 teenagers needing hospital treatment in Llanelli last year, with a further 12 "alcohol related" attendances almost doubling the figure.

A spokeswoman for Hywel Dda Health Board said the aim for the next 10 years was to prevent alcohol and drug misuse among children and adults, and to offer streamlined treatment and rehabilitation.

"We want to reduce the number of people consuming alcohol in a hazardous or harmful way," she added.

alana.lewis@swwmedia.co.uk



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Swansea City fans make Wembley their own at Championship play-off

THERE is a corner of North West London that will forever be South West Wales. For one glorious day in May we made it our own.

From the early hours of a grey, wet morning the Jack Army were Wembley bound — by train, car, limo, minibus and coach the Jack Army faithful were on the move.

At times the M4 was just one long convoy of vehicles all proudly flying Swansea City flags, banners and scarves, their occupants exchanging waves and grins as an addition to the usual mirror- signal-manoeuvre overtaking routine.

A few homemade banners hung from motorway bridges along the way wished the Swans luck — one near Bridgend was a little less complimentary. But this was a happy army on the move east — even the cows in the fields were in Swansea City colours.

The Second Severn Crossing passed in blur of mist and drizzle but as we headed ever further east the weather began to clear. By 9.30am it was time for a pit stop and we pulled off at Reading West services, which was more like Swansea West services such was the sea of black and white. Inside, hundreds of fans were ordering full English breakfasts in distinctly un-English accents — perhaps Reading West bosses should consider renaming them full Welsh breakfasts from now on.

The man with the merchandise stall outside was doing a roaring trade too — by 10am he had sold out of Swansea City scarves. Back on the M4, and London was getting ever closer. Then as we drove along the Westway, just by that old Lucozade advertising sign, we caught our first glimpse of the promised land — the arch of Wembley Stadium away to our left.

The north circular road was almost traffic free, and once past the Blue Plaque denoting the Ealing birthplace of Sid James we knew we were close. The final approach to Wembley is rather uninspiring as you drive through an industrial estate but then you turn the corner and there stands the imposing glass and concrete stadium.

But 11am the car park was rapidly filling up, and thousands of fans were streaming down the famous Wembley Way from the Tube station heading towards the Bobby Moore statue that stands guard over the entrance.

As the minutes passed away the atmosphere built, with thousands of fans from both teams mingling around the ground. The Jack Army was in full force — youngsters with painted faces and giant foam hands, families in team shirts, older fans with walking sticks wrapped in black and white ribbons.

The atmosphere was party-like — as I sat on the floor typing away at my laptop some fans came over and dropped a couple of 10 pences next to me – "'Ere you go mate, buy yourself a coffee" they cheerily called. Meanwhile choruses of "Hymn and Arias" rang out, along with chants of "Brendan Rodgers' Barmy Army". A couple of young supporters were blowing vuvuzelas which turn out to be just as annoying in real life as they were at the World Cup on the telly.

Among the crowd was Clydach councillor Roger Smith, who had travelled up on the National Express coach with his wife Paulette dressed proudly in an original 1981 Swansea City shirt. He said: "This is a wonderful day. The atmosphere is terrific. To walk up to Wembley Stadium on a day like this is extraordinary. I've kept this No3 shirt all these years — never did I think I would have the chance to wear it at such an event as this."

Extraordinary was the word for it. It was a day for the fans — and the fans did South West Wales proud.



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Monday, May 30, 2011

DJ's live broadcast from Pilton

DJ and TV presenter Lauren Laverne was in Pilton on Friday, broadcasting her Radio 6 show live from Worthy Farm.

Setting up home on the farm, which hosts Glastonbury Festival, Lauren chatted to Emily and Michael Eavis about this year's event.

She also chatted to Emily about the impending birth of Michael's first grandchild.

There was live music from Guillemots and Glastonbury Emerging Talent competition winners, Treetop Flyers.

Although the broadcast went well, it was occasionally interrupted by some 'grey and pointy' low-flying planes, who were carrying out exercises at the time of the broadcast.

Despite Lauren's best efforts, Emily remained tight-lipped on who the headliners on the Park Field will be.

She did, however, admit that one of the Park stage's headlining slots was still open.

BBC coverage of the festival will be fronted by Fearne Cotton and Reggie Yates.

BBC Three, which broadcasts the most coverage from the festival, will bring viewers all the action through its live coverage of headline slots.

The Times called Glastonbury Festival the "best fest" in its 51 festival round-up in the final edition of its Playlist supplement.

Source: http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/glastonburyfestival/DJ-s-live-broadcast-Pilton/article-3542276-detail/article.html

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Mum 'acted like pitbull' after drinking 11 pints

A YOUNG mother was like a pitbull terrier when she viciously clamped her teeth on to the breast of a female doorwoman from a Swansea nightclub, a court heard.

The horrendous bite attack left the victim so shaken, she subsequently gave up her job.

Sophie Godsall lost her temper outside Odyssey in Little Wind Street after drinking 11 pints of lager.

The violent early-hours incident was described when 22-year-old Godsall, of Calland Street, Plasmarl, narrowly avoided losing her liberty at Swansea Crown Court.

