Monday, October 31, 2011

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

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

AA Akron Aeros

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

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

AAA Columbus Clippers

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

Advanced A Kinston Indians

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

A Lake County Captains

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

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

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

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

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

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

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

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Northern team of the week nominations

Northern Team of the Week nominations:

Goalkeepers:
Serge Fagelman (Broughton)
Mike Hirshman (Republic of Mancunia 1st)

Defenders:
Toby Levy (South Manchester 1st)
Dylan Sidle (Republic of Mancunia 1st)
Nathan Ezair (South Manchester 2nd)
Jack Rowe (South Manchester 2nd)
Avi Rosenthal (Haroldeans)
Rafi Lewis (Manchester Maccabi 2nd)
David Seligman (Oakhill)
Jack Roache (Oakhill)
Sheldon Lee (Manchester Maccabi 3rd)
Adam Jackson (Hyde Park)
Elliot Jackson (Leeds Maccabi 1st)
Michael Sacks (Manchester Maccabi 1st)

Midfielders:
Marc Yaffe (South Manchester 1st)
Ben Kay (Broughton)
Josh Klepper (South Manchester 2nd)
Cabral Christian (Haroldeans)
Richard Buxton (Manchester Maccabi 2nd)
Gab Silva (Republic of Mancunia 2nd)
Jacob Brunner (Oakhill)
Josh Lewis (Hyde Park)
Oshri Amar (Leeds Maccabi 1st)
Louis Basso (Manchester Maccabi 1st)

Strikers:
Adam Lavin (South Manchester 1st)
Anton Feingold (South Manchester 1st)
Zalmy Lachs (Crumpsall)
Marc Woolfe (Oakhill)
Bobby Abrams (Haroldeans)

Managers:
Darryl Lee (South Manchester 1st)
Ivan Gee (Haroldeans)
Sydney Fulda (Broughton)
Josh Daniels & Zack Gothelf (Oakhill)

Goal of the Week:

Loz Newman (South Manchester 1st) Thumping header at the far post from Toby Levy?s cross to round off an exquisite ten-pass move.

Adam Lavin (South Manchester 1st) Dribbled past four defenders inside the penalty area before curling a stunning effort into the top corner.

Ben Annis (Manchester Maccabi 2nd) Sent an unstoppable 25-yard drive into the far corner.

Daniel Klapisch (Republic of Mancunia 2nd) ? Beat the keeper with a perfect chipped effort.

Save of the Week:

Jacob Shapiro (Oakhill) Stunning penalty save helped Oakhill see off Manchester Maccabi 3rd)

Mike Hirshman (Republic of Mancunia 1st) Somehow managed to tip David Herman?s 25-yard rocket over the crossbar.

Referee of the Week:

Lee Shuell (Broughton v South Manchester 2nd)
Adam Cohen (Sporting JLGB vs Haroldeans)

Source: http://www.thejc.com/sport/57445/northern-team-week-nominations

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WGSweet published Yeovil Town FC comment: Terriers' bark worse than bite

Article

Source: http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/Yeovil-Town-FC-comment-Terriers-bark-worse-bite/story-13712777-detail/story.html

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Jody McIntyre and the Tottenham riots: quelle surprise

Two days after the worst rioting in Tottenham since the 1980s, and the facts of what happened are slowly coming together.

What's already fairly clear is that not all the rioters were locals; as David Lammy MP noted in the Times: "Many of the people arrested weren't from Tottenham. The grief of one family must never be hijacked to inflict grief on others."

Coming after months of social unrest and protests, particularly in the capital, the idea that a peaceful protest could be hijacked by the more anarchic elements in society should come as no surprise.

Nor should the fact that one of the key figures has been pinpointed as Jody McIntyre, a far left protester who rose to prominence in the wake of the student rallies after he alleged that he had been knocked from his wheelchair by a policeman (the incident was investigated and the Met was later cleared of wrongdoing).

It later transpired that McIntyre was no political ing�nue, but a venomous anti-Israel campaigner who had made a catalogue of unfounded allegations against the Jewish State on his personal blog.

He labelled Israel schizophrenic and lunatic and spoke of having a casual sandwich break with Hamas terrorists (only he didn't describe them as terrorists). In the months since, he has been on the platform at Palestine Solidarity Campaign events and continued to rail against Israeli "apartheid".

Of course, he's been less vocal on the subject of the rockets fired at Israeli towns, the murder of a three-month-old baby by a Palestinian extremist, or the bomb that went off in Jerusalem earlier this year ? killing a British Christian.

He is, of course, a poster boy of the far left, a darling of the socialist world. He even writes for the Independent and occasionally for the Guardian. Regardless of his views on Israel, he has painted himself as a crusader for the oppressed, a fighter for the poor and unrepresented.

So as small businesses and the homes of those who didn't have a back-up plan were being destroyed, was this bastion of the left condemning the violence and its impact on those who didn't deserve it?

No, actually on Friday he slammed the lack of accountability in the police in an Indy post about the "violence and provocation" of the force.

And the next day, as the riots broke out, he was advising his more than 9,000 Twitter followers to get involved and add to the pain.

"Be inspired by the scenes in Tottenham, and rise up in your neighbourhood," he cried. "100 people in every area = the way we can beat the feds."

I'm sure those people who have had their livelihoods destroyed will be delighted to have been part of the attempt to "beat the feds".

Hey, my flat's burnt to the ground, my windows have been smashed, kids terrified. But we're sticking it to the man, yeh.

Today, as most of us looked in horror at the photographs of destruction on the front pages, McIntyre didn't show any remorse. "You ask if looting is justified, I ask if the police will ever be held accountable for killing people?"

It's for the Indy to decide if they want him to continue writing in their name (they stated yesterday that they don't "condone lawbreaking").

I doubt the PSC or the rest of Britain's far left anti-Israel brigade will distance itself. He hates Israel, so that's enough. It doesn't matter how unpalatable the rest of his behaviour is.

But isn't it interesting that someone like McIntyre, a self-proclaimed campaigner for social justice and rights, is only bothered when it suits him.

Update: Posted on the Indy website: "Following his recent tweets and statements on the London riots, The Independent will no longer be taking blogs from Jody McIntyre."

