Lady Gaga walks into a St. Paul bar

Turf Club music manager Dave Wiegardt said it was an especially quiet night at the blue-collar St. Paul rock haven — you know, the one with the puny, dingy bathrooms,thanksgiving money clips, 1940s facade and Replacements and Neil Young posters — when a black Escalade pulled up out front with the most famous pop star of 2010 inside.

"She just walked in the door with this giant guy by her side and bellied up to the bar," Wiegardt said, describing the visit Lady Gaga paid to the Turf Club late Tuesday following her second of two sold-out concerts at Xcel Energy Center. "Next thing you know,tiffany bangles sale, she’s across the room at the pinball machines playing a game by herself. It was pretty unreal."

Already known to enjoy hitting the town after her performances — but usually at more trendy dance venues and gay clubs — Gaga showed up at the Turf just after midnight and stayed for about an hour, accompanied by her Omaha-reared boyfriend and songwriting muse Luc Carl plus two bodyguards. They stayed about an hour, said Wiegardt, who guessed that "one of the reasons they might’ve picked [the Turf] is because it was low-key and pretty quiet."

Word got out via Twitter that she was there, but the crowd stayed relatively small and cool. Reports from the 50 or so patrons uniformly described the superstar as being unusually approachable and laid-back. One Tweeter said she talked fashion with the singer. Others commented that she appeared tiny in person. A group of women even talked Gaga into posing inside the Turf Club’s photo booth with them, pictures that are now splashed across the web everywhere from fan sites to the blog of notorious celeb hound Perez Hilton.

"She really came off like a normal person — or at least a normal person who goes out wearing black hot pants,tiffany earrings sale, a sports bra and fishnets," quipped Machen Davis, one of the women in the photo strip and a promotions staffer at First Avenue nightclub.

"She was really cool and down-to-Earth,Atlas charm bracelet," said Turf Club bartender Jay Finder,discount tiffany key rings, who struck up a conversation with the singer after serving her (he wouldn’t reveal what she ordered). "She said she absolutely loved the Minnesota fans and couldn’t believe how many of them were crying in the front rows and just going crazy."

Chris Riemenschneider –612-673-4658

Credit: Star Tribune, Minneapolis

Lady Mustangs remain confident

McAllen Memorial coach Lorena Lopez was looking at the big picture after her team lost to District 30-5A rival McAllen Rowe in the championship of the PSJA North tournament.

Yes, her team was disappointed to lose. But,discount tiffany necklaces, there’s no need to worry.

The Lady Mustangs (13-4), ranked third by Valley Freedom Newspapers, finished second in the Donna and PSJA North tournaments and was third in the Sinton tournament.

"Even if we are down,thanksgiving bangles, we keep fighting," Lopez said. "That’s one of the positive things I saw in the tournament season. We were second or third in all our tournaments, and that’s a positive note. We’re almost there, and that’s a good place to be right before district."

Lopez has been most pleased with the play of her defense. She thought it did a good job against Rowe’s big hitters on Saturday. Senior libero Rebekah Jimenez led those efforts. Also,thanksgiving Pendants, 6-0 middle blocker Jennifer Kowalski was named to the all-tournament team at PSJA North.

Setter Chelsea Lyons has been consistent all season.

"We have plenty of room for improvement," Lopez said. "It’s just (a matter of) taking care of the ball right now — serving inbounds and hitting smart. I think once we take care of those two things, everything will come together."

BUILDING CONFIDENCE

Harlingen South’s rebuilding process took a major step up Saturday when the fourth-ranked Lady Hawks defeated No. 2 Los Fresnos in the fourth-place match at the PSJA North Varsity Tournament. The victory was the Lady Hawks’ first against one of the Valley’s elite teams.

Harlingen South (13-3) has lost twice to Los Fresnos and once to No. 3 McAllen Memorial.

"We’ve played some good teams, and at the beginning of the year, I felt like we had to find some chemistry because we lost so many girls," Lady Hawks coach Steve Lunsford said. "I think we finally found it at the PSJA tournament. … We seemed to play with a lot more confidence than we have before against the good teams."

The Lady Hawks claimed third place titles at the Donna and Mission tournaments (after losing to Los Fresnos in the semifinals each time). Although they finished fourth at PSJA North, the Lady Hawks had a tough draw and lost in the second round to Memorial.

One of the biggest improvements Lunsford has seen has been the play of libero Amanda Garcia. Her improvement on serve-receive has been key, Lunsford said. That’s allowed Harlingen South’s big hitters, Liz Ramee and Ashley Bukowski, to shine.

