Mariners rally but then fall to Orioles

SEATTLE Two and a half months after Philip Humber achieved immortality at Safeco Field, and a mere four days after Aaron Cook raised Seattle Mariners manager Eric Wedges ire with an 81-pitch shutout at the same venue, Wei-Yin Chen took the Seattle mound on Tuesday.

For a long while it looked like something magical was going to happen for Chen. And then something totally unforeseen happened for the Mariners, who charged hard after what would have been their most rousing comeback victory of the season.

But in the end, it was the Orioles who rallied last, and best, to pull out a 5-4 victory at Safeco Field.

"That game was an emotional back-and-forth," Wedge said. "Casper (Wells) got us going, and the fight you saw after that no one saw that coming."

After the Mariners scored three in the eighth to tie the game, Robert Andino delivered a two-out homer in the top of the ninth off left-hander Charlie Furbush to provide the margin of victory.

"It was a two-seamer. I wanted to have it sink. It just didnt sink," Furbush said. "It stayed flat, and he put a good swing on it. Its a tough way to lose, after we had battled back. I just didnt get the job done."

Andinos homer to left his first since May 7, and fourth of the year came on a 2-2 pitch and ended Furbushs scoreless streak at 22 2/3 innings. Tom Wilhelmsen was unavailable after being used in three straight games.

"Charlie has been fantastic," Wedge said. "He just left one up in that situation. Hes been good against left-handers and right-handers. I felt he was the best guy to go to at that time."

The Orioles All-Star closer, Jim Johnson, worked a 1-2-3 ninth for his 24th save, and the Mariners stirring rally had an anti-climactic ending

On a night when it looked early like Felix Hernandez again had the electric stuff to flirt with a masterpiece, it was Chen, a rookie left-hander, who flirted with history. And then the Orioles who flirted with disaster.

Continued here:
Mariners rally but then fall to Orioles

Mencyclopaedia: Lacoste

Why fashion beats sport if you want to win immortality.

BY Luke Leitch | 06 July 2012

Until chronic bronchitis forced his premature retirement from tennis in 1929, Ren Lacoste won three French Opens, two Wimbledon Championships and two US Opens in just four years as a professional. It was a feat that earned him membership of the Four Musketeers, France's greatest-ever group of players.

Yet say "Lacoste" today, and what do most people think of? Not the ballistic precision of Ren's baseline play, but the clothing company he founded, and its famous crocodile-logo polo shirt (12 million sold in 2011 alone, with a total company turnover of 1.6billion euros). The story of Ren Lacoste is a smashing example of why, should you hanker after immortality, it's better to triumph in the fashion business than strive for sporting greatness. After all, can you name the other "musketeers"?*

READ: Mencyclopaedia: Orlebar Brown

To aid his training, Lacoste, born in 1904, invented a ball-lobbing machine so that he could practise without a partner. That ingenuity continued when, by now a champion, he ran up some shirts that resembled the impractically formal, starched numbers that were the tennis uniform of the time - but made of a light, piqu cotton to allow freedom of movement and maximum coolness. "The Crocodile" became Lacoste's nickname after his wager over a crocodile-skin bag with France's Davis Cup coach was reported by the Boston Globe in 1923. He played up to the nickname when, while still a player, he began to wear an embroidered crocodile patch on the left breast pocket of his tennis blazer.

READ: Mencyclopaedia: Duchamp

These factors all combined after that early retirement, when he launched a company producing those lightweight "L.12.12" shirts, complete with a scaled-down crocodile on their chests. This means Lacoste has the highly dubious - considering the blight it has spawned - honour of being the first ever company to display its logo on the exterior of its clothes.

After their introduction to the US in the Fifties, the shirts became available in various colours and popular among golfers. They were (and still are) rather expensive compared to other polo shirts, but by the late Seventies they - along with chinos, no socks and loafers - became the chosen uniform of America's "preppies", WASPy, privately-schooled college students. This in turn sparked a backlash marked by the 1981 publication of a book called Save an Alligator, Shoot a Preppie (Americans tend to confuse their Lacoste reptiles).

READ: Mencyclopaedia: Alan Paine

Excerpt from:
Mencyclopaedia: Lacoste

USOC: Chivas dealt lesson in coming up short on history

Photo Credit:

Courtesy of Seattle Sounders FC

Chivas USA were a game from making franchise history. But in the end, the same old mistakes cost them a shot at immortality on Wednesday night as they fell 4-1 to the Seattle Sounders at the Starfire Sports Complex in the semifinals of the US Open Cup.

As has been the case several times this season, a slow start and a defensive miscue proved decisive for the Rojiblancos, who conceded three goals in the second half to the three-time defending Open Cup champions. A Cesar Romero goal ultimately cut the Sounders' lead to one midway through the second half, but Chivas were ultimately unable to recover from the early deficit.

The result is certainly disappointing for us, head coach Robin Fraser told MLSsoccer.com by phone after the match. The game was pretty much going as we expected until we gave up the goal, and then to make a mistake at the start of the second half and were really chasing the game. Once it got to that point, it was always a difficult proposition to chase.

OPTA Chalkboard: Floodgates open for Sounders after opening goal

Seattle got on the board early, when a classy pass from Osvaldo Alonso sprung Eddie Johnson behind the Chivas defense, where the US International was able to slip a shot past Dan Kennedy. Down a goal, the Goats generated several scoring chances during a cagey first half, but they ended the half without a single shot on goal their first didn't come until the 58th minute.