She pleaded guilty to assault causing actual bodily harm and was given a nine-month prison sentence which was suspended for 12 months.

Judge Paul Thomas QC also ordered her to pay �500 compensation to her victim and carry out 150 hours of unpaid work for the community.

Kathryn Jones, prosecuting, said trouble flared when doorwoman Sophie Jones was on duty at Odyssey at 2am on November 21.

After a fight broke out, two male colleagues of Miss Jones's were escorting a man out of the premises when Godsall began remonstrating with them.

When Miss Jones asked Godsall to leave the scene, the defendant lunged at her and outside the club the two women fell to the ground in a struggle.

After trying to butt Miss Jones, Godsall bit her hard on the right breast and refused to let go. She also pulled out some of the doorwoman's hair.

Nearby police officers who intervened heard Miss Jones yelling: "Let go! Let me go!"

Interviewed after her arrest, Godsall said she had drunk 11 pints of lager that night.

She told officers she was disgusted by her behaviour, adding: "I have never bitten anyone before. This was a complete act of madness — totally out of character."

The court heard that Miss Jones needed a tetanus injection for the bite wound around her nipple.

Tom Scapens in mitigation, conceded that his client had committed a "wholly unattractive offence".

But before she lost her temper, he claimed, Godsall had been acting as a peacemaker, "trying to defuse matters and trying to prevent matters from escalating".

Godsall, said the barrister, was the mother — and sole carer — of a three-year-old boy and the prospect of losing her liberty had been hanging over her head "like a very dark cloud".

Passing sentence after watching CCTV footage of the incident, Judge Thomas said Godsall had attacked Miss Jones after losing "all self-control and all sense of dignity".

He told her: "You bit her viciously on the breast, clamping on to her in a manner more akin to that of a pitbull than the mother of a three- year-old."

There had to be a custodial sentence, but the court was prepared to suspend it to take account of Godsall's genuine remorse and the fact that the assault was out of character.

Another factor, said the judge, was that a sentence of immediate custody would have a "disproportionately adverse effect" on the defendant's young son.

He directed that Godsall should discharge the compensation at the rate of �5 a week.

"If you can afford 11 pints of lager on a night out, you can afford to pay compensation," he told her.

postnews@swwmedia.co.uk



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Grand words, but peace no closer

Israel's prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu gave the most concessionary speech ever heard from a leader of Likud to the joint houses of the United States Congress on Tuesday in Washington.

However, reactions to his admission, that in a peace solution "some" Jewish settlements in the West Bank would remain outside Israel's borders, indicate that Mr Netanyahu's speech did not go any way towards to extricating the diplomatic process from its quagmire.

The speech to Congress was the culmination of a series of speeches by the two leaders, beginning with Mr Netanyahu's address to the Knesset last week, followed by two speeches by Mr Obama, at the State Department last week and on Sunday at the annual convention of the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC. Mr Netanyahu spoke at the AIPAC convention on Monday.

In Congress, Mr Netanyahu was greeted with rapturous applause by the senators and representatives. He combined steadfast commitments to security arrangements - a "united Jersualem" as Israel's capital, a refusal to retreat to the "indefensible" pre-1967 borders and a denial of any return of Palestinian refugees to the Jewish state - with the kind of words that he rarely, if ever, used before.

"I am willing to make painful compromises to achieve this historical peace," he said.

While rejecting the 1967 borders, Mr Netanyahu said that "Israel will be generous on the size of a Palestinian state, but will be very firm on where we put the border with it."

Perhaps the most significant part of the speech, certainly from an internal Israeli political perspective, was when Mr Netanyahu said that the issue of Jerusalem could be "creatively" solved and that it was clear that following a peace agreement, "some settlements" would not be within Israel's borders.

The issue of Israel's future borders was the central bone of contention between the two administrations.

Israeli diplomats claimed that they had received assurances, ahead of Mr Obama's State Department speech last Thursday, that he would only refer to the Israel-Palestine conflict in a small section of the address, which would deal mainly with the revolutions in Arab countries. They also said that he would not mention the 1967 borders as a base for the future borders between Israel and the Palestinian state.

Instead, Mr Obama spoke at length on the conflict and did bring up 1967. The result was almost open conflict between the Netanyahu government and the White House, with Mr Netanyahu replying that the 1967 borders were "indefensible". The blunt exchange was followed by a frosty meeting between the two leaders the next day.

The tension thawed over the next few days, with the President giving a very different speech, at least in tone, at AIPAC, and clarifying the 1967 remarks with the assurances that there would also be "land swaps" that would take into account demographic changes on the ground.

Mr Netanyahu's speech won over Congress, but this was friendly audience to begin with. The White House's response was more lukewarm, with a spokesman saying that they were satisfied with Mr Netanyahu's commitment to peace. Senior Israeli officials admitted, however, that relations between the two leaders are still tense.

Flying home, the Prime Minister could look forward to more criticism. First it came from the right wing of his own party. Likud MK Dani Dannon said that following the speech "the Prime Minister will find that most of the Likud is not with him".

The head of the Yesha settlers' council, Naftali Benet, said: "It is a waste of time to talk about a Palestinian state, it will never happen."