"Our defense is so much better than it has been," Lunsford said. "When we play good defense, we are able to pass the ball well. We have some strong hitters, but it doesn’t do us any good if we can’t get the ball to the setter."

BIG WEEKEND

District play begins in 32-5A and 32-3A. Districts 30-5A and 31-5A don’t begin until Sept. 11,pendants, and that leaves a couple of intriguing 30-5A/31-5A matchups on Saturday. Sixth-ranked Edinburg North (11-2) is scheduled to play at top-ranked McAllen Rowe (15-1).

Edinburg North won the Alice tournament and Rowe won the PSJA North tournament last weekend. Interesting sidenote: Rowe’s Victoria Hesbrook transferred from Edinburg North over the summer. Sixth-ranked McAllen High (8-10), which won its own tournament last weekend,cheap tiffany bracelets, plays No. 5 Edinburg Economedes (14-2).

David Hinojosa covers high school volleyball for Valley Freedom Newspapers. You can reach him at (956) 683-4442 or via e-mail at dhinojosa@themonitor.com.

VALLEY VOLLEYBALL TOP 10

1. McAllen Rowe 15-1

2. Los Frensos 13-3

3. McAllen Memorial 13-4

4. Harlingen South 13-3

5. Edinburg Economedes 14-2

6. Edinburg North 11-2

7. McAllen High 8-10

8. Mission Veterans 8-5

9. Edinburg High 12-4

10. Edcouch-Elsa 8-6

GOVERNORS, LADY GOVERNORS OPEN SEASON AT BELMONT-V

Austin Peay State University issued the following news release:

Austin Peay State University men and women’s cross country teams open their respective 2010 campaigns at the Belmont-Vanderbilt Cross Country Opener, Friday, at Percy Ward Park’s Vaughn’s Creek Course in Nashville.

The women’s teams will get out of the blocks first,thanksgiving gifts, with their four-kilometer race scheduled to start at 5:30 p.m., followed by the men’s five-kilometer race which will follow at approximately 6 p.m.

The women’s race features 13 teams, including three teams ranked in the preseason US Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) South Region rankings: Vanderbilt (No. 3),watches, Alabama (No. 6) and Tennessee (No. 7).

The Lady Govs return just two runners from last season’s team – juniors Janelle Avery and Alyssa Molnar – who will be joined by five freshmen. Avery was the team’s most valuable player last season and will be called on to lead this season’s young group.

"This is definitely a stacked race on the women’s side," said APSU cross country head coach Doug Molnar. "Our young squad will quickly get a taste of what college cross country is about. We’ll have five freshmen running in our starting line-up so it should be fun to see how they react to the situation. We will try to stay within ourselves and run our race. We’ve been putting in a lot of miles and this is a short race so our strength should show up in the end."

The men’s race will have fewer competitors – 11 teams will be competing – but the competition will be just as stiff with three teams ranked in the USTFCCCA South region rankings: Tennessee (No. 4), Belmont (No. 9) and Lipscomb (No. 15).

The Governors are not as youthful as the women’s squad as four runners return from last season’s team,tiffany bracelets clearance, including team most valuable player,cheap tiffany Pendants, junior Enock Langat. That group of returners will be supplemented by three newcomers, led by sophomore transfer Geofrey Kosgei,thanksgiving key rings, who joins the Govs after a standout season at Arkansas-Pine Bluff where he finished 17th in the Southwestern Athletic Conference’s Cross Country Championship.

"The men’s race will be just as competitive as the women’s," Molnar said. "Our guys have been putting in a lot of miles so this will be a comparatively short distance for them; it will be interesting to see how they do. I’d like to see them go out controlled and really ramp it up over the last few kilometers." For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Pointers face unknown against Our Lady of Mt. Carm

A team from far, far away will be entering a game that could be a good story for The Twilight Zone.

The South Point Pointers are preparing for their first home game of the season Friday against a team from Canada and neither team knows much about the other.

South Point hosts Our Lady of Mount Carmel from Edmonton, Alberta in Canada. It is the same school that played at Ironton two years ago.

Pointers’ head coach Doug Shilot said details about the team are sketchy at best.

"They have kids who can run and they like to throw it around. Other than that, we really don’t know a lot," said Shilot.

Canada plays 12-man football but will switch to the 11-man lineup while playing in the United States. Shilot said the young Pointers will have to play well regardless of how many players are on the field.