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/jennifer-lipman/jody-mcintyre-and-tottenham-riots-quelle-surprise

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Goedert, Mills, Buck all homer as Clippers batter Bats: Minor-league report

Bases-loaded walk lifts Aeros; Mike Rayl shines in Kinston's shutout of Fredrick; West Michigan routs Lake County; Hankins' homer not enough for Mahoning Valley; Kulbacki's two RBI lift Lake Erie.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 12, Bats 4: Columbus got homers from 3B Jared Goedert (.271, 14 HRs), 1B Beau Mills (.250, 6 HRs) and RF Travis Buck (.263, 4 HRs) and won the International League game in Louisville, Ky. Mills finished with four hits and 2B Argenis Reyes (.306) had three.

RH Paolo Espino (3.57) started and threw four innings. He allowed two runs (both earned) on five hits. Espino struck out six and walked none. RH Zach Putnam (6-3, 3.72) pitched two scoreless innings to earn the win.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 6, Phillies 5: Akron DH Michel Hernandez (.337) walked with the bases loaded and two out in the bottom of the 13th as the Aeros outlasted visiting Reading (Pa.).

Aeros C Chun Chen (.258) and 2B Karexon Sanchez (.213) homered for Akron. It was Chen's 16th home run of the season and Sanchez's ninth.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 1, Keys 0: LH Mike Rayl (4.74) threw seven scoreless innings and RF Bo Greenwell (.257) doubled in LF Jordan Casas (.262) in the eighth inning as Kinston (N.C.) won the Carolina League game over visiting Fredrick (Md.).

Rayl allowed five hits, struck out four and walked one. RH Nickolas Sarianides (2-0, 3.72) pitched the eighth to get the win and RH Preston Guilmet (1.60) struck out two in the ninth in earning his 34th save.

2B Casey Frawley (.215) and 1B Jesus Aguilar (.247) each had two hits for the Indians.

A Lake County Captains

Whitecaps 7, Captains 3: West Michigan banged out 15 hits and beat Lake County in a Midwest League game in Eastlake.

RH Danny Salazar (0-2, 3.60) started and pitched three innings. He gave up one run (earned) on four hits. LH J.D. Reichenbach (3.65) relieved and got touched up for five runs (all earned) in four innings on nine hits, including two home runs by the Whitecaps' James Robbins.

RF Brian Heere (.246) and LF LeVon Washington (.209) each had two hits for the Captains.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Crosscutters 6, Scrappers 2: Scrappers 2B Todd Hankins (.253) hit his fourth home run but Mahoning Valley lost the New York-Penn League game to visiting Williamsport (Pa.)

RH Hector Rondon, the Indians' Minor League Pitcher of the Year in 2009, pitched in a game for the first time since having Tommy John surgery in August 2010.

Rondon, 23, pitched one inning and allowed one earned run on two hits.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 3, Wild Things 2: RH Josh Roberts (4.17) pitched seven sharp innings and LF Kellen Kulbacki (.270) hit his sixth homer and drove in two runs to lead Lake Erie past visiting Washington (Pa.).

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

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Brady B vs Southgate Harmen A

Alex Bourne bagged a brace as Harmen avoided a potential upset against Division Four high-flyers Brady B at Rowley Lane. Here is the pick of the action. Photos: Marc Morris

Source: http://www.thejc.com/galleries/msfl-galleries/brady-b-vs-southgate-harmen-a

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Cardinals manager Tony La Russa announces retirement

The World Series win over Texas was the third of La Russa's 33-year career. The manager guided the Cardinals to the championship despite being 101/2 games behind Atlanta on Aug. 25 for the final playoff spot in the National League.

tony-larussa-retire.jpgView full sizeSt. Louis Cardinals Manager Tony La Russa is retiring.

ST. LOUIS — Tony La Russa retired as manager of the St. Louis Cardinals today, three days after winning a dramatic, seven-game World Series against the Texas Rangers.

The 67-year-old La Russa announced his retirement at a news conference at Busch Stadium.

The World Series win over Texas was the third of La Russa's 33-year career. The manager guided the Cardinals to the championship despite being 10½ games behind Atlanta on Aug. 25 for the final playoff spot in the National League.

La Russa retires third on the all-time wins list, 35 behind John McGraw. In addition to this season, he won championships in Oakland in 1989 and St. Louis in 2006.

"Other than some of personal attachments, I feel good," La Russa said. "I feel good that this is the right decision and there's something out there."


Source: http://www.cleveland.com/sports/index.ssf/2011/10/cardinals_manager_la_russa_ann.html

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Metal gurus

Earlier this year I ran an article about an enigmatic collection of lead books which, it was being argued, were ancient Jewish mystical texts.

Immediately, rival theories began to appear all over the media here and abroad that these were early Christian codices.

But the claims of antiquity began to be debunked on the blogs.

Further detective work done by scholars ? see this and this - suggest that the metal mysteries, sadly, are simply fakes, as the Israel Antiquities Authority believed all along.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/simon-rocker/metal-gurus

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Occupy protesters at St Paul's Cathedral face first legal step to eviction

Occupy London Stock Exchange activists to be handed letter from Corporation of London asking them to pack up camp

The first step in what is likely to be a lengthy legal battle to remove the anti-capitalist protest camp from outside St Paul's cathedral in London will begin on Monday afternoon when officials formally hand activists a letter requesting that they pack up their tents and other belongings.

A Corporation of London spokesman said the letter, which was still being drafted, was likely to ask that the Occupy the London Stock Exchange protesters move within 24 or 48 hours. Activists have been camping outside St Paul's for a fortnight in protest at the perceived excesses of bankers and the global finance system.

Legal officials from the corporation, which owns some of the land around St Paul's, said they would distribute several copies of the letter in the camp.

If the activists do not comply, which appears almost inevitable, then the corporation's lawyers will most likely start court proceedings on Wednesday under the Highways Act, seeking an eviction. This process could take several months, lawyers have warned.

The letter will point out that there is no objection to a 24-hour protest at the site, on the western edge of the cathedral, but that the presence of more than 200 tents plus assorted marquees providing food, information and other facilities meant the thoroughfare was blocked.

Announcing the plan to take court action after a meeting on Friday, Michael Welbank, the councillor who chaired the meeting, said: "Protest is an essential right in a democracy ? but camping on the highway is not."

The Occupy camp ended up on the site, which is part owned by St Paul's, on 16 October after an initial plan to base itself at nearby Paternoster Square, the private business and retail development housing the London Stock Exchange, was thwarted by police action.

The cathedral has backed many of the camp's aims, but on Friday said it supported legal action. The decision prompted the canon chancellor, Giles Fraser, to step down, a move mirrored later by a part-time chaplain. St Paul's was closed for a week due to what officials said were health and safety issues with the camp's size and proximity.

A protester at the camp, Spyro van Leemnen, said any response to the letter would be decided at a general assembly later in the day. The movement makes decisions democratically, through mass meetings.

