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SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick plans to make a decision on the future of coach Charlie Weis within days of the season’s end. Swarbrick said Thursday that how he made his decision last fall, when he met with Weis three days after the season ended and told him he would be back, would be “fairly representative of the timing” of what he does this year. The Fighting Irish play at home against Connecticut (4-5) on Saturday then play at No. 14 Stanford (7-3) in the regular-season finale on Nov. 28. Notre Dame (6-4) is hoping for a good bowl bid. Swarbrick said the student-athletes are his primary concern because he knows the scrutiny of Weis is difficult for the team. “I understand with everything that’s swirling around it’s tough on them. My interest is being responsive to their needs,” he said. The evaluation of Weis is an ongoing process, he said. “But it gets more intense toward the last quarter of the season, the last third of the season. It’s always happening, but you get a little more organized about it as you approach the end of the season,” he said. Swarbrick said he will take into account more than Weis’ 35-25 record, which is the same winning percentage as his two predecessors. He pointed out that NCAA graduation numbers released Wednesday show Weis is doing a good job. He said Weis is doing well in other areas, saying the football team does well in the classroom, doesn’t have disciplinary issues and Weis does a good job of bringing in the types of student-athletes Notre Dame likes. “Many, many of those other things that are important to our analysis are quite positive,” Swarbrick said. Swarbrick added, though, that the won-loss record is a “very important” part of the equation. “Sports are about winning and losing and none of us shy away from that,” he said. Swarbrick said another factor he takes into consideration is how the student-athletes feel about a coach. A number of Irish players said this week they believe Weis should be allowed to come back for a sixth season. “Coach Weis is, I think, just a great fit for what Notre Dame stands for and what this university is looking for,” quarterback Jimmy Clausen said. “To be honest, a lot of people don’t know who coach Weis is, what he’s all about. He’s a loving, caring guy. He treats all the guys on the team exactly the same as he treats his son Charlie Jr.” Defensive end John Ryan said Weis sets the tone for the team in his work ethic. “He’s a true success story in the way he’s risen all the way up the ranks to what some would say is the pinnacle of the college profession,” he said. “It’s his work ethic. He’s tireless. He doesn’t stop working.” Weis said he won’t spend any time Saturday thinking it could be his last home game as Notre Dame coach. “Not one bit. That would be very selfish for me to do it, to start off with,” he said. “I’d have to be very, very, very selfish for me to be thinking about anyone other than those fourth- and fifth-year players. I promise as far as I could ever tell I don’t think those thoughts would ever enter my mind.” More on College Football

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Notre Dame Plans Charlie Weis Decision Within Days Of Season’s End

Chicago LIVE on Twitter: Local News, Sports, People

Posted by Giggi On November - 21 - 2009

Follow the latest in Chicago LIVE through our curated Twitter lists: local news, local sports, and local people via tweets. Do you know a tweeter who’s perfect for one of these lists? Email us at twitterlists@huffingtonpost.com !

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Chicago LIVE on Twitter: Local News, Sports, People