"We’ll have our hands full," said Shilot. "I don’t want to get in a situation where we execute and execute and then turn the ball over. We have to take care of the ball."

South Point moved the ball last week but turned it over in a 35-12 loss at Minford.

Athens at Coal Grove

Look for the interior line of the Hornets to hold the key to this game.

Athens was 9-1 last season as they enjoyed their best season in years, due mainly to playing for the first time in the Tri-Valley Conference after leaving the SEOAL.

The Bulldogs return a lot of good skilled players, but they lost all five of their interior offensive linemen and they also flipped over and played defense.

Quarterback Trey Harris is the key to the offense. Harris threw for three touchdowns last week in a 36-21 loss at Gallipolis.

Coal Grove has a veteran offensive and defensive line that should be a problem for the Bulldogs.

Lucasville Valley at Rock Hill

Last year, this was supposed to be a blowout and the Indians held off the Redmen 14-0.

This year, Lucasville Valley has 28 juniors and seniors back and the Indians are expecting to be better than last year’s 7-3 record.

Blake Yates (6-3, 175) is the quarterback and is the key to the offense. Alex Holcomb (5-9, 170) is the top receiving target.

Defensively, the Indians return all their linebackers along with two-way linemen Tye Johnson (6-0,tiffany necklaces for sale, 230),tiffany Pendants clearance, Ryan Wamsley (5-10, 225) and Curt Crabtree (6-2, 265).

Fairland at Meigs

Depth was a concern before the season for Fairland coach Dave Carroll. Now it’s a problem.

The Dragons’ wide receiver Cody Midkiff suffered a broken leg in last week’s game against Portsmouth West and 6-5,Atlas charm bracelet, 325-pound lineman Adam Lee also sustained an injury and isn’t expected to play.

Fortunately for the Dragons, Meigs has also been bitten by the injury bug. Jeff Roush was supposed to be the leading ballcarrier on offense,tiffany cuff Links clearance, but he suffered a broken collarbone in a scrimmage and may be lost for the season.

Charlie Barrett did most of the running in last week’s 53-13 loss to Coal Grove. He’ll need plenty of help from Taylor Rowe and quarterback Cameron Bolin.

Chesapeake at Wayne, W.Va.

Wayne has just 16 juniors and seniors on the roster this year after graduating 16 seniors from last year’s 13-1 team.

But Chesapeake coach Phil Davis is not fooled.

"They’re still a good team. They’re inexperience,tiffany bangles on sale, but they have a lot of good players," said Davis.

Chesapeake lost 35-7 at Oak Hill, but the score was somewhat deceiving. The Panthers had a 7-0 lead and were driving for another touchdown when they fumbled on a the 1-yard line that would have given them a 14-0 lead late in the first half. Fumbles and an interception enabled the Oaks and pull away late.

River Valley at Symmes Valley

River Valley is hoping that last year’s experience will bring a better experience this season.

The Raiders were only 1-9 last year and the lone win was a forfeit when Minford was penalized for using an ineligible player.

After having only five lettermen last year, the Raiders have 20 this season.

The experience helped the Raiders beat Federal Hocking in their opener.

But there’s a problem for the Raiders’ spread attack. The Vikings’ defense may be better than last season when they went 8-2.

Green at Fort Frye

Both teams have small roster. Green has 24 players while the Cadets have 29.

Fort Frye was 6-4 last season including a 49-7 win over Green. But gone is four-year starter Tanner Robinson at quarterback.

The Cadets’ backfield will rely on running back Colton Skinner, but the line lost three key players. Returning up front are senior center Josh Spindler (6-1, 200) and right tackle Jared Garvin (5-9, 213).

Skinner ran for 96 yards and three touchdowns last week in a 38-14 win over Hannibal River. He also caught three passes for 77 yards.

LADY TORTOISE

It’s not unusual to find pink flamingos, gnomes and other ornaments on the square of grass most people have in front of their house. But visitors on their way to the Warren’s doorbell may glimpse Baby or Cinco,tiffany necklaces on sale, two California desert tortoises,earrings, lumbering about her front yard.

Joyce and Waldo Warren watch over 14-year-old and 15-year-old Baby and Cinco, which typically keep to the enclosed grassy area at the front of their Hawthorn Drive house. Joyce also keeps 3-year-old Malibu and 4-year-old Toto, two smaller tortoises,money clips, in a box in her living room.

She and Waldo, who moved to Barstow 18 years ago, have four tortoises now, but over the 16 years they’ve lived in their home,tiffany, Joyce has taken care of almost 200, she says.