The group has promised to remain at St Paul's in the long term and spread to other areas in the City. A "spillover" camp at Finsbury Square, further east, set up a week ago, is now thought to be near capacity. It is believed that protesters will target a third site later this week.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/oct/31/occupy-london-st-pauls-cathedral

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Penn State is unappreciated, unloved and undefeated in Big Ten: National College Football Insider

There are a lot of questions about Penn State's 5-0 Big Ten record against lesser opponents, but first place in the Leaders Division isn't a bad place to be with three games to play.

psu-still-rush-illini-horiz-mct.jpgView full sizeDevon Still had Illinois QB Nathan Scheelhaase hurrying out of the pocket during Saturday's game, which was another dominating effort by the Penn State defense. But can it's offense keep the Nittany Lions atop of the Leaders Division?

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- What's the right way to describe Penn State as the Nittany Lions relate to the Big Ten?

Best team? No. Least unblemished? Better. First place? Gotta be.

The team with the No. 101-ranked scoring offense in the nation, averaging 21.8 points, is the only undefeated team in Big Ten play. That is either a disturbing blast of reality for the conference as a whole or a tough-minded reminder that defense wins, and there's something to be said for finding a way.

Right now, Penn State at 5-0 not only sits atop the Leaders Division, it has a two-game lead. This side of the Big Ten has a 5-0 team, an 0-5 team and four others with at least two conference losses. The 5-0 team beat the 0-5 team just 16-10.

The Nittany Lions' six-point victory over Indiana on Oct. 1 is some indication of what type of first-place team we're dealing with. In the Hoosiers' next four Big Ten losses, they allowed 41, 59, 45 and 59 points. Penn State managed three field goals and a 74-yard touchdown pass.

The Nittany Lions also have beaten Iowa by 10, Purdue by five, Northwestern by 10 and Illinois by three when the Illini's game-tying field goal try in the closing seconds Saturday banged off the upright. Any reasonable Big Ten power rankings would show the Nittany Lions are 5-0 against the bottom six teams and haven't played anyone in the top six. But wouldn't you think Wisconsin or Ohio State, both 2-2, would take a 5-0 record against bad and mediocre teams?

When they needed it in the snow on Saturday, the Nittany Lions found it. Quarterback Matt McGloin was 5-for-18 for 20 yards before Penn State's final go-ahead scoring drive in the fourth quarter. On the 10-play, 80-yard march, McGloin was 4-for-6 for 78 yards.

Now Penn State goes into a bye week trying to find its offense, the way Ohio State looked for it during its bye week after a one-completion win over Illinois. There's some hope. Top receiver Derek Moye, out since Oct. 11 with a broken bone in his foot, returned for the game-winning drive Saturday and is back in the mix. He could be a game-changer.

Running back Silas Redd has done for the Penn State running game what Dan Herron has done for Ohio State, and his 137-yard game Saturday was his fifth straight over 100 yards. According to the Big Ten Network, he led all major college running backs in rushing in October with 703 yards.

The quarterback position doesn't have anywhere to go but up. Most Penn State observers don't understand why McGloin isn't the only guy who plays, but Joe Paterno continues to give two quarterbacks a chance. Rob Bolden was 0-for-4 Saturday and he's completing 43 percent of his passes, with one touchdown and four interceptions. But maybe he keeps McGloin motivated in practice.

So imagine how good the defense must be. Linebacker Mike Mauti, one of Penn State's best defenders, was lost for the season to injury in late September. But defensive lineman Devon Still is an All-American candidate and the Nittany Lions are 10th in the nation in yards allowed and fourth in fewest points allowed.

The prediction here isn't for the Nittany Lions to reach the Big Ten title game. But at the very least, Penn State will play Wisconsin in the last game of the regular season with a shot at it. They have Paterno, who passed Eddie Robinson for the top spot among all Division I football coaches with win No. 409 Saturday.

The next target for Paterno? Connie Mack, who holds the all-time record for wins as a big-league baseball manager with 3,731. He's just 3,322 wins away. For now, Paterno only needs to reach win No. 411 in this regular season to take his shot at 412 in Indianapolis on Dec. 3.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/osu/index.ssf/2011/10/penn_state_is_unappreciated_un.html

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Israel's forgotten man?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

I hope not.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Iranian chess player expelled after Israel boycott

An Iranian chess player has become the latest person from the country to refuse to compete against an Israeli player in an international championship.

Iranian Grandmaster Ehsan Ghaem Maghami announced he would boycott the match against Israel's Ehud Sachar. The two had been scheduled to compete in the fourth round of the Corsica Masters competition.

As a result of his refusal, Mr Maghami was expelled from the tournament.

"Politics has no place in competition at this level," said organiser Leo Battesti. "I had no other choice."

In July a member of the Iranian swimming team pulled out of an international contest because of the presence of an Israeli athlete in the race. Last year an Iranian weightlifter agreed to participate in the World Masters Weightlifting Championship, despite the presence of any Israeli. But when his Israeli opponent won, Hossein Khodadadi refused to shake hands with him.

The World Jewish Congress has previously called for Iran to be suspended from international sporting events, including next year's London Olympics, until its athletes agree to race Israelis.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/news/israel-news/57267/iranian-chess-player-expelled-after-israel-boycott

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Greater Cleveland's Alex Lavisky, Anthony Gallas were up and down in the Cleveland Indians' minor-league system this season

Local Indians prospects Anthony Gallas and Alex Lavisky have a moving experience in the farm system this past season.

Alex Lavisky Anthony Galla.JPGView full sizeAlex Lavisky, left, and Anthony Gallas began the past baseball season with the Class A Lake County Captains in Eastlake, but their paths went in different directions as the year progressed.

Two Indians minor leaguers sprung from the ballfields of Northeast Ohio learned a major-league lesson this season: Keep your bags packed and a pair of fresh underwear handy.

Former St. Edward catcher Alex Lavisky and outfielder Anthony Gallas, who starred at Strongsville and Kent State, began the season as Lake County teammates in Eastlake.

As the season unfolded, you needed a GPS to track them.

Lavisky, whom the Indians drafted in the eighth round last year and who received a $1 million signing bonus, wound up in Niles, Ohio. Gallas closed the season in Akron, by way of Kinston, N.C. -- the hard way.