It’s almost impossible to translate Lil Wayne’s lyrics into the written word. With nearly every syllable on every one of his nearly 1000 songs of this past decade, Weezy is surly and snarly, croaking and crawling, urgent and erstwhile. But there are no accent marks for ” Someone should’ve warned you/R-E-L-A-X like fuckin’ California/Or get cornered, or get tortured, or get slaughtered/In that order .” The words out of Wayne’s mouth somehow sound like an artist beyond his time, even if the words on a page are about as non-sensical as they come. In the thrillingly intimate documentary, “Tha Carter” (DVD in stores today), director Adam Bhala Lough however finds a way to make Lil Wayne’s lyrics translate into actual words. By subtitling entire mixtape verses–DJ drops sometimes included–the New Orleans lyricist is put on a pedestal that was once reserved only for Bob Dylan and John Lennon. And why not? Lil Wayne was one of the three most important rappers of the ’00s, a decade where hip-hop inherited and then maintained its place atop the music world. It’s a lofty declaration, but the Quincy “QD3″ Jones III-produced film has the artistic and integrity-filled chops to make the premise a compelling one. Whether Wayne’s lyricism is spelled out over grainy black and white photographs from live performances or in a quiet hotel room like the video below, “The Carter” keeps the focus on the music and away from the scandals and constantly retold…kind of. The “kind of” comes about because of the honest way in which Wayne’s surreally serious addictions–drugs, recording and himself–are shown in the film, and in turn will be the easiest to sensationalize. (No doubt, the very reason why Lil Wayne pulled his support from the project at the last minute.) Lough’s camera is given an unparalleled pass into Wayne’s guarded world, one that the many journalists shown interviewing him can only hope to glimpse in 15 minutes slots. But Lough, and certainly with the aid of DVD-Mixtape luminary QD3’s co-sign, gets weeks with Wayne in at least a dozen locations. The camera gets a guided tour through backstage worlds, tour bus sleeping quarters, endless press junkets, and sleepy-eyed viewings of “Sports Center.” Even more impressive, is the tour through Wayne’s omnipresent Louis Vuitton bag, whose contents include a six inch stack of cash, a container of liquid codeine cleverly camouflaged in a grape Vitamin Water bottle, and a coffee-table book praising the form of the naked female body. It’s the most physical example of the trust Lil Wayne bestowed upon the process, but perhaps not the most telling. That example isn’t even allowing his daughter to be interviewed–and her rap about “stuntin like her daddy” may be one of the film’s most precious moments–but it’s the access to the New Orleans rapper’s recording process. While it’s not discussed at any length in “The Carter,” it’s hard not to think about Wayne’s impending prison sentence when watching the film. The only time that Lil Wayne doesn’t seem to be recording in his travel studio–which literally goes everywhere he goes–is when he’s in a proper studio. He sets it up in hotel rooms and on the tour bus and puts in hours and hours every single night. It’s what the man does. And while he has an affinity for the liquid codeine charmingly known as “syrup,” it’s easy to imagine that he’ll be okay without it when he serves his time. And a little infliction of the real world might help tame his ghastly addiction to self…but this man is going to go insane without a studio. His passion for the process borders on a physical addiction and he says in the film that he has to record so often just to release the pressure in his head from all the rhymes building up throughout the day. While the quotables and memorable scenes in “The Carter” are endless–from grouchily ending an interview after only 90 seconds to Cortez Bryant’s tears recounting the story that got the embittered manager kicked off the tour bus–it’s Lil Wayne’s commitment to his art that truly resonates. And that “The Carter” found a way to translate that beyond the headphones makes it one of the top-five greatest hip-hop documentaries of all-time.

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Brandon Perkins: New Lil Wayne Documentary: One of Hip-Hop’s Best

Centerplate, the hospitality partner to North America’s premier convention centers and sports stadiums, announced today with the Capital Improvement Board that its currently undergoing a comprehensive investigation of Lucas Oil Stadium to immediately address all known food safety violations, ensuring that the facility operates as a model of operational excellence and exceeds all Health …

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Centerplate and the Capital Improvement Board Investigating Food Safety Violations at Lucas Oil Stadium to Ensure … (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)

Charles Barkley, In White Makeup, Mocks Sammy Sosa (VIDEO)

Posted by Giggi On November - 13 - 2009

In a bizarre moment during the halftime show of tonight’s Lakers-Suns game, TNT analyst and former NBA power forward Charles Barkley sat as a makeup artist applied white cosmetics to his face. His colleague Kenny Smith shouted “Say it loud!” before continuing, “I’m black and I’m proud.” Barkley then asked Smith, “If I become white am I allowed to eat chicken?” The entire episode appeared to mock the recent photographs showing former baseball player Sammy Sosa’s noticeably lighter skin . WATCH: Get HuffPost Sports on Facebook and Twitter! More on NBA

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Charles Barkley, In White Makeup, Mocks Sammy Sosa (VIDEO)

