Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Canterbury South Africa Springboks Dry Polo Bottle Green

Product Code: 13568
Brand: Canterbury
New Product: Added on
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Delivery: Next Day Optional

?34.99

South Africa Springboks Dry Polo Bottle Green. Made by Canterbury.
Colour Bottle Green

We aim to deliver goods to UK addresses within 5 working days of receiving payment for your order, for non-UK addresses and international deliveries please contact customer services at Lovell Rugby. You should only be able to order items that are in stock, but if there is some other delay in processing your order we will contact you as soon as possible to keep you informed. We strive hard to keep to our delivery times but with third party involvement sometimes situations are beyond our control. Should late or non-delivery occur please contact our customer services to discuss the situation and to track the consignment.

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Monday, June 11, 2012

Sex-abuse trial against former coach Jerry Sandusky begins



By Associated Press


POSTED: 10:19 a.m. HST, Jun 11, 2012

AP photo/Gene J. Puskar

Former Penn State University assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, left, arrives today at the Centre County Courthouse for opening statements in his trial on 52 counts of child sexual abuse involving 10 boys over a period of 15 years in Bellefonte, Pa.
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BELLEFONTE, Pa. ? The first witness in Jerry Sandusky's trial said the former Penn State assistant football coach sexually abused him as a young teenager on campus and in hotels and later sent him "creepy love letters."

The witness, dubbed Victim No. 4 by prosecutors, said what began as "soap battles" in the shower escalated into inappropriate touching and oral sex. He said under cross-examination that he feels responsible for what happened to other alleged victims because he didn't come forward earlier.

The man, now 28, was the first of eight alleged victims expected to testify during the trial, which began Monday with opening statements.

Sandusky faces 52 criminal counts that he sexually abused 10 boys over 15 years, allegations he has denied. His arrest and the fallout led to departures of longtime football coach Joe Paterno and the university president.

The trial is expected to last several weeks.

Lead prosecutor Joseph McGettigan III opened Sandusky's highly anticipated trial Monday by telling jurors that the 68-year-old retired coach was a pedophile who took advantage of fatherless children or those with unstable home lives, plied them with gifts and sexually abused them for years.

Defense lawyer Joseph Amendola countered that some of the alleged victims had hired civil lawyers and had a financial interest in pursuing the criminal case.

Sandusky sat still as the first witness explained that he began showering with the former assistant coach in 1997, when he would have been about 13 years old. The man said he had met Sandusky through The Second Mile, the children's charity the assistant coach had founded.

The witness spoke calmly and firmly when questioned by McGettigan. Wearing a white shirt, dark tie and dark pants, he looked straight ahead at McGettigan during questioning. He gestured at times when asked to describe interactions with Sandusky.

"He would put his hand on my leg, basically like I was his girlfriend ... it freaked me out extremely bad," the man said, extending his right arm out and pushing it back and forth.

"I pushed it away ... after a little while, it would come right back. That drove me nuts," he said.

Instances in the shower, the man testified, escalated to the point where either Sandusky maneuvered himself so his head would be near the boy's genitals, or vice versa. The man testified that there were "a few occasions" where Sandusky ejaculated in the Penn State locker room showers.

Pictures of Sandusky and the then-boy were shown at times on a video screen. The man was asked to identify photos handed to him by McGettigan, including those with Penn State football players, but rarely looked over when the pictures were displayed on a screen large enough for jurors to see.

The man said he stayed either at his mother's or grandmother's home at times. He never told his grandmother.

"No, no way. I was too scared to ... The other things were nice. I didn't want to lose that," he testified.

A self-described college football fan, the man said he enjoyed the access to Penn State football games and facilities. At one point, the man said, Sandusky let him wear the No. 11 uniform of LaVar Arrington. Prosecutors also showed a picture of the man, as a boy, with Arrington.

The man testified that Sandusky also took him to bowl trips including the Outback and Alamo bowls. He also gave him golf clubs, snowboards, drum sets and various Penn state memorabilia including a watch from the Orange Bowl, the man testified. He said he would wear gift jerseys to school.

The witness said that, as he got older and after he got a girlfriend, he was "basically getting sick about what was happening to me."

He testified to one alleged interaction before a bowl game banquet in Texas, in a hotel bathroom before taking a shower, that Sandusky pushed down on him in a "downward motion."

The man said he resisted, when he testified that Sandusky responded, "You don't want to go back (home), do you?"