"I’m proud to tell people that I love these little tortoises," she said. "(But) this last year I looked at my yard and space and decided we can’t keep all of these tortoises."

Over the years she has taken her tortoises to Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue and another rescue center in Tehachapi. Some of them, about 40, she said, were offspring of tortoises she found on local roadways. Joyce has also had baby tortoises left in a box on her doorstep.

Some tortoises, like Baby (who’s a boy), Cinco (a girl), Toto and Malibu, Joyce decided to hang onto. She even had a tortoise named Methuselah who, she estimated, was more than 100 years old. Methuselah and his mate, Sarah, were among the tortoises taken to Tehachapi.

"I never thought I’d be attached, but I miss my old Methuselah," she said. "He’d come when I’d call him. (And) he dug a hole under a rock and lived there."

Warren’s tortoises have found good homes, but according to David Lamfrom, local field representative for the National Parks Conservation Association, because they are an endangered species, tortoises shouldn’t be removed from the wild. If people come across a tortoise in the middle of the road, they should be helped across the street, he said.

According to Lamfrom, who’s heard of Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue, said taking captive tortoises to a rescue center is a good way of finding a better home for them. Because captive tortoises often carry an upper respiratory disease that can be passed to their wild counterparts, people should never release them into the wild. People can also view wild tortoises at the Mojave National Preserve,buy tiffany earrings, he said.

"The Mojave National Preserve is a great place for wild tortoises especially during the spring wildflower bloom," he said.

Warren, who’s a member of the High Desert branch of the California Turtle and Tortoise Club, is also wary of people who say they’d like to have them as a pet.

"Most everyone says I would love to have one for my kid," she said. "I say it’s not a play thing."

Fate of Rothstein, Gallagher and Salesman in his

When three of Broward County’s once powerful residents are sentenced to federal prison in the next few weeks, their fates will lie in the hands of one man — U.S. District Judge James I. Cohn.

Cohn wields great authority and power as a lifetime appointee to the federal bench in Fort Lauderdale but outside court, he’ll introduce himself as "Jimmy Cohn" in his soft Alabama drawl or gently inquire about some personal detail you’ll have assumed he’s too busy to remember.

"A true Southern gentleman" and "tough but fair" were the most common descriptions offered by dozens of attorneys who have handled cases in his courtroom and were interviewed by the Sun Sentinel.

And yes, many of them said that he doles out tough sentences to convicted criminals.

For his part, Cohn said in a rare interview that he would like to be known as "somebody that was fair and reasonable and someone who treated people with courtesy and respect and somebody who followed the law."

The high-profile sentencings start June 2 with former Broward School Board member Beverly Gallagher, who took bribes from undercover FBI agents posing as contractors. She expects a sentence of three years and one month under a plea agreement reached with prosecutors.

A week later comes one of the most hyped days of judgment in Broward County in recent times. On June 9, Cohn will sentence now-disbarred attorney Scott Rothstein, who faces a maximum of 100 years in prison for running a massive Ponzi scheme out of his Fort Lauderdale law firm.

On July 8, former Miramar City Commissioner Fitzroy Salesman faces a maximum of 60 years imprisonment after he was convicted of bribery and extortion for taking payments in the same FBI sting that ensnared Gallagher. Experts predict he’ll serve four to eight years in prison.

Forecasting the punishment Rothstein faces is a competitive sport right now in local legal and political circles. Most bets fall in the range of 30 years to life, though the disgraced lawyer’s help in pulling off a government sting of an alleged Italian mobster has some wondering if that will win him a meaningful reduction in sentencing.

The decision lies with Cohn alone, though the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the federal probation office and the defense will all make recommendations. As a judge, Cohn is prohibited from saying what he’ll do until sentencing day.

"He’s a judge who’s prepared, he’s decisive and he plays it down the middle. The rulings cut both ways," said Bill Matthewman, a defense attorney who represented convicted cop killer Kenneth Wilk in Cohn’s courtroom in 2007.

Cohn "will give everyone a good hearing on trial issues but once they are convicted, if they are convicted, I think he believes they are also due a tough sentence that punishes them," Matthewman said.

Cohn, 61, is a lifelong Democrat nominated to the federal judiciary in 2003 by Republican President George W. Bush and confirmed 96-0 by a Republican-dominated Senate during a bitterly partisan era. His confirmation hearing was described by the Sun Sentinel as "a striking display of harmony in a contentious arena" but Cohn said that, as a Democrat selected by a Republican president, he was unlikely to face opposition.