The Captains were on a 12-hour trip from Wisconsin in mid-June when Gallas was called to the front of the bus and told he was promoted to Kinston. The team arrived in Eastlake at about 5 a.m. That left him two hours to rush home to Strongsville, pack and catch a plane to Atlanta for a connecting flight. He reached the airport in time to board the plane just minutes before takeoff.

anthony gallas.JPGView full sizeAnthony Gallas had no time to waste when this past season when he was promoted to Class A Kinston, N.C.

At Kinston, Gallas went straight to the ballpark, showered, ate and, on no sleep, started in right field and batted third in the second game of a doubleheader. He even managed to hit a double. Did we mention he played on no sleep?

"You go on adrenaline at that point," he said.

Such is the topsy-turvy life of a minor leaguer, which Gallas and Lavisky experienced in all its unpredictable, sometimes frustrating glory this summer.

"A big learning curve," said Lavisky, who struggled in his first year of professional ball. It was a year of adjustments, especially at the plate.

Lavisky batted .207 with eight homers in 49 games for Lake County, where he split time at catcher and designated hitter. He was sent in mid-June to the club's rookie league team in Mahoning Valley, where he hit .201 with five homers in 68 games. Combined, he finished with 13 homers and 52 RBI in 458 at-bats.

"I was in such a deep hole to begin with," he said. "I think I raised my batting average 100 points in like three weeks just from making these adjustments. If I wasn't so far behind, the numbers would have been a lot different."

Lavisky, 20, was told not to fret about his numbers, just focus on technique. Even so, most top prospects don't handle being sent down as well as he did, said Ross Atkins, the Indians' vice president of player development.

"In Lavisky," he said, "we saw an incredible amount of determination and baseball intelligence and some natural leadership ability that resonated throughout in a very tough year for him."

Going from 30-game seasons in high school to the grind of a professional schedule can wear young players out. But in the most physically demanding position on the field, his body held up just fine, he said.

alex lavisky.JPGView full sizeCatcher Alex Lavisky managed to hold up to a grueling season behind plate.

Good thing, because Lavisky just spent from late September through the first half of October in Goodyear, Ariz., first in the Indians' fall development program and then as one of the club's four instructional league catchers. Teams invite their bigger investments to fall ball for extra seasoning.

"That's one of the things they've made very clear," he said. "They believe in me a lot."

But off-seasons are a bit different for the undrafted.

Gallas, signed as a rookie free agent after becoming the first Mid-American Conference player to get at least 250 hits, score 200 runs and drive in 200 runs in his career, took a week off when the season ended.

Then he went back to work -- for his uncle's commercial real estate appraisal business.

"Being an undrafted free agent, I have to maintain a living," he said during a recent lunch break from his day job.

Gallas and Lavisky are also hitting and fielding instructors at Diamond Indoor Sports in Westlake.

This season, Gallas rode his dynamic bat from Low Class A Lake County to High Class A Kinston, and finally to a late-season taste of Class AA Akron -- a three-level jump.

"Anthony was a real pleasant surprise," Atkins said.

Gallas batted .314 with six homers in 207 at-bats for the Captains before the red-eye call-up to Kinston. He was holding his own in the Carolina League when he was hit by a pitch and suffered a deep bruise on the outside of his left hand.

"It was kind of like two different seasons for me," he said. "I did pretty well at Lake County, made the All-Star team and everything was going good. And when I came down to Kinston, it was like the complete opposite. I couldn't find my bat. I was struggling."

He finished with a .197 batting average in 39 games at Kinston, but as Akron chased a playoff spot in September, Gallas was unexpectedly promoted. He appeared in just one game, going 0-for-4 with three strikeouts.

"It was need and an opportunity," Atkins said, "and [Gallas was] someone we felt good about handling it from a maturity standpoint."

Gallas, who turns 24 in December, said, "I feel like I definitely opened some eyes, and at least I got on the radar."

The question is at what level the Indians intend to start the two next season. The most likely scenario has Gallas returning to Kinston (the affiliate moves to Zebulon, N.C., near Raleigh, as the Carolina Mudcats in 2012) and Lavisky back in Eastlake with the Captains, although Atkins was noncommittal.

"We'll sort through that over the course of this off-season and how they report to spring training," he said.

After this season, Gallas and Lavisky know to be packed and ready.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: blubinger@plaind.com, 216-999-5531

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/10/greater_clevelands_alex_lavisk.html

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Israel - a "holiday" from Hell?

Admittedly I?m not a regular reader of the West Sussex County Times, but something in this week?s paper caught my eye.

The paper has an exclusive, headlined ?Woman describes her Israel trip from hell?, on page six of this week?s edition.

It sounds a fascinating tale ? the intro alone reveals how a West Chiltington woman told of her ?ordeal in an Israeli prison?.

I decided to read on:

?Audrey Gray, 77, was invited to Bethlehem to a refugee camp to help plant olive trees.?

Average West Chiltington readers must have been gripped by this terrifying account of one of their own being banged up abroad. Indeed, even I was almost concerned about the poor pensioner?s plight. But then, with the next line, the penny dropped.

?However, when she reached Tel Aviv Ben Gurion international airport, she, along with 12 others, was arrested.?

Arrested with 12 others? Hmm, that sounds like something we should have heard about before, surely? If you havent worked it out already you soon will. But let us continue with our story. (Unfortunately I?ve not been able to find an online version of the story to link to.)

Ms Gray told the paper she was ?just visiting friends? and ?didn?t think there would be a problem?. Her treatment in the prison was ?inhumane? ? there was ?just no humanity?. Ms Gray ?lost all concept of time? and ?couldn?t really remember a life before or after?.

According to reporter Charlotte Pearson, Ms Gray and her friends were ?never told why they had been arrested?, even when boarding their plane home.

The story, as educated readers of the Jewish Chronicle will realise, is something of a perversion of the truth.

Even at her advanced age, Ms Gray is clearly a master of media spin. She was, of course, one of the 12 anti-Israel activists held after flying to the country as part of the ?flytilla? campaign three weeks ago. Not that you?d know it from the West Sussex County Times?s story ? it fails to mention the well-publicised campaign even once.

To an unknowing reader, this is viewed as an open-and-shut case.

So is this a one-off piece of poor standards from a reporter who has been fed a line and fallen for it, or something indicative of a wider problem?

Having served time myself on a number of local papers, I?ll suggest the former, with an element of the latter for good measure. Ms Pearson cannot really be expected to understand the intricacies of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict when reporting on village fetes in West Chiltington any more than I could have been expected to understand the situation facing Iranians in Barnet when I was reporting on their plight in between ducking in and out of Barnet Council meetings.

But did it not cross Ms Pearson's mind at any point to perhaps contact the Israeli Embassy to ask for its version of events?