Asked by McGettigan to clarify, the man said "that he was trying to get me to have oral sex, and threatening me if not."

He said about 10 seconds later, Sandusky's wife, Dottie, called out from another room, and that an apparently surprised Sandusky left the bathroom.

Sandusky also sent the man letters, he testified. One shown briefly on a video screen in court was a handwritten on Penn State letterhead, signed "Jerry"

"I know that I have made my share of mistakes," the letter read. "However I hope that I will be able to say that I cared. There has been love in my heart."

The man described some of the correspondence as "creepy love letters ... Others would be, 'Hey, do you want to come to a football game?' Those kinds of things."

The man said he was reluctant to cooperate with the investigation into Sandusky.

Under cross-examination by Amendola, the witness said: "I feel if I just said something back then ... I feel responsible for what happened to other victims."

He also said he had spent years "burying this in the back of my head."

"I thought I was the only person," he said. "I just came to terms with that and just wanted to go away."

Last week, the trial judge said the accusers couldn't testify under aliases. The Associated Press typically doesn't identify people who say they are victims of sex crimes.

During his opening statement, McGettigan told jurors he would prove that the abuse included oral and anal sex involving boys Sandusky met through The Second Mile and that it took place "not over days, not over weeks, not even over months, but in some cases over years."

McGettigan called The Second Mile, which Sandusky established in 1977, the "perfect environment for the predatory pedophile" and his way to get close to his victims.

Amendola said the young men who would take the stand were accusers, not victims. He said jurors may find it odd that Sandusky showered with children, but that it was innocuous, and part of Sandusky's upbringing.

"In Jerry's culture, growing up in his generation, where he grew up, he's going to tell you it was routine for individuals to get showers together," Amendola said. "I suspect for those of you who might have been in athletics, it's routine."

Amendola said the defense will argue that Mike McQueary, the football team assistant who reported seeing Sandusky naked in a shower in 2001, was mistaken about what he saw.

"We don't think Michael McQueary lied," Amendola told jurors. "Are you surprised? We don't think that he lied. What we think is that he saw something and made assumptions."

Amendola also told jurors that at least six of the alleged victims have civil lawyers, including several in the courtroom gallery on Monday.

"These young men had a financial interest in this case and pursuing this case," Amendola said.

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App Budgeting Tool Helps You Manage Your Money | FINANCE ...

Have you ever wondered why you can never manage your budget. You get a regular wage and your costs are more or less fixed. So why is it so hard to make ends meet. Clearly what you want is to manage you money so that you know what you can safely spend.

Not only will ?Project Budget? allow you to create a managed budget for your day in and day out finances, it will help you organise your income and expenses. When the weekend comes around, you?ll know exactly how much you can spend without putting a hole in your wallet.

?Project Budget? is perfect for the 40hr a week office worker, the single mum on welfare or the shift worker. In fact anyone with a regular pay check will benefit from Project Budget. And it doesn?t matter if you get paid weekly, 2 weekly or monthly, Project Budget will help you put aside money each week to pay all your bills.

For those of us who are mathematically challenged, you won?t have to ever again get all your bills out and spend hours with a calculator, pen and notepaper trying to work it all out. The app budgeting tool does all the heavy lifting for you. Input your expense data just the once when you first get the app and you?re good to go.

It doesn?t matter what part of the world you?re from or what currency you use. The app will handle all your calculations. The instructions are in English

I?m sure you will have that feeling of relief when you receive that dreaded bill, you check the amount owing, then check your account via ?Project Budget? (which has worked everything out for you from the data you entered) and know that you can pay it right there, on the spot.

?Project Budget? has a user friendly interface and all the in-built calculations you need to be your ultimate money management system and you don?t have to be a Rhodes scholar to wok it out. You have you iPhone with you everywhere you go, reassuring you that your finances are in order. What a great relief!

Finally, you can now implement and achieve your saving goals. Maybe a car or holiday? Your choice. In addition, you will be able to reconcile your bank account with the touch of a button.

Drew Fraser from Australia has been working on the concept of an app budgeting tool for a lot of years now. For more information, visit the website http://projectapp.co

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Embattled Iraqi PM holding on to power for now

BAGHDAD (AP) ? Iraq's embattled prime minister has fought off an attempt to push him out of office, aided by divisions among his opponents and Iranian intervention on his behalf.