The leaders of Kadima were also dismissive of the speech, despite the fact that its contents accord with their manifesto. "Speeches are not policy," said senior MK Shaul Mofaz, "Netanyahu is leading us nowhere and we need elections to prevent the confrontation that he is forcing us into."

The Prime Minister's aides were unfazed. "We gained everything we sought to accomplish," said one. "We got the administration's commitment to oppose a unilateral recognition of Palestinian statehood, we underlined that support for Israel in Congress is as strong as ever and we showed up Kadima's hypocrisy. They should be joining the coalition now, not attacking Bibi."

The Palestinians were the least impressed. "There was nothing new in the speech, except for more obstacles for the peace process," said Nabil Abu Rudeineh, President Mahmoud Abbas's spokesman.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/news/world-news/49529/grand-words-peace-no-closer

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Head, Chisenhall homer as Columbus squeaks past Durham: Minor-league report

Frawley's three-run homer lifts Kinston to victory, Akron and Lake County both lose.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 7, Bulls 6: Josh Rodriguez scored on a wild pitch with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning and Columbus beat Durham, N.C., in an International League game.

Jerad Head put the Clippers up, 1-0, with a home run in the second. Lonnie Chisenhall's solo homer produced a 6-4 lead in the seventh. Nick Hagadone (1-0) picked up the win with a scoreless inning of relief.

Notes: Head's home run was his sixth of the season, and Chisenhall's was his fourth.

AA Akron Aeros

Curve 5, Aeros 4: Altoona (Pa.) second baseman Brock Holt broke a 4-4 tie with an RBI single in the bottom of the ninth as the Curve won the finale of a four-game Eastern League series. Right-hander Bryan Price (1-2) allowed the Holt RBI single and suffered the loss.

Notes: Akron lost three of four games at Altoona over the weekend. ... Aeros outfielder Tim Fedroff went 1-for-4 to extend his team-best hitting streak to 16 games.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 6, Keys 5: Casey Frawley's three-run home run with two outs in the top of the ninth gave Kinston a come-from-behind victory at Frederick, Md. Delvi Cid hit his sixth homer of the year for Kinston.

A Lake County Captains

Dragons 3, Captains 2: Yorman Rodriguez singled home two runs in the bottom of the ninth to give Dayton its second straight walk-off win over Lake County in the Midwest League. Captains starter Mike Rayl worked six scoreless innings, allowing three hits, walking one and striking out five. Clayton Ehlert (0-2) allowed the two ninth-inning runs.

Notes: Anthony Gallas has reached base in 23 straight games.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

The Crushers were idle Sunday.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/05/head_chisenhall_homer_as_colum.html

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Corey Kluber pitches seven strong innings to earn a 5-2 Columbus Clippers' win: Minor league report

Kluber gets his first win. Kinston loses, 11-0, but pitcher Adam Miller continues his encouraging comeback with two brilliant innings. Akron and Lake County were idle.

corey-kluber.jpgThe Clippers' Corey Kluber, who struck out more than one batter per inning in 2010, had struggled this season before Monday night's fine outing.

MINOR LEAGUE REPORT

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 5, Indians 2 RH starter and winner Corey Kluber (1-3, 6.94) stopped a four-game losing streak for Columbus (26-12), allowing two runs on four hits in seven innings of the International League game in Indianapolis. CF Ezequiel Carrera (.316) slugged a two-run home run to put the Clippers ahead, 3-1, in the fifth inning. 2B Cord Phelps (.298) had two RBI singles and SS Luis Valbuena (.268) scored three runs, doubled in one, singled and walked. RH relievers Carlton Smith and Josh Judy each pitched a scoreless inning, with Judy earning his sixth save.

Notes: Kluber, 25, was acquired from the San Diego Padres organization in a three-way trade last July 31, with the Indians sending veteran starting pitcher Jake Westbrook to the St. Louis Cardinals. Kluber, a fourth-round pick by San Diego in the 2007 draft, was a combined 9-9 last season with a 3.49 ERA and 165 strikeouts in 160 innings, pitching 22 games at AA San Antonio, five at AA Akron and two at Columbus....Carrera’s 31 runs led the International League going into Monday night’s other IL games, and his 15 stolen bases (in 17 tries) were tied for the league lead....OF Jerad Head was 0-for-3, dropping his batting average to .354, one point behind Gwinnett Braves’ 1B Mauro Gomez for the league lead....Valbuena’s 2-for-3 game snapped a 3-for-25 slump.

AA Akron Aeros

The Aeros were idle Monday

Notes: Akron hosts the Altoona (Pa.) Curve at Canal Park on Tuesday at 7:05 in the first of a three-game series....LH starter Kelvin De La Cruz is 2-3, but going into Monday night’s Eastern League games, he was fifth in the league with a 2.32 ERA and third with 42 strikeouts. De La Cruz has held opponents to a .171 batting average, but he has walked 23 in 31 innings....RH starter Austin Adams (4-2) has a 2.36 ERA, sixth in the league going into Monday night’s games, and 35 strikeouts, which was eighth....LF Tim Fedroff (.333) has hit in nine straight games, going 16-for-37 (.432) with three doubles and eight RBI. Fedroff was sixth in the league in batting average going into Monday night....OF Jordan Henry (.300) is 18-for-50 (.360) with 16 runs, nine walks and 8-of-9 in stolen base tries in his last 12 games....1B Matt McBride (.254) is 15-for-43 (.349) with five homers, three doubles, nine RBI and nine runs in his last 11 games.