Did she not think it wise to inform readers of the wider context of Ms Gray?s visit? It would have been perfectly possible to give a similar account of what happened to the 77-year-old while including the fact that she was in Israel specifically to take part in the "flytilla" protest.

Whether Ms Pearson will explain why her story failed to mention a single word of explanation about the true nature of pro-Palestinian activist Ms Gray?s visit remains to be seen.

But it is clear that the wider problem ? the effectiveness with which anti-Israel campaigners are finding a voice in local and national media ? is a rising problem for Israel and her supporters.

How many West Chiltingtonians will have taken the story at face value, convinced that Israel randomly stops British pensioners who have been ?invited? to refugee camps, bangs them up for a few days and then sends them packing?

Out of its true context, the story presents a wholly negative view of Israel to readers who may rarely consider any in-depth news about the country, or indeed the Palestinian territories.

Thankfully, pro-Israel campaigners around Britain ? many of them Christians like Ms Gray ? are now raising their efforts to put across Israel's view and combat the overwhelmingly negative portrayal in the British media.

But with stories such as this slipping into local papers up and down the country every week - often missed and unchallenged by Israel's friends - a cynic might suggest the pro-Israel camp has its work cut out.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/marcus-dysch/israel-a-holiday-hell

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Struggling to pay the bills

A poignant letter in this week?s Jewish Tribune reveals one family's battle to keep their head above water in these hard economic times.

The anonymous writer used to raise money for Jewish schools, then he lost his job, home and became bankrupt. Life is now a constant struggle.

For a while, paying Jewish schools weren?t a problem but then they became a ?living nightmare? for him. I assume he is a member of the Charedi community and therefore has sent his children to one of the independent strictly Orthodox schools.

He continues:

?Recently, a school governor decided that my minimum payment should be �1,500 per term?.I had already been given a plastic card banning my son from all areas of the school because I had paid nothing.

?But then I owe everybody money? gemachim [loan charities], rabbonim, personal loans, grocery bills.

?I have to find �1,800 per month just for rent when many months I earn nothing at all?.

?? When I had put together �1,000 to pay part of a term?s school fees, the rent went unpaid that month, and I still cannot pay it.?

He goes on to say that a governor of the school spotted him when he took his family on ?our first few days? holiday in seven years? and he was asked where he had got the money for that. ?Surely he was right. I should not have taken this vacation. However, my wife has driven our children to school for the last 20 years every single day without complaint. If not me, then surely she needed a break?

?For the first time in my life, I was aware that my wife and I were sacrificing food so that our children could eat properly?

?So, please, before we assume that all those not paying full school fees are a burden, have a little rachmonus for those who sincerely cannot afford to pay and I beg of you, pleasae stop sending us threatening letters, ?ban cards? and regular reminders of how much we owe.?

I wonder how many more tales there are like this.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/simon-rocker/struggling-pay-bills

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Judah Maccabee: as told by Mel Gibson

What could possibly go wrong?

Who wouldn't want to see a film about a celebrated Jewish warrior made by a man who has made his views on just how nasty those Jews are pretty darn clear?

Mel Gibson as Haman, I could work with.

Mel Gibson as King Pharaoh (complete with bad Egyptian accent). OK. Mel Gibson as Nebuchadnezzar, or Titus, or Lavan. Totally down with that.

But Judah Maccabee? Possible the most awesome of all the Jewish heroes? The Hammer? The guy who purified the Temple and saved the festival of lights for doughnut-lovers everywhere?

With Mel Gibson's gentle and sensitive touch, I can't wait to see how this inspirational figure of Jewish lore will be recast.

A guerrilla or a terrorist, perhaps, fighting the long-suffering Greek state? A double-agent, working against his Greek countrymen? Or just a man with daddy issues?

It's great that Hollywood wants to borrow from Jewish texts. These stories are wondreful, the material ripe and vibrant. All the classic themes are there, good versus evil, suspense and intrigue, family loyalty and a community coming together in crisis.

In other words, perfect for Steven Spielberg.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/jennifer-lipman/judah-maccabee-told-mel-gibson

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Where were you when........?

As almost a lifetime critic of Israel's lack of public relations skills, I have watched even more aghast than usual as Turkey's Erdogan has made the running against Israel with his portrayal of her attack on the Turkish ?humanitarian relief flotilla? to Gaza as something not short of an international crime. I will concede absolutely that, confronted with opposition. the Israeli commandos went into overdrive and did not stop to decide whether they should suffer casualties before responding to their attackers. But then this was no innocent `?humanitarian? sortie by well-intentioned Turks ? and I do not rely on Israeli propaganda sources for my information. What's wrong with the Washington Post and why has Israel not drawn on what it had to say in an editorial in June last year? You don't know what I am talking about? Well, here's the editorial and if you did not know about the information it contains, phone your local Israel Embassy and ask why (all the words that follow are from the Washington Post editorial):

Western governments have been right to be concerned about Israel?s poor judgment and botched execution in the raid against the Free Gaza flotilla. But they ought to be at least as worried about the Turkish government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, which since Monday has shown a sympathy toward Islamic militants and a penchant for grotesque demagoguery toward Israel that ought to be unacceptable for a member of NATO.??

On the opposite page today, Turkey?s ambassador to the United States makes the argument that Israel had no cause to clash with the ?European lawmakers, journalists, business leaders and an 86-year-old Holocaust survivor? who were aboard the flotilla. But there was no fighting with those people, or with five of the six boats in the fleet. All of the violence occurred aboard the Turkish ferry Mavi Marmara, and all of those who were killed were members or volunteers for the Islamic ?charity? that owned the ship, the Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH).??

The relationship between Mr. Erdogan?s government and the IHH ought to be one focus of any international investigation into the incident. The foundation is a member of the ?Union of Good,? a coalition that was formed to provide material support to Hamas and that was named as a terrorist entity by the United States in 2008. In discussions before the flotilla departed, Turkish officials turned down offers from both Israel and Egypt to deliver the ?humanitarian? supplies on the boats to Gaza and insisted Ankara could not control what it described as a nongovernmental organization.??

Yet the IHH has certainly done its best to promote Mr. Erdogan. ?All the peoples of the Islamic world would want a leader like Recep Tayyip Erdogan,? IHH chief Bulent Yildirim proclaimed at a Hamas rally in Gaza last year. And Mr. Erdogan seems to share that notion: In the days since an incident that the IHH admits it provoked, the Turkish prime minister has done his best to compete with Iran?s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hezbollah?s Hasan Nasrallah in attacking the Jewish state.?