The position of U.S. district judge is for life and appointees are not subject to voter approval. The job pays $174,000 a year.

Before Cohn’s current job, he was a Broward Circuit judge,tiffany necklaces on sale, appointed in 1995 by Gov. Lawton Chiles, a Democrat. He scored high in attorney reviews and never attracted a challenger at election time.

Growing up in Tuskegee, Ala., during the civil rights struggles of the 1950s and 60s, the Cohns owned a store and were one of two Jewish families in town. There was no synagogue so Cohn,tiffany sets, his parents and his two sisters drove 40 miles west to the Reform temple in Montgomery for religious classes. "The worst part of it was I missed the first half of the NFL game," Cohn said wryly.

Cohn witnessed and was disturbed by racism against African-Americans. At an early age, he became acutely aware that his own heritage was also perceived as alien in the South.

"You want to assimilate, you don’t want to be different, no kid wants to be different," Cohn said. "On the other hand, you want to maintain your Jewish heritage and traditions."

For Cohn, playing sports was the best way to fit in. He was a quarterback on the Tuskegee High School football team, an all-star second baseman in baseball, ran track and played basketball.

When he started the ninth grade in September 1963, his dad escorted Cohn to school but it was surrounded by state troopers because Gov. George Wallace had closed it to avoid desegregation. Cohn went to live with his aunt in nearby Union Springs where he attended the public school.

He came home the next year and attended Tuskegee High when it was fully desegregated, though with a smaller enrollment. Cohn played on sports teams that were carefully made up of an equal number of whites and African-Americans.

Cohn planned to be an accountant but soon figured out that wasn’t for him. After graduating from his beloved University of Alabama with a major in general business, he spent time in the National Guard. He’d enjoyed business law classes, so he enrolled at Cumberland School of Law in Birmingham. When he tried his first case as a student before a mock jury, it felt right.

"I knew this was my calling," Cohn said.

After passing his bar exams in Alabama and Florida, his sister and parents, who retired to South Florida, persuaded him to interview here. After a brief stint as a Broward public defender, then State Attorney Philip Shaler offered him a $1,000 raise — to $13,000 — to be a prosecutor. Cohn prosecuted cases from 1975 to 1978, working with two men who are still his friends, current State Attorney Mike Satz and defense attorney Richard Garfield.

Satz said Cohn is a master of putting people at ease.

"When people I know meet him casually at the gym or in a restaurant, if they mention him later they don’t say ‘your friend the judge,’ they say ‘your friend Jimmy,’ " Satz said.

Cohn has always had a winning way with jurors. In private practice from 1978 to 1995, he was a successful criminal defense,tiffany key ring, family law and personal injury attorney.

Jurors trusted his sincerity and people at the county courthouse still talk about how he won a "not guilty by reason of insanity" jury verdict on a first-degree murder case — a difficult feat under Florida’s restrictive law. The defendant, Robert Lee Endicott shot and killed a young woman in Fort Lauderdale in 1979. Endicott is still involuntarily committed 30 years later.

For anyone who has ever heard Cohn’s mellow voice, he has a surprising disclosure. He had what he calls "a bad stuttering problem" when he was a child and decided to try to overcome it, without assistance, in the ninth grade.

"There was a kid in class who had a melodious voice and he spoke very slowly. And I started to mimic him and it worked,tiffany earrings for sale," Cohn said. He still sometimes rephrases a sentence in his head before speaking to avoid stumbling on certain words.

Cohn and his wife Kathleen, adopted their son Bill,Atlas charm bracelet, now 15, in 1995. When the biological parents had last-minute doubts at the hospital, Cohn said he delivered "as good a final argument as I ever gave a jury" and reassured the couple they would be making an extraordinary gift — the baby the Cohns had tried unsuccessfully to conceive for years.

Intent on being a good parent, Cohn said he decided to become a judge so he could have more structure in his work life.

And it’s a very structured life. He awakes at 5 a.m., doesn’t use an alarm clock and has never overslept in his life. He’s at the gym by 5:30 a.m. and goes to bed by 9 or 9:30 p.m. "unless there’s a ball game."

In his eight years on the state bench, Cohn tried 770 felony jury trials, including 144 in one year, a local record only exceeded by his friend, U.S. District Judge William Dimitrouleas when he was a state judge. Cohn believes that his work ethic helped to get him the federal appointment.