I felt like we were very close to being dangerous on a number of chances, said Fraser. I felt like we were a final pass away, we were getting crosses, crossing situations, blocks out for corner kicks and we were definitely getting in behind them, and thats the start to being dangerous. But the game was as we expected until we made the mistake [on the first goal].

With a difficult end to an otherwise bright Open Cup campaign, Fraser admitted Wednesday's loss must be viewed as a learning experience for his young team.

I think that you have to look at everything as a progression, he said. Certainly we were proud to get to the semifinals of the Open Cup and give ourselves a chance to win a championship, and certainly we looked forward to that opportunity. But in reality, its a bitter pill to swallow when you get to this point and dont put [your] best foot forward.

View post:
USOC: Chivas dealt lesson in coming up short on history

A few ways to enjoy and celebrate Andy Griffith

By FRAZIER MOORE AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - Through his decades-long career, Andy Griffith was beloved, yet somehow taken for granted. He early on gained immortality as Sheriff Andy Taylor. But his skill at playing cornpone decency blinded fans to his ability to master other roles.

It simply seemed that, as a denizen of make-believe Mayberry, N.C., Griffith, with his wide grin and gentle drawl, wasn't acting, but instead a natural. (Note that Griffith was overlooked for so much as an Emmy nomination for "The Andy Griffith Show," while his comical co-star, Don Knotts, bagged five trophies as Deputy Barney Fife.)

Sure, being Andy Taylor would've been plenty. But for Griffith, who died Tuesday at age 86, there was more to the act.

- As a reference point in understanding Griffith's range, there's no better place to start than with his first film, "A Face in the Crowd." Released in 1957, it would be notable for just the other names attached: director Eliza Kazan, writer Budd Schulberg, co-stars Patricia Neal, Walter Matthau and Lee Remick. But the film belongs to Griffith as Larry "Lonesome" Rhodes, a drifter who becomes a power-mad media star with an evangelical streak. The film is a pioneering exploration of the corrupting influence of television in the wrong hands, and Griffith is riveting as a ruthless TV guru.

- A year later, Griffith showed his stuff as a comic actor in "No Time for Sergeants." In this hit film he reprises his role from the Broadway play as Will Stockdale, a country lad whose simple-mindedness is matched by his eternal good cheer. No wonder he turns the military upside down when he is drafted into the Air Force. Griffith is able to keep the performance riotously broad, yet believable and appealing. He proudly demonstrates his ability to read by struggling through a children's book: "Once they was a boy named Tony, who wanted a pony. So he went to his mama and sayed, 'May I have a pony?' And his Mama says, 'Naw, Tony, you may not have a pony.'" Hearing him, you laugh but also share his pride at plowing through it. And then there's the scene where, overeager as ever, Will rigs up the toilets in the latrine to respectfully "salute" the officers.

- The success of "Sergeants" helped pave the way for Griffith's hit sitcom (as well as inspiring a spinoff, "Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C."). Serving as a pilot for his prospective new series was an episode of a popular comedy, "The Danny Thomas Show," in which Thomas' character was stopped for speeding in a small town where Andy Taylor was not only the sheriff, but also justice of the peace and editor of the paper. Playing bumpkin-boss to the hilt, Griffith was an ideal foil for the city slicker Thomas, whose condescending attitude finally got him thrown in the clink. The episode was a success, and a few months later, in October 1960, "The Andy Griffith Show" premiered. In that series' early episodes, Griffith's sheriff retained its clownishness. But soon he realized he was surrounded by comic giants (particularly Knotts), so Andy Taylor claimed his role of down-home dignity amidst his eccentric fellow citizens. Sheriff Taylor still carried the show, but you couldn't really tell - it rested light as a feather on Griffith's shoulders.

- "Hearts of the West" is an amusing, if largely forgotten, comedy released in 1975 and starring a baby-faced Jeff Bridges as a 1930s writer of Wild West novels who heads to Hollywood, where he's cast in B-movie westerns. In a supporting cast that also includes Blythe Danner and Alan Arkin, Griffith plays Billy Pueblo, a crusty western actor in a performance with as much grit as charm. After Bridges' character has injured his privates by landing on a horse for a scene without wearing a cup, Billy exclaims with harsh compassion, "Didn't anybody tell him?" Then he righteously lectures him on how to deal with the powers-that-be: "Whenever they want something special, like that kind of a jump, you've got to wait 'em out. You wait till the price gets high enough to make it worth your while."

- "Matlock," which ran nine years starting in 1986, was a pleasant, prolonged postscript to "The Andy Griffith Show" in the form of a light-hearted formulaic drama. A Southern lawyer instead of a Southern lawman, Matlock, with his slower gait and head of silver hair, could have been Andy Taylor at a later stage of life. Set in Atlanta, there was no sense of community on the show, as there was with mythical Mayberry, but Matlock, as a steadfast individual, embodied the same upright values and sense of order that helped make Sheriff Taylor so endearing. Matlock was a reassuring figure for viewers to visit, and Griffith made him that way.

- Griffith's Ritz cracker commercials. Nearly every actor who can do commercials does them, even though, too often, these mini-performances trivialize substantial work they may have done in other spheres. Not so with Griffith and Ritz, for which he served as a spokesman in the 1970s. So memorable were those ads that, 20 years later, he would speak of fans still approaching him and echoing the tagline: "Gooood crackuh." No wonder. The ads captured what people knew, or thought they know, about Griffith, and loved: the Andy Taylor in him. Griffith did grand work, maybe did it too well to have been granted the full complement of roles that he deserved, and that his Andy Taylor image may have denied him. But when he told the world, "Everything tastes great when it sits on a Ritz," there could be no dispute. In those few words he was exhibiting good-heartedness, a love of life, and appreciation for life's small delights. And viewers got it. "Mmmm-mmmmm! Gooood crackuh!" Good guy.