??The heart of humanity has taken one of her heaviest wounds in history,? Mr. Erdogan claimed this week. He has had next to nothing to say about the slaughter of Iranians protesting last year?s fraudulent elections, but he called Israel?s actions ?state terrorism? and a ?bloody massacre? and described Israel itself as an ?adolescent, rootless state.? His foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, said in Washington on Tuesday that ?this attack is like 9/11 for Turkey? -- an obscene comparison to events in which more than 2,900 genuinely innocent people were killed.??

Mr. Erdogan?s crude attempt to exploit the incident comes only a couple of weeks after he joined Brazil?s president in linking arms with Mr. Ahmadinejad, whom he is assisting in an effort to block new U.N. sanctions. What?s remarkable about his turn toward extremism is that it comes after more than a year of assiduous courting by the Obama administration, which, among other things, has overlooked his antidemocratic behavior at home, helped him combat the Kurdish PKK and catered to Turkish sensitivities about the Armenian genocide. Israel is suffering the consequences of its misjudgments and disregard of U.S. interests. Will Mr. Erdogan?s behavior be without cost?

End Washington Post comment.....and mine

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/geoffrey-paul/where-were-you-when

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Hendon boss: Neasden 'bad losers'

David Garbacz, the manager of Premier Division leaders Hendon United Sports Club A, has accused North West Neasden A of being ?bad losers? after his team went three points clear at the top of the table.

A goal from Avidan Last helped Hendon beat their title rivals for the second consecutive week in a game that Neasden finished with 10 men after keeper Max Shields was sent off after conceding a penalty.

?The winning goal led to the inevitable Neasden complaints,? said Garbacz. ?As good a football team as Neasden are, I?m not sure if they have ever lost a match without it being the referee?s fault.

?As far as we were concerned, it was another three massive points that puts us in a nice challenging position in the league.?

Neasden joint-manager Darren Yarlett claimed that Last?s decisive strike should have been rule out for offside. ?The goal came from a terrible decision from the ref,? Yarlett said. ?He was 50 yards behind play when the assistant-referee put his flag up after the forward was five yards off.

Yarlett also criticised Hendon?s style of play. ?Only one team played football over the two matches,? he said. ?If their manager encourages long ball and nothing else then I?d hate to play in a side like that. To me it?s anti-football and painful on the eye.

?I think David should also remember who the most successful Jewish Sunday side has been over the last five years, and who has a bigger trophy cabinet. Let?s see what they finish with in May.?

Garbacz responded: ?The lads from Neasden are all fine friendly chaps until they happen to go behind. Then all their toys tend to come flying out the pram and every official has to bear the brunt of the blame which always mars games between us. It happens every time and we expect it.

?It?s a shame as they?re playing nice football and should steer away from it.?

Source: http://www.thejc.com/sport/sport-news/57254/hendon-boss-neasden-bad-losers

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South Wales Evening Post published Desert ride raises funds for £45k op

Article


Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503366/s/19a70a2c/l/0L0Sthisissouthwales0O0CDesert0Eride0Eraises0Efunds0Epound0E45k0Eop0Cstory0E136973450Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Manners maketh

Just when London and the metropolitan manners are getting truly awful, a timely reminder that there is life outside the Great Wen and, indeed, it is courteous.
I spent part of last week in Scotland, on the Isle of Arran and in Glasgow. The really striking thing about both places was the friendliness and politeness in shops, public transport, and restaurants. Not just regulation pleases and thank-yous; genuine, unforced greetings, people stopping in the street to help, incredible service in shops, whether we were buying or not. My friends and I asked someone the way in the street; she thought about it, told us, and then, realising that she had misled us, ran after us to re-direct us, and then waited at the place to make sure that we got there safely. Fairly extraordinary behaviour if one is used to the sheer surliness of the London commuter.
I'd like to swank and say that my fellow Scots are known for their devotion to politeness but I don't actually believe that to be the case. Rather, London is so full of bile that any departure from the "norm" is a much appreciated surprise. Almost certainly most places outside the capital are like this. We just forget, unfortunately.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/jenni-frazer/manners-maketh

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St. Ignatius turns St. Edward's errors into 20-17 triumph

LAKEWOOD, Ohio -- Every coach at every level has said it more than once. They say it in the pros. They say it in college and in high school. Turnovers have lost more games and broken more hearts than curfew violations and homecoming queens.

St. Ignatius QB Eric Williams celebrates with students after the Wildcats defeated St. Edward Saturday night at Lakewood Stadium. - (Joshua Gunter, The Plain Dealer)

LAKEWOOD, Ohio -- Every coach at every level has said it more than once. They say it in the pros. They say it in college and in high school.

Turnovers have lost more games and broken more hearts than curfew violations and homecoming queens.

It happened again on Saturday in Lakewood Stadium where St. Ignatius used two key turnovers in the third quarter -- turning both into touchdowns -- to defeat rival St. Edward, 20-17, in front of a chilled crowd estimated at 11,000 in a game that threw a monkey-wrench into the playoff works.

The victory will lift the Wildcats from sixth place in the region playoff race to second, meaning they will play Boardman on Saturday at Byers Field. St. Edward, the defending Division I state champion, fall from fifth to sixth and will play third-place finisher Cleveland Heights.

Check out The Plain Dealer's photo gallery from the game.

First-round playoff matchups will be announced Sunday by the OHSAA.

In typical fashion between the two West Side rivals, the game had two lead changes, was tied three times and went down to the late stages of the fourth quarter. The Wildcats (8-2) clinched the game when senior Blake Thomas made a sparkling catch of an Eric Williams pass on third-and-9 play at its 41.

Thomas' reception, his third of the night, went for 13 yards and a first down. With St. Edward out of timeouts, the Wildcats simply had to run out the final 2:24 to give them their fifth victory in the last six games against their rivals.

"I would probably put that in the top five, especially because it came against St. Ed's," said Thomas, who took the ball off the helmet of a St. Edward defender. "It was sitting there for a little bit and I wasn't sure if I was able to get it but I got it out of there."

St. Edward (7-3) led, 10-3, at the half on a seven-yard touchdown run by Dwayne Aaron with 47 seconds left in the second quarter -- also set up by a turnover -- and a 35-yard field goal by Jake Wilhelm.

The Wildcats, in the playoffs for the 22nd time, got their first break on the opening possession of the third quarter when junior linebacker Kevin Smith recovered a fumbled punt at the Eagles' 37. Junior Tim McVey scored on a seven-yard run after senior Tim McCoy set up the score with a clutch reception for a 35-yard gain on first down.