Spending time with his wife and Bill — they particularly enjoy watching "Seinfeld" reruns together and traveling — has won out over his older hobbies. Cohn is a devoted fan of the University of Alabama’s football team and keeps a toy elephant that sings the Alabama fight song in his chambers. He plays golf less frequently these days because of a workout injury but still loves to watch the pros on TV.

His personal heroes are federal judges whose legal decisions helped end racial segregation in the South, including the late Judge Frank M. Johnson who "had the courage to follow the law when it was not popular." Cohn’s own judicial philosophy, he said, is to look to the "plain meaning of the law" as Congress wrote it.

The judge sets the tone and he insists on punctuality, courtesy and respect in his courtroom. He seems bewildered by attorneys who run late or are less than totally organized.

If there is any criticism of Cohn, it is that his insistence on tight scheduling can sometimes seem too rigid.

Salesman’s attorney, Jamie Benjamin, practically begged Cohn for more time to prepare his defense, noting that the government had investigated the case since 2004 compared to the few months that he’d had to prepare. Cohn insisted the trial proceed with only a minor delay.

Benjamin said he thinks the world of Cohn: "He’s the picture of what you want in a judge." But Benjamin said he was really frustrated by the judge’s rigidity. "It’s puzzling to see that court scheduling can ever be more important than preparing a case," the attorney said.

Cohn said he hopes he’s evolved with experience but that "lawyers are inherent procrastinators and you’ve got to set deadlines."

Some defendants in state court, where Cohn handled career criminals who were mandated by law to receive lengthy sentences, called him "the Rocket Man" because they said "he could send you to the moon." That reputation has stuck and some attorneys quietly call Cohn’s courtroom "the launching pad" for similar reasons.

Cautiously choosing his words, Cohn said he judges each case on its merits, considering the advisory sentencing guidelines, the nature and circumstances of the crime and the defendant’s history and character.

Cohn’s close friend, Garfield, said that beneath the calm exterior, Cohn is intense, prepared and efficient.

In more than 35 years of friendship, Garfield has only seen him lose his cool after flubbing a shot on the golf course.

The two, who have very different personal styles, like to rib each other, most recently about their views on Tiger Woods’ fall from grace. They were both long-term fans but Garfield is done with Woods. Cohn said he doesn’t condone the serial extramarital affairs and empathizes with Woods’ wife, but still admires his professional excellence at golf.

With a smile, Cohn said: "There’s got to be hope of redemption, right?"

Paula McMahon can be reached at pmcmahon@SunSentinel.com or 954-356-4533.

Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx Is Boring

By the time you read this, Yankees third-baseman Alex Rodriguez may have hit his 600th home run, becoming the seventh man in baseball history to do so. Now it’s true that home-run milestones aren’t what they used to be, but still: It is bizarre to see a man whose career has been marked by relentless fanfare and drama–both good and very, very bad–doing something this significant and having most fans consider it no big deal,tiffany ring, if they consider it at all.

Part of this is because A-Rod would probably have to rob a bank to surpass last year’s Madonna-steroids-mysterious-cousin-Kate Hudson-October-heroics opera. But mostly, the relative silence on the A-Rod front isn’t the result of a change in his underlying nature–it’s the final triumph of the organization’s effort to instill each of its members with a sense of the obligation to be professionally boring.

George Steinbrenner’s death was sad from a personal standpoint, but his absence has been felt within the Yankees for a while. The Yankees are run by prudent, smart men who’ve learned to imitate Good George (making as much money in as many ways as possible, thinking ambitiously about acquiring talent) while leaving behind the habits of Bad George (using the media to fight with employees, making trades just because you’re in a bad mood). Bad George might have eviscerated A.J. Burnett for punching a door and hurting his hand,thanksgiving bangles, creating a lasting clubhouse problem; today, the story was just a blip.

It’s not hard to get clues about what kind of atmosphere the Yankees are trying to cultivate: They have their own TV network, yes, with which to present themselves,buy tiffany earrings, and to watch it is to see a drama-free infomercial continuously letting us know the team is winning and there is nothing to worry about. Where Bad George bad-mouthed and alienated Bomber legends Yogi Berra and Billy Martin, yes exists essentially to stroke the ego of anyone who has ever played, or even watched, Yankees baseball. The tranquillity of the network isn’t just a façade: Consider that Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera, two of the greatest Yankees of all time, are both free agents after this season. Contract extensions can fray even the strongest player-team-fan bonds; David Ortiz is currently grumbling that Boston hasn’t yet guaranteed him a salary for 2012. But no one, even "sources close to the situation," has heard a peep from Mo or Jeter, and fans aren’t even slightly concerned that they’ll leave. The Brian Cashmans and Hal Steinbrenners running the show simply say, "We don’t negotiate contracts during the season," and everyone takes them at their word, a trust they’ve earned in their dealings with Andy Pettitte and Jorge Posada. Joe Torre did things the old Yankees way,discount tiffany earrings, taking some shots at the organization in a tell-all book, and is consequently on the outs with parts of the front office.