Nouri al-Maliki's tactical victory averts a potentially destabilizing contest to replace him, at least for the time being, but perpetuates the sectarian-based deadlock that has paralyzed the country for years.

In the latest setback for those trying to unseat al-Maliki, the country's president said Sunday he would not ratify a petition for a no-confidence vote because it lacked the needed number of signatures.

An Iraqi lawmaker who supports the prime minister says Iran is helping him by trying to buy time. Tehran is pushing for a two-month grace period during which al-Maliki, who has close ties with the Islamic Republic, would ostensibly try to appease coalition partners who accuse him of monopolizing power.

At the root of the standoff is the unresolved power struggle between Iraq's three main groups ? the majority Shiites and minority Sunnis and Kurds ? following the ouster of Saddam Hussein in the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.

Elections in March 2010 were inconclusive. Al-Maliki was able to form a national unity government but its component parties do not trust and in some cases detest each other.

The continued impasse has raised the possibility of renewed sectarian violence and hampered plans for rebuilding the country ravaged by a decade of fighting.

Six months after the departure of the last U.S. forces, hopes seem to be fading that oil-rich Iraq can quickly transform into a functioning democracy.

"It's a sensitive and tense situation and anything could go wrong," analyst Joost Hiltermann of the International Crisis Group said of the ongoing political crisis.

Al-Maliki, a Shiite, is under fire for breaking promises to share power with his partners in a unity government that includes the Sunni-dominated Iraqiya bloc, Kurdish parties and loyalists of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

Sunnis who believe he is targeting their leaders with politically motivated prosecutions and Kurds who think he is hostile to their northern autonomy have their own reason to dislike the prime minister.

Al-Maliki's erstwhile partners have been pushing to unseat him with a no-confidence vote in the 325-member parliament, but appear to be struggling to muster the required 164 votes.

Last week, they said they sent a petition for a no-confidence vote with 176 signatures of lawmakers to President Jalal Talabani ? a Kurd with ties to Iran who is apparently reluctant to see al-Maliki replaced. On Sunday, Talabani said the petition only had 160 valid signatures, falling short by four. He said 13 lawmakers told him they were withdrawing or suspending their signatures.

The rebels in al-Maliki's coalition can also force a no-confidence vote without Talabani's help, but it's a longer, more cumbersome process.

After Talabani's ruling, al-Maliki called for more talks to resolve the coalition crisis.

Al-Maliki's main foreign backer, Shiite-ruled Iran, is also trying to keep him in power, according to several Shiite politicians who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of those efforts. Al-Maliki is a key guarantor of Tehran's influence in Iraq and forged close ties with Iran's leaders during two decades in exile there in the Saddam era.

The push to unseat al-Maliki hinges on al-Sadr, whose loyalists have 40 seats in parliament. The mercurial young cleric has a long history of conflict with al-Maliki, but is also particularly vulnerable to Iranian pressure.

Sadr bolted the Shiite political camp several weeks ago to side with Iraqiya and the Kurds. Shortly after that, he was summoned to Tehran, where he was asked to give al-Maliki two more months to work out his coalition problems, according to Shiite lawmaker Humam al-Hamoudi, an al-Maliki supporter.

To add to the pressure, al-Sadr's Iranian-based spiritual leader issued a religious edict that would rule out having al-Sadr side with Sunnis and Kurds.

Al-Sadr's response to the pressure remains unclear.

Al-Hamoudi said he expects al-Sadr will eventually return to the Shiite fold, for fear of losing support among his constituents.

Before departing for Tehran, al-Sadr tried to unify the ranks, asking senior members of his movement and the Mahdi Army militia to sign a loyalty oath to him with a fingerprint dipped in blood, said a senior militia commander, Abu Ali Rubai.

Meanwhile, the push against al-Maliki is likely to continue.

The coalition rebels said in a statement they would "continue to mobilize lawmakers," while al-Hamoudi suggested that a lack of trust will make it hard to solve the coalition's problems.

"The problem is that al-Maliki has signed so many signatures before, but the level of commitment will only be seen in the future," al-Hamoudi said, hinting at broken pledges of the past.

In the original coalition deal, reached after nine months of political wrangling following the 2010 election, al-Maliki made sweeping concessions in a bid to form a government. "What he signed up to was very theoretical and not achievable," said Reidar Visser, a Norway-based analyst who writes for the blog historiae.org.