AA Kinston Indians

Hillcats 11, Indians 0 Lynchburg (Va.) RH Zeke Spruill (2-4, 2.88) pitched a complete game three-hitter, with five strikeouts and no walks, in the Carolina League game at Kinston, N.C. Indians’ RH starter Brett Brach (3-3, 3.62) took the loss, allowing eight runs in 4 2/3 innings. Kinston RH Adam Miller, a 2003 Cleveland first-round draft pick who, until April 30, hadn’t pitched for nearly three years because of career-threatening finger injuries, continued his sterling relief pitching with two perfect innings — besides a teammate’s error — and three strikeouts.

Notes: Miller has pitched six scoreless innings in his last four games, allowing two hits while fanning nine and walking two. Miller, considered one of baseball’s premier pitching prospects before his finger injuries, allowed four runs (three earned) in one inning in his April 30 game, his lone appearance prior to his last four outings. He struck out the side in his second inning Monday night....Brach’s ERA was 1.63 going into the game, and 1.34 if including a scoreless six-inning, winning start for Lake County to begin his season....Kinston has lost seven of its last eight games, totaling six runs in the losses.

A Lake County Captains

The Captains were idle Monday

Notes: Lake County hosts the Fort Wayne (Ind.) TinCats at Classic Park in Eastlake on Tuesday at 7:00 in the first of a three-game series....LH Mike Rayl is 4-0 with a 2.29 ERA in seven starts, holding opponents to a .181 batting average and striking out 39 while walking nine in 35 1/3 innings....[mpe: don’t use any of the following, which were all in Monday paper:  ]OF Anthony Gallas is second in the Midwest League with a .356 batting average. He trails only former teammate Tyler Cannon, who was hitting .366 for the Captains before being promoted to Kinston last week. Gallas is tied for the league lead with 16 doubles. He has four homers....RH reliever Nikolas Sarianides (2-1, one save, 2.50) has struck out 17 and walked two, allowing 13 hits, in 18 innings....RH reliever Clayton Ehlert (0-1, eight saves, 2.03) has fanned 13, walked one and given up 10 hits in 13 1/3 innings. 

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/05/corey_kluber_minor_league_repo.html

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Drew Pomeranz labors, but Kinston tops Wilmington, 7-3: Minor-league report

Tribe's No. 1 draft pick in 2010 allows his first runs of the season, but Indians pound out 17 hits in victory.

kinston indians logo

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 7, Blue Rocks 3: 2B Justin Toole (.435) went 4-for-5 with four RBI as Kinston won a Carolina League game in Wilmington, N.C. K-Tribe LH Drew Pomeranz (1.80 ERA) allowed his first earned runs of the season, giving up three in four innings. The Blue Rocks got three hits and three walks against him. Pomeranz struck out five.

Notes: 3B Adam Abraham (.314) doubled and singled for two of Kinston's 17 hits. ... Pomeranz has struck out 22 batters in his first 15 innings. He had hurled 11 scoreless innings in his first two starts, giving up just three hits, two walks and one unearned run.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Bats 4, Clippers 2: Columbus managed just one extra-base hit in losing an International League game Tuesday in Louisville, Ky. Clippers LH Scott Barnes (5.40 ERA) allowed four runs -- three earned -- on four hits and five walks in five innings. He struck out three. Columbus 2B Cord Phelps (.311) walked twice and doubled.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 3, Baysox 0: RH Brett Brach (1-0, 0.00 ERA) allowed two hits and one walk in six scoreless innings, and he combined with two pitchers on a three-hitter as Akron won an Eastern League game in Bowie, Md. Brach struck out four. Aeros RH Bryan Price gave up one hit in two innings, and RH Matthew Langwell earned his first save after walking one in the ninth. SS Juan Diaz (.200) hit a two-run homer, RF John Drennen (.324) also homered and 3B Matt Lawson (.292) had three hits for the Aeros.

Notes: This was Brach's first appearance for Akron. With Kinston, he went 0-1 with a 1.80 ERA in five innings over two appearances.

A Lake County Captains

Captains vs. Lugnuts, ppd.: Lake County's game against Lansing (Mich.) was postponed due to inclement weather. The game will be made up as part of a doubleheader Wednesday, with the first game starting at 5 p.m.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/04/drew_pomeranz_labors_but_kinst.html

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OHSAA softball: Poland Seminary stops Archbishop Hoban, heads back to Division II state tourney

The victory earns Poland its second consecutive final four trip and a chance to avenge last year's runner-up finish.

Source: http://highschoolsports.cleveland.com/news/article/-2054267813693093459

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Flick Colby, Pan's People co-founder, dies

Driving force behind Top of the Pops' fondly-remembered dance troupe has died of bronchial pneumonia at the age of 65

The driving force behind Top of the Pops' fondly-remembered dance troupe Pan's People has died of bronchial pneumonia at the age of 65.

Flick Colby was the dancer and choreographer credited with co-founding the group that went on to become an iconic part of British pop culture.