Read more:
A few ways to enjoy and celebrate Andy Griffith

Andino's homer in ninth lifts O's over Seattle – Tue, 03 Jul 2012 PST

July 3, 2012 in Sports

Seattle Times

Associated Press photo

Seattles Casper Wells broke up Baltimores perfect game with a seventh-inninghomer. (Full-size photo)

SEATTLE Two and a half months after Philip Humber achieved immortality at Safeco Field, and a mere four days after Aaron Cook raised Eric Wedges ire with an 81-pitch shutout at the same venue, Wei-Yin Chen took the Seattle mound on Tuesday.

Something magical and maddening almost happened for Chen. Almost. And then something totally unforeseen happened for the Mariners, who charged hard after what would have been their most rousing victory of the season.

But in the end, it was the Orioles who rallied last, and best, to pull out a 5-4 victory at Safeco Field.

After the Mariners scored three in the eighth to tie the game, Robert Andino delivered a two-out homer in the top of the ninth off left-hander Charlie Furbush to provide the margin of victory. Andinos homer to left his first since May 7, and fourth of the year came on a 2-2 pitch and ended Furbushs scoreless streak at 22-2/3 innings.

The Orioles All-Star closer, Jim Johnson, worked a 1-2-3 ninth for his 24th save, and the Mariners stirring rally had an anti-climactic ending

Continued here:
Andino's homer in ninth lifts O's over Seattle - Tue, 03 Jul 2012 PST

Spain's long reign set to roll on

United with old suspicions laid to rest, Sergio Ramos can happily partner Gerard Pique (below). Photo: AFP

AFTER decades of being the great underachievers of world football, Spain are not only on the cusp of history in Kiev tonight; they have reached the brink of immortality.

Such is the insatiable global desire for success in football that prolonged reigns are almost impossible as champions are deposed with haste as the game evolves.

Occasionally, however, a team comes along that is so far ahead of the curve that it takes a small eternity to catch up. Perhaps the last time of such domination was Brazil's reign between 1958 and 1970, when they won three of four World Cups.

Advertisement: Story continues below

Spanish defender Gerard Pique. Photo: AFP

Yet even they were not immune from being outclassed by their local rivals. After winning the South American Championships (the precursor to today's knockout incarnation, the Copa America) in 1949, they wouldn't win another continental title for almost 40 years. Being at the top, even when you're the greatest, is tough.

Plenty have come close but no team has won three consecutive knockout major tournaments. At 4.45am tomorrow, Spain will chase that slice of history to call their own: Euro 2008, World Cup 2010, Euro 2012. Perhaps this squad is even young enough to have a crack at Brazil 2014.

They enter as favourites and rightfully so. Spain remain unbeaten in competitive football since the first match of the World Cup in South Africa, a shock 1-0 defeat against Switzerland. They bounced back to not only win that tournament but every match in qualifying for this tournament.

Other than a semi-final exit from the Confederations Cup in 2009, their last competitive international defeat was in a Euro 2008 qualifier against Northern Ireland, a 3-2 defeat in Belfast in October 2006. It was a seminal moment. Days afterwards, Raul, Spain's all-time leading scorer and most capped outfielder, was dumped, aged just 29.

See the original post here:
Spain's long reign set to roll on

A&E orders 'Bates Motel' series

Actress Janet Leigh shown in May 2002, has died after a long illness at the age of 77. Leigh attained screen immortality as a murder victim in Alfred Hitchcock's film "Psycho". (UPI Photo/Ezio Petersen)

License photo

NEW YORK, July 2 (UPI) -- A&E Network says it has ordered a series called "Bates Motel," based on the 1960 Hollywood film classic "Psycho."

Bob DeBitetto, president and general manager of A&E Network and BIO Channel, and the network's executive vice president of programming, David McKillop, announced Monday it had ordered the 10-episode first season of "Bates Motel" from Universal Television.

Carlton Cuse and Kerry Ehrin are serving as executive producers. Preproduction and casting are to begin immediately.

"We are proud to be partnering with Carlton Cuse and Kerry Ehrin on their thrilling reinvention of one of the most compelling characters in cinematic history," DeBitetto and McKillop said in a statement. "It's a provocative project from two of the best storytellers in the business and we're looking forward to getting started."

Cuse was a producer of the TV series "Lost" and "Nash Bridges." Ehrin's producing credits include the TV series "Parenthood" and "Friday Night Lights."

"Bates Motel" is inspired by Robert Bloch's 1959 novel and Alfred Hitchcock's genre-defining film, "Psycho," starring Anthony Perkins, Vera Miles, John Gavin and Janet Leigh.

The TV show is described as "a contemporary exploration of the formative years of Norman Bates' relationship with his mother, Norma, and the world they inhabit," a synopsis said.

It is to premiere on the network in 2013.

See the article here:
A&E orders 'Bates Motel' series

Legendary driver may call it a career at infamous race

Success on a racetrack can result in immortality. Even the casual sports fan can recite the names of Foyt, Andretti, Unser, Mears, Franchitti, and Owens.

Yes, all have been driven or in this case have driven in their chase for glory. The former at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, while the latter at a dirt course set up around a ball diamond at Plank Hill Park in a pit stop along Indiana 16 called Twelve Mile.

The 50th edition of the Twelve Mile 500 Lawnmower Race, which makes it the oldest of its kind anywhere in the nation, will kick off the first of three races at 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday.