Charles Warner: Matsui and Rivera: Behavioral Models for TV

Posted by Giggi On November - 13 - 2009

New York Yankee World Series MVP, designated hitter Hideki Matsui, and the incomparable closer Mariano Rivera were models of mature, professional dignity in the final game of the World Series – behavior rarely seen in the trash heap of commercial television. Matsui, the calm, taciturn Japanese slugger drove in a record-tying six runs in the sixth and final game of this year’s World Series against the scrappy Philadelphia Phillies, and Rivera, baseball’s greatest, most effective closer of all time, got the final five outs to shut down the dangerous Phillies in a 7-3 Yankee win. These were impressive performances, but what stood out as much as their on-the-field heroics were their calm, confident, mature behavior and, most of all, their dignity – the way they handled their accomplishments. They didn’t jump up, pump their fists, look to the heavens, or even smile. They just did their jobs in a non-demonstrative, professional manner. Dignity is rarely seen on commercial television – not on cable where WWE wrestling is the consistently top-rated program, not on cable news which features bloviating and hysterical vaudeville performers who spin opinions and sensationalism without ever landing a blow on the facts. Witness the disgraceful coverage of the recent Ft. Hood killings in which the cable news channels got it wrong for hours and depended irresponsibly on erroneous Twitter and Facebook rumors too much. And dignity is certainly not seen on prime time television, as brilliantly analyzed and skewered by James Wolcott in the current issue (December) of Vanity Fair in a piece titled “I’m a Culture Critic…Get Me Out of Here.” Wolcott’s intelligent article isn’t up on the Web yet, so you’ll have to buy the magazine or wait until next month to get Wolcott’s superbly written piece online. Wolcott makes the point that Reality TV has “…not only ruined network values, destroyed the classic documentary, and debased the art of bad acting, but also fomented class warfare, antisocial behavior and class warfare.” Yes! Go get ‘em James! You’ll get no dignity on Reality TV or anywhere on commercial TV where programmers have to get ratings with programs (news and opinion programs included) that appeal to the lowest level of taste and educational attainment and to the basest of instincts. We don’t see much dignity in sports, either; certainly not in hockey, soccer, or football. But occasionally in Major League Baseball, which is slower, more intellectual, and dominated less by raw emotion than other sports, we get glimpses of maturity and professionalism. The Fox TV network carried the World Series and to its credit, announcer Joe Buck and analyst Tim McCarver were fittingly mature and professional in their approach, in ironic contrast to promotion spots for the local Fox-owned TV station in New York which ran in some local breaks. The promo spots were for the Fox station’s local news programs and showed scenes of silly anchors laughing, a camel snorting, and another anchor juggling to reinforce the notion of news as lowest-common-denominator vaudeville. But in the World Series games themselves, Matsui and Rivera, from Japan and Panama respectively, were models of the kind of dignified behavior it would be nice to see on TV. Hey, Bill O’Reilly, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Jim Cramer, Low Dobbs, Keith Olbermann, and network CEOs and programmers, were you watching? Will you please try to model the behavior of these two Yankee superstars?

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Charles Warner: Matsui and Rivera: Behavioral Models for TV

A new sports-safety study recommends that guidelines be developed to help coaches decide whether to cancel or modify outdoor practices on days of elevated pollution.

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Study: Air quality is a sports safety issue (Louisville Courier-Journal)

Derartu Tulu Wins NYC Marathon

Posted by Giggi On November - 1 - 2009

Derartu Tulu, a 37-year-old Ethiopian runner, has won the New York City marathon. Tulu beat out Russian 41-year-old Ludmila Petrova in the home stretch of Central Park to win her first New York City Marathon. Tulu finished 3rd in 2005 and is an Olympic gold medal winner in the 10,000. More on Sports

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Derartu Tulu Wins NYC Marathon