Before the age of the music video, which dawned with the arrival of MTV, the dance troupe provided the visual entertainment when an artist could not appear on the BBC show.

They were not the first such group to appear on the pop programme - they were preceded by the Go-Jos - but they were TOTP's first exclusive set of dancers.

And they came to be as synonymous with the much-loved chart show as cigar-chomping Jimmy Savile and the pounding Led Zeppelin theme tune.

Although Colby was an American who grew up in Clinton, New York, it was on British television that she found fame.

She joined dancers Babs Lord, Ruth Pearson and Dee Dee Wilde and recruited Louise Clarke and Andi Rutherford to form Pan's People in 1966.

At the time, their outfits were seen as somewhat skimpy and their dance routines considered daring. It was, after all, a while before audiences grew accustomed to semi-naked women shimmying provocatively in every other hip hop and dance music video.

As well as being a staple of 1960s and 1970s TOTP, Pan's People featured on a number of other TV shows, including The Two Ronnies.

Although at first Colby was both choreographing the routines and dancing with the group, she later retreated to a behind-the-scenes role only.

She would often have just a few hours to come up with a sequence for a song on TOTP, which may explain the comically literal moves the group sometimes pulled.

They last appeared on the show in April 1976, dancing to Silver Star by The Four Seasons.

When the group split after this final performance, the women were said to have remained close friends.

But Colby eventually moved back to the US, where she married and settled down in Clinton with her husband George and opened a gift shop.

When her husband died earlier this year, Colby was already seriously ill with cancer herself and she never fully recovered from her bereavement, her publicist said.

Her condition deteriorated before finally leading to the bronchial pneumonia she died of at her home in Clinton on Thursday.

Philip Day, who has been Pan's People's publicist for more than 40 years, said: "Challenging as the task was, the ladies, spearheaded by Flick, made it a pleasure.

"Never a moan, always on time and true professionals at all times. I will never see their like again."


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2011/may/29/flick-colby-pans-people-dies

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Sunday, May 29, 2011

David Cameron takes on aid critics by making vaccine pledge

Prime minister to promise more money for immunisation despite growing outcry over UK's aid budget

David Cameron will use a conference in London to promote plans to raise a further $3.7bn (�2.25bn) in global aid to increase immunisation programmes, further antagonising those in Britain who claim he is putting overseas aid before squeezed living standards in the UK.

With his modernising credentials damaged by the row about NHS reforms, Cameron is determined to show that he is committed to a generous UK aid budget, and reassure those on the centre left he is a centrist Conservative. He also believes he can see off the aid sceptics in his own party, mainly from the right.

In his most high-profile intervention on overseas aid since becoming prime minister, Cameron will host the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (Gavi) conference in London on 13 June.

The conference, discussed by Barack Obama and Cameron last week, is regarded as vital to efforts to lower child mortality in Africa. In a sign of the scale of pledges being sought, the Obama administration is being asked to give $450m to the programme over three years.

Britain will also announce a substantial extra contribution to help reach the $3.7bn required to scale up immunisation programmes between 2011 and 2015, and save an estimated 4 million children's lives.

The funding will specifically enable Gavi to distribute two vaccines, pneumococcal and rotavirus, tackling the two biggest killers of children in the developing world: pneumonia and diarrhoea. It is thought the vaccines will save more than 4 million lives by 2015. Pneumonia accounts for 20% of all deaths of children under five.

Britain gave �150m to Gavi in March last year, and since 2005 has been the second most generous contributor to the alliance after the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Gavi was praised by the Department for International Development in a review on multilateral aid published three months ago. Officials at the department were reassured by steps Gavi is taking to be more transparent about the differing costs of vaccines from different producers. Two pharmaceutical industry representatives sit on the board of Gavi.

Germany announced last week that it would give ?30m (�26m) to GAVI in 2012, up from ?20m in 2011. Cameron made passionate remarks at his press conference at the close of the G8 summit of industrialised nations in France last week, insisting he would not backtrack on a commitment to increase the amount of overseas aid given by DfID. It is the only UK department not facing budget cuts.

Cameron added he would not solve the UK deficit on the backs of the world's poor, and lambasted some other world leaders for forgetting their promises on aid. Some of this passion was driven by the knowledge of what the Gavi conference could achieve next month. He regards practical vaccines that are shown to have tangible results in terms of saving lives as one of the best ways of combating the aid fatigue currently gripping the UK.

Gavi claims it has saved more than five million lives in its first decade of existence.

Alan Duncan, the international development minister, sprung to Cameron's defence telling Sky News that "aid-bashing does not actually get us anywhere. If we were to cancel the aid budget altogether it wouldn't solve all the other problems, so this sort of balancing of the aid budget versus all other problems isn't entirely logical.

"The fact is, if you had a pound, would you give a halfpenny to stop someone dying in the street? The answer is you probably would, and what we are doing is stopping millions of people dying from disease, we are helping educate people and make them healthy."


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/2011/may/29/david-cameron-makes-vaccine-pledge

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Probe after Wembley tickets stolen from Swansea property

POLICE are investigating a burglary which resulted in tickets for Swansea City's play-off final at Wembley being stolen.