Dean Owens wasnt born into the sport of racing; he just stumbled upon it when a neighbor told the 13-year-old about a group of guys that gathered each Fourth of July in a park nearby to race lawnmowers. The year was 1969 and they had been doing it for six years prior. The moment that Owens laid eyes on the competition he knew that he wanted to immerse himself in the sweat, oil, dirt and yes, fear of speeding through trees in a cluster of mayhem.

I got pretty excited about it, Owens recalled.

The excitement spread throughout the mechanically-inclined Owens family and eventually Deans two brothers, his father, his son, and even his sister tested their skill and guile.

It was quite a family affair, Owens said.

Owens will be competing in his 38th race on Wednesday, which is a new track record of the sorts.

I consider myself very competitive, Owens said. But I have a ball doing it.

The race is broken into three categories: Briggs and Super Stock (both of which are four-cylinder races) and a two-cylinder Modified race in which Owens said anything goes.

See the rest here:
Legendary driver may call it a career at infamous race

Uggie from ‘The Artist’ makes his mark

Uggie has made his bid for Hollywood immortality.

The canine star of the Oscar-winning film The Artist became the first dog to put its paw prints in cement outside the famous Graumans Chinese Theatre.

The rambunctious Jack Russell terrier was celebrated at a treat-laden ceremony outside the landmark as Councilman Tom LaBonge declared it Uggie Day in Los Angeles.

The main message that Uggie would like to send to everybody out there is to please adopt, Uggies trainer, Omar Van Muller, told the crowd. Hes adopted. He made it. If you guys can adopt a dog, even if they dont make it on the big screen, theyll be big stars at your house.

The event also marked Uggies retirement from show business. Van Muller said Uggie, whose other film credits include Mr. Fix It and Water for Elephants, would no longer star in films but would appear at charity events and other functions.

Uggie, who arrived at Graumans Chinese Theatre in a fire truck, was bestowed with a golden bow-tie collar and given a cake in the shape of a fire hydrant after performing tricks for photographers and tourists lining a red carpet.

While Uggie is the first canine to be showcased at Graumans courtyard, three dogs Lassie, Rin Tin Tin and Strongheart have stars on the nearby Hollywood Walk of Fame.

The Associated Press

Read the rest here:
Uggie from ‘The Artist’ makes his mark

Camelot eyes horse racing immortality

Aiden O'Brien's Camelot could become only the 16th horse to win the Epsom Derby and Irish Derby.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

(CNN) -- This Saturday, Aiden O'Brien's unbeaten colt Camelot will be aiming to add the Irish Derby to his Epsom Derby victory from earlier this month. It's a neat double, achieved by only 15 horses before him. But his trainer has his eye on another prize.

Camelot has already captured the English 2,000 Guineas and the Epsom Derby. Assuming everything goes to plan this weekend, his next target will be the St. Ledger Stakes at Doncaster in September -- and racing immortality.

For Camelot stands on the brink of that rarest of achievements, the English "Triple Crown" of thoroughbred racing.

Royal regulations for Ascot's fashionistas

Only 15 horses have ever done the treble in the century and a half in which the 2,000 Guineas, Epsom Derby and St. Ledger Stakes have been run.

Three of those, wartime winners Pommern, Gay Crusader and Gainsborough will forever have an asterisk next to their names as racing was considered too disrupted in that period for their achievements to stand, making the "official" figure as low as 12.

The last Triple Crown winner was the great Nijinsky, way back in 1970 (although the brilliant filly Oh So Sharp did win the "Fillies' Triple Crown" -- the 1,000 Guineas, the Epsom Oaks and the St. Ledger -- in 1985).

Few horses these days even attempt the full set. Since Nijinsky (who, incidentally, also won the Irish Derby en route to his treble), only two other horses have won both the 2,000 Guineas and the Derby, and both of those -- Nashwan (1989) and Sea The Stars (2009) -- opted for a tilt at the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe instead of the St. Ledger.

View original post here:
Camelot eyes horse racing immortality

Cycling: Geraint Thomas in pursuit of Olympic track gold

As Bradley Wiggins and Mark Cavendish seek cycling immortality on the roads of France next month, Geraint Thomas will be riding around in circles in Manchester. But the 26-year-old from Cardiff would have it no other way.

Thomas has proven himself to be a versatile and leading talent on the bike, including this season as team-mate Wiggins has won three stage races, with the Welshman providing support at Paris-Nice and the Tour de Romandie as the Londoner proved his credentials as a potential Tour de France champion.

Rather than support Wiggins in the mountains and Cavendish in the sprints when the Tour begins in Liege on June 30, Thomas will instead focus on fine-tuning preparations for success in the four-kilometre team pursuit at a second successive Olympics.

Beijing gold medal winner Thomas told Press Association Sport: Theres no doubt at all, but Id love to have been going to France to help them both out.

Its just unfortunate where the Olympics and Tour falls in the year.

I was always going to come back and ride the team pursuit. A home Olympics is massive and its my best chance of winning a gold medal. Its always been like that.

The team pursuit really excites me and its something I love doing. I just cant wait to get on those boards in London now and rip it up.

Thomas completed the Giro dItalia alongside Team Sky colleague Pete Kennaugh and the duo were both named in the Great Britain Olympic team earlier this month, with Ed Clancy, Steven Burke and Andy Tennant completing the team pursuit squad.

All five have been riding on the road in the last few weeks but recently returned to the track for the first time since winning the World Championships in Melbourne in April.

The British team set a world record of three minutes 53.295 seconds there, going faster than the Beijing-winning mark.