PHILADELPHIA — Guess who showed up for Halloween dressed as sluggers? The New York Yankees and Alex Rodriguez, whose double clanked off a television camera in the right-field corner and was ruled a home run in the first instant replay call in World Series history. It changed the game. “I think it woke our offense up a little bit,” Rodriguez said after the Yankees rallied for a rain-delayed 8-5 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies on Saturday night that gave them a 2-1 Series lead. Rodriguez and the rest of those dangerous New York bats finally broke loose to back another postseason win by Andy Pettitte. Game 4 is Sunday night. Joe Blanton pitches against Yankees ace CC Sabathia, who goes on three days’ rest for the second time this postseason. After pitching dominated the first two games in the Bronx, the Yankees and defending champion Phillies flexed their muscles, combining for six home runs at cozy Citizens Bank Park. Jayson Werth connected twice for Philadelphia. Rain affected the Series schedule in Philly for the second consecutive year, delaying the start by 1 hour, 20 minutes. Once they hit the field in front of their boisterous fans, the Phillies built a 3-0 lead – but it was squandered by a struggling Cole Hamels, last year’s World Series MVP. A slumping Nick Swisher and pinch-hitter Hideki Matsui also went deep for the Bronx Bombers, while Johnny Damon hit a tiebreaking, two-run double. “This was my first time coming to this ballpark. It just seems like you’re going to have a slugfest a lot,” Swisher said. “It was a great day for us.” Pettitte settled down after a shaky start and even helped himself at the plate with a tying single. His six-inning outing was enough to earn his 17th postseason win, extending his major league record. “He closed off our left-handed hitters,” Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said. Especially slugger Ryan Howard. The NL championship series MVP is 2 for 13 with nine strikeouts in the Series. “Go home and go to sleep. I’m a simple guy,” he said. “We’re not going to panic by any means just because we’re down in the Series.” Some fans were dressed in Phillies red, others in full costume for the second-ever World Series game on Halloween. They whipped around white rally towels, but the trick was on them – their team got whipped when the Yankees rallied. Carlos Ruiz homered for the Phillies in the ninth off Phil Hughes. Mariano Rivera finished up at 12:42 a.m. in a non-save situation. “It was an absolute grind tonight, that’s for sure,” Pettitte said. “I can’t remember winning a game where I’ve struggled like I did tonight. So it’s very gratifying.” With the Yankees down three runs, Mark Teixeira walked in the fourth and Rodriguez hit an opposite-field drive into the right-field corner. He cruised into second base after the ball ricocheted back onto the field. Video replays, however, showed the ball struck the lens of a television camera positioned just above the fence at the 330-foot sign. New York manager Joe Girardi came out to talk with right-field umpire Jeff Nelson as Phillies pitching coach Rich Dubee visited the mound. While Rodriguez chatted with Howard at second base, umpires huddled in the infield. Four of the six went under the stands for a look at the replay and emerged about a minute later. The signal: home run. Baseball adopted instant replay for boundary calls during the 2008 season and Rodriguez homered the first time it was used last year. “It’s only fitting, right?” he said. Rodriguez’s first hit in nine World Series at-bats was his sixth homer this postseason, tying Bernie Williams’ club record from 1996. It also was the 17th postseason homer this year for the Yankees, setting a franchise mark. The call seemed to give the Yankees a boost and help them break out of their Series slump – the team that led the majors in runs (915) and homers (244) during the regular season scored only four times in the first two games at home. “Tonight I was a lot more disciplined, and better results,” Rodriguez said. New York kept hitting in the fifth and chased Hamels. Benched in Game 2 at home, Swisher opened with a double and slid home with the tying run when Pettitte looped a one-out single to center on a first-pitch breaking ball. It was Pettitte’s third hit in 18 career postseason at-bats, second in World Series play. Who needs a designated hitter? The Fox broadcast caught Derek Jeter saying to plate umpire Brian Gorman: “We’re going to have to listen to Pettitte now. He’s been bragging about his hitting all year.” Jeter fisted a soft single and Damon cracked a two-run double to right-center for a 5-3 lead. Hamels was lifted after another walk to Teixeira and walked off the mound to a mix of boos and cheers. The lanky left-hander, who was 4-0 with a 1.80 ERA in the postseason last year, fell to 1-2 with a 7.58 ERA in four outings this time around. Swisher homered off rookie J.A. Happ in the sixth and took a long look at his solo shot to left. Werth answered leading off the bottom half with a mammoth drive off the facing of the second deck in left. After connecting, he slammed his bat to the ground and glared into the Philadelphia dugout as if to urge on his teammates. It was Werth’s seventh home run this postseason, one shy of the major league record held by Carlos Beltran (2004) and Barry Bonds (2002). Jorge Posada’s RBI single in the seventh gave New York a three-run cushion. Matsui added an opposite-field solo shot to left in the eighth, his second homer in two games. Matsui was on the bench because World Series rules don’t permit a DH in National League parks. Pettitte fell behind 3-0 in the second. Werth reached down for a breaking ball and hit a leadoff homer to left, setting off fireworks and lighting up the Liberty Bell in right-center. With the bases loaded, Jimmy Rollins walked to force in a run and Shane Victorino added a sacrifice fly. Pettitte avoided further damage by striking out Chase Utley, then settled in and held Philadelphia in check. That gave the Yankees a chance to come back. The Phillie Phanatic was wearing a rain-slicker and fisherman’s hat when he high-fived Mike Schmidt as the Hall of Famer walked to the mound to throw out the first pitch to Howard. The grounds crew was still drying puddles on the warning track as the Phillies took the field. Last season, Game 5 of the World Series between the Phillies and Tampa Bay was suspended for two days because of rain. Once it resumed – in the sixth inning – the Phillies went on to a 4-3 victory that clinched the championship. Last year’s Game 3 started at 10:06 p.m. because of rain and didn’t end until 1:47 a.m. It was the latest start in Series history. NOTES: The Phillies dropped to 11-2 at home the past two postseasons. … Nine of the last 10 teams to win Game 3 when the World Series was tied 1-all went on to take the title. The exception was the 2003 Yankees, who lost the next three games to Florida. More on Sports