The Eagles erred again on their next possession when St. Ignatius senior Adam North stepped in front of a Ryan Fallon pass at the St. Edward 33. Five plays later, Thomas caught a 10-yard touchdown pass to give the Wildcats their first lead since a first-quarter field goal of 29 yards by Tim Shenk.

"In a game like this, a turnover is key," said St. Ignatius coach Chuck Kyle, wearing a baseball cap from the 2009 playoffs. "We needed a turnover. Adam is a good defensive back, He has very good anticipation. Some kids can run like a deer but they don't get it that they have to get [to the ball] and jump. Adam does that very well."

St. Edward pulled into a 17-17 tie when Fallon bulldozed his way for a one-yard touchdown run with 2:48 left in the third quarter, answering the Thomas touchdown. Shenk gave the Wildcats on top for good when he opened the fourth quarter with a 35-yard field goal. The Eagles had two more possessions but were unable to convert.

With Fallon completing a 29-yard pass to senior Chris Connors -- who caught a game-high eight passes for 120 yards -- St. Edward eventually moved to the St. Ignatius 41. Senior Zack Ryan and lineman Mike Ryan forced a punt by sacking Fallon.

St. Ignatius couldn't move the ball and the Eagles took over on their 29. They were able to penetrate to the Wildcats' 40 before three straight passes fell incomplete.

Williams, a transfer from Portland, Ore., completed 16 of 28 passes for 193 yards. Fallon was 13-of-23 for 160 yards. Senior Jake Mooney caught five for 47 yards, Conor Hennessey caught two for 41 yards and Tim McCoy caught four for 60.

Aaron led the Eagles with 103 yards rushing on 20 carries. McVey led the Ignatius ground game with 60 yards on 16 carries.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: trogers@plaind.com; 216-999-5169

On Twitter: @TimRogersPD

 

Source: http://highschoolsports.cleveland.com/news/article/4196440943282666171

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Donnie Webb's sac fly helps Akron avoid sweep by New Hampshire: Minor-league report

T.J. House loses 11th game as Kinston falls; Lake County swept in twinbill; Lake Erie nipped at Evansville; Columbus and Mahoning Valley rained out.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 2, Fisher Cats 1: Donnie Webb broke a 1-1 tie in the top of the ninth with a sacrifice fly as Akron avoided a three-game sweep at Eastern League foe New Hampshire. Lefty pitcher Matt Packer (6-11) pitched eight innings, allowing one earned run on three hits in eight innings. He struck out seven and walked one.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Red Sox 10, Indians 3: Left-hander T.J. House (6-11) surrendered three runs in five innings and absorbed the loss as Kinston (N.C.) lost a Carolina League game in Salem, Va. House gave up eight hits and walked four. Second baseman Casey Frawley hit his 11th home run of the year for the K-Tribe, a bases-empty shot in the ninth.

A Lake County Captains

Dragons 9-7, Captains 2-1: Dayton beat visiting Lake County twice Sunday. The Dragons' 7-1 victory followed the completion of a game suspended by rain in Eastlake on Aug. 9. The Captains' lone run in the second game came in the top of the seventh and final inning on a ground out by Aaron Fields that scored LeVon Washington. The opener picked up in the top of the fourth with Dayton leading, 2-0. Although not the losing pitcher, Joey Mahalic gave up six hits and five runs -- four earned -- in four innings of relief Sunday.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Otters 7, Crushers 6: Lake Erie lost its second straight Frontier League game in Evansville, Ind., after having won 10 in a row. Evansville out-hit Lake Erie, 11-8.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers vs. Red Wings, ppd.: Columbus' International League game at Rochester, N.Y., was rained out. A doubleheader in Rochester is scheduled Monday at 5:05 p.m.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers vs. Cyclones, ppd.: The New York-Penn League game between Brooklyn (N.Y.) and Mahoning Valley in Niles was rained out. No makeup date was announced.

Notes: Outfielder Jordan Smith leads the Scrappers in hitting with a .335 average. He has 61 hits in 182 at-bats. With 25 walks, his on-base percentage is .430.

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

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Western Gazette - North Dorset published Darren Purse targets 700 senior games following Yeovil Town FC...

Article

Source: http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/Darren-Purse-targets-700-senior-games-following/story-13676566-detail/story.html

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Week ahead: Staying unsettled - Temperatures above normal, Oct 29 - 08:47

An unsettled week is on the cards with low pressure close by. Most rain is likely to be affecting more western parts of the country. Temperatures are likely to be above normal for the time of year for many with the winds tending to blow from the south or southeast. For the weather for the next few days click here Tuesday 1/11/11 The cold front is going to be passing east through Tuesday. This takes an area of showery, sometimes heavy rain through England, clearing the far east by mid-afternoon. A weak ridge follows from the west bringing cooler and brighter weather to Wales, western England and Scotland as well as much of Ireland. Some showers affecting the western coasts of Scotland and western Ireland. Highs at 10C in Northern Ireland, 16C in southeast England. Wednesday 2/11/11 Low pressure is to the west of Ireland through Wednesday. A strong south to southeast flow will be developing with cloud and some spots of rain spreading north through the country, associated with a warm and cold front. Highs at 14 to 17C.

Thursday 3/11/11 Low pressure remains to the west of Ireland, with a secondary low developing and drifting into southwest England through the day. This is going to be pushing fronts eastwards bringing some heavier periods of rain across western England and Wales. More northern and eastern areas should be drier with some breaks in the cloud allowing some brighter spells to come through. Highs at 14 to 18C. Friday 4/11/11 A shallow low passes northwards through Friday taking some heavier periods of rain north through Ireland, northern England and western Scotland. Conditions become drier to the south with some bright spells over central and southeast England, but cloud and drizzle affecting the west. Highs at 12 to 17C. Saturday 5/11/11 Low pressure dominates the weather across the country on Saturday. Northern and eastern Scotland is likely to be wet with some heavy bursts of rain. To the west and south there will be a mix of sunshine and showers, some of them heavy at times. Highs at 11 to 15C. Sunday 6/11/11 Cloud and rain affecting Ireland and western Scotland as fronts move east, some of the rain heavy at times. Elsewhere the day is likely to be drier with sunny spells and a few showers. Highs at 12 to 16C.


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

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Grapel reunited with family in Jerusalem

The US student who was held prisoner in Egypt for four months has thanked Israel for securing his release.

