Saturday, December 31, 2011

Moises Montero's homer powers Lake County over Fort Wayne: Minor-league report

Corey Kluber struggles in Clippers loss; Akron loses pitchers' duel to Richmond; Delvi Cid, Jesus Aguilar homer in Kinston win; Lake Erie rally falls short vs. Windy City.

A Lake County Captains

Captains 4, TinCaps 3: Moises Montero cranked a two-run home run and Lake County defeated Fort Wayne (Ind.) in a Class A Midwest League game at Classic Park in Eastlake. It was Montero's third homer of the year. Starter J.D. Reichenbach (7-1) pitched six innings for Lake County and gave up one run. The win snapped a four-game Captains skid.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Bisons 10, Clippers 2: Buffalo scored 10 runs on 10 hits, and won an International League game in Columbus. Four Clippers errors led to two runs. Corey Kluber (7-9) went five innings, giving up six earned runs on five hits. Jared Goedert hit a solo home run for Columbus, his 10th of the season.

AA Akron Aeros

Flying Squirrels 2, Aeros 0: Right-hander Steve Wright (1-3) allowed two earned runs that broke a scoreless tie in the eighth inning, and Akron lost an Eastern League game at Richmond, Va. Wright, who failed to retire a batter in the eighth, struck out seven in seven innings. The Aeros managed only two hits in the rubber game of the series.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 8, Pelicans 7: Delvi Cid hit his second homer of the year and Jesus Aguilar his fourth, as Kinston (N.C.) outslugged host Myrtle Beach (S.C.) in a Carolina League game. It was not a good day for Kinston pitchers, but closer Preston Guilmet recorded his 33rd save with 11/3 scoreless innings.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers-Muckdogs, ppd.: Mahoning Valley's game at Batavia (N.Y.) was rained out. The New York-Penn league teams will play a doubleheader in Batavia starting at 5:05 p.m. Monday.

Notes: Outfielder Jordan Smith, without a home run, leads the Scrappers in RBI with 38. Smith also has a team-leading .332 batting average, in 196 at-bats. With 27 walks, Smith has a team-best on-base percentage of .427.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Thunderbolts 8, Crushers 4: Windy City scored five runs in the first three innings, and won a Frontier League game in Avon.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/moises_monteros_homer_powers_l.html

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Simon Hoggart's week: Reagan's law of keeping your chin up

The political currency of hope and how V�clav Havel still wanted to conjugate verbs in the midst of a diplomatic crisis

?"Optimism can defeat despair," said Ed Miliband in his new year message. This is the Pollyanna, Pangloss, "pull your socks up" school of political discourse. You can trace it back to Ronald Reagan's team who discovered that, however bad things might be, you can always sell voters the hope that they might get better.

So when Jimmy Carter tried to get re-elected in 1980 by talking about how Americans had to cut back (the so-called "malaise" speech) he was creamed by Reagan, who won re-election in 1984 by saying "it's morning again in America", though Reagan's own life was generally built around his afternoon nap.

Since then every democratic politician in the world has known that optimism equals votes, pessimism brings defeat. So you have the weird result that our leader of the opposition outlines all the horrors to come, while simultaneously telling us to keep our chins up and expect the very best.

?Brung! It is Barry Cryer, phoning with his New Year message. "I had a letter from a friend the other day," he tells me. "He said, 'I was in my health club ? well, in a pub with the windows open ?'"

?We had our festivities in Norwich and went to family eucharist in the cathedral on Christmas morning. Alain de Botton has a new book about the inspiration unbelievers can draw from faiths, but you don't need to read it to be uplifted by that superlative, soaring building, lit inside by the low, cold, lurid winter sun, and by the knowledge that people have been worshipping on the site for 900 years.

The dean gave the sermon and chose as his text ? I am not making this up ? the words of Lady Gaga, "changing the world one sequin at a time". It more or less worked. As he explained, a sequin on its own is a tiny, insubstantial thing. But combined with thousands of other sequins, it creates something luminous and dazzling.

The trouble is that this kind of pop culture reference leads to a suspicion that someone is trying to get down wid da kidz, and reminds us older folk of Alan Bennett's vicar in Beyond the Fringe, comparing our mortal existence to a tin of sardines. ("Is there a bit in the corner of your life? I know there is in mine ?")

And as the dean spoke I thought of the stonemasons of the past, in their lodge by the great door, huddled together in the freezing East Anglian winter, thinking that one day, centuries hence, thousands of people would gather inside the mighty walls they had built, to hear the word of Lady Gaga and be awed by its majesty.

? Downton Abbey was as silly as usual, though great fun if you regard it as a sort of spoof soap opera. I wonder why the papers make such a fuss of the programme, since only 8.9 million people ? fewer than 15% of the population ? watched it live on Christmas night. No doubt many recorded it, so they could whizz through the ads later.

Lots of folk have pointed out that no aristocratic family would ever have shown such tender solicitude for their servants, though it's dramatically necessary since if they were realistic, we would hate them.

One scene that's been hugely criticised was the servants' ball, at which the upstairs people danced and generally cavorted with the staff. But years ago I went to a not dissimilar event on a Scottish estate, and the whole point was the annual blurring of established roles.

The lady did have to dance with the tractorman, the daughters with the farm hand. Unlike the psycho-babble that fills much of Downton, I thought that rang true.

?I had lunch this week with an old friend from the BBC, Rachel Wright, and she told me about her memories of V�clav Havel who, when she lived in Prague in the early 1990s, hired her to improve his English. He was, she says, an extraordinarily shy, even retiring man, who liked nothing better than to sit anonymously in a bar, having a quiet drink or a bite to eat. Of course people did come to recognise him: once a wedding party arrived in high excitement and asked to be blessed. A woman bustled up and cried, "Mr President, we must save the cows in south Bohemia!" Havel looked puzzled until an aide said crisply, "Don't worry, we will take care of the cows."

On the day there was an attempted coup in Moscow against Gorbachev, the whole of Prague was in a ferment, terrified the Russians might try to re-establish control of their old satellite states. Rachel rang the palace to ask if Havel wanted his lesson that day, and a secretary assured her he did. As the situation seemed to worsen, she phoned twice more, and was twice told to come. But when she arrived the place was seething with ambassadors from round the world. She explained why she was there; officials said, "are you mad?" and sent her away. But it had never crossed Havel's mind to change his routine.

?Your round robin letters continue to arrive. Just another tiny sample, this one from Essex: "We started the year with drainage problems, and the snow conditions hampered their repair. Using the outdoor toilet for a few days was not much fun." And apart from a family holiday and a birthday party, that is pretty much all they have to report. A full round-up later.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2011/dec/30/simon-hoggarts-week

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David Huff picks up another win as Clippers breeze: Minor-league report

Phelps has four hits in Columbus romp; Lynchburg's Simmons has 7 RBI in rout of Kinston; Lake County punchless in shutout loss; Scrappers coast past Auburn.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 11, Bats 3: David Huff (9-3) allowed six hits and three earned runs over 6 innings as the Clippers won in Louisville, Ky., in an International League game. Cord Phelps (.307) went 4-for-4, including a double and a triple, drove in two runs and scored one. Chad Huffman (.234) and Beau Mills (.271) each went 3-for-5 with a home run.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Hillcats 11, Indians 6: Andrelton Simmons drove in seven runs and scored one while going 3-for-5 as host Lynchburg (Va.) routed Kinston in a Carolina League game. Justin Toole (.259) went 2-for-4 with and RBI and scored twice for the Indians.

A Lake County Captains

Dragons 3, Captains 0: Mitch Clarke (3-1) held Lake County to two hits and stuck out six over six innings as Dayton beat Lake County in a Midwest League game in Classic Park in Eastlake. Shin-Soo Choo was 0-2 in his first rehab assignment. Mike Goodnight (5-11) took the loss, allowing three runs -- one earned -- on three hits, walking two and striking out four. The Captains committed five errors.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 7, Doubledays 2: John Barr (.239) went 3-for-5 and scored two runs, and Jake Lowery (.260) went 2-for-4 with two RBI as Mahoning Valley won a New York-Penn League game in Auburn, N.Y. Reliever Nathan Striz (3-3) allowed one hit over three innings to earn the victory.

AA Akron Aeros

The Aeros were off Monday. They open a three-game series against the Sea Dogs in Portland (Me.) Tuesday at 7.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

The Crushers were off Monday. They open a three-game series against the Florence Freedom Tuesday at All Pro Freight Stadium in Avon.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/david_huff_picks_up_another_wi.html

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Justin Germano fires perfect game as Columbus tops Syracuse: Minor-league report

Akron can't overcome early deficit vs. Trenton; Kinston's Brach struggles in loss; Crushers lose in 11 innings.



germano-mug-tribe-second.jpgView full sizeJustin Germano pitched just the fifth perfect game in International League history, and the first ever for the Clippers.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 3, Chiefs 0: Justin Germano (1-2) pitched a perfect game for Columbus, as the Clippers won at Syracuse, N.Y., in an International League game. Germano, a 6-2 right-hander, struck out seven in facing the minimum of 27 batters. He threw 95 pitches, and 69 were strikes.

In the bottom of the ninth, Germano retired Jhonatan Solano on a fly ball to center fielder Tim Fedroff, and then Jeff Frazier on a fly ball to left fielder Jerad Head. He finished with a flourish, fanning Corey Brown looking.

Fedroff slugged a double and triple and drove in two runs.

Notes: Germano, 28, pitched the first perfect game in Clippers history and the first thrown in the International League since 2003. It is the sixth no-hitter in Clippers history. Germano's ERA is 3.65 in 441/3 innings.

He has been used as a starter and reliever, and Tuesday's gem was his first complete game of the season. He has three saves. A native of Pasadena, Calif., he signed a minor-league contract with the Indians on March 24, 2010. He has appeared with the Indians this season in relief, compiling an 0-1 record in nine appearances, with a 5.68 ERA in 12 innings.



AA Akron Aeros

Thunder 4, Aeros 3: Akron rallied for three runs in the bottom of the eighth, but lost an Eastern League game at Canal Park to Trenton, N.J. Akron starter T. J. McFarland (7-5), was the starter and losing pitcher. He struck out six in five innings, and gave up three runs, but just one earned.

Notes: Akron was 2-for-9 with runners in scoring position.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Dash 9, Indians 2: Kinston, N.C., starter Brett Brach (6-7) gave up eight runs (seven earned) and nine hits in 5 innings, as the K-Tribe lost a Carolina League game at Winston-Salem, N.C.

A Lake County Captains

The Captains were off on Tuesday.

Notes: First baseman Jesus Aguilar has swung a potent bat. He leads the team with 68 RBI and 19 home runs, and is hitting .292 in 346 at-bats. Four pitchers lead the Captains in victories: Cole Cook (5-10), Michael Goodnight (5-9), Mike Rayl (5-5) and J.D. Reichenbach (5-1).

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

The Scrappers were off on Tuesday.

Notes: Outfielder Jordan Smith leads Mahoning Valley with a .344 batting average, with 44 hits in 128 at-bats. With 16 walks, his on-base percentage is .430.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Wild Things 5, Crushers 4 (11): Robert Wendzicki (0-2), surrendered a solo home run in the bottom of the 11th inning, and Lake Erie lost a Frontier League game in Washington, Pa.

Notes: The Wild Things avoided a three-game sweep. Lake Erie collected 36 hits in the three games.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/07/justin_germano_fires_perfect_g.html

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Shin-Soo Choo goes 0-2 in first rehab start at Lake County: Indians Insider

Choo played six innings, grounded out weakly to second and took a called third strike in two plate appearances. Meanwhile, Carlos Carrasco goes on DL with elbow issues.

choo-gloves-atbat-vert-cc.jpgView full sizeShin-Soo Choo went hitless in his first rehab game at Lake County, but is eager to help the Indians down the stretch of the 2011 season.

EASTLAKE, Ohio -- On the eve of the Indians' big three-game home series with Detroit, attention shifted temporarily 18 miles east, to a man and his thumb.

Shin-Soo Choo, on the disabled list since breaking his left thumb after being hit by a pitch on June 24 in San Francisco, made his first rehab appearance Monday with the Lake County Captains. Choo played six innings, grounded out weakly to second and took a called third strike in two plate appearances. In the field, he flagged down a long fly to the fence in right.

Choo said he was a little nervous and his timing is a little off, but otherwise felt comfortable at the plate and felt no pain. He hasn't heard from the Indians about when he might rejoin the club.

"I really want to play. The next six games against Detroit and Minnesota are big series I really want to play," he said. "My body's ready, but I'll see more pitches here, make sure everything feels good."

At the time of his injury, Choo was batting .244 with 10 doubles, two triples, five homers, 28 RBI and 11 stolen bases in 72 games.

Choo batted third and wore number 25 instead of his usual 17. Fans at Classic Park greeted him with the familiar "Chooooo" as he stepped to the plate each time.

Facing Dayton Dragons left-hander Mitch Clarke, Choo swung at the first pitch of his first at-bat, bouncing it foul past first, then took a called strike on the outside corner. On an 0-2 count, he sent a weak chopper to second and was thrown out by a step.

In the top of the second, Choo, who turned 29 last month, chased down a long sacrifice fly to the fence.

Choo's second plate appearance came with the Captains down, 3-0, in the fourth. He was called out on strikes on a 1-2 fastball, looked back at the umpire and gave his bat a little kick as he walked back to the dugout.

Before his injury, Choo's batting average had climbed 13 points in 10 days -- suggesting he might be regaining his form from 2010 and 2009, in which he hit .300 and at least 20 homers each season. He once called 2010 "the greatest year in my life."

This year? Not so great.

The thumb required six screws to stabilize. It's scarred and discolored.

Besides the batting slump and injury, he was fined $775 and had his driver's license suspended for 180 days late last month for driving drunk on May 2 in Sheffield Lake.

The Captains were three-hit and lost 3-0. But Choo's appearance bumped attendance to 6,105, compared to 4,500 to 5,000 for a typical Monday "Buck Night" promotion.

Elbow sidelines Carrasco: The Indians placed starter Carlos Carrasco on the 15-day disabled list Monday with inflammation in his right elbow, temporarily voiding his six-game suspension for throwing at Kansas City’s Billy Butler.

Carrasco was suspended for six games on Aug. 1 for throwing at Butler’s head in a July 30 game. Carrasco intended to serve his ban following his Aug. 3 start against Boston. However, Carrasco felt discomfort in his elbow after facing the Red Sox, according to an Indians release.

The Indians also reinstated third baseman Jack Hannahan from the paternity list. Hannahan was not with the Indians for their three-game weekend series in Texas, staying with his wife for the birth of the couple’s first child.

Carrasco’s injury leaves the Indians without a starter for Saturday’s home game against Minnesota. The most likely candidate is left-hander David Huff, who is 1-1 with a 0.51 ERA in three starts.

By the numbers: With the Tigers and Indians opening a big three-game series, here are some numbers and facts to remember:

• The Tigers have lost 11 straight at Progressive Field.

• The Indians and Tigers will play each other 12 times, six in August, six in September. They will end the season with a three-game series at Progressive Field starting Sept. 26.

• Tigers GM Dave Dombrowski and manager Jim Leyland had their contracts extended on Monday. Until then, they'd been working in the final year of their contracts.

Dombrowski's deal was extended for four years and Leyland was signed through 2012. Could it be a coincidence that the extensions were announced the day before the Tigers try to extend their four-game lead?

• In case you're wondering, manager Manny Acta is signed through 2012 with a club option for 2013.

Date with destiny: After going 3-4 on a trip against Boston and Texas, Acta said the Indians were going home to "take care of their own destiny."

The Indians will play 39 of their remaining 50 games in the own division. They are 16-18 in the AL Central and will need to go on quite a run to make the postseason.

"The schedule is mapped out for us to make any kind of run we want to," said rookie second baseman Jason Kipnis. "We can be 10 down or 10 up by the end of the season."

Closer Chris Perez said this series with the Tigers is important, but not in a sweep-or-go-home sense.

"We play them a lot," he said. "We just need to stay close, within striking distance, and not let this thing get too far out of reach for us. We've still got a lot of games left with them.

"This series at home is going to be huge. We've got our horses lined up."

The Indians are starting Justin Masterson, newcomer Ubaldo Jimenez and Fausto Carmona against the Tigers.

Added reliever Joe Smith, "If we take care of business when we get home, we'll be all right come September and, hopefully, make it a race down to the end."

The next 12 games are in the AL Central, six against the Tigers, three against the Twins and three against the White Sox.

Testing, testing: The Tigers gave former Indians catcher Victor Martinez the day off Sunday after he sprained his left knee Saturday against Kansas City trying to avoid a tag at the plate. With Monday's open date, there's a chance Martinez will be in Detroit's lineup during the series.

Sign here: The Indians have signed 14th round pick Cody Anderson, a right-hander from Feather River (Calif.) Community College, and 38th round pick shortstop Yhoxian Medina, who just completed his sophomore season at Southeastern (Iowa) Community College. Teams have until midnight Aug. 15 to sign their draft picks.

Staff writer Paul Hoynes contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/shin-soo_choo_goes_0-2_in_firs.html

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800+ unpaid interns hired in arts and sports

MP Luciana Berger warns against limiting the types of people able to move into careers in the arts

Government-funded arts and sports bodies have employed more than 800 unpaid interns in the past two years, figures show, in the face of moves led by the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, to end the practice.

Research by the Labour MP Luciana Berger shows that in the last two years 884 unpaid interns were employed by 34 organisations funded by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. Some 467 were employed in 2010, dropping slightly to 417 in 2011.

Tate galleries said they regularly employ 120 unpaid interns annually and the National Museum of Science and Industry employed 89. Six organisations increased the number of interns they hired this year. The biggest increase was by the Olympic Delivery Agency, which employed an extra 21 unpaid interns in 2011, up from seven in 2010.

Five museums, including the British Museum and the Horniman Museum in south London, which hired 77 unpaid interns between them in 2010, did not hire any this year.

In April Clegg called for employers to stop handing out internships as part of his drive to improve social mobility in the UK. Clegg said he wanted to end a culture in which individuals could get a foot in the door in firms and industries because of "who your father is", and which was dominated by the "sharp-elbowed middle classes". The social mobility strategy urged more companies to pay interns the minimum wage to attract young applicants from poorer backgrounds.

His campaign received a filip when at the beginning of this month, HM Revenue & Customs ? stung by suggestions it traditionally failed to act on evidence of underpayment ? issued a warning to fashion houses that they could be prosecuted for not paying their interns. HMRC said it had written to all 102 fashion houses involved with September's London fashion week, warning them about non-payment of the minimum wage of �6.08 an hour for those aged 21 and over. Clegg welcomed the move.

But there is concern Clegg's drive against internships will founder in harsh economic conditions for employers and more, not fewer, firms will ask workers to offer their services in return for scant reward ? lunch and travel expenses perhaps, but no pay.

Berger said: "Unpaid internships limit the opportunities for people who cannot afford to work for free. As well as pressuring the private sector to abandon this practice, it's vital that wherever possible the government pays interns the national minimum wage.

"Arts organisations find themselves in a very difficult position following drastic cuts in their funding from government. However, limiting the types of people able to move into a career in the arts can be just as damaging, as having a homogeneous group of people dominating the industry will naturally reduce creativity.

"While I acknowledge that the numbers have dropped slightly this year, the fact that 400 people still had to work for free shows how much more needs to be done."

Berger's figures are supported by the Institute for Public Policy Research thinktank which published evidence on Tuesday it says shows a growth in unpaid internships across the digital and design sectors of the British economy. More than two-fifths of agency staff it surveyed say they are using more unpaid interns.They surveyed 500 agency workers and found that most clients in the design and digital industries expected more work for less money, leading to fewer permanent staff and more unpaid interns.

Staff turnover had increased in recent years, with people working for digital and design agencies saying they were feeling the brunt of the "long, slow recovery" from recession. The thinktank said the country's "faltering" economic recovery was putting pressure on firms to cut costs and reduce staff.

A minority of those questioned said their agency helped employees deal with stress or rewarded them if they put in extra work.

Kayte Lawton, senior research fellow at the IPPR, said: "If an intern is doing work for a company, then they need to be paid. It's as simple as that. Employers often mistakenly believe there is a grey area around internships in the national minimum wage legislation that allows them to take on unpaid interns as long as both sides understand it is a voluntary position - but this is simply not the case."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2011/dec/27/work-and-careers-arts-policy

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Train passengers fight back against persistent delays

Long-suffering train commuters are starting to take a more proactive approach

It was an increasingly familiar scenario for myself and the gaggle of weary commuters struggling to get home to east Suffolk from London Liverpool Street. On a bitterly cold winter evening, the 19.00 London to Norwich mainline service, due at Ipswich at 20.07, had been delayed, yet again, by 10 minutes.

Depressingly, National Express East Anglia had let the connecting 20.13 service on the line out to Saxmundham and Lowestoft depart, meaning we all had to wait nearly another hour for the next train. As our two-hour journey metamorphosed into a three-hour marathon, we faced a miserable late-night wait in a freezing waiting room with no heating and all the coffee and snack bars long closed for the day.

The National Express employee stood outside the customer service office handing out the so-called delay repay forms which enable passengers to claim compensation. But as the 30 or so of us ? increasingly familiar and forlorn faces to each other because of the frequency of delays ? gathered on the platform, one exasperated man demanded that, instead of being forced to wait, we should all be given taxis to take us straight home. As the employee protested that he did not have the power to sanction such a move, and that authorisation had to come from a senior manager in Norwich, I shrieked: "Well, get on the phone then, and ask for authorisation."

With an angry mob baying for action, the employee dutifully went back into the office and made the phone call. There was a huge cheer when he returned to say that the official thumbs-up had been given, and we lined up for the cabs which would whisk us home.

The days of National Express running the trains here are numbered as it has been stripped of the Greater Anglia franchise three years early. In October, the Department for Transport announced that the Dutch transport company Abellio (which runs two other franchises in the UK) is to operate the route which includes commuter and longer-distance routes out of London to Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire. Abellio has already warned passengers not to expect miracles when it takes over in February. It will initially only run until July 2013, but with the ultimate prize of a longer, 15-year franchise. And it is an enormous challenge.

This is, of course, the railway that will be on show to the world during the Olympic Games, providing services to and from the Olympic park. Overall, it will be responsible for 3,000 employees and the safe operation of 43,000 services a month, carrying two million passengers a week.

It was not for nothing disgruntled passengers set up a website called I hate National Express East Anglia which declared: "Clapped out carriages, held together by the paint of various private train companies, secondhand rolling stock from other train routes, overhead electrical lines that date from 1938 ? this is the National Express East Anglia route."

In 2010 National Express changed the train times and connections for passengers in east Suffolk, ending the through services from London to Lowestoft in return for more regular, hourly services. But the tight timing of the connection at Ipswich, and the frequent delays have made travelling into London so unreliable that many people have given up and drive to stations like Manningtree or Colchester where there are more trains and a shorter journey.

Like many other commuters, I am now so used to routinely claiming for repayment for delayed trains that I keep a stack of forms on my desk.

Some of my fellow commuters from Saxmundham have been paying upwards of �6,000 a year for season tickets to travel in uncomfortable trains which, when they do run on time, are packed. Holders of 12-month season tickets, for example, paid �6,120 for 2011 but face a 5.6% rise to �6,468 from next week.

The consumer group Passenger Focus says travellers are increasingly taking matters into their own hands, using social media such as Twitter to communicate delays to each other and to complain about poor service. Anthony Smith, the group's chief executive, said: "Passengers must complain. If they get together as a group it amplifies their voice, and, of course, if you don't ask you don't get. People build their lives around railway timetables and if the basic promise to run trains at a certain time is not delivered then they must do something about it. All our surveys show that people hate changing trains because of problems with connections. There's absolutely no question of passengers resorting to tactics such as bullying staff, but overall they have become more assertive and pro-active."

In my area, the decision by passengers to be more vocal has clearly paid off. The operator's Passengers' Charter states that should a connection be missed because a train is running late, it will endeavour to provide passengers with alternative transport to get to their final destination if the next connecting train is more than 60 minutes away and if it will get you there quicker than waiting for the next train.

Operators clearly rely on passenger inertia to keep compensation claims to a minimum. In East Anglia, if a journey is delayed by 30 minutes or more you can claim compensation with the delay repay scheme. This guarantees compensation to a value of at least 50% of the cost of the ticket held for that portion of the journey. If the journey is delayed by 60 minutes or more then this is doubled. In the case of seven-day tickets (weekly) and season tickets (monthly and annual), the compensation will be calculated against the proportional daily cost of the price of the ticket.

The reality, however, is that most passengers simply want a punctual and reliable service ? and one that is worth the thousands of pounds they pay every year for it.

Top tips for fighting back


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2011/dec/30/rail-passengers-fight-train-delays

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Yemen: Nine dead as president plans US visit

Security forces and supporters of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh shot dead nine protesters on Saturday, as he said he would soon visit the US ahead of transferring power in February. Scores of demonstrators, who demanded Saleh face trial, were also wounded when tear gas and water cannons were used against them, AFP reported.

Speaking in Sana'a, Saleh said he will travel to the United States in the coming days: "Not for treatment, because I am well, but in order to create favorable conditions... for the presidential election," set for February 21.

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No perfect season, but Pack remain on track

 

John Riordan
THE dream of a perfect season is over for the Green Bay Packers. And the nightmare of 16 games without a victory has been avoided by the Indianapolis Colts.

Meanwhile, 22 of the 32 NFL teams, including the seven already guaranteed a post-season berth, can still realistically look beyond New Year's Day when the regular season is destined to reach a gripping climax.

While the clash of Tim Tebow's Denver Broncos and Tom Brady's New England Patriots in Colorado was the source of huge pre-match hype (even inspiring a skit on Saturday Night Live), it ended up being an easy victory for the Pats who clinched a ninth AFC East title in 11 seasons with their 41-23.

Instead the drama lay elsewhere, and the biggest story of an incredible day was the Kansas City Chiefs' unlikely win on the occasion of interim coach Romeo Crennel's first game, a surprising 19-14 victory that ended the Packers' 19-game winning streak, their first defeat since this day last year in New England.

"I personally always viewed the undefeated season as, really, just gravy,” coach Mike McCarthy said afterwards. “The goal was to get home-field advantage and win the Super Bowl. That's what we discussed. We were fortunate enough to be in the position to possibly achieve the undefeated season but we still have the primary goal in front of us, and that's to get home-field advantage.”

Incredibly, that Chiefs win, coupled with defeats for their AFC West rivals, the Broncos and the Oakland Raiders and surprise win for the San Diego Chargers over the Baltimore Racens means that all four teams can finish 8-8. In that wild scenario, Kansas City would advance and the Tebow phenomenon will crash and burn.

Oakland were the victims of an amazing Detroit Lions fightback in the dying seconds, a 98-yard drive that forced a 28-27 victory which was inspired by quarterback Matthew Stafford and one of the most impressive games of wide receiver Calvin Johnson’s career.

The AFC wild card race could go down to the wire with the New York Jets and the Tennessee Titans both losing while the Cincinnati Bengals won to put them back in contention for the sixth seed.

That Titans loss brought to an end that other famous (or infamous) streak. The Colts had been 0-13 for the season but their convincing 27-13 victory ended up being the franchise's first win in 14 years without Peyton Manning.

With the Pittsburgh Steelers facing a tough clash tonight against the San Francisco 49ers, the Ravens missed an opportunity in the late game to keep their arch rivals on their toes, losing 34-14 at San Diego.

And the other AFC North team, the aforementioned Bengals beat the St Louis Rams 20-13 to keep alive the possibility that three teams from the same division advance to the post-season.

The other top seed in the AFC, the Houston Texans were surprisingly beaten by the Carolina Panthers who benefited from another Cam Newton-inspired performance, the 28-13 away victory denting Houston’s plans for home advantage in January.

In the NFC, the New Orleans kept the pressure on the Packers for seeding with a big 42-20 win in Minnesota. Drew Brees threw for 412 yards and five touchdowns to lead the surging Saints to their sixth win in a row.

The NFC East was blown wide open. LeSean McCoy ran for three touchdowns as the Philadelphia Eagles hammered the Jets 45-19 to stay in contention for the division, a prospect which seemed impossible going into December.

If the Eagles beat the Dallas Cowboys (who won 31-15 in Tampa Bay on Saturday night) on Christmas Eve and the Giants are beaten by the Jets the same day, the possibility that all three teams, Phillie, Dallas and the Giants, finish 8-8 in which case the Eagles will advance.

The Giants walked themselves into this nightmare scenario with a gutless 23-10 defeat at home to the Washington Redskins.

“I'm very disappointed in how we played today,” coach Tom Coughlin admitted afterwards. “I accept responsibility for it. But I expected to see more quality execution and we didn't get that.”

Although the Atlanta Falcons, who won 41-14 against Jacksonville on Thursday night, joined the Lions as favourites for the two wild card spots, there are four teams snapping at their heels.

The Seattle Seahawks won at the 38-14 at the Chicago Bears and the Arizona Cardinals beat the always unlucky Cleveland Browns in overtime (20-17) to leave those three, the Seahawks, the Bears and the Cardinals on 7-7

Meanwhile, in the one and only game that carried no play-off implications, the Miami Dolphins beat the Buffalo Bills 30-23 in snowy west New York.

Source: http://feeds.examiner.ie/~r/iesportsblog/~3/SmUJY3IZfjk/post.aspx

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Young people biggest users of debt relief orders, figures reveal

Higher levels of student debt could force many more into difficulties as statistics show one in four face insolvency

Young people struggling to repay their debts have been urged to get help as official figures reveal that 25- to 34-year-olds are the biggest users of debt relief orders (DROs), a form of insolvency introduced two years ago.

The Insolvency Service said 44,000 DROs had been granted in England and Wales in the two years following their launch in April 2009, and that one in four people with a DRO was aged between 25 and 34.

The orders allow those struggling with debts of up to �15,000 to write them off, subject to a number of conditions. The borrower must have a disposable income of no more than �50 a month, savings and assets worth less than �300, and cannot be a homeowner.

Although those seeking them do not have to go through the courts and they cost just �90 to set up, they are a still a formal arrangement and appear on an individual's credit record.

Debt counselling charities said the statistics highlighted the financial pressures faced by the younger generation, and warned that higher levels of student debt could force many more into difficulties in the future.

Although student loans are not covered by DROs, Una Farrell, spokesperson for the Consumer Credit Counselling Service (CCCS), said they were a factor in the number of young people becoming insolvent.

Farrell said: "Student debt does play a large part in getting people used to taking on large debts early on and it limits their ability to manage their finances. The CCCS is very worried about future generations who are going to end up taking on higher levels of debt."

Joanna Elson, chief executive of Money Advice Trust, said many struggling 25- to 34-year-olds "might have expected to be further up the financial ladder" by that stage in their life.

"At the same age their parents would most likely have bought their first home, have a comfortable pension lined up, and be saving for the future. For today's 25-34 year-olds the picture is much bleaker," she said.

Elson added: "The good news is that help is available and free advice services can make a big difference. It is vital anyone struggling with their finances is aware of charities like National Debtline, CCCS and Citizens Advice."

Stephen Speed, chief executive of the Insolvency Service, echoed Elson's call for struggling borrowers to get help.

"Owing more money than you can afford to repay is a daunting prospect, especially when you're young, but there are a number of options you can take and there is help available.

"I would encourage people struggling with debt to read our publication, In Debt? Dealing with your creditors (pdf), and to access free advice from debt charities at an early stage."

The Insolvency Service's figures show that over the last two years one in three people under 25 who were given a DRO owed less than �5,000, whereas all other age groups typically owed more. Among the over 25s, 40% owed between �10,000 and the maximum allowable debt of �15,000.

Despite the fairly modest levels of debt being written off by some, Farrell said DROs were not being used lightly.

"Once you have had a DRO you are going to have problems getting credit for a long time. You have to be in pretty dire straits to qualify," she said.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2011/dec/29/debt-relief-orders-young-biggest-users

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Grady Sizemore is 3-for-3 with a double in Akron loss to Reading: Minor-league report

Adam Abraham's three hits lead Kinston to win; Lake County sloppy in loss to West Michigan; Jake Lowery homers as Scrappers roll; Lake Erie manages just one hit in 1-0 loss.

AA Akron Aeros

Phillies 6, Aeros 1: Indians outfielder Grady Sizemore, in Akron on a rehab assignment, went 3-for-3 with a double, but the Aeros still lost the Eastern League game to visiting Reading (Pa.)

In two games with the Aeros, Sizemore is hitting .400.

Akron LH starter T.J. McFarland (9-9, 3.87) allowed four runs (three earned) on eight hits and two walks over seven innings. He struck out six.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 3, Keys 2: Kinston DH Adam Abraham (.251) had three hits, including his 15th homer of the season, to lead the Indians to the Carolina League win over visiting Frederick, Md.

Kinston LH starter T.J. House (5.19) allowed two earned runs in 61/3 innings. He gave up three hits while walking three and striking out eight.

A Lake County Captains

Whitecaps 7, Captains 2 Lake County committed five errors in the Midwest League loss to visiting West Michigan. Captains RF Brian Heere (.250) and 3B Giovanny Urshela (.237) each had two hits.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 8, Crosscutters 3: Mahoning Valley DH Jake Lowery (.249) had three hits, including his sixth home run of the season, and three RBI to lead the Scrappers to the New York-Penn League win over visiting Williamsport (Pa.)

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Wild Things 1, Crushers 0: Lake Erie DH Kyle Shaffer (.220) had the Crushers' lone hit in the Frontier League loss to visiting Washington (Pa.). Lake Erie RH Thomas Campbell (2.53) started and threw five scoreless innings. He allowed three hits and three walks.

AAA Columbus Clippers

The Clippers were off Thursday.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/09/grady_sizemore_is_3-for-3_with.html

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Friday, December 30, 2011

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Nottingham Post commented Police called to pubs 100 times a week

Article


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Matt LaPorta homers, singles in Columbus Clippers' victory: Minor League Report

The Class AA Akron Aeros and the Class A Mahoning Valley Scrappers also get victories on Friday.

matt laporta.JPGView full sizeMatt LaPorta

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 4, Mud Hens 3 1B Matt LaPorta (.500) homered and had a run-scoring single, and RH Zach McAllister (12-3, 3.32) allowed two runs in seven innings as host Columbus edged Toledo in International League play Friday. SS Luis Valbuena (.305) had three hits for the Clippers. RH Chen Lee (2.27) allowed one run in two innings for his first save.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 7, Senators 1 Five pitchers combined on a four-hitter, and 2B Karexon Sanchez (.218), LF John Drennen (.241) and C Chun Chen (.261) each drove in two runs as Akron won an Eastern League contest in Harrisburg, Pa. Sanchez tripled, singled and had two walks. Drennen homered and singled. Chen doubled, singled and walked. Aeros RH Bryan Price (2.79) got the start and allowed two hits in three scoreless innings. RH Rob Bryson (2-0, 3.26) went two innings to get the victory, RH Bryce Stowell (2.00) also pitched two innings, and LH Kyle Petter (0.00) and RH Dale Dickerson (9.00) each worked an inning of relief.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Keys 10, Indians 0 RH Clayton Cook (9-9, 4.56) could not get out of the first inning, allowing six runs on six hits and one walk in of an inning, and host Kinston (N.C.) got three-hit in a Carolina League loss to Frederick (Md.), the K-Tribe's last regular-season game at Grainger Stadium. Keys LH Jacob Pettit (7-0, 1.62) allowed one hit in five innings, and RH Ryan O'Shea (3.09) gave up two hits in four innings.

A Lake County Captains

Whitecaps 3, Captains 0 RH Jordan Cooper (2-9, 4.73) allowed just two runs in seven innings for host Lake County, but three West Michigan pitchers combined to four-hit the Captains. Whitecaps LH Kyle Ryan (6-10, 3.15) gave up four hits in six innings. West Michigan RH Kevan Hess (two innings) and RH Michael Torrealba (one) teamed for three perfect innings of relief.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 8, Jammers 4 3B Jordan Smith (.305) had a three-run double and LF John Barr (.234) a two-run double during a seven-run third inning as Mahoning Valley won a New York-Penn League game in Jamestown, N.Y. Scrappers RF Bryson Myles (.309) tripled, singled, walked, drove in a run and scored two runs.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Beach Bums 9, Crushers 3 LH Paul Fagan struggled, and Lake Erie fell behind by seven runs by the fourth inning in losing a Frontier League contest in Traverse City, Mich.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/09/matt_laporta_homers_singles_in.html

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New Spanish government announces draconian measures to balance the budget

Deputy PM Soraya Saenz Santamaria headed the table that made the announcements Spain's new government revealed on Friday that the public deficit for 2011 would come in at 8% of GDP, well above a target of 6%, and announced income and property tax hikes and a civil servant wage freeze in response.

Source: http://en.mercopress.com/2011/12/30/new-spanish-government-announces-draconian-measures-to-balance-the-budget?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_content=main&utm_campaign=rss

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