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World Series Instant Replay Call Changes Game, Helps Yankees Beat Phillies

Stephanie Wei: What We Lost When We Lost Payne Stewart

Posted by Giggi On October - 26 - 2009

Today, October 25, 2009, marks the 10-year anniversary of the tragic plane crash that killed golfing great Payne Stewart, along with five others. It was merely four months after he won the US Open at Pinehurst. The image of his reaction — his fist pumped in the air and one foot kicked up behind him — when he sank the winning putt on the 72nd hole is one that will always resonate with us. Pure joy. At the time, I was 16, and when I heard the sad news, I remember feeling shocked to the point where I was speechless and then shedding some tears. I was also at the age where I couldn’t really grasp the death of someone famous in a freak accident. I didn’t know him. I didn’t really live through his era. But, I do remember some things that separated him from your average major champion golfer; he was a fantastic role model. In all the hoopla about it being 10 years, it’s interesting to think about why we all miss him so much. Not just about the way he died, it’s about the way he lived. He always had his priorities straight : Golf isn’t everything in my life. I mean, I have a beautiful family. I have a wonderful wife and two lovely children. If on the way home, something would happen and I couldn’t play golf again. Hey, I’ve had a wonderful career and I want to spend the rest of my life with my family. Moments after he beat the then perpetual bridesmaid, Phil Mickelson, at the US Open, he grabbed his face and said, “You’re going to love being a father.” He put things in perspective, too: If you can’t laugh at yourself, then how can you laugh at anybody else? I think people see the human side of you when you do that. I don’t think it’s healthy to take yourself too seriously. And of course, there were his clothes — the knickers, Tam O’Shanter cap, knee-high argyle socks, and the occasional tie and matching sweater vest — all a throwback to the classic Bobby Jones era. He wanted to, you know, stand out from the standard polo-shirt-and-khaki-trouser pro (so, he wore an old-school golf uniform). David Toms gave his take : I think he was the one guy that did something different with his attire and everything and presented himself in that way. More and more guys are doing that, trying to make a statement by what they’re wearing. He was one of the guys that started that. Everyone knows he was a true character. He oozed charm. He was sometimes a bit cocky. He was a fierce competitor. He was a prankster. After his good friend Paul Azinger beat him at the ‘93 Memorial Tournament, Payne still got the last laugh : He put bananas in my brand new pair of Zegna loafers,” Azinger said. “He peeled them and shoved big chunks in there. I left the tournament grounds that victory evening wearing only my socks! Given his good ol’ Missouri roots, he was very frank and open. He once said, “If somebody asks for my opinion, I tell them my opinion, whether it’s what they want to hear or not.” Translation: He was full of amazing zingers (press-friendly!), like this one (!): [The Ryder Cup] is for the game of golf, yeah, but trust me, the Europeans don’t have that mentality. They come over and want to whip us. And they don’t care about the betterment of the game of golf. Of course, we can’t forget his fluid, divine swing that screamed finesse — the one that carried him to 11 PGA Tour victories, including three majors. We must wonder how many more he would have won. He had a storied career, no doubt, but with that swing, he had several more glory moments left to be seen in the champion’s circle. He could have been one of the greatest golfers of all time. But, really, no point to harp on the shoulda, woulda, couldas, and it’s un-Payne like. In an interview, Payne was asked what he learned from Azinger’s battle with cancer. He imparted these strangely comforting words: “I’m going to a special place when I die, but I want to make sure my life is special while I’m here.” Now, brace yourselves before you watch this clip. Grab a tissue or two. It’s sad, but inspiring more than anything, not to mention a fitting tribute to the life, character and mystique of a man we lost 10 years ago. This post first appeared at Wei Under Par