South Wales Police said the incident happened at Gwili Terrace in Mayhill, Swansea, on Tuesday when three tickets for the match were taken from inside a house.

Officers have liaised with staff at the Liberty Stadium to obtain replacement tickets for the owners.

But police are appealing for information on the stolen tickets, which have been deactivated and cannot be used to gain entry into Wembley for Monday's match against Reading.

Detective Constable Chris Grey of Swansea CID said: "The stolen tickets are now worthless as whoever has the stolen tickets will not be permitted entry to the ground. Any journey to Wembley will be a wasted one.

"We are appealing to anyone who may have bought them to come forward to help with our investigation into the burglary."

The tickets are for Block 506, Row 5, Seat Numbers 179, 180 and 181.

Anyone with information about the theft has been asked to contact Swansea CID on 01792 450618 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503366/s/154fee2e/l/0L0Sthisissouthwales0O0Cnews0CProbe0EWembley0Etickets0Estolen0Carticle0E360A37840Edetail0Carticle0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Miracle twins are a double joy for mum

MEET two little ladies who are nowhere near as little as they were this time last year.

Port Talbot twins Maddison and Brooke really were miracle babies when they were born exactly 12 months ago today — while their mum Michelle Morris's story is something of miracle in itself.

She was told she had almost no chance of conceiving naturally and "died" on an operation table during a routine hospital procedure.

But today a family get-together was taking place at Michelle's home at St Joseph's Park in Aberavon to celebrate the twins' first birthday.

Crawling

"They're doing really well," said the doting mum. "They're into everything at the moment.

"Although they can't walk yet they are crawling and pulling themselves up everywhere.

"They were born very small and they're still small, but they are both really healthy."

Michelle has epilepsy and endometriosis, a chronic long-term condition that can cause pain, lack of energy, depression and fertility problems.

Three years ago, she suffered a massive cardiac arrest while undergoing a routine exploratory procedure in hospital.

Her heart stopped but surgeons managed to revive her.

She had been told she would only have a seven per cent chance of having children without fertility treatment.

Eventually she decided to adopt, only to find out she was pregnant on the day she sent off an adoption pack.

But even then there were more medical dramas to come. When she was 23 weeks pregnant, Michelle went into labour and there were fears she would lose the babies.

Fortunately they held on for another 10 weeks. Then Michelle had pre-eclampsia, a potentially fatal condition, and the babies were delivered by emergency C-section at Princess of Wales Hospital in Bridgend. Maddison was born weighing 3lb 4oz, while Brooke was 3lb 2oz.

Both spent weeks in the hospital's special care baby unit but are now up to 15lb and 17lbs respectively.

"They're totally different in character," said Michelle, who will celebrate her 22nd birthday next month.

"Brooke is totally relaxed and laid-back, while Maddison is a little terror — she's quite a handful."

Playgroup

Michelle hopes to get the girls started in a playgroup before long.

In the meantime she takes them to regular nursery rhyme sessions at Port Talbot Library.

She is also in contact with Tamba, the national twins and multiple births association.

"There are groups all over the UK but none in this area," she added.

"I'm in discussions with them at the moment and I'm hoping to start one up in Neath and Port Talbot.

"From what I can gather there are a lot of twins around here."

paul.lewis@swwmedia.co.uk



Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503366/s/155a2970/l/0L0Sthisissouthwales0O0Cnews0CMiracle0Etwins0Edouble0Ejoy0Emum0Carticle0E360A50A480Edetail0Carticle0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Educational gaps growing in Israel

New education league tables in Israel indicate that there is a growing gap between the level of education received by students in poor and wealthy areas.

Given the strong socialist-Zionist ethos in the early decades of Israeli statehood, the country's education system was avowedly public.

Citing the traditional Jewish emphasis on education and the Zionist value of helping immigrants from across the globe to live and earn in Israel, the country's leaders presented education as the key to creating an equal society.

But in the Education Ministry's latest tables on pass rates for end-of-high-school exams, the ten towns that fare the best are wealthy and in the centre of the country, while at the bottom of the table are 150 poor towns, most of which are in the periphery.

The statistics show that while five per cent more students are passing than five years ago, the increase was almost entirely concentrated in wealthy areas.

Since Israel joined the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) a year ago, the group has released a string of figures pointing to growing social gaps in Israel.

According to its calculation, the gap between the standard of living in Israel and that of the lowest tenth of the population was three times higher than the OECD average. Some experts believe that the new Education Ministry figures challenge the accepted wisdom in government that the education system can serve as the antidote to the social divide.

This expectation of education has been particularly strong since major cuts in welfare spending in 1985 and 2003.

"If these education statistics show the direction that things are taking, I don't think the social gaps are going to be closed," said Yotam Hotam, a lecturer in the Faculty of Education at the University of Haifa.

Shlomo Swirski, academic director of the Tel Aviv think tank the Adva Centre and author of a report on education gaps released earlier this year, said that the growing inequality is explained by schools' growing dependence on parental contributions.

In 1985 the government abolished the rule that tuition must be entirely funded by the state, and permitted schools to ask parents for money to contract teachers to provide extra classes.

In the past decade, the amounts requested from parents in wealthy towns have increased steadily, in some places reaching �300 per child per month. However, in poor towns, parents are unable to find those sums.