Which brings us back to A-Rod, who took a few hits in Torre’s book. One of the main reasons A-Rod hasn’t said anything stupid in a while is that he isn’t saying much at all these days. Under the tutelage of Yankees media-relations director Jason Zillo, who pulled A-Rod away from some of the more entertainment-oriented advisers in his life during the turmoil last year, A-Rod has retreated into the same shiny bubble of positivity and professionalism as the rest of the team. Considering he’s probably having his worst season since he was 22 years old, it’s a little surprising that Rodriguez, who is making $32 million this season, isn’t receiving more criticism. But the Yankees are organized to dilute such matters. Where Bad George would have been screaming about the overpaid third-baseman with the celebrity girlfriends–one actually shudders to think what he would have done to A-Rod had he been healthy and in full bluster in 2009–now the Yankees would rather you not even think about salaries, or personalities, or anything, really, other than the relentless scroll of victories. This is the way the Yankees do business now, and business, it is a-boomin’. As long as they win the World Series again this year,tiffany rings on sale, anyway.

Brewster man charged with attempted murder known a

A 21-year-old Brewster man charged with attempted murder after he allegedly slashed the neck and face of a Muslim taxi driver in New York City Tuesday, is known for being tolerant of other cultures and religions,tiffany jewellery, the executive director of a multi-faith church organization said Thursday.

Michael Enright, who is being held without bail, is accused of stabbing the taxi driver after speaking to him in Arabic.

Enright has volunteered with the multi-faith church organization Intersections International and came to the office, the director said, as recently as earlier this week.

"We were kind of shocked and heart broken that Mike would, could be — he’s obviously innocent until proven guilty — that he may of been involved in this situation," said the Rev. Robert Chase,thanksgiving gifts, executive director for Intersections International.

"He’s always been a gentleman here and he believes in our mission and our mission is to build bridges between lines of cultures and religion," Chase said.

Chase said Enright,tiffany Pendants on sale, who was studying film and photography at the New York City School of Visual Arts, became involved with the non-profit organization after learning of the work it does with veterans.

"He’s doing his senior film on lifting up the voice of veterans on the ground," Chase said. "He learned about the work we were doing with vets and liked what we stand for and we then worked along with the School of Visual Arts to help with his film, including his being embedded in Afghanistan last spring."

The initiative of Intersections International, according to its website, is to promote global justice, reconciliation and peace across boundaries that divide people, including faith,shop for tiffany money clips, culture,discount tiffany earrings, ideology, race, class and national borders.

Enright was ordered by a judge Wednesday to be held without bail on charges of attempted murder and assault as hate crimes and weapon possession.

He did not enter a plea during his brief court appearance. Police said that Enright was drunk at the time the taxi driver was attacked.

Credit: Connecticut Post, Bridgeport

America the not-so-beautiful

While I have been more than happy with the performance and stability of my UK shares, the laggards this year have been my US-listed holdings, just five of them,thanksgiving money clips, which account for about 10 per cent of my portfolio.

I am clearly missing something. In 2009, my UK shares produced a total return of 50.3 per cent, double the FTSE 100′s 25 per cent. Yet the US portfolio, which held similar shares, managed only 14.5 per cent, not much more than half its benchmark,tiffany ring, the S&P 500. This year too, my American shares have continued to disappoint. Returns to date are a negative 12 per cent compared with only minus two per cent on the benchmarks. My UK shares are up one per cent in 2010, reflecting the defensive and high income holdings I have gradually been switching into since last September.

The reasons for the US underperformance are varied. Some stocks I hold have a very high beta. Advanced Micro Devices,Thanksgiving surprise gift, which I bought exactly a year ago as a geared recovery play on news of its $1bn settlement win against Intel, catapulted from $4.40 per share to $10, but has now sagged to just over $6.50. That’s one of the better stories. So too is the value raid on BP ADRs (American depositary receipts). They were $31 in June and I took profits at $39.75 for half the holding earlier this month. I’ve been a little unlucky with Anardarko, the oil company partner of Tullow Oil. The stock has recovered to as high as $55 but is still well below the acquisition price of $65 last September. Apache, another oil explorer, continues to languish well below my most recent acquisition price too.

I have also been disappointed in my biggest US holding, General Electric, which I regard as an exchange traded fund (ETF) for the US economy. I piled into the shares in March 2009, pretty much at the stock market low, at prices varying from $4.99 to $6.91. At first, GE went great guns, getting up to $16 last September. But it hasn’t moved any higher, though I remain convinced that it will improve.

However,money clips, the real damage was caused by the shorter-term activity in the account, and much of this comes down to trying to be too clever. That includes trying to hedge using an inverse SPDR ETF. Somehow I managed to lose heavily on this. Forays into technology stocks such as EMC didn’t do well in 2009, and overall there was just far too much trading. This year, however, I haven’t traded very much at all but there is still this nagging underperformance. Quite how to resolve this isn’t clear. Trying to replicate my UK strategy by going in search of yield would be fine if it were not for US withholding taxes, which crimp the income by 15 per cent (or 30 per cent if you don’t lodge the "tax alien" paperwork with your US broker). These payments can be offset against UK taxes, but the paperwork is time-consuming. I’d really prefer to retain growth stocks, since that is what the US excels in,tiffany earrings sale, yet the growth stocks I have chosen just don’t seem to be performing. Certainly I think that I will have to sell down my holding in Anardarko, and possibly Apache too. While the US shares are dragging the entire portfolio’s performance down by only one point, it is the niggling investment mistakes I must be making, rather than their size, that worry me. If I don’t fix them, they could be replicated elsewhere on a larger scale.

Nick Louth is an active private investor, writing about his own investments. He may have a financial interest in any of companies, securities and trading strategies mentioned.

‘Wild Grass’ is a beautiful yet messy tale of long

The newest romantic drama from 88-year-old French filmmaker Alain Resnais is at times confounding, achingly beautiful, tedious and clever. "Wild Grass" is a great-looking, emotionally messy motion picture.

"Wild Grass" is all over the place, especially in matters of the heart. This is intended to be a controlled chaos as presented by Resnais,cheap tiffany bracelets, an old master whose romantic dramas "Hiroshima, Mon Amour" (1959) and "Last Year at Marienbad" (1961) were best foreign-language film Academy Award nominees in their day.

He’s still exploring those places that the human heart goes when it’s in disarray, in an adaptation of Christian Gailly’s novel that follows the entanglements that form when a woman’s wallet is stolen.

That a man finds the discarded wallet and turns it in to the police seems a simple enough story. For most of us,tiffany key ring, the story would be over at this point. But this is merely a jumping-off point for a gorgeously photographed, existentialist tale of longing.

The overall arc of the script is certainly that of not only a missing wallet, but of people who are all missing something valuable in their lives. But I could never quite tell where the story was heading.

The predictable is confounded repeatedly as Georges (AndA– e Dussollier of "Tell No One") desperately attempts to meet the woman whose wallet he found. Unpredictable is a good quality in films; unfocused is not.

Marguerite (Sabine Azema, Resnais’ real-life companion) has no such interest in meeting Georges

- until an act of vandalism, an odd phone call and her own yearnings compel this shoe-buying,shop for tiffany, airplane-flying dentist to seek an adventure.

These mysterious characters remain perplexing throughout — cold,cheap tiffany earrings, detached and distant are equal descriptions — and I found I didn’t engage their stories more because they weren’t better defined. But Resnais’ camera makes the journey a colorful, playful trip through cinematic techniques.

There are fantasy moments. There are inner monologues (Marguerite berates herself for buying more shoes; we watch as Georges practices his phone-call voice like a teen calling for a date). Lighting colors change as people’s emotions alter.

These aren’t merely flights of filmmaking fancy, but veteran flourishes that frame a heady, often distracting mix of melancholy, light comedy and moments both romantic and disturbing.

These curious avenues traveled by the film may induce those who dismiss French films out of hand to cite the picture as an example of why they do so. But for others, "Wild Grass" may slowly grow on you.

WILD GRASS

Stars: Andre Dussollier, Sabine Azema, Anne Consigny, Emmanuelle Devos, Mathieu Amalric

Theater: Circle Cinema

Running time: 1 hour, 44 minutes

Rated: PG (some thematic material,tiffany bracelet, language and brief smoking)

Quality: (on a scale of zero to four stars)

Note: in French with English subtitles

Michael Smith 581-8479

michael.smith@tulsaworld.com

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