3504f26ab0930333.jpg 119x150 Stephanie Wei: What We Lost When We Lost Payne Stewart

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Stephanie Wei: What We Lost When We Lost Payne Stewart

Mike Tyson & Evander Holyfield TOGETHER On Oprah Friday

Posted by Giggi On October - 15 - 2009

CHICAGO — Boxing rivals Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield are to meet again – and this time Oprah will referee. Harpo Productions announced Wednesday the two fighters would appear on Friday’s live episode of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” from Chicago. On June 28, 1997, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Tyson was disqualified after biting off part of Holyfield’s right ear during their WBA heavyweight title fight. Winfrey aired an interview with Tyson on Monday during which he discussed the death of his 4-year-old daughter and talked about his family. Harpo Productions says Tyson will take questions from the audience on Friday. More on Sports

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Mike Tyson & Evander Holyfield TOGETHER On Oprah Friday

Death Toll Increases to Over 5,000 and Counting Thanks to Operation Gatekeeper San Diego, CA- With numbing regularity news bulletins flash regarding groups or individuals suffering severe injuries, snake bites or dying in the remote deserts or mountains or drowning in the river along the 800 mile “Wall” as they attempt to cross the border between Mexico and the USA. In the 24/7 news cycle, this blip quickly fades from our collective memory and we move onto something more interesting, after all, we can’t imagine ourselves in the same predicament. Left in the wake are those still living or their relatives, without organized systemic help to search and rescue or recover and claim bodies and try to make arrangements. This doesn’t need to be this way and prior to October 1994, it wasn’t. Fifteen years of failed immigration policy has not improved the numbers of undocumented aliens entering the country and has cost millions in dollars and human suffering. International Humanitarian Crisis: Migrant Deaths at the U.S.-Mexico Border A recent report issued jointly by ACLU and ACLU Foundation of San Diego & Imperial Counties and Mexico’s National Commission on Human Rights (CNDH). It outlines the disturbing findings in a straight forward manner, along with suggestions on how to reduce the death toll that is only increasing in scale. “The current policies in place on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border have created a humanitarian crisis that has led to the deaths of more than 5,000 people,” said Kevin Keenan, Executive Director of the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties. “Because of deadly practices and policies like Operation Gatekeeper, the death toll continues to rise unabated despite the decrease in unauthorized crossings due to economic factors.” Humanitarian Crisis Report By Maria Jimenez Some of the highlights within this report: The deaths of unauthorized migrants have been a predictable and inhumane outcome of border security policies on the U.S.-Mexico border over the last fifteen years. Beginning in 1994, the U.S. government implemented a border enforcement policy known as “Operation Gatekeeper” that used a “prevention and deterrence” strategy. The strategy concentrated border agents and resources along populated areas, intentionally forcing undocumented immigrants to extreme environments and natural barriers that the government anticipated would increase the likelihood of injury and death. The stated goal was to deter migrants from crossing. Over the last fifteen years, national security concerns have reinforced the deterrence strategy without any improvements in the results. The mutual interest of intercepting national security threats on a shared border reshaped the bilateral relationship between Mexico and the United States, redefining priorities given to immigration and border policies. The national security lens favored the militarization of the border at the cost of migrant lives. In the last five years, the border enforcement budget expanded from $6 billion to $10.1 billion, the number of agents jumped to 20,000; 630 miles of new fencing was completed around urban areas; 300 miles of vehicle barriers were erected; a “virtual fence” of technological infrastructure was installed…and more migrants are dying now than ever before. Recommendations to reduce migrant deaths are listed in the report: October 1, 2009 marks the fifteenth anniversary of the launch of Operation Gatekeeper and the ensuing border enforcement policies that have led to the deaths of more than 5,000 people. Prior to Operation Gatekeeper, migrant deaths were few and far between. In its conclusion, the report reflects on the findings and suggests courses of action that the U.S. and Mexican governments could take to protect and advance the human right to life of international migrants. Action on Day One: Recognize border crossing deaths as an international humanitarian crisis. Action within 100 days: Shift more U.S. Border Patrol resources to search and rescue. Direct government agencies to allow humanitarian organizations to do their work to save lives and recover remains. Establish a binational, one-stop resource for rescue and recovery calls. Convene all data collecting agencies to develop a uniform system. Commit to transparency. Elevate border deaths to a bilateral priority. Invite international involvement. Action within One Year: Adopt sensible, humane immigration and border policies. Support nongovernmental humanitarian efforts at the border to do what governments are unable or unwilling to do. These recommendations complement those made in 2002 by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights to reduce deaths at the border. These included: 1. Demilitarize