"The situation is bad for the education system because it allows parents with clout to turn part of the education system into exclusive schools, said Dr Swirski.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/comment-and-debate/analysis/49537/educational-gaps-growing-israel

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Lookback: April 2011 Lookback - Warmest since before 1659, May 05 - 09:18

Four years ago I wrote that few months could have left so much statistical debris in their wake than had April 2007. Well, April 2011 has matched it. In the Central England Temperature record, which stretches back to 1659, the warmest April before 2007 had occurred in 1865 with a monthly mean temperature of 10.6°C. In 2007 that was broken by the wide margin of 0.6°C, and now in 2011 that in turn has been broken by the even wider margin of 0.8°C.

The first week was dominated by a strong southwesterly airflow, and although it was warm and mostly dry in southern and eastern districts, heavy and prolonged rain affected the western highlands, the Lake District and Snowdonia. Thereafter all parts of the UK were dry. There were some cooler and cloudier days during the second week, but it was exceptionally warm and sunny between the 16th and 25th.

Mean maximum temperature for April ranged from 19.8°C at St James's Park (London) to 9.8°C at Fair Isle (between Orkney and Shetland), while mean minimum temperature varied between 9.6°C at Mumbles Coastguard station (Glamorgan) and 3.5°C at Aboyne (Aberdeenshire). Mean maximum temperature ranged from 2°C above the long-term average in northern and western Scotland to 5-6°C above in East Anglia and Southeast England. Mean minimum temperature was 3.0 to 4.5 °C above the long-term normal in all regions. The Central England Temperature (CET) of 12.0°C was 3.9 °C above the long-term mean, and the highest for April in the entire CET record.

The highest maximum at a standard site (i.e excluding rooftop and mountain sites) in the UK was 27.8°C at the rather sheltered site at Wisley (Surrey) on the 23rd, the highest April temperature anywhere in the UK since 1949, while the lowest minimum was minus 5.4°C at Tulloch Bridge (Lochaber) early on the 26th. The lowest daytime maximum was 6.5°C at Warcop (Cumbria) on the 13th, and the warmest night was that of the 22nd/23rd with a minimum of 14.8°C at Wych Cross (Sussex). An exceptional diurnal range of 23.4°C was recorded at Santon Downham (Norfolk) on the 21st.

Rainfall averaged over England and Wales during April was 13.3mm which is 21 per cent of the average for the standard reference period 1971-2000, the lowest in April since 2007; in the last 100 years only five Aprils were drier while 95 were wetter. The equivalent figures for Scotland were 43mm and 68 per cent of the normal amount, and for Northern Ireland 38mm and 66 per cent. Monthly totals at routinely-available sites ranged from 206mm at Tyndrum (Stirlingshire) to 0.2mm at St Helier (Jersey). The rainfall for March and April together over England and Wales was the lowest since 1938.

Sunshine averaged over England and Wales during April was 238.3 hours which is 153 per cent of the 1971-2000 mean, the highest since 2007; in the last 100 years only two Aprils were sunnier while 98 were duller. The equivalent figures for Scotland were 203.5 hours and 138 per cent, and for Northern Ireland 213.8 hours and 133 per cent. Largest total in the UK was 269 hours at Thorney Island (Hampshire) and the smallest was 140 hours at Stornoway (Isle of Lewis).

© Philip Eden


Source: http://feeds.weatheronline.co.uk/~r/weatheronline/~3/7Y6j1SW4YUw/reports

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OHSAA track and field: Bay wins Division II boys title, but girls outcome on hold because of official's error

Bay’s boys win the Division II regional track title at Ravenna, and Bay’s girls are winning pending the outcome of the 3,200, which will be rerun Tuesday because of an official’s error.

Source: http://highschoolsports.cleveland.com/news/article/5994703742718677993

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Clippers sweep doubleheader against Indianapolis: Minor-League Report

See how the Indians farm teams did last night as Alex White struck out eight and Drew Pomeranz started for Kinston.

alex-white-spring.JPGView full sizeAlex White struck out eight batters in 5 2/3 innings last night for the Columbus Clippers.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 6-6, Indians 1-5 DH Jordan Brown (.275) hit a grand slam to help Columbus complete a sweep of visiting Indianapolis in an International League doubleheader Monday.

Righty Jensen Lewis (2-0, 0.00) got the win with one inning of scoreless relief. Lewis has not allowed a run in 7 2/3 innings this season.

In the opener, RH Alex White (1-0, 1.90) struck out eight in 5 2/3 innings and LF Chad Huffman (.264) hit his fifth home run in his past four games to lead the Clippers to the win.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros vs. Baysox, postponed The Eastern League game at Canal Park between the Aeros and Bowie was postponed because of rain. The game will be made up today as part of a doubleheader beginning at 6:05 p.m. Both games will be seven innings. Fans holding tickets for Monday’s game can exchange them — at the Canal Park Box Office — for today’s games or any home game this season.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Red Sox 7, Indians 3 Salem roughed up the K-Tribe’s bullpen in winning the Carolina League game in Kinston, N.C.

Lefty Drew Pomeranz started for the Indians and pitched three innings. He allowed one run (earned) on three hits and no walks while striking out five.