Ilan Grapel, a former IDF soldier who has dual Israeli and American citizenship, was detained on allegations that he was spying for Mossad. He was never charged and his family said he was in Cairo because he was working for an NGO.

He was freed last night in exchange for 25 Egyptian convicts being held in Israeli jails.

On his return, he told reporters that he wished to thank the Israeli people and noted: "Once it would have taken 40 years to get out of the desert."

He thanked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and others who had worked to bring him home, including US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and US congressman Gary Ackerman.

He said he had been treated respectfully by the Egyptian authorities.

His mother, Irene, said she was overjoyed to have her son home. "My heart was broken for four and a half months," she said.

Mr Netanyahu expressed his gratitude to the Egyptian and US governments, adding that the deal to return him had been "hanging on a thread".

Source: http://www.thejc.com/news/israel-news/57292/grapel-reunited-family-jerusalem

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Greater Cleveland's Alex Lavisky, Anthony Gallas were up and down in the Cleveland Indians' minor-league system this season

Local Indians prospects Anthony Gallas and Alex Lavisky have a moving experience in the farm system this past season.

Alex Lavisky Anthony Galla.JPGView full sizeAlex Lavisky, left, and Anthony Gallas began the past baseball season with the Class A Lake County Captains in Eastlake, but their paths went in different directions as the year progressed.

Two Indians minor leaguers sprung from the ballfields of Northeast Ohio learned a major-league lesson this season: Keep your bags packed and a pair of fresh underwear handy.

Former St. Edward catcher Alex Lavisky and outfielder Anthony Gallas, who starred at Strongsville and Kent State, began the season as Lake County teammates in Eastlake.

As the season unfolded, you needed a GPS to track them.

Lavisky, whom the Indians drafted in the eighth round last year and who received a $1 million signing bonus, wound up in Niles, Ohio. Gallas closed the season in Akron, by way of Kinston, N.C. -- the hard way.

The Captains were on a 12-hour trip from Wisconsin in mid-June when Gallas was called to the front of the bus and told he was promoted to Kinston. The team arrived in Eastlake at about 5 a.m. That left him two hours to rush home to Strongsville, pack and catch a plane to Atlanta for a connecting flight. He reached the airport in time to board the plane just minutes before takeoff.

anthony gallas.JPGView full sizeAnthony Gallas had no time to waste when this past season when he was promoted to Class A Kinston, N.C.

At Kinston, Gallas went straight to the ballpark, showered, ate and, on no sleep, started in right field and batted third in the second game of a doubleheader. He even managed to hit a double. Did we mention he played on no sleep?

"You go on adrenaline at that point," he said.

Such is the topsy-turvy life of a minor leaguer, which Gallas and Lavisky experienced in all its unpredictable, sometimes frustrating glory this summer.

"A big learning curve," said Lavisky, who struggled in his first year of professional ball. It was a year of adjustments, especially at the plate.

Lavisky batted .207 with eight homers in 49 games for Lake County, where he split time at catcher and designated hitter. He was sent in mid-June to the club's rookie league team in Mahoning Valley, where he hit .201 with five homers in 68 games. Combined, he finished with 13 homers and 52 RBI in 458 at-bats.

"I was in such a deep hole to begin with," he said. "I think I raised my batting average 100 points in like three weeks just from making these adjustments. If I wasn't so far behind, the numbers would have been a lot different."

Lavisky, 20, was told not to fret about his numbers, just focus on technique. Even so, most top prospects don't handle being sent down as well as he did, said Ross Atkins, the Indians' vice president of player development.

"In Lavisky," he said, "we saw an incredible amount of determination and baseball intelligence and some natural leadership ability that resonated throughout in a very tough year for him."

Going from 30-game seasons in high school to the grind of a professional schedule can wear young players out. But in the most physically demanding position on the field, his body held up just fine, he said.

alex lavisky.JPGView full sizeCatcher Alex Lavisky managed to hold up to a grueling season behind plate.

Good thing, because Lavisky just spent from late September through the first half of October in Goodyear, Ariz., first in the Indians' fall development program and then as one of the club's four instructional league catchers. Teams invite their bigger investments to fall ball for extra seasoning.

"That's one of the things they've made very clear," he said. "They believe in me a lot."

But off-seasons are a bit different for the undrafted.

Gallas, signed as a rookie free agent after becoming the first Mid-American Conference player to get at least 250 hits, score 200 runs and drive in 200 runs in his career, took a week off when the season ended.

Then he went back to work -- for his uncle's commercial real estate appraisal business.

"Being an undrafted free agent, I have to maintain a living," he said during a recent lunch break from his day job.

Gallas and Lavisky are also hitting and fielding instructors at Diamond Indoor Sports in Westlake.

This season, Gallas rode his dynamic bat from Low Class A Lake County to High Class A Kinston, and finally to a late-season taste of Class AA Akron -- a three-level jump.

"Anthony was a real pleasant surprise," Atkins said.

Gallas batted .314 with six homers in 207 at-bats for the Captains before the red-eye call-up to Kinston. He was holding his own in the Carolina League when he was hit by a pitch and suffered a deep bruise on the outside of his left hand.

"It was kind of like two different seasons for me," he said. "I did pretty well at Lake County, made the All-Star team and everything was going good. And when I came down to Kinston, it was like the complete opposite. I couldn't find my bat. I was struggling."

He finished with a .197 batting average in 39 games at Kinston, but as Akron chased a playoff spot in September, Gallas was unexpectedly promoted. He appeared in just one game, going 0-for-4 with three strikeouts.

"It was need and an opportunity," Atkins said, "and [Gallas was] someone we felt good about handling it from a maturity standpoint."

Gallas, who turns 24 in December, said, "I feel like I definitely opened some eyes, and at least I got on the radar."

The question is at what level the Indians intend to start the two next season. The most likely scenario has Gallas returning to Kinston (the affiliate moves to Zebulon, N.C., near Raleigh, as the Carolina Mudcats in 2012) and Lavisky back in Eastlake with the Captains, although Atkins was noncommittal.

"We'll sort through that over the course of this off-season and how they report to spring training," he said.

After this season, Gallas and Lavisky know to be packed and ready.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: blubinger@plaind.com, 216-999-5531

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/10/greater_clevelands_alex_lavisk.html

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He's hot in Honolulu

Londoner Gregg Sulkin, barmitzvah boy hero of the film Sixty Six and young werewolf in the Disney Channel series, The Wizards of Waverly Place, gets the red carpet treatment at EuroCinema Hawaii, an international film festival, where he won the Rising Star award.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/news/the-diary/57306/hes-hot-honolulu

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