Among other things, al-Maliki promised to set up a body that would have final say on legislation and be headed by the leader of Iraqiya, but later reneged. Al-Maliki also failed to appoint defense and interior ministers, jobs he kept for himself as he tightened control over the security forces.

The deadlock has meant parliament is not passing important bills ? key among them those that regulate oil revenue-sharing.

The uncertainty has fed a number of Iraq's ongoing crises, such as the conflict between the autonomous Kurdistan region in the north and the central government in Baghdad over the oil rights.

Hiltermann said Iraq's lack of effective government has been cushioned by its oil riches ? an income tens of billions of dollars a year.

He said he expects Iraq to muddle through as long as oil keeps flowing. "It's not a good situation for Iraq," he said. "Just more of the same."

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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Mariners 6-pack combines for no-hitter vs. Dodgers

Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Kevin Millwood throws to a Los Angeles Dodgers batter in the second inning of a baseball game Friday, June 8, 2012, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Kevin Millwood throws to a Los Angeles Dodgers batter in the second inning of a baseball game Friday, June 8, 2012, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Kevin Millwood throws to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second inning of a baseball game Friday, June 8, 2012, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Elian Herrera reacts to swinging strike against the Seattle Mariners in the fourth inning of a baseball game Friday, June 8, 2012, in Seattle. Herrera struck out on the at-bat. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Seattle Mariners' Ichiro Suzuki singles against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the third inning of a baseball game Friday, June 8, 2012, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Nate Eovaldi throws against the Seattle Mariners in the first inning of a baseball game Friday, June 8, 2012, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

(AP) ? Kevin Millwood and five Seattle relievers combined on a no-hitter, the third in franchise history, and the Mariners beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 1-0 on Friday night.

The no-hitter was the fourth in the majors this season, joining gems pitched by the Angels' Jered Weaver, the Mets' Johan Santana and White Sox right-hander Philip Humber, who threw a perfect game at Seattle in April.

But this one was clearly the least conventional.

Millwood was cruising through six innings, giving up just one walk. But while warming up for the seventh he felt a twinge in his groin and was pulled from the game. Five relievers combined to finish the no-hitter, capped by Tom Wilhelmsen retiring Andre Ethier on a routine grounder to end it.

Associated Press

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Woodward and Bernstein look back on Watergate

The founder and leader of a Georgia megachurch--who was arrested last week on charges of choking his teenage daughter, slamming her into the ground and hitting her with a shoe--told churchgoers on Sunday that he did not beat her. "The truth is, she was not choked, she was not punched," Creflo Dollar, the pastor, said [??

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Hubble spots a bright spark in a nearby spiral galaxy

ScienceDaily (June 9, 2012) ? A new image, taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, shows a detailed view of the spiral arms on one side of the galaxy Messier 99. Messier 99 is a so-called grand design spiral, with long, large and clearly defined spiral arms -- giving it a structure somewhat similar to the Milky Way.

Lying around 50 million light-years away, Messier 99 is one of over a thousand galaxies that make up the Virgo Cluster, the closest cluster of galaxies to us. Messier 99 itself is relatively bright and large, meaning it was one of the first galaxies to be discovered, way back in the 18th century. This earned it a place in Charles Messier's famous catalog of astronomical objects.

In recent years, a number of unexplained phenomena in Messier 99 have been studied by astronomers. Among these is the nature of one of the brighter stars visible in this image. Cataloged as PTF 10fqs, and visible as a yellow-orange star in the top-left corner of this image, it was first spotted by the Palomar Transient Facility, which scans the skies for sudden changes in brightness (or transient phenomena, to use astronomers' jargon). These can be caused by different kinds of event, including variable stars and supernova explosions.

What is unusual about PTF 10fqs is that it has so far defied classification: it is brighter than a nova (a bright eruption on a star's surface), but fainter than a supernova (the explosion that marks the end of life for a large star). Scientists have offered a number of possible explanations, including the intriguing suggestion that it could have been caused by a giant planet plunging into its parent star.

This Hubble image was made in June 2010, during the period when the outburst was fading, so PTF 10fqs's location could be pinpointed with great precision. These measurements will allow other telescopes to home in on the star in future, even when the afterglow of the outburst has faded to nothing.

A version of this image of Messier 99 was entered into the Hubble's Hidden Treasures Competition by contestant Matej Novak. Hidden Treasures is an initiative to invite astronomy enthusiasts to search the Hubble archive for stunning images that have never been seen by the general public. The competition is now closed and the winners will be announced soon.

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