Kinston led, 2-1, in the fifth when the Red Sox scored four times off right-handed reliever Toru Murata.

A Lake County Captains

Captains 2, TinCaps 1 1B Jesus Aguilar (.281) hit a two-run home run to lead Lake County to the Midwest League win in Fort Wayne, Ind.

Righty Kyle Blair (2-0, 2.84) started for the Captains and allowed one earned run on five hits over five innings. He walked none and fanned four.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/04/clippers_sweep_doubleheader_ag.html

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The wedding panners of Stamford Hill

A strictly Orthodox man featured in a BBC documentary about Chasidic weddings has been ostracised by his synagogue congregation.

Members of the Stamford Hill community have widely condemned last week's programme, Wonderland: A Hasidic Guide to Love, Marriage and Finding a Bride. The BBC received eight complaints about the film which was watched by 1.3 million people last Wednesday. It featured Avi Bresler, who had served four-and-a-half years in prison for money-laundering, and the outspoken Gabi and Tikwah Lock, who have been married for 40 years.

On Sunday, Mr Lock was asked to leave by senior members of the Satmar Synagogue in Clapton Common during their Lag B'Omer celebrations.

David Lefkowitz, a synagogue member, said: "The senior members felt it was inappropriate for him to be in the synagogue after what he did on the programme.

"He does not represent Chasidic people. He brought shame on us and made Jewish people look like losers.

"There are so many good things to show about the community but instead he spoke all this rubbish. Unless he really repents, he won't be let back in."

But Mr Lock said: "People in Stamford Hill do not agree with what I did. But I'm happy with the way it came across. I don't care whether people like it or not."

Rabbi Avraham Pinter, principal of the Yesodey Hatorah Girls School in Stamford Hill, said: "The community has been portrayed as crazy, dysfunctional fanatics. We have become a laughing-stock. It took advantage of vulnerable people and it exploited them. It's disgraceful.

"Now nobody will go in front of a camera again."

Isaac Kornbluh, who lives in Stamford Hill, said: "The film did not represent the Stamford Hill Chasidic community, but the life and travels of an individual and his friends."

Another resident said: "It took the worst part of everything. I worry about how non-Jews see this. I feel ashamed to face people if they have watched it and think this is how my life is."

Rabbi Dr Irving Jacobs, a former principal of Jews' College, said the programme echoed Nazi newspaper Der Stuermer's antisemitic caricatures. "In presenting [Mr Bresler] as an example of the typical Orthodox Jew, the BBC is making a further, subtle contribution to engendering antisemitism," he said.

But a BBC spokeswoman insisted that it had been made clear that Mr Bresler was not typical of the Chasidic community.

"He is, however, an observant Jew who lives a Chasidic life, and with characters such as this we are able to show that Chasidism is broad, and more inclusive, than many would have previously understood it to be," she said.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/49524/the-wedding-panners-stamford-hill

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Saturday, May 28, 2011

Bins look their best

The countdown to this year's Glastonbury Festival is now well under way, as work began on the site this week.

The infamous fence has been put up, encircling the fields of Worthy Farm – and some fields borrowed from neighbours – in a ring of steel.

Meanwhile, bin painters are hard at work, painting hundreds of bins to ensure that even the rubbish will look its best.

This year, U2, Coldplay and Beyonce have been announced as the headliners, with hundreds of other acts, including Flogging Molly, Queens of the Stone Age, Morrissey and Plan B performing across the various stages.

Tickets have sold out completely for the festival which runs between June 22 and 26.

Source: http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/glastonburyfestival/Bins-look-best/article-3593888-detail/article.html

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Race passes and Rooney shirt for auction

A charity auction is being held in aid of the Dorset and Somerset Air Ambulance and in memory of Sam Norris.

It is on Saturday, from 5pm, at the Glastonbury Festival site, at Worthy Farm, in Pilton.

Sam sadly died following a road accident two years ago.

The air ambulance which attended the scene was able to help save the lives of both Faye, Sam's eight-months pregnant wife and their son Isaac.

Sam should be celebrating his 30th birthday this year and he was a sound engineer and musician.

The auction will be an event for all the family – there will be live music, a hog roast, bar, face painting and lots more.

Among the lots on offer are passes for two people to the Jenson Button Hospitality Suite at the 2011 British Grand Prix on July 9 and 10, an England football shirt signed by Wayne Rooney, a Mulberry handbag – this season's Alexa Satchel in oak – and a signed Bath Rugby Shirt.

Tickets are �10 and all under-15s are free which includes the hog roast.

Under 15s get in free but will need a ticket so please ensure they are included in any orders.

Tickets can be purchased from family members or by emailing the number of tickets required to dominiccrew@sky.com.

These can be paid for by cash, cheque (made payable to The Dorset and Somerset Air Ambulance) or via online banking.

Organisers would appreciate it if tickets could be purchased in advance to ensure the hog roast accommodates numbers.

There is also a maximum capacity so please order early to avoid disappointment.

For more information see the website at http://airambulanceau ction.wordpress.com.

Source: http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/glastonburyfestival/Race-passes-Rooney-shirt-auction/article-3565742-detail/article.html

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