the border; 2. Establish a guest-worker program; 3. Increase the number of permanent resident visas available to Mexicans; 4. Legalize undocumented immigrants already in the United States; 5. Modify immigration laws that deport immigrants for minor criminal offenses; 6. Encourage cooperation with Mexico; 7. Protect the rights of asylum seekers; and 8. Recognize U.S. citizenship of the Tohono O’odham. Except for the growing cooperation between Mexico and the United States, the rest of the solutions have not been considered or adopted. Illegal Aliens Are Scapegoat for local Ills Migrant workers are the au-current whipping child of Conservatives, anti-immigration policy makers, any neo-group, Militia groups like the Minutemen or any other persons that feel the need to fly the colors of bias and bigotry. There are constant claims that undocumented workers are taking jobs from Americans, really? When was the last time you fought for a job of stooping in a field picking crops in 100 degree heat for 12-16 hours? Or standing for hours on a street corner with the hopes that you will get picked up, work a long day and hope that you don’t get stiffed so that you can repeat another day in order to send a few dollars to your family that is living in extreme poverty. With Operation Gatekeeper and it’s equivalents in other border regions, the only purpose is to push emigrating people further out from ports of entry and closer to the high risks of crossing in uncharted land against incredible odds. The mountain and arid desert regions each have their own micro-climates that bring extreme heat during the day and sub-freezing nights that exhausted travelers are unprepared for. These are not the drug dealers, cartels or even terrorists; they are way more sophisticated than those who desperate enough to use human coyotes to help transport them to what they believe will be a better life. Now, please don’t get me wrong, the drug cartel’s murder and mayhem with the negative side effects is huge, for both sides of the border it has affected the quality of life for millions and does need to be strongly addressed by both governments. Add to the mix of government agencies are the San Diego Minutemen http://www.sandiegominutemen.com/site/index.php and other groups, self appointed militia who claim to be American Patriots to help protect the border, confusing vigilantes for activistism, pushing the Birther argument tool of FreedomWorks that Obama was born in Kenya and is therefore ineligible be president, but didn’t have a problem with John McCain’s Panama birthplace. They will also let you know who to vote for, funding & spinning California measures they don’t like and best yet, listing who their enemies and friends that support their cause, and heads up, they cross the line from activist to cult when they start dissing their own and excommunicating those who they no longer support when their riled up members start acting out. This Land was Their Land, Now It’s Our Land From the Sierra Nevada’s to Catalina Island This Land was stolen for you and me… California History 101: Before the Gold Rush of the 1840’s, the area was an extension of Mexico, yes, the indigenous people occupying the land were Mexicans, Indian-Spanish and Native Americans with immigrants coming from the East. The formation of California into state was not without bloodshed is the equivalent of a land grab that divided East and West Germany with a wall, separating generations of families from each other. Back in California, pre-1994 before Operation Gatekeeper, there was the daily comings and goings of workers from both sides without the animosity and military intervention that has become the accepted norm in the region. Post NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement that went into effect in 1994, the same year Operation Gatekeeper went into effect opening the borders to trade but closing them to people, had hundreds of US companies setting up operations in Mexico to take advantage of the cheap labor force while promising it would save American jobs. Wall Street and major corporations had a huge stake in its success and lobbied vigorously for its passing but the paradox is the negative effect on the environment, food safety and US jobs they claimed would be created and the human costs associated with its implementation. Public Citizen, www.citizen.org/trade/nafta/ lists the broken promises of NAFTA and why we will continue to feel its effects for decades to come. I recently visited Tijuana as part of my listening and writing tour and although I have stopped there many times over the past 3 decades, this was the first time it appeared like a ghost town, gone were the hawkers, the crowds on the street, the donkey’s painted in Zebra stripes and more then 60% of the store fronts shuttered. Before boarding the Mexicoach in San Ysidro, the gateway community that hosts the port of entry, a converted bus with Wackenhut on it’s side pulled up and discharged two Border Patrol officers with a handcuffed man covered in dirt, in between as he was escorted into the building. Wackenhut is one of the large contractors supplying services to Homeland Security at the Border Region. Creepier still was the three Homeland Security agents boarding the bus on the US side by checking passports and asking questions, before the bus crossed into Mexico; I thought this was weird but frequent riders and the bus driver had never before experienced it, intimidating and eerie… Border region protection is a National and International public and private contractors’ effort costing taxpayers millions each year with questionable gains in reducing crime, illegal incursions and apprehensions while there are fewer migrants crossing due to the economic downturn yet they are dying at a higher rate than ever before. This can no longer be acceptable. More on Death & Dying