See original here:
Cycling: Geraint Thomas in pursuit of Olympic track gold

The wasteful quest for immortality

Mary Midgley, the nonagenarian philosopher, believes that living forever is overrated: quality of life not quantity is more important

You've been speaking a lot lately about immortalism. What exactly is this? Immortalism is the idea that not only should life go on getting longer, but that it should go on forever - that medical technology will see to it that we simply don't die. It is a kind of ideology, almost a religion, and is much more prevalent in the US than in the UK. It is in part an overconfidence in technology from the 20th century, and has got mixed up with science fiction.

Why is the desire to live forever a problem? My charge against immortalism is that it is wasteful - the idealism that gets hooked onto it is going in a useless direction and needs to be deflected. There are too many people already, and you can't put up with an infinite number. Another difficulty is inequality. As things stand, the most privileged would live forever while everybody else would be dying at the normal rate.

What else are you unhappy about? Even at the pace our lifespan has been increasing, we are beginning to run into trouble. The indignation that people express at not getting their pensions until they're 67 shows that the idea of a life cycle is firmly rooted and may be fairly essential to human life. I'm talking about the degree of activity at different times of life, and that is not something which changes frequently, or that changes much from culture to culture.

What we respect has also changed: we have a high regard and respect for youth, which makes the situation harder for the old.

So even without immortalism, is the current lengthening of life problematic? Doctors have a habit of trying to make each individual live a bit longer. I think it runs very deep. They should be given a better idea of health that doesn't necessarily mean living longer.

How can we reinvent older age? We need to improve quality of life, not quantity. For example, the distribution of work is ridiculous. People in their middle years work far too long and are suddenly expected to stop. Part-time work is a good idea, but it hasn't been fitted into our society half enough. It is very important for women with children but also very important for the old.

When he found he was dying of cancer, Steve Jobs made this interesting remark, that it was the best thing that ever happened to him because it made his priorities clear. He said nobody wants to die but it is life's best invention, it is the mechanism of change. He had a point.

What about your life now you are in your 90s? We haven't recovered from the idea that growing old is an awful disaster, which must somehow be put off. I never bought that one. If nothing awful happens to you, you go on doing what you're doing and looking for more. I'm lucky to be in the sort of job I am in, where you can simply go on doing what you like and not be forcibly retired. I've got somewhat feeble and ailing but I haven't got seriously ill. It's the thought of a futile life that is the problem.

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

Read the rest here:
The wasteful quest for immortality

Vampire website leads to another sex-crimes case

By Lori Kurtzman

The Columbus Dispatch Saturday June 23, 2012 5:45 AM

Jeffrey Justice, 29, is accused of exchanging nude photos with a teen he met on a vampire site.

Vampires are big right now. Big enough that a teen might jump online to talk fangs and immortality or who Bella should have ended up with in the Twilight series.

But its not just teens on those sites, as two central Ohio cases show, nor is it all innocent chatting.

Prosecutors say two men charged in separate sex crimes this week met their victims on vampire-themed social-networking sites.

The latest accusations involve a northeastern Ohio man charged with swapping nude photos with a Licking County teen. On Thursday, a grand jury indicted 29-year-old Jeffrey Justice of Chesterland on one count of illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material and one count of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles.

The indictment, released yesterday, alleges that Justice and the 15-year-old Newark girl exchanged the pictures some time between Jan. 1 and June 1 after meeting on a vampire website. Workers at a local youth club alerted authorities, Licking County Prosecutor Ken Oswalt said. Justice is being held at the Licking County jail.Earlier this week, a North Side man was charged in federal court with forcing a 15-year-old to perform oral sex on him at least seven times in his home or car. Randall V. Roberts, 41, who is jailed in Franklin County, met the girl on vampirefreaks.com, according to the complaint. From 2006 to 2010, records show at least three other men nationwide have been charged in sex crimes against girls they met through the same site.

While FBI spokeswoman Jenny Shearer said she hasnt heard of a trend of vampire site-related crimes, shes hardly surprised that potential sex offenders might search such forums for underage targets.

People who have those interests know where to go to find potential victims, she said.

Read more here:
Vampire website leads to another sex-crimes case

The decadent theme revised in 20th century novels

19.06.2012 - (idw) University of Gothenburg

The immortality-through-art theme is explored in a number of decadent novels from the late 1800s. A new doctoral thesis from the University of Gothenburg shows that the decadent theme is revised in well-known American 20th century novels such as The Great Gatsby, Lolita and The Crying of Lot 49. Decadence in art and literature refers to the cultural period in Europe that occurred in the late 1800s, also called fin de sicle. Decadent aesthetics originated in France and then spread to England and the rest of Europe, and eventually also to USA. The decadent novel is characterised by controversial themes such perversity, narcissism and agony often conveyed using an extremely poetic style. In her doctoral thesis in English, Tia Stajic Lfgren focuses on the typical decadent theme of immortality-through-art. Stajic Lfgren refers to the theme, which can be found in The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891) and several other fin de sicle novels, as the metaphysics of art. The metaphysics of art represents a concrete expression of the 19th century doctrine of lart pour lart or art for art's sake, which holds art as superior to and exempt from moral principles, she says.

While this denial of mortality in the traditional fin de sicle novel is manifested in daring and perverse experimentation, both thematically and stylistically, mortality is gradually accepted in the 20th century novels explored in my thesis, and this completely changes their narrative structure, says Stajic Lfgren.

She concludes that although the 20th century novels are influenced by the decadent combination of the perverse and the aesthetical, these narratives evolve away from perversity to adopt a more human and also spiritual approach in terms of both themes and characters. The thesis has been successfully defended.

For more information please contact: Tia Stajic Lfgren Telephone: +46 (0)31 338 01 46 E-mail: tia.stajic.lofgren@sprak.gu.se jQuery(document).ready(function($) { $("fb_share").attr("share_url") = encodeURIComponent(window.location); }); Weitere Informationen: http://hdl.handle.net/2077/28715

Originally posted here:
The decadent theme revised in 20th century novels

Storage company promises INFINITE IMMORTALITY

NetApp has announced a major minor release of its data ONTAP storage operating system, promising data immortality and infinity.

Data ONTAP is NetApp's operating system for its FAS arrays and provides a unified file (NFS, pNFS and CIFS/SMB) and block (iSCSI, FCoE and Fibre Channel) storage array architecture. NetApp customers have been waiting for the company to integrate its acquired Spinnaker clustering technology into ONTAP and this release represents another stage of this multi-year effort.

NetApp says Data ONTAP 8.1.1 provides:-

- Immortal operations through zero downtime. System upgrades and maintenance don't disrupt array operations. - Infinite scalability with a single volume that can grow to 20PB. Er, sorry NetApp but 20PB is not infinite. I know; we're being picky. - "Set it and forget it" data protection. - Virtual array with Data ONTAP Edge; a version of ONTAP running as a virtual machine in an ESX server, which is cheaper than a FAS array and suitable for remote/branch offices needing up to 5TB of capacity - Secure multi-tenancy jointly with Cisco and VMware. - Combining SSD and HDD inside a volume or aggregate in the array as a Flash Pool which provides Virtual Storage Tiering (VST), or tiers without tears and, indeed, without tiers either as the SSDs are used as a read and write cache. - Clustering of up to six ONTAP arrays with each node potentially configured for different work, such as FC SAN access and filer activity.

The company says ONTAP 8.1.1 also delivers performance improvements and has better manageability and supportability. The Flash Pool technology enables SAS disks to be replaced by SATA ones with SSDs providing I/O acceleration. NetApp is providing this technology across its product range.

Our understanding is that NetApp will extend its VST technology to cover flash caches in servers so as to remove most network latency from data access by apps in servers.

With ONTAP 8.1.1 NetApp can offer an enterprise content repository with NFSv3 access to a container that can scale to 20PB and 2 billion files by using a cluster of five FAS6280 high-availability pair arrays; ten nodes in other words. Snapshot copies and SnapMirror replication are available as us NFS-mounted tape backup.

Data ONTAP EDGE includes Snapshot, SnapRestore, SnapVault, FlexVol, FlexClone and deduplication technologies. It provides iSCSI, CIFS and NFS protocol access but not Fibre Channel.

NetApp has taken over a now-discarded HP marketing theme, saying this new version of ONTAP makes IT agile. Its concept if having a single and multi-purpose storage infrastructure with one set of management and data protection tools is relatively unchanged although it is being amended by the inclusion of the E-Series for applications needing more data access speed.

EMC's chief blogger Chuck Hollis got his ONTAP 8.1.1 riposte in before the launch. He blogs; "after spending a few days getting to know what's in this release, if I were a NetApp customer I'd start thinking about Plan B," and contrasts NetApp's use of flash as a cache with EMC's se of storage tiering. He also contrasts the Isilon scale-out clustering with NetApp, but a high-end Isilon customer isn't likely to want to use a traditional 2-controller array.

See the article here:
Storage company promises INFINITE IMMORTALITY

Another lost chance for racing immortality

ELMONT -- Excitement turned into disappointment at Belmont Park early Friday morning when I'll Have Another's attempt to claim thoroughbred racing's Triple Crown was dashed by a lower leg injury. Critics of the Triple Crown trail will be quick to blame the injury on the short timing between the three classic races and will be calling for longer periods in between the races and an overhaul to the entire Triple Crown campaign.

The purists will argue that winning the Triple Crown is a difficult road for a thoroughbred to maneuver and thus the challenge of achieving racing immortality. Three races in five weeks, at three different distances, at three different tracks, culminating in the Test of the Champion, a 1 1/2-mile marathon around Big Sandy makes the feat all the more difficult. I'm in the camp with the purists as we've seen 11 tries (almost 12) since Affirmed last won the Triple Crown, 34 years ago. This is a sign that the thoroughbred can still handle the grind of the trail, based on the near misses and the percentage of horses winning the first two legs since then.

For racing fans, while disappointment will radiate first and foremost, the possibility of a breakdown if the connections continued on despite the injury, would have been devastating to both the industry and to the millions watching at Belmont and on national television. The sport is just starting to recover from the catastrophic breakdown of Eight Belles in the 2008 Kentucky Derby and excitement was reaching a high not seen since the Smarty Jones attempt of 2004.

Thoroughbred racing is a sport that can have the highest of highs and the lowest of lows whether you're an owner, a fan or a horseplayer. From the exhilaration that Team I'll Have Another and his backers experienced in Louisville and Baltimore to the heartbreak of a career-ending injury and a lost chance at racing's immortality, the last five weeks have seen it all.

The Belmont Stakes itself now takes on a much different character this afternoon. The remaining 11 horses in the race will be running for a victory that will be somewhat tainted with the sudden departure of the Derby and Preakness champion. Television ratings will dive from an expected 10-12 range to 4-5. The crowd, once expected at over 100,000 will surely be much less than that. Tickets on sites such as StubHub were going at premium dollars will fall faster than Enron.

But there still will be a big race here at Big Sandy on Saturday. As last year's winning trainer Kelly Breen, who has My Adonis (15-1) entered, said "I'm sure that the fans will be disappointed, but the Belmont's the Belmont. It's still a Triple Crown race."

The new morning line favorite is Dullahan (9-5), who skipped the Preakness after finishing a late closing third in the Kentucky Derby. He broke badly in the Derby and was caught nine wide on the final turn, having too much ground to make up on the eventual winner. Trainer Dale Romans reflected on the Derby, "I told (jockey Kent Desormeaux) to get out in the clear, and he came running. He had to go a lot wider than he wanted to, but he finished strong. It was just an unlucky break." He also made a jockey change from Desormeaux to Javier Castellano, after recent off-track issues.

Pedigree doesn't appear to be an issue for Dullahan. His dam, Mining My Own, is the unraced daughter of Smart Strike, who was the dam of Curlin, who won the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic, the Dubai World Cup (UAE-I), and the Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup Stakes, all at 10 furlongs. He also lost by a head to Rags to Riches in the 2006 Belmont Stakes. He is a definite win threat.

Romans is not exactly giddy about inheriting the favorite role.

"It's devastating," he said. "I really wanted him [I'll Have Another] to compete. This was going to be a special race, one of the biggest races of our time."

View post:
Another lost chance for racing immortality

I'll Have Another out of the Belmont Stakes, out of the Triple Crown and retired for good

ELMONT, N.Y. - A leg injury has taken I'll Have Another out of the Belmont Stakes and out of the running for the Triple Crown.

The issue is with a swollen left-front tendon. Trainer Doug O'Neill said something was first noticed in the leg on Thursday, but hoped I'll Have Another had "just hit himself."

Trainer Doug O'Neill, rear left, kneels to wrap I'll Have Another's left foot at Belmont Park on Friday. (AP)I'll Have Another looked fine during a morning workout on Friday, according to O'Neill, but in the cooling down period "you could tell that swelling was back and at that point I didn't feel very good."

O'Neill talked to owner Paul Reddam and the two summoned a doctor, who determined I'll Have Another showed signs of tendinitis beginning in his left-front leg.

The doctor indicated the horse would need 3-6 months of rest. After conferring, O'Neill and Reddam opted to retire I'll Have Another.

"It's a bummer," O'Neill said, "but it's far from tragic."

The inflammation to the tendon is a "one-bad-step injury," according to equine veterinarian Larry Bramlage, and doesn't have anything to do with overuse or I'll Have Another's schedule of races.

"In the whole scale of tendon injuries, it's minor. In the scale of the Triple Crown, it's huge," Bramlage said.

[Photos: Belmont favorite I'll Have Another out of racing with a leg injury]

There were indications Friday morning that something was amiss. O'Neill took I'll Have Another to the track for his morning jog hours earlier than he had been going for the past three weeks. O'Neill then left the Belmont track without speaking to the media, and Reddam was also not available. That was highly unusual for what had been a media-friendly group.

Original post:
I'll Have Another out of the Belmont Stakes, out of the Triple Crown and retired for good

Djokovic loses chance at instant immortality; who is greatest in tennis?

Roger Federer has won 16 Grand Slam tennis titles. Novak Djokovic has won only five. But if he could have pulled off the Djokovic Slam, fans could have argued he was the equal of Federer. This is even better; Monday's French Open loss to Rafael Nadal leaves a three-way fight to claim the title of greatest tennis player ever.

Rod Laver held that title for decades. Djokovic could have been the first men's player since Laver 43 years ago to win four consecutive Grand Slams, but lost in four sets to Nadal, who now owns 11 Grand Slam titles.

Since 2005, Federer has won 12 Grand Slam titles to Nadal's 11, a virtual tie. But Federer has won six Wimbledon titles and five U.S. Open crowns to Nadal's two Wimbledon's and one U.S. Open. Advantage Federer. A little too much of Nadal's prestige is tied up in the red clay of Roland Garros, where he has won a record seven French Open titles.

But Nadal is 8-2 head-to-head vs. Federer in Grand Slam tournaments (18-10 overall), including 6-2 in Grand Slam finals. Nadal had to beat Federer en route to his first six titles, five times in the final and once in the semifinals. Even when Federer had the most dominant four-year peak in tennis history, going 315-24 from 2004 until 2007, he had a losing record vs. Nadal. When a guy goes 309-16 against everyone else and 6-8 vs. Nadal, it diminishes the four Grand Slams that Federer won before Nadal came around. Advantage Nadal.

If Nadal hadn't suffered knee injuries in 2009, he might already be clearly considered the greatest ever. He was upset in the French Open that year -- the only time he hasn't won it in the last eight years. That was the year Federer won his only French Open title. And he pulled out of Wimbledon and didn't even play, the only defending champion in decades to not play at Wimbledon. Federer won his last Wimbledon title that year, but Nadal came back to win the next year. It's very reasonable to assume that if Nadal had been healthy, he would have won both of those tournaments, giving him a string of 5 Grand Slam titles in 6 events. He would then have 13 career titles to Federer's 14.

But he doesn't. Federer has 16. Nadal has 11.

But not for long.

Two years ago, it was 16-6.

And even then, some were talking as if Nadal might already be the greatest ever (even though Nadal always demurred). John McEnroe said Nadal might be the best back when his Grand Slam count stood at nine:

"There is definitely an argument for him not only being the best player at the moment, but the greatest of all time. Rafa has won things like the Davis Cup and an Olympic gold medal that Roger Federer hasn't and he is right on his tail in terms of Grand Slam titles, too."

Continued here:
Djokovic loses chance at instant immortality; who is greatest in tennis?

'Zulu' and the ghosts of actors past

I had occasion recently to watch, for maybe the fourth time in my life, Cy Endfield's "Zulu," a terrific 1964 epic about the Anglo-Zulu war of 1879, particuarly the famed Battle of Rorke's Drift, when a contingent of perhaps 150 English soldiers managed, for 30 hours or so, to hold off perhaps 4000 Zulu warriors who had the previous day wiped out an English column of more than 1200 souls.

The film is notable for a number of things: a massive scale, with hundreds of extras waging hand-to-hand (or, more precisely, spear-to-bayonnet) combat; the gorgeous Natal setting; the 70mm photography; the bloody-minded storytelling, almost half of which is battle; the John Barry score; the authentic tribal rituals, music and military tactics on display.

But I was particularly taken by the acting. The film famously provided Michael Caine with his star-making role, some 12 years and 30 parts into his career. Ironically, the archetypical Cockney Caine was universally noted for the first time in his working life for playing an upperclassman, Lt. Gonville Bromhead, an actual historic personage who was raised in comfort and never saw battle before that fateful day. To hear Caine speak in the soft, clipped, exact tones of a posh gent is almost comical -- and, indeed, generations of English comedians have joked about how it might have sounded had Caine played the role in his familiar voice: "'Ere! Quit pointin' those bleedin' spears at me!"

Beside Caine, there are such faces as Stanley Baker (the headline star and producer), Jack Hawkins, Nigel Green, James Booth and, in the only female speaking role, Ulla Jacobsson. And as I watched them, I realized that they were all -- save Caine -- dead. I was moved to look up the status of everyone who had a role of any size in the film and found that virtually every single person whom you might be able to identify the film (which, to be fair, is nearly 50 years old) had passed away. Caine was an exception, as were one or two relatively obscure minor players. And, bizarrely, one of the few survivors turns out to be someone rather famous, albeit not for movie acting: Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, the South African tribal leader and political figure who plays his own ancestor, the chieftain Cetewayo who waged battle against the English.

It's a strange thing, if you think about it, to watch a film and feel so much vitality coming from people who are no longer alive. Their speech and facial expressions and movements and human quirks -- sweating and coughing and such -- are captured forever and, at the same time, lost forever. Even given the massive scale of "Zulu" and the fact that it was made during the lifetimes of many people who can remember seeing it on first release, the movie like a time capsule of a bygone era -- a living mausoleum. Before long, more time will have passed since the release of the film than passed between the events it depicts and its making. And by then surely no one who can be recognized in it will still be alive.

This is a relatively recent phenomenon in human culture: the ability to capture lifelike representations of people and experience them anew after the subject's demise. In the contact of a death-soaked movie like "Zulu" this may seem especially poignant, perhaps, but it applies to any old film or TV show or audio recording. Think of someone clearing his or her throat at a concert performance from the 1940s, still audible today decades after the throat-clearer has died. The scores of extras in "Zulu" are no more identifiable than that anonymous soul. And yet they, too, feel strangely immortal for having been captured in a motion picture.

John Keats was onto a similar thought in "Ode on a Grecian Urn," describing figures who would never age or die or, indeed, change their postures. But those were representations of people who may or may not have once lived, of course, not captured images of people who were demonstrably alive and no longer are.

Artists live on through art, yes, but so, too, can the people who happen to be present when artists make their work. It's a scary thought, but comforting, too, and it gives you an appreciation of the miracle of movies that may bring them more vitally alive to you than ever.

Link:
'Zulu' and the ghosts of actors past

I'll Have Another one lap away from Triple Crown immortality

Email

Tom Keyser

I'll Have Another would become the 12th Triple Crown winner with a victory in Saturday's Belmont Stakes.

ELMONT, N.Y. Ill Have Another was born in Kentucky, received his early training in Florida, began his racing career in California, and has flown to Kentucky, Maryland, and twice to New York in the past nine months. He has traveled many miles, but no journey will seem farther than the one on which he embarks on Saturday, when Ill Have Another, the winner of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, attempts to become a Triple Crown winner in the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park.

The Belmont is 1 1/2 miles, one lap around Belmont Park, but there is a 34-year history of failure in this endeavor. Not since 1978 has a horse swept the Triple Crown.

Thirty-four years of it not happening. Thats a pretty strong statistic, Doug ONeill, the trainer of Ill Have Another, said earlier this week. Youve got to stay injury-free. You have to maintain your physique and your energy. Thats a huge hurdle.

The numbers 11 and 12 are prominent in this Belmont Stakes. There are 11 Triple Crown winners, the last being Affirmed. Since Affirmed, 11 horses have won the Derby and Preakness and failed in the Belmont. Ill Have Another will be the 12th horse to join one of those lists. The Belmont is the 11th race on the card. Ill Have Another will start from post 11 in a field of 12 in a 12-furlong race. This is the 144th Belmont 12 squared is 144.

Post time for the Belmont is scheduled for 6:40 p.m. Eastern; the first race is at 11:35 a.m. The Belmont will be shown live by NBC in a 2 1/2-hour telecast beginning at 4:30 p.m. NBC Sports Network has live Belmont programming from 3-4:30 p.m, and a postrace show from 7-7:30.

The forecast for Saturday, according to The Weather Channel, is for a high of 80 degrees, and a 30-percent chance of isolated thunderstorms.

[BELMONT STAKES: Past performances, video updates, contender profiles, odds]

Read the original:
I'll Have Another one lap away from Triple Crown immortality