Daily Archives: April 2, 2017

Progress: Orlando recap & review: Coming to America – Cageside Seats (blog)

Posted: April 2, 2017 at 7:54 am

Issues with the WWNLive website lead to the iPPV being largely inaccessible for the first half, but now the VOD is up (and anyone that ordered it live only has been given the VOD for free!) So, yesterday I recapped what I could, and I am, in light of the events, leaving all that untouched and picking up what I missed right now. As a result, the tag match recap will be joined in progress when we get to it. (Pun not intended, but welcome!)

On with the show!

Technical grappling early, Havoc hanging with the Technical Wizard and nearly pinning him for a finish at one point. Elbow strike and a small package nearly does it again and the pace picks up, suicide dive and a facewash. Sabre back in it with a northern lights suplex rolled into a guillotine choke but Jimmy gets the ropes!

Slugging it out now, Sabre gets an Indian deathlock and bridges back before applying a Jim Breaks Special for added wrist damage. Forearm for uppercut, cut off on a charge, Havoc plants him with a DVD, stomp comes up empty, some jockeying, ZSJ with a wheelbarrow Tiger suplex!

He keeps the clutch, transitions to a Stretch Plum before going for a crucifix pin that gets two. Off the ropes, thinking octopus hold, he's got it in but Havoc reverses to a Beach Break... NOT ENOUGH! Zack is busted wide open above the eye now and they go striking. charging blows, Jimmy gets a rolling elbow!

Charging knee strike, to the second, double stomp connects! Acid Rainmaker countered into a flying armbar but Havoc reverses to a pin! Sabre kicks out, omoplata, wrenching the other arm back but again Jimmy counters to a pin for two! Half nelson suplex, elbow, Acid Rainmaker ducked, backslide...

Zack Sabre, Jr. wins by pinfall with a bridging backslide pin.

Awesome opener. Love these two guys and they always make magic together.

Drake blindsides Spud during intros and lays a beating on him! Outside, to the woodshed, beating him unholy before he can even get his ring jacket off here. Back in the ring, Spud hanging on the ropes and James pulls him off to level him with an uppercut.

Snapmare to a shoot kick, standing on Spud's hand, back suplex, the abuse keeps coming. Drake spits in his face and Spud fires up! Right hands, kicks in the corner, James is able to get him around for another snapmare into a kick but you can't keep the little guy down now!

Tit for tat, Spud adds a dropkick that sends Drake outside! Suicide dive bowls him over! Back in the ring, step-up enzuigiri, a neckbreaker, up top for a diving elbow drop but Drake dumps him on his head with a counter suplex on a charge Folding powerbomb... SPUD LIVES!

James jawing at Spud, off the ropes, the Rockstar catches him with a tilt-a-whirl DDT! On a charge, Drake goes low, schoolboy roll through...

James Drake wins by pinfall with Mr. Mayhem.

Spud is two-for-two in very good work-from-underneath matches in Progress now! Drake isn't quite as vicious as Robinson was, but his size did a lot to make up for it. Great stuff.

Drake attacks Spud after the match, just for good measure.

Toni keeps forcing Jinny in the corner early and, naturally, Jinny takes offense and snaps off a flying headscissors into mounted punches! Storm has a big roundhouse kick and big double-hand chops in the corner, before the butt bumps begin. Jinny counters a charge with a flipping arm drag that sends Toni into the turnbuckles.

Stomps laid in, clubbing overhand strikes, Storm back in with forearms that daze Jinny in the corner. But the fashionista gets a reverse surfboard and kicks her freakin' head in! More stomps, a wicked elbow, choke in the corner and mocking the double-hand chops.

But Toni turns it around, knife-edge chops, Jinny cuts her off, charging knee, a second, snapmare into taunts. Kick, cover, no good. Disdainful stomp, another cover, Storm is hurting but she won't give it up yet, and Jinny heads outside to get a... garbage bag?

SHE'S MAKING TONI STORM WEAR THE GARBAGE BAG! Forearms laid in, just yelling at her unholy but Toni blocks one and fires forearms in return before Hulking the garbage bag off! German suplex, charging hip attack, bridging fisherman suplex... Jinny kicks out!

Powerbomb blocked, Jinny throws a series of kicks for a nearfall, heading up top but she gets cut off... MUSCLE BUSTER! NOPE! Looking for a powerbomb again, big slap, Rainmaker blocked, reverse neckbreaker connects! But Toni doesn't capitalize, instead going to the corner, and Jinny yanks her off...

Jinny wins by pinfall with her feet on the ropes.

Man, the Progress women's division is something special right now. Really good match, can't wait for Natural Progression Series IV finals.

My feed goes live with Callihan going ham on Travis Banks, so I'm just gonna start recapping the match here! Strickland in on Cooper, pummeling him with kicks and dropping him with an Ace Crusher. Kicks for everybody and all four men are laid out on the mat!

JML back in it first, laying the Power Trip out in the corners and setting Banks up for a Swerve Stomp-assisted powerbomb. Sami has the Stretch Muffler on and TK's trying to break it with kicks! They succeed and run wild on Shane, flying knee connects...

South Pacific Power Trip win by pinfall with an assisted DDT on Shane Strickland.

Well, what I saw of that was very fun!

Jim Smallman uses his between match comments to speak to the memory of Kris Travis, who sadly passed away a year ago.

Trent needs this to hurry up and get over with because he has to be at WWE Axxess, because 2017 pro wrestling.

Feeling out to start, Seven a bit tentative and Riddle gets on him with a waistlock takedown. Trent struggling, forcing a break, and things soon go to strikes. Bro forcing him in the corner, catches him with an exploder suplex, goes for the hight jump senton but Seven has the knees up!

Charging overhand chop, Trent gets some Fromunda on his hand but Matt blocks it and knocks him off the apron with a triangle knee that sets up the baseball slide slap. Strike for strike and the Progress tag champ puts his hand into the ringpost!

A low suicide dive wipes Riddle out and Seven tries to follow it off the top but Bro meets him and plants him with an avalanche fisherman buster! Shotgun knees, but Trent fires up, waistlock, standing swtich, German suplex, he pops up, gives one to Riddle, Bro pops up! Another German suplex from Matt and both men are wiped out!

Blocking lariats with boots, Seven connects with a backfist, Seven Stars blocked with a kick, another backfist, Dragon suplex, Riddle pops up, Pele kick, bridging German suplex... NOT ENOUGH! Forearms and kicks, springboard knee ducked, SPINNING PILEDRIVER! BRO LIVES!

In the corner, setting him up, thinking avalanche piledriver but Bro slips out and hits a folding powerbomb! Scoop, jumping Tombstone... NO GOOD! Trent is firing forearms, Riddle returns with kicks, Seven with the backfist, Seven Stars... NOPE! Powerbomb escaped, knee strike, jumping Tombstone... OUT AT ONE! BROMISSION LOCKED IN! IT'S OVER!

Matt Riddle wins by submission with the Bromission, retaining the Progress Atlas Division Championship.

Shock of shocks, Bro is three-for-three on awesome matches this week. Little bit of a slow start but once we got to bomb trading it was really good.

Trent goes to take a bow post-match but just flips the crowd off instead.

A WWE-recognized title is being defended on iPPV. What a world.

Bit of stalling early as both men marinate in the atmosphere of the crowd, but soon enough Tyler's going after the leg. Andrews trying to go hold-for hold and he gets some reversals in and forces Bate outside for a moment. Grappling intensifies, but eventually, inevitably, we get flips.

Lucha evasions like mad here, it's wild. Champ sends challenger out with a boot and Andrews responds by sliding back in for a tope con giro! Arm drags on arm drags, Mark backed in the corner and Bop claims a victim! Snapmare to a vicious kick, Tyler steps on one and hand and applies a Jim Breaks Special to the other before tying him up on the mat with an arm-trap cloverleaf.

Standing senton atomico gets two, lifting European uppercuts beget chops from Andrews but Bate takes his leg out from under him. Looking for the Tyler Driver, Mark blocks, Bate stays with it, tries again, Frankensteiner reversal! Northern lights suplex, too long setting up the moonsault, schoolboy nearfall!

Tyler cuts a springboard off with an uppercut, off the ropes, he eats an enzugiri, SHIRANUI ON THE APRON! Moonsault senton gets two and Bate takes Andrews' head off with a lariat and follows it with a deadlift delayed sheerdrop brainbuster... NOPE! Slugging it out from their knees now, to their feet, Mark comes out ahead.

Charging strikes, Andrews with an enzuigiri, Bang connects, Tyler counters a guillotine with a Cozy Crush Dynamite! Underhooks, Mark forces him in the corner to break, eats a huge knee but snaps off a jumping Frankensteiner! Bate blocks a handspring and deadlifts him into the airplane spin!

Andrews counters out with a poison Frankensteiner! TYLER HITS A SHOOTING STAR PRESS! ANDREWS WITH ONE IN RETURN! COP KILLER! BATE KICKS OUT! Nobody home on the shooting star press! Bate hits a superkick, suplex lift, STUNDOG MILLIONAIRE! Rolling Koppo Kick, underhooks...

Tyler Bate wins by pinfall with the Tyler Driver '97, retaining the WWE United Kingdom Championship.

Holy hell. Bit of a meandering start, not sure we needed all the mat grappling from Mark Andrews, but once it got going, my word. Good stuff.

In hard and dirty, fighting for position and forcing referee Joel Allen to separate them repeatedly. Dunne clawing the beard and face to grind Haskins down. but Mark has hamstring kicks and a snap scoop powerslam in return. Pete heads outide and Haskins dives on the other two British Strong Style men!

Dunne with a diving moonsault but Mark avoids him and throws a suicide dive! He sets Peter up on the apron, walks all the way up the entranceway and runs back down it to clobber him with a knee strike! A second try but the Bruiserweight has a forearm to cut him off.

Back in the rings, evasions, roll-through Sharpshooter in full effect! Joel ejects Bate and Seven! Peter spikes Haskins with a rope-hung DDT in all the confusion! Romero Special grapevines in, he gets Marks left hand and goes to bite the fingers but is blocked, and so simply stomps the knees hard.

Champ with a vicious falling forearm, now just toying with Haskins. Wrenching his nose unholy before stomping the injured neck! Slugging it out, Mark Haskins is back in it! Rock Bottom backbreaker into a Falcon Arrow... NOT ENOUGH! Pasting Dunne in the corner but Peter wants more, clasping hands behind his back!

Dunne walking through the shots, forearms and stiff kicks, he throws one forearm in return and knocks Mark down! Haskins has a similar one in return, though, and both men are running low. Springboard right into a forearm, Bitter End... countered with a DDT! Half and half, reversals, briding Fujiwara armbar applied but Dunne gets the ropes!

Sitdown striking, slap for slap, charges, Haskins with a tilt-a-whirl takedown but Peter drops him with a Tombstone! He keeps it held, hits the piledriver again... MARK HASKINS LIVES! Pumphandle applied, Bitter End... SMALL PACKAGE COUNTER! PEDIGREE... NOPE!

Struggle in the corner, Mark Haskins flip piledriver! Roll-through Death Valley Driver... NOT ENOUGH! The bridging Fujiwara's back on! Peter counters and bites the fingers! SUPERKICK! Roundhouse ducked, Bitter End connects this time... NO GOOD!

Dunne has a crazy crossface variation in...

Pete Dunne wins by submission with a modified arm-trap crossface, retaining the Progress Championship.

Awesome match. The determination of Mark Haskins through that finishing sequence, my word.

Jim Smallman thanks the crowd to send us out.

Technical issues with the live broadcast aside, Progress made excellent work of their US debut. Not much storyline movement, but all the matches delivered, and hey, Zack Sabre, Jr. wore all three of his titles to the ring. Dude is running out of torso!

And a special shout-out to Lenny Leonard and Excalibur on commentary, who really did their research in a big way and made sure it wasn't just a good show, but an easy watch.

Check it out on VOD now on WWNLive, or wait for the show to go up on Demand Progress after the offices reopen in about two weeks.

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WWN Supershow Mercury Rising 2017: Evolve vs. Progress live results: WWN Championship Eliminator, Sabre … – Cageside Seats (blog)

Posted: at 7:54 am

WWN returns today at 8PM Eastern with Mercury Rising 2017: Evolve vs. Progress in Orlando, Florida, courtesy of the fine folks at the World Wrestling Network & FloSlam. If you need a primer on what's going down tonight, feel free to check out my preview here, as well as my recaps of Evolve 80 here and Evolve 81 here, but be sure to come back to this thread to chat about it with the finest pro wrestling community on the internet while you watch, whether it's through the website, Roku channel, or whatever other device you may be tuning in on.

Here's a run-down of the card for tonight, and we'll update with basic results here, too:

Keith Lee over Austin Theory, Gatekeeper Blaster, and Jason Kincaid by pinfall with Ground Zero on Blaster.

LuFisto (c) over Toni Storm by pinfall with the Burning Hammer, retaining the Shine Championship.

All Ego Ethan Page over Jimmy Havoc by pinfall with Spinning Dwayne (Evolve 1, Progress 0)

South Pacific Power Trip (TK Cooper & Travis Banks) over Doom Patrol (Chris Dickinson & Jaka) by pinfall with the assisted DDT on Dickinson. (Evolve 1, Progress 1)

Pete Dunne (c) over ACH by submission, retaining the Progress Championship. (Evolve 1, Progress 2)

Zack Sabre, Jr. (c) over Mark Haskins by submission with the leg-trap Ode to Jim Breaks, retaining the Evolve World Championship. (Evolve 2, Progress 2)

Fred Yehi vs. Jon Davis vs. Matt Riddle vs. Parrow vs. Timothy Thatcher vs. Hot Sauce Tracy Williams (WWN Championship Battle of the Champions Elimination Match)

Timothy Thatcher eliminates Parrow by submission with a sleeper hold.

"Hot Sauce" Tracy Williams eliminates Timothy Thatcher by submission with a crossface.

Catch Point eliminate Jon Davis with tandem submissions!

"Hot Sauce" Tracy Williams eliminates Fred Yehi with a schoolboy pin.

Matt Riddle wins the WWN Championship, last eliminating "Hot Sauce" Tracy Williams by submission with the Bromission.

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LSU edge rusher Sci Martin ‘out’ for spring; Arden Key ‘making progress’ – The Advocate

Posted: at 7:54 am

LSU edge rusher Sci Martin is "out" for spring, coach Ed Orgeron said, and junior Arden Key is "making progress" in his return.

Martin suffered an injury during the Tigers' first scrimmage at Tigers Stadium on March 18. Martin, a McDonogh 35 graduate, played in five games as a true freshman last season.

He spent the first week of spring practice rotating with Andre Anthony in replacing Key at the buck, a hybrid edge-rushing position in Dave Aranda's 3-4 defense. Martin's absence leaves Anthony and Ray Thornton, moved from F-linebacker to buck, in manning the spot.

+2

D.J. Chark likes root beer.

Key is not participating in spring for what the team has called "personal reasons," and Isaiah Washington, also at buck, is academically ineligible for the rest of spring. Orgeron said Saturday that Key is on track to rejoin the team. He's expected to return over the summer, the coach said earlier this spring.

"He's making progress," Orgeron said.

LSU conducted its 10th practice of a 15-practice spring Saturday, scrimmaging in Tiger Stadium. It's been a bruising first half of spring ball.

Running back Derrius Guice and D.J. Chark have both twisted their ankles, but Guice has returned. Chark did not scrimmage Saturday, as he was "questionable," Orgeron said. Reserve tight end Jamal Pettigrew suffered an ankle injury, as well, Orgeron said earlier this spring.

Coaches hoped sophomore lineman Donavaughn Campbell would be at full strength for spring after December shoulder surgery, but he's been limited. Defensive lineman Christian LaCouture has been limited, too, with scar tissue in his surgically repaired knee.

Orgeron said Saturday that LaCouture has not scrimmaged this spring.

The Tigers are missing two projected starters on the offensive line, Toby Weathersby and Will Clapp, while both recover from shoulder procedures. Weathersby is expected to miss all of spring practice. Clapp returned in a limited role this week.

Danny Etling calls it his pitchers mound, and he wants it pointed at his target.

QB battle update

Senior Danny Etling remains LSU's first-team quarterback, but there's still a possibility that could change, Orgeron said.

"I think its still open now, and I dont think anybody has taken the bull by the horns, to be honest with you," Orgeron said of the quarterback battle between Etling, third-year sophomore Justin McMillan, redshirt freshman Lindsey Scott and freshman Lowell Narcisse.

"They take two steps forward and one step back," he continued. "Theyre still going to go into (preseason) camp and see whats going on in camp. Obviously, Danny is the first-team quarterback. Nobody has beaten him out yet. That doesnt mean that wont happen."

Etling led all passers with 97 yards on 5-of-13 passing. McMillan threw for 62 yards on 5-of-7. Scott went 3-for-7 for 40 yards, and Narcisse was 1-for-2 for 5 yards.

"Justin McMillan has done some good things. Lindsey has done some good things," Orgeron said. "Lowell is still learning, but Lowell may be the most talented one of all of them. And obviously, were going to give Myles Brennan a chance. But we've still got a ways to go in that quarterback battle."

Scrimmage notes

Guice led all rushers in Saturday's 90-play scrimmage, Orgeron said.

The Tigers split about 80 snaps between the first and second teams. Third-teamers got about 10 snaps, Orgeron said. Guice ran for 72 yards on nine carries, the coach said. Reporters are not allowed into scrimmages.

Stephen Sullivan led all receivers with 75 yards on three catches, and Drake Davis caught two passes for 62 yards, Orgeron said.

Follow Ross Dellenger on Twitter, @RossDellenger.

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Climate Progress, With or Without Trump – New York Times

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Progress continues on Eastern Wyoming Community College career and tech center – Scottsbluff Star Herald

Posted: at 7:54 am

TORRINGTON, Wyo. Returning Eastern Wyoming College students, as well as community members, will find a new addition to the EWC campus when the fall semester begins in August.

EWC President Richard Patterson hosted a media tour March 31 to update progress on the $23 million project.

Well have so much more to offer our students, Patterson said during the tour. The community and the legislature have been very supportive of this project, providing the funding that includes a county bond issue.

It will be an asset for many years, providing educational opportunities for not only the youth in our county and Wyoming, but those from other states.

Standing in the open floor plan spacefor the cosmetology department are site superintendents and far right, Dusty Nash, project superintendent for FCI Constructors LLC. It will also include a barber chairfor the first barber school in Wyoming. Private rooms are to the right for waxing, facials, and other services.

Tami Afdahl, left, EWC director of college relations, and Ron Laher, EWC vice president of administrative services, stand in the entrance to the new Career and Technical Education Center on Friday, March 31, at the conclusion of a media tour. The building will be completed in June, in time to prepare it for fall semester students.

Eastern Wyoming College President Rick Patterson follows Tami Afdahl, EWC director of college relations, up the main staircase in the Career and Technical Education Center during a media tour on March 27. The 69,000 square foot building also will house Community Connections, for community educationofferings and an auditorium.

EWC personnel and project supervisors pose on the main staircase of the new Eastern Wyoming College Career and Technical Education Center Friday afternoon, March 31. Far left on thebottom step is EWC Vice President for Administrative Services Ron Laher. EWC President Rick Patterson, in black, and without a hard hat, is near the top.

Dusty Nash, project superintendent for FCI Constructors of Wyoming LLC, demonstrates a feature included in each of the 72 student welding booths, as well as in the three instructor's booths. The booths are distributed in threeshops on the main floor of thenew Career and Technical Education Center.

The main floor hallway serves as a supply depot during construction, but will be a hub of activity when 2017 fall semester classes begin. Facing north, to the left will be the Commons andCommunity Connections, and to the right will be cosmetology and the welding department.

The main floor hallway serves as a supply depot during construction, but will be a hub of activity when 2017 fall semester classes begin. Facing north, to the left will be the Commons andCommunity Connections, and to the right will be cosmetology and the welding department.

A room full of pipes and mechanical elements backs up the welding department in the new Career and Technical Education Center on the Eastern Wyoming College campus in Torrington, Wyo.

Hosting the media tour of the new Career and Technical Education Center on Friday, March 31, was Eastern Wyoming College President Rick Patterson, far left, and site project superintends and supervisors.

This double-sided fireplace will be the main feature of the second floor where the health technology department is located, as well as cosmetology classrooms.

Standing in the open floor plan spacefor the cosmetology department are site superintendents and far right, Dusty Nash, project superintendent for FCI Constructors LLC. It will also include a barber chairfor the first barber school in Wyoming. Private rooms are to the right for waxing, facials, and other services.

Tami Afdahl, left, EWC director of college relations, and Ron Laher, EWC vice president of administrative services, stand in the entrance to the new Career and Technical Education Center on Friday, March 31, at the conclusion of a media tour. The building will be completed in June, in time to prepare it for fall semester students.

Eastern Wyoming College President Rick Patterson follows Tami Afdahl, EWC director of college relations, up the main staircase in the Career and Technical Education Center during a media tour on March 27. The 69,000 square foot building also will house Community Connections, for community educationofferings and an auditorium.

EWC personnel and project supervisors pose on the main staircase of the new Eastern Wyoming College Career and Technical Education Center Friday afternoon, March 31. Far left on thebottom step is EWC Vice President for Administrative Services Ron Laher. EWC President Rick Patterson, in black, and without a hard hat, is near the top.

Dusty Nash, project superintendent for FCI Constructors of Wyoming LLC, demonstrates a feature included in each of the 72 student welding booths, as well as in the three instructor's booths. The booths are distributed in threeshops on the main floor of thenew Career and Technical Education Center.

The main floor hallway serves as a supply depot during construction, but will be a hub of activity when 2017 fall semester classes begin. Facing north, to the left will be the Commons andCommunity Connections, and to the right will be cosmetology and the welding department.

The main floor hallway serves as a supply depot during construction, but will be a hub of activity when 2017 fall semester classes begin. Facing north, to the left will be the Commons andCommunity Connections, and to the right will be cosmetology and the welding department.

A room full of pipes and mechanical elements backs up the welding department in the new Career and Technical Education Center on the Eastern Wyoming College campus in Torrington, Wyo.

Hosting the media tour of the new Career and Technical Education Center on Friday, March 31, was Eastern Wyoming College President Rick Patterson, far left, and site project superintends and supervisors.

This double-sided fireplace will be the main feature of the second floor where the health technology department is located, as well as cosmetology classrooms.

The 69,000-square foot Career & Technical Education Center houses Community Connections, cosmetology, health technology and welding programs, including classrooms, an auditorium, computer centers and a student commons area. The new building allows for increased enrollment in each of the programs.

Cosmetology is in the front of the building on the ground floor. Included in the open floor plan will be a barber chair for the first barber training program in Wyoming. Private rooms are available for skin treatments, tanning and provide the potential to offer massage in the future. One cosmetology classroom is on the ground floor next to the service area, and two are on the second floor.

Health technology students will find a new lab setting on the second floor that includes hospital room environments.

There are head wall units just like those in hospitals, Patterson said during a stop on the tour. The restroom and shower are like those in hospitals, too.

We now have two great training rooms for our CNA (certified nursing assistant) students. It is set up like our regular nursing program on the Douglas (Wyoming) campus.

He added that a local nursing program is not out of the question in the future.

The welding program covers the north half of the ground floor. It offers individual welding booths for as many as 72 students, and includes three special training booths for instructors. These units are larger, making it possible for a student and instructor to move freely. The booths are divided into three shops. Also available is a separate machine tooling training room. Four classrooms and space for certification testing by American Welding Society welding inspectors are included in the layout.

Dusty Nash, project superintendent for FCI Constructors of Wyoming LLC, the lead contractor on the entire project, said the metal booths in the welding department were fabricated at a Gering business, and that one of those involved in manufacturing them is a former EWC welding student.

Community Connections is a combination of community education offerings, as well as the workforce office. Located on the ground floor, it includes classrooms, a computer center and a meeting room.

Construction should be complete by June. The welding department will be the first to move, and furnishing the rest of the departments will begin.

According to Ron Laher, EWC vice president of administrative services, $250,000 has been designated for new furnishings. This is in addition to current items that will be moved.

The project is funded with a $20 million appropriation from the Wyoming Legislature and a $3.1 million in general obligation bonds approved by Goshen County voters in November 2014. In addition to major contractors, 33 subcontractors, including several local businesses, have been involved.

According to Tami Afdahl, director of college relations, the public will have an opportunity to visit the complex during a dedication ceremony in August.

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FCAHS’ Stockstill making progress ahead of spring practice – Hattiesburg American

Posted: at 7:54 am

Jacob Kemp , Prep Sports Reporter Published 5:47 p.m. CT April 1, 2017 | Updated 12 hours ago

Forrest County Agricultural High School football coach Jeff Stockstill speaks to his players during practice on Friday.(Photo: Susan Broadbridge/Hattiesburg American)Buy Photo

With spring football practice on the horizon, Pine Belt football teams are anxious to get back on the gridiron in preparation for the 2017 football season.

But there might be no one as excited as new Forrest County AHS head football coach Jeff Stockstill.

Stockstill, who spent three seasons with Raleigh, was hired by FCAHS in Februaryand has been busy prepping his team ever since. Between fitting in weight room sessions and trying to ingrain his playbook into the minds of his players, Stockstill has been busy, but also impressed with his team so far.

"They've been getting after it," he said. "We've been hitting the weight room, going out during school, hitting the hallways recruiting some guys to come out there with us and that sort of thing. It's been good so far."

Not being able to practice after school or strap on the football pads until after Easter hasn't deterred the Aggies. In fact, Stockstill says the majority of his playbook is already implemented. But according to the first-year coach, the biggest progression has been the little things.

"Two more weeks and we're going to hit the field," Stockstill said. "I'm excited, the guys are excited. For the most part we run a lot of different formations but just the same plays so it hasn't been too bad. The guys ran a little more spread last year and this year we're going to be that Wing-T team that Forrest County has been known for."

While the Aggie coach has been impressed with his team's worth ethic, he still hasn't gotten a good gauge of who or what his team is yet and likely won't until the team can go full contact in practice.

"I think that's when we will get a good sense of who we want to play where," he said. "Pads change the game. Everybody looks good running around with shorts and t-shirts on. So, when you put the pads on that's when the kids start to separate themselves. We'll find out who's out there that wants it and who's out there because his friends are out there."

However, Stockstill's goal remains to give the Aggies back their swagger and confidence that has waned in past years due to lack of success.

"They've been hearing it from me for about three weeks now," he said. "How many games did you guys loselast year where you either blew the lead or the score was close and you couldn't finish a ball game.We want to get the most out of each player. In my experience you have to get the most out of what you have. We're coaching effort and desire. How bad do you want it?"

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Tidbits 3/27/2017 – ReporterNews.com

Posted: at 7:53 am

Abilene 5:04 p.m. CT March 26, 2017

.(Photo: Contributed Photo)

Investing class Paul Anthony Thomas, asset manager with Custom Private Equity, will present a class for individual investors from 6:30-7:30 p.m. Monday at the South Branch ofthe Abilene Public Library, located in the Mall of Abilene. Admission is free.

Christian ethics lectures Jeph Holloway will present the 2017 T.B. Maston Lectures in Christian Ethics at 7 p.m. Monday and 9:30 a.m. Tuesday at Hardin-Simmons University. TheMonday lecture, in Logsdon Chapel, will be "The Rise of the Man-chine: The What and Why of Posthumanism." Tuesday's lecture, in Behrens Auditorium, will be"Participating in Gods Purpose: A Christian Response to the Posthuman Vision." Admission is free.

Lenten organ recitals A Lenten organ recital series will be presented at 12:15 p.m. Tuesday and April 4 at First Baptist Church, 1333 N. Third St. The concerts will be performedon the Shelton Organ, and will feature performers from five churches.

Spell Abilene! The Adult Literacy Council will present its annual Spell Abilene! adult spelling bee at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the South Branch of the Abilene Public Library, located in the Mall of Abilene. Refreshments will be servedand prizes will be awarded to members of the audience. Admission is free.

Business workshop Texas Tech Small Business Development Center at Abilene will conduct a workshop, Meet the Bankers, from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Tech Training Center,749 Gateway St., Suite 301. Local bankers will give information on lending requirements and the bank loan process, and will be available to answer questions.To make a reservation, call 325-670-0300.

CarFit TxDOT and the Mature Driver Program will conduct CarFit, a program to improve the safety of older drivers, from 8:30-11:30 a.m. Wednesday at the Rose ParkSenior Center, 2625 S. Seventh St. Technicians will teach participants how to make their vehicle fit them by adjusting steering wheel placement, mirrors,restraints and more. For an appointment, call 325-676-6808.

Free tax assistance Through April 13, the AARP will provide free tax assistance from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays at the Abilene Public Library, 202 Cedar St., andFridays and Saturdays at the Mockingbird branch, 1326 N. Mockingbird Lane. Library doors will open at 9 a.m., with registration on a first-come, first-servedbasis. Participants should bring photo ID, Social Security cards, wage and earnings statements, and other financial information. For more information, call325-676-6025.

Good Neighbor Breakfast Connecting Caring Communities will conduct its annual Good Neighbor Breakfast from 7:30-8:30 a.m. Thursday at First Central Presbyterian Church, 400 OrangeSt. Admission is free, but donations will be accepted. RSVP to office@wecareabilene.org.

Conservation workshop The Texas A&M Forest Service will conduct the Big Country Conservation Workshop from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday at the Abilene Convention Center, 1100 N.Sixth St. Topics will include trees and windbreaks, rangeland and grazing, wildfire preparedness, water management, land stewardship and wildlife management.Registration is $10and includes a lunch. Registration must be made by Monday. To register, contact 806-892-3572 or wtn@tfs.tamu.edu.

Book-It Book-It, a panel discussion on nonprofit organizations, will begin at 9:30 a.m. Thursday in the Richardson Library at Hardin-Simmons University. Admission isfree.

Screenwriter speaks Screenwriter Lauren Modery, McMurry Universitys 2017 Knox-Bennett Guest Writer, will discuss blogging at 2:30 p.m. Thursday in the Jay-Rollins Library oncampus. A screening of her film, "Loves Her Gun," will begin at 7 p.m. in the Ryan Little Theatre. Admission is free.

Maker Fest Maker Fest, an open house demonstrating Abilene Christian University's Maker Lab, will be open from 3-8 p.m. Thursday in the Brown Library on campus. Activitiesand tool demonstrations will be available. Participants are invited to bring a quadcopter for a flying activity. Admission is free.

Art reception An opening reception for the Young Masters Juried Art Competition will be conducted from 5-6:30 p.m. Thursday at The Grace Museum, 102 Cypress St.

Library banquet The Friends of the Abilene Christian University Library will conduct its annual spring banquet at 6 p.m. Thursday in the Hunter Welcome Center on campus.Tickets are $40. For more information, contact 325-674-2340 or mas16a@acu.edu.

'Life in Bloom' banquet The "Life in Bloom" fundraising banquet, benefiting Pregnancy Resources of Abilene, will begin at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Abilene Convention Center, 1100 N.Sixth St. A sponsor reception will begin at 6 p.m. Singer/songwriters Tom Douglas and Allen Shamblin will be featured. Tickets are $35. For tickets, call325-672-6415 or go to http://www.prabilene.com/partner/events.

Artist speaks Sarah Williams will speak about her art from 7-8 p.m. Thursday at The Grace Museum, 102 Cypress St.

'The Complete Works of WilliamShakespeare (Abridged)' A production of "The Complete Works of WilliamShakespeare (Abridged)" will begin at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and April 6-8 at Abilene CommunityTheatre, 809 Barrow St. Tickets are $15 for adults and $12 for students, seniors and military.

'Godspell' A production of "Godspell" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and April 6-8, and at 2 p.m. Sunday and April 9in Van Ellis Theatre atHardin-Simmons University. Admission is $10 for adults; $5 for students, seniors and military; and free for HSU faculty, staff and students.

Swap meet The Big Country Swap Meet, featuring a variety of cars, motorcycles, auto parts and memorabilia, will be open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, and from 7:30 a.m. to7 p.m. Saturday, at Big Country Raceway, 5601 W. Stamford St. For more information, go to http://www.bigcountryswapmeet.com.

Outlaws & Legends The seventh annual Outlaws & Legends Music Festival will take place from 2-11 p.m. Friday, and from 11:45 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday, at the Back Porch of Texas, 3350N. Clack St. For more information, or for tickets, go to http://www.outlawsandlegends.com.

Art reception A reception for three art exhibits, "Human Essence," "Textile" and "Images of the West," will be conducted from 5:30-8 p.m. Friday at the Center forContemporary Arts, 220 Cypress St.

Pageant The Sunburst Beauty Pageant will begin at 6:30 p.m. Friday at the Mall of Abilene. The competition includes boys up to 3 years old and girls and women up to27 years old. Registration will begin at 5:30 p.m. For more information, go to http://www.sunburstbeauty.com.

Top Gun Classic The 15th annual Top Gun Sporting Clays Classic, benefiting the West Texas Rehabilitation Center, will be conducted Friday and Saturday at Abilene ClaySports, 1102 E. Spur 707. An awards dinner will be served Saturday at the Taylor County Expo Center. To register, or for more information, go torehabclayshoot.org.

Pop-up workshop A pop-up workshop with artist Robert Sabuda will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at the National Center for Children's Illustrated Literature, 102 Cedar St.Registration is $10, including supplies. Reservations must be made by Wednesday. To register, go to http://www.nccil.org or contact 325-673-4586 or info@nccil.org.

Book signing Abilene native Dick Elam will sign copies of his new book, "Anne Bonny's Wake," from 2-4 p.m. Saturday at Books-A-Million at the Mall of Abilene.

Easter egg hunt The city of Abilene will conduct an evening Easter egg hunt for children 12 and younger at 7 p.m. Saturday at Lee Sports Complex, 1318 N. Pioneer Drive.Admission is free.

Texas Author Series The 2017 Texas Author Series will continue with a talk featuring Rachel Caine, author of "Ink and Bone" and "Paper and Fire," at 2 p.m. Sunday at the SouthBranch of the Abilene Public Library, located in the Mall of Abilene. Admission is free.

Eggstreme Easter Hunt The Eggstreme Easter Hunt, for participants 13 and older, will be conducted from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 8 at Abilene State Park. Traditional egg huntsfor younger children will begin with ages 0-4 at 9 a.m., ages 5-8 at 10:30 a.m. and ages 9-12 at 11:30 a.m. Admission is $5 per car.

Bowl for Kids' Sake The annual Bowl for Kids' Sake, benefiting Big Brothers Big Sisters, will begin at 9 a.m. April 8 at PrimeTime Family Entertainment Center, 4541 Loop 322. Asecond session will begin at 11 a.m. Registration is $25. To register, go to http://www.bbbstx.org/abilenebfks.

Pool egg hunt A swimming pool Easter egg hunt will begin at 10 a.m. April 8 at the Redbud YMCA, 3125 S. 32nd St. Children 5 and older will hunt at 10 a.m., followed bychildren 18 months through 4 years at 10:30 a.m. Admission is $5 for members, $7 for nonmembers and $3 for parents. For tickets, call 325-695-3400. Swimtesting will be available at 9 a.m., and the Easter bunny will be present for photos from 9:30 a.m. to noon.

I-CAN luncheon Interested Citizens of Abilene North will conduct its annual Hero's Luncheon at 11:30 a.m. April 13 at the Abilene Convention Center, 1100 N. Sixth St. Ameet and greet will begin at 11 a.m. Kirt Dewayne Robinson will be the guest speaker. Daniel Jackson and the Rev. Iziar Lankford will be the honorees.Tickets are $30. For tickets, call 325-428-9035.

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Tidbits 3/27/2017 - ReporterNews.com

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Covert Transhumanism: A Mind Control Documentary – YouTube

Posted: at 7:52 am

Transhumanism is not only the future, it is already here Find Info the the Book and Film: http://www.omnisense.org/2016/10/cove... All 25+ Original Tracks in Covert Transhumanism Produced by Omnisense; https://omnisense.bandcamp.com/album/... ___ The Electronic Control Grid: https://youtu.be/wmvsk0Q9UIs ___ Stay Up to Date with Omnisense's Work; https://twitter.com/mkultraRF https://www.facebook.com/coverttransh... ___ Covered in Covert Transhumanism; A Mind Control Documentary: Electromagnetic Mind Control (At the Speed of Light) Whistleblower Testimony Government and Scientific Sources Verifying Mind Control Cutting Edge Mind Control Capabilities Explained How Mind Control is Done History of Mind Control Psychological Warfare (PSYOPS) Black Ops Perpetrated via Black Project Technology Technological Mind Tricks / Technological Illusions Telepathic Impersonations Black Project Post-Singularity Artificial Intelligence 21st Century Targeting ~ Targeted Individuals Electronic Warfare / Electronic Harassment Tactics Used Against Targeted Individuals Aspects of 21st Century Targeting Gangstalking / Organized Stalking / Zersetzung / Street Theater Technological Possession Suicide Programming Electronic Telepathy/Synthetic Telepathy/v2k Mind Control Patents (RF Energy / Microwave) Brain Waves are Electromagnetic Waves (RF Energy) Cell Phone Tower Conspiracy (RF Energy) ELF Waves (RF Energy) HAARP (RF Energy) Electronic Telepathy Patents (RF Energy / Microwave) NSAs SIGINT ~ Remote Neural Monitoring (Thought Surveillance) Manchurian Candidates Trauma Based Mind Control Mind Control Techniques Modern Day Mind Control Programs Black Project Technology New Age Psychological Operations Common Remote Influencing Technology Facades Technological Channeling Analysis Technological ESP Synthetic Sensations via Directed Energy Weapons Synthetic Dreams ~ Virtual Reality (VR) Black Project Spending Brain/Mind Mapping Operation Paperclip Operation Armageddon Artificial Intelligence based Demonic Possession Facades Defenses to Mind Control The Shadow Government The Surveillance Grid Psy Op Methodologies Mechanics of Perception Technological Conspiracy Quotes Transhumanization of Society What I call The Covert Transhumanism Era

In a nutshell; "It seems AI has the power of the Matrix(in the movie) without the need for us to be in a pod plugged in." ~Andrew Hale

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Covert Transhumanism: A Mind Control Documentary - YouTube

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Hedonism alone didn’t kill George – Irish Independent

Posted: at 7:48 am

This was officially named as being a type of heart disease, but most people who spoke about George in the month after his death portrayed a man who had been struggling. In the long wait for the autopsy results, a steady trickle of stories about the wildest excesses of his drugs use, blackouts and the public sex, flowed from the British tabloids. The novelist Tony Parsons, a sometime-friend of George's, wrote this week that it was a warped kind of hedonism which marred the pop star's life. This, Parsons felt, was down to a failure on George's part to recognise which act of the play he was going into. "There is a time and place for party drugs and sex in public places. It is not a man's middle years. After the booze-soaked, chemically crazed tumult of youth and young manhood, your 30s, 40s and beyond are a time for yoga, fruit smoothies and stretching exercises - not rehab and bad drugs and increasingly desperate attempts to stay clean."

What stopped George from ever moving into that squeaky-clean middle age that Parsons wished for him? Probably in common with a lot of gay men, it was a combination of a few factors. He was likely combating the legacy of a damaged childhood by numbing himself with drugs. His lack of children would allow for vast expanses of unstructured free time in which addiction flourishes. And perhaps most invidiously of all he saw a kind of timidity about calling out his destructive behaviour for what it was. George was one of the first gay pop stars. Criticism, or even concern about the way he was living, was conflated with homophobia. And his inner-addict was canny enough to understand how all this worked. Remember when he was caught having public sex in that toilet in Los Angeles? That sad, lonely and drug-fuelled incident was ingeniously repacked for the subsequent music video as an hilarious and sexy adventure. In interviews to promote it, George spoke about the court case he endured as though he had been Oscar Wilde, on trial for loving too much.

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Hedonism alone didn't kill George - Irish Independent

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Why George Michael’s battle with drugs won’t be repeated – GQ.com

Posted: at 7:48 am

George Michael was too young to die and too old to be caning it.

Fifty-three is not old for a self-made millionaire looking forward to enjoying the final third of his life. But it is positively ancient when you have spent the last few years in and out of expensive clinics and getting busted. There is a time and place for party drugs and sex in public places. It is not a man's middle years.

After the booze-soaked, chemically crazed tumult of youth and young manhood, your thirties, forties and beyond are a time for yoga and fruit smoothies and stretching exercises - not rehab and bad drugs and increasingly desperate attempts to stay clean.

When he did four weeks' jail time for driving under the influence of drugs, George Michael was already 47 years old. I have known a few wild men in my time. But I never knew anyone who caned it all the way to the male menopause.

Oh, George! When I first met him, he was 21 years old and Wham! were in their pomp - stuffing shuttlecocks down their tennis shorts, mobs of teenage girls chasing George and Andrew Ridgeley down every street and a chauffeured limo waiting until the night's fun was over. But the fun was, like the 21-year-old George himself, as clean cut as could be.

Young George was shrewd, mature and totally unlike the debauched degenerates that I had been knocking around with for the previous ten years. The night we met, George and I went to Rudland & Stubbs in Smithfield and drank our bodyweight in sauvignon blanc. And I thought that was about as wild as it would ever get with this likeable young man. I was dead wrong.

Even nine years after that first meeting, at his 30th birthday party on his father's stud farm - the horses running free in the rolling fields, torch lights lining the long sweeping driveway - there was no indication that George Michael was going to go down in flames as the last of the great hedonists. Even on the night he turned 30, all that was still ahead of him. He looked too much the master of his destiny to ever veer wildly off the rails. He surely managed his career far too well to destroy it with gluttony for good times. But five years later we were sitting by the fire in his big open-plan house in Oak Hill Park, Hampstead - Hippy the Labrador chewing the white pile carpet between us - when George casually slipped into the conversation that he was smoking around 25 spliffs a day.

In those years he was still reeling from a double bereavement. Anselmo Feleppa, the Brazilian lover who finally convinced George that he was gay and not hovering somewhere on the bisexual spectrum, had died of an Aids-related brain haemorrhage in 1993. His mother Lesley, the only member of his family I ever met in the many hours I spent in his Oak Hill Park home, had died in 1997 at the age of 60. But life is full of loss. It doesn't make most of us want to ruin ourselves.

And suddenly, it seemed like the drugs were not for recreation but relief, respite and oblivion. And he was already far too old to be living that way.

This is not to suggest that fleeting fun is for the young. There will always be a time and place for transient bliss in a man's life, whatever his age. Witness Sir Rod Stewart, 72, flamboyantly making the draw for the fifth round of the Scottish Cup after possibly imbibing a drink or two. And consider the late Leonard Cohen, who always said that if he lived to be 80, he was going to start smoking again.

"It is the right age to recommence," Cohen solemnly told the New York Times. And that's exactly what Cohen did - it is no coincidence that on the cover of Cohen's last album, You Want It Darker, released just before his death at the age of 82, he has ostentatiously got a fag on the go. Leonard Cohen, the smoker, and Rod Stewart, the drinker, glow with joy. But then they obey the first rule of hedonism - enjoy it.

How much true undiluted pleasure, I wonder, did George Michael feel from his wild years? Rumours abound about what chemicals he was on. What is irrefutable is that they ruined him. I spent a lot of time around George in his twenties and thirties. We met each other's families. When I went out with my girlfriend Yuriko on the night before we got married, the only person who came with us to the little Japanese restaurant in Islington was George Michael. In the end I was really just the favourite journalist of a big star. But I considered him my friend. But by the time he was in his forties and fifties, we had stopped talking to each other. And I had stopped recognising him. It wasn't just the weight he piled on. He looked miserable.

Why do most of us bail out of hedonism? Because we worry about the consequences. You have to be either 18 or 80 to smoke cigarettes and not worry about lung cancer. Anywhere in between and you know it is a real possibility. After youth's first flush, other things take priority over having a good time. A serious job, a permanent woman and fatherhood. You don't stay up all night when you have to play with your child at dawn.

For most of us, life imposes its own restrictions. The hard-core hedonists are often the ones who take most readily to the Perrier and pilates of later life. Because they have watched their friends die. Because they have done unknown damage to themselves. And they know it. So they move from the dark to the light, from the madness to something approaching peace. George Michael, almost uniquely, travelled in exactly the opposite direction. Whatever George was on, he did too much of, much too late. Whatever your poison, you should start young and - when the hangovers take days to shake off, rather than hours - learn to pace yourself. You don't do what George did. Because that will give you a morning after that lasts for eternity.

On the wall of the Snappy Snaps on Hampstead's high street, five minutes' walk from George's old home in Oak Hill Park, there was some graffiti next to the dent where he crashed his car at 3.30 on a Sunday morning. "Wham" the graffiti quipped, and everyone enjoyed the joke. But it was probably a lot less fun to be the drug-addled middle-aged man who had passed out behind the wheel of his car when he was trying to find his way home.

I never saw anyone get hedonism so badly wrong as George. All the drugs, all the sex in public places, all the reckless driving - and he was not having fun. He was dying.

It is different for the authentically young, for the generation born in the 21st century. A major NHS survey of 6,500 schoolchildren reveals that the number of young people smoking, drinking and taking drugs has dramatically fallen over the last ten years.

The authentically young have watched their grandparents die of lung cancer because they smoked cigarettes. They can see that a drink or two is fun but that drunks are unequivocally pathetic. They know their parents took drugs - mum starting everything with an E in Ibiza, dad chopping out the white lines during the Britpop wars - so drugs seem old hat. They have watched their elders take hedonism to the end of the line. And they want very little to do with it.

For the second half of the last century, young folk drank up, lit up and cranked up the volume. But the clean teens of the 21st century make that old-school hedonism look out of time, as redundant as record stores. And nothing ever seems quite so old fashioned as the formerly fashionable.

Drugs are still out there. But even the use of cannabis, the most commonly used drug, is way down these days. And we are talking about the very young - which means we are talking about the shape of the future. The young of today have learned from the mistakes of all those arthritic old groovers who cavorted in The Roxy and The Haienda. And as the father of one of them, it seems to me that there has been a real cultural shift. It was once the cool kids who got off their faces. Now it is the uneducated idiots who get routinely rat faced. Unfettered hedonism is a dial-up pastime in a digital world.

The experts say the nature of childhood has changed. This coming generation set the pace for all of us, with our personal trainers and obsession with appearance. These clean teens are more vain than all those generations who passed the bong in leaky bedsit rooms. In those heady days of 20th-century hedonism, nobody fretted about how they looked in a photograph. Nobody joyously rutting in the mud of Woodstock worried about something so superficial as their appearance. Now it often feels as if nothing matters more.

Funny enough, George Michael was fanatically self-conscious about the way he looked. When we met in that house at the end of a private road in Hampstead, he would always put the kettle on and get out the biscuits. The only exception would be if he had a photo shoot coming up. Then he would not even touch a chocolate digestive. George was in control. He was disciplined. And in those years of early solo success, when he was up there commercially with even Michael Jackson, he was happy. Somewhere along the line, he lost his way. He lost the ability to know when it was time to say yes to a chocolate digestive - or your drug of choice - and when it was time to say no. Although we drifted apart, I remember him as a beautiful man with a huge heart and a generous spirit who could handle success but could not handle hedonism.

You can't make the pleasure of the moment last a lifetime. How will you celebrate your 80th birthday? Chop out a couple of lines? A threesome with friends? A fireside spliff? Or light up a cigarette knowing that life has waited too long to kill you with lung cancer? Leonard Cohen's cigarette at 80 was only fun because he had stopped smoking decades earlier.

We give up on the unapologetic hedonism of our extreme youth - the meaningless sex with a succession of strangers, the nicotine habit, the booze and powders - when we learn that life cannot be lived as if tomorrow never comes.

Because unless you fall off your perch, it always does.

George Michael was a legend

George Michael on beating drugs, depression and his outing in LA

George Michael's songs were powered by love

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Why George Michael's battle with drugs won't be repeated - GQ.com

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