See the rest here:
Mary Ann West: Death Toll Increases to Over 5,000 and Counting

Snowboard Addiction.

Posted by Giggi On September - 16 - 2009

Snowboard Addiction Is The Worlds Best Online Snowboard Coaching! Video Lessons, Podcasts To Ride With And Manuals With Photos And Diagrams. It Incorporates Both A Freestyle Program And A Learn To Snowboard Program.

Snowboard Addiction.

Snowboard?

Posted by Giggi On September - 16 - 2009

what is a good snowboard FOR A 13 YEAR OLD (begginer) He has been using the 6 year olds “freeride 110″ snowboard and is good on it. I don’t know what to get him should I get him the freeride 110? Or should I upgrade to something a tad better… please give me links, I know nothing about snoboards

Colin Montgomerie guides you round the Open Championship course.

Read more from the original source:
The Open 2009: holebyhole guide to the Ailsa Championship links course at Turnberry (Daily Telegraph)

How to open a British bank account while living overseas?

Posted by Giggi On July - 17 - 2009
british open

Hi, I’m a British Citizen who currently lives in Korea. I’d like to open a British bank account, but not sure if I can without going into a branch in person and signing forms, etc. Is it possible to do this while living overseas and if so, what bank would you reccomend. I’d like to get a Visa card with the account and more importantly, the ability to withdraw money from other countries. I travel a lot.
Thanks for any help.
graeme.

british open

What native son was the only golfer to win the British Open twice in the 1990s?

Does the British Open Championship follow USGA rules?

Posted by Giggi On July - 17 - 2009
british open

do they use the USGA rulebook for questionable calls or do they have their own?

reason being, my brother and I have had a disagreement in a ruling that came up in the British Open.

He says if you address the ball for a put, and the wind moves the ball you aren’t accessed a penalty. I believe you are penalized if the ball moves after the ball is addressed.

hexi.us the open championship 2009,the open championship live, the open championship, the open championship 2010, the british open 2009, the open golf at turnberry This weeks golf at Turnberry will be top drawer, with the great and good converging t

british open

Homework help, please! I can’t find the answer in my text book. The question asks why the British opened their colonies to immigration, as opposed to the Spanish and French who didn’t, and also asks: How do you explain the ethnic homogeneity of New England and the ethnic pluralism of New York and Pennsylvania?
serious answers, please. this is an important AP history assignment and i just cant figure out the answer, i’m blanking.

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