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== Sanford man charged in infant death ==
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<html>A 30-year-old Sanford man has been accused of killing a 3-month-old, according to Lowell police.
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Jason Moore, 30, was arrested Friday and charged with first-degree murder and two counts felony child abuse,[http://www.coba404.com/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=138463&fromuid=855 Kevin Rudd defends same sex marriage in front of Pastor on Q & A], police said.
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  Moore s relationship was babysitter and friend of the mother,[http://mahfel.atwebpages.com/ Electronics Lead the Way in Online Back_1], police said in a news release.
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Lowell police were called to Kings Mountain Hospital on Aug. 13 in response to a 3-month-old girl who showed signs of child abuse. The girl was later transferred to Levine Children s Hospital in Charlotte for treatment of abusive head trauma,[http://www.emagine.com.au/node/2761598 Fantasy- Rookie-Sophomore Studs in the Making_3], officials said. She died Aug. 17 after being removed from life support.
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Police did not say whether Moore was babysitting the child on Aug. 13.
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Moore is being held without bond in the Gaston County jail. He will have a video arraignment Tuesday,[http://bbs.fkmg.net/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=768176 Clive Palmer and Kevin Rudd in airport standoff], authorities said. His first court appearance will be determined then.
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This was not Moore s first arrest. Since 2009, Moore has been found guilty in multiple breaking and entering and larceny cases, court records show.
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Moore is also scheduled to stand trial in September for a 2011 driving while impaired charge,[http://s1.elforo.de/cristyhost/viewtopic.php?p=70442#70442 Overdose deaths pass national road toll for first], according to court records.</html>

Edição de 10h10min de 5 de setembro de 2013

Tabela de conteúdo

Wale – No Pain No Gain 0

<html>Friday, August 23rd,NFL Power Rankings- Where Do Things Stand at Start of Preseason-_1, 2013 | Posted by

Wale No Pain No Gain | New Music

Yesterday we got a sneak peek of both ’s new track, and RGIII’s new mini documentary,Baylor Soccer Blanks UTSA in Season Opener, as they dropped a trailer for the upcoming special. Today the Washington D.C. wordsmith,NBA Free Agency Rumors- Knicks meeting with Hamed, Wale, returns to the scene,NBA Free Agency Report- Josh Childress to work out for the Cavaliers_1, with the full version of his new track “No Pain No Gain”. The track is an incredible, triumphant number that finds Wale showing off his lyrical prowess and effortlessly riding the addictive beat. The track finds Wale speak in lyrical form about the ups and downs of success, but as we all know,Essendon sorry for 'mistakes' but 'not drug cheats', “No Pain No Gain”. Check out the full track after the jump and speak your mind down below.

Signed,</html>

Tejay van Garderen gets edge on rival Tom Danielson in rain

<html>Aug 23:Aug 22:Aug 21:BEAVER CREEK Boulder's Tom Danielson crested 9,560-foot Bachelor Gulch on Thursday and looked down at a descent that could make or break his USA Pro Challenge. A 2,000-foot downhill ride, slick from rain hammering the pavement, could definitely break more than his chances. Tejay van Garderen, the prerace favorite and new Aspen resident, was on his rear wheel with the same view. Throwing caution to the rain and hungry to make up for a disappointing USA Pro Challenge in 2011, van Garderen flew down the mountain like a runaway bobsled. He and Colombian Janier Acevedo left Danielson in the rain as van Garderen took a firm grip on the yellow jersey. Van Garderen allowed Acevedo, of the Continental team Jamis-Hagens USA Pro Challenge riders take on a king of the mountain hill Thursday during the 103.7-mile fourth stage, which went from Steam- boat Springs to Beaver Creek. The seven-stage race wraps up Sunday in downtown Denver. (Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)Berman, to win Stage 4. But van Garderen took the overall lead over BMC Racing teammate Mathias Frank by four seconds. Acevedo is in third place, 30 seconds back. Danielson lost 22 seconds and is 40 seconds back in fourth place going into Friday's crucial Vail time trial. Boulder's Matt Cooke kept the king of the mountain jersey for the fourth straight day. "As soon as the descent started, it was wet and tricky,Solheim Cup At The Colorado Golf Club CBS Denver_3," van Garderen said. "Janier took one corner pretty hot and Tom Danielson looked like he was a little timid. I thought, 'OK, let's go for it.' " Danielson didn't use the word "timid." Amazed? Maybe. He couldn't believe what he saw from van Garderen and Acevedo. "They were just taking risks and sliding all over the yellow line," Danielson said. "I just didn't do that. I was beaten by a better guy." Careening down slick, windy streets at 50 mph has led to the end of many careers, not to mention bones. It's not advisable for recreational riders, but van Garderen has a couple of keys. One, he said BMC's Continental tires are especially good in the rain. And two? "You want to avoid touching your front break,David Lee balls hard at Rucker Park (video)," he said, "because if you touch your front break in the corners, you're Fans enjoy the view from a perfect perch while watching Stage 4 of the USA Pro Challenge on Thursday. (Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)going to slide out." Van Garderen claims he's not a great descender in the rain, but Danielson won last year's stage to Aspen with an epic descent down Independence Pass. However,Vanessa Pham trial- Julio Blanco Garcia's videotaped interrogation played_0, it was dry that day. "I would think Tom's a little frustrated right now," van Garderen said. "That's understandable. But at the end of the day, every inch of the road, we're racing on. If you have a weakness in any area, it's going to show through." The plan was for Danielson's Boulder-based Team Garmin-Sharp to break van Garderen on the way up Bachelor Gulch. The trio, plus Frank,Communications Tower Falls Near Safe Passage Route, had broken from the peloton shortly before the ascent and Danielson made numerous attacks. On each one, van Garderen was on his wheel, occasionally drafting off Frank. "I thought I could drop him,Bill Barnwell on the bottom eight teams in the NFL in 2013," Danielson said, "but I couldn't." Meanwhile, Acevedo continued his fine year. This stage win came on the heels of third-place finishes in the tours of California and Utah. "I was feeling very good during the week and I had a tremendous day," Acevedo said through a translator. "I was confident. When it was going so hard, I had good legs." Stage 4 at a glance Big winner: Tejay van Garderen put himself on the inside rail to finish in Denver with the yellow jersey. He smoked the field in the queen stage Thursday, refusing to back down from Tom Danielson's continuous attacks up Bachelor Gulch. Falling back: Luxembourger Andy Schleck of RadioShack Leopard Trek started the day within striking distance, 1:18 behind the leader. He finished in 41st place, 9:13 back, and fell 10:31 behind van Garderen. What's next: The Vail time trial made famous during the Red Zinger and Coors Classic returns Friday after a one-year absence. It's 10 miles straight up Vail Pass Trail and starts at 1:05 p.m. John Henderson, The Denver Post

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Gentleman Scholar- Advice for drinking like a modern man

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 Font ResizeGentleman Scholar: Advice for drinking like a modern manBy Troy Patterson, SlatePosted:
 
09/03/2013 05:37:12 AM MDTUpdated:
 
09/03/2013 05:37:17 AM MDT
Aha! Here's a notion. How about I take a recipe from the Esquire Drink Book (1956), fancy it up a bit, and name the drink after the recently deceased author of a 1998 novel about the Spanish-American War? (Stock/Getty Images)NEW YORK Oh, man, I'm in a jam here. Gotta stay up late to finish an article - an article about a Caribbean-American highball known most correctly as the Cuba Libre and most commonly as the rum and Coke. Gonna be burning the midnight oil writing a piece on this classic drink, which became a classic despite not being especially good. Eyelids getting heavy. If only I had at hand a drink that would keep me up and loosen me up, a fizzy liquid stimulant ...

Aha! Here's a notion. How about I take a recipe from the Esquire Drink Book (1956), fancy it up a bit, and name the drink after the recently deceased author of a 1998 novel about the Spanish-American War? Elmore Leonard's Cuba Libre 1 key lime 2 dashes Angostura bitters 2 ounces light rum Mexican Coca-Cola to taste Cut the tiny little key lime in half. If you're feeling fussy,Ted Thompson Press Conference- Discussing the Pack, pick out the seeds and discard them. With a garlic press or your dainty fingers, squeeze the juice of the lime into a chilled tall glass. Go ahead and toss the shells of the squeezed lime halves in the glass-it's festive. Add the bitters and the rum. Fill the glass with ice. Give a quick stir before topping off the glass with the Coke. Give another quick stir. Serve. Oh, this is not bad. This is as refined as a Cuba Libre can get, I think. The key lime (which is more tart and bitter than the familiar Persian kind) works with the aromatic bitters and with the Mexican Coke (sweetened with cane sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup) to give the drink a semblance of complexity. Why, this is almost a proper cocktail! Rarely does the Cuba Libre rise to such distinction. Yes, some people brightly suggest reducing the Coke to a syrup and restructuring the drink as an old-fashioned. Others indicate that a well-chosen rum, such as Appleton Special Gold, can ennoble the cola and elevate the drinking experience. But for the most part, people of all levels of sophistication-from veteran cocktailians to college students too naive to understand that asking for a vodka and Coke is asking, first of all, to get carded-understand that cola is, in a mixological context, not so much an ingredient as a masking agent. Indeed, the best thing that ever happened to the soft-drink industry was Prohibition, which encouraged casual drinkers to switch to soda and committed drinkers to disguise the taste of low-end hooch by any means necessary. Very few old-school cocktails call for cola (though the Filmograph calls for a bygone "kola tonic" these days best approximated by a South African syrup), and very few fancy-cocktail folk care to work with its heavy caramel sweetness either, for reasons summarized by a source interviewed for a recent New York Post story on "snotty" bartenders. "I don't carry Coca-Cola," one Phil Ward tells the tabloid. "It ruins palates."* Where did the Cuba Libre come from? An island country south of Florida, of course. The most credible story of its invention dates to August 1900-two years after the Spanish-American War freed Cuba from Spanish reign, 14 years after a Georgia druggist named John Pemberton developed Coca-Cola as nonalcoholic version of coca wine, 38 years after brothers Facundo and Jos?? Bacardi bought a distillery in Santiago de Cuba. The story-described in a sworn affidavit featured in a vintage Bacardi ad-has it that a U.S. military man ordered one in a bar and that other patrons followed suit. However, a current Bacardi ad campaign implies that the drink came into being after one of Teddy Roosevelt's most rugged Rough Riders attempted to chat up a surly-eyed,Yanda, Webb active for Ravens, Dickson, McPhee scratched, fine-cheekboned gal in a peasant skirt. Read more about this campaign in Advertising Age, which notes that "rum ads have lately been turning toward historical figures." Ad Age cites as further examples Captain Morgan and also Sailor Jerry, which you may add to a tall glass, with cola and stout,City Sets Deadline For Owners Of Landmark 120, to make a Shave and a Haircut. Down on the bottom shelf of your local liquor store-possibly on the far side of a pane of bulletproof glass-you may also notice Admiral Nelson's Spiced Rum, which you may add to your gas tank as a corrosion inhibitor. The rum and Coke is the West Indian equivalent of the gin and tonic-a highball symbolic of empire. Rum, a liquor essential to the geometry of the Atlantic slave trade, met Coke, the consummate quaff of American capitalism. (Think of Cocacolonization and Godard's "Children of Marx and Coca-Cola." Remember Andy Warhol's silkscreens and his philosophy of soda-populism: "A Coke is a Coke and no amount of money can get you a better Coke than the one the bum on the corner is drinking.") Understand that the drink became broadly popular on these shores during World War II; with domestic distilleries aiding the war effort, rum consumption increased 400 percent, and with Coca-Cola exempt from sugar rationing, well, there you had it. Consider, also, the story of "Rum and Coca-Cola," a Trinidadian calypso song written about U.S. soldiers "debauching local women" and, implicitly, also about the military-industrial complex they rode in on. Morey Amsterdam ripped off the original and reworked it for the Andrews Sisters, whose version became the second-biggest record of the 1940's (after "White Christmas"). Now that's what I call cultural appropriation. What's the best way to wash the taste of it from one's mouth? I have three ideas. The first is to reach back in history and up to New England. Until the 1920s, when Coca-Cola usurped its position, the most popular soft drink in the U.S. was Moxie, an enduring cult favorite on account of its sarsaparilla bitterness and medicinal tang. The bottlers offer some worthy suggestions on the "Moxology" page of their official website, but trial and error have led me to a superior cocktail application. Like I said,Contest winners announced- Faried T_3, I'm in a jam here: Plop half an ounce of Moxie jelly (ingredients: Moxie soda, sugar, pectin) into a mixing glass. Add a few dashes of your preferred bitters to deepen its flavor. Add a few ounces of your preferred rum and stir to dissolve the jelly. Add a lot of cracked ice and keep stirring. Strain into an old-fashioned glass over ice, add an orange twist, take a sip, and pour it all down the sink, probably, unless you share this writer's taste for radical rootiness. The second notion is a crowd-pleaser from The PDT Cocktail Book-the Cinema Highball, a rum and Coke made with buttered-popcorn-infused rum. I directed my editor to don her lab coat and get to fat washing, with the aim of delivering a batch of this infused rum. She delivered a bit less than half a batch, along with an account of certain discoveries made at dinner the night before: The popcorn flavor really comes through. The squeeze of lime recommended in the original recipe clashes with the butter. The stuff doesn't really complement tempeh tacos. The third idea is the most interesting and the most hopeless-an as-yet-uninvented drink currently named the Quixotic Exotic Coke. For a year or so, I have been sporadically attempting to invent a rum and Coke that has no Coke in it. The idea is to replicate the taste of Coca-Cola by finding the ideal flavor balance of liquors and liqueurs. I've tried this using Ramazzotti as the base,Harvey signs on for 2014 for AFL 'Roos, Galliano and Licor 43 to capture Coke's note of vanilla, dashes and one-eighth-ounces of B??n??dictine and green Chartreuse to duplicate nuances of sweetness and spice, figuring out which sparkling water (Perrier) best replicates the charge of Coke's distinctive fizz, and so on. I've had no success with this, despite consulting professional bartenders-a few of whom, I discovered, had independently developed the same hobby of tinkering toward a boozy imitation of the inimitable. It's not terribly difficult to come up with a formula for something that tastes like RC Cola, or something that is, on its merits, better than Coke, but it is impossible to fake the Real Thing.

  • Speaking of ruining things, would it harsh your buzz to hear about the space that Coke's archrival inhabits within the world of mixed drinks? Pepsi is not specified as an ingredient in any classic cocktail, but you will run across mentions of it in a number of less-discriminating bar guides and crowd-sourced compendia. You can infer from the names of Pepsi-topped drinks that the tone of the proceedings is fairly base. There's the Chocolate Chicken, the Buttered Pancakes, the Bitches Ain't Shit, the Wicked Llama, the Panty Dropper No. 5, and (sorry, Mom) the Cum in a Blender.

Meanwhile, RC Cola maintains a characteristically low profile in this arena, despite its effort to launch a custom cocktail in honor of the second-biggest royal wedding of 2011-the union of Princess Anne's daughter and some rugby player. Also, you can mix Royal Crown Cola with Crown Royal whiskey to create a Royal Crown Royal, best enjoyed while reading Ford Madox Ford. 

 
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Sanford man charged in infant death

<html>A 30-year-old Sanford man has been accused of killing a 3-month-old, according to Lowell police.

Jason Moore, 30, was arrested Friday and charged with first-degree murder and two counts felony child abuse,Kevin Rudd defends same sex marriage in front of Pastor on Q & A, police said.
 Moore s relationship was babysitter and friend of the mother,Electronics Lead the Way in Online Back_1, police said in a news release.
Lowell police were called to Kings Mountain Hospital on Aug. 13 in response to a 3-month-old girl who showed signs of child abuse. The girl was later transferred to Levine Children s Hospital in Charlotte for treatment of abusive head trauma,Fantasy- Rookie-Sophomore Studs in the Making_3, officials said. She died Aug. 17 after being removed from life support.
Police did not say whether Moore was babysitting the child on Aug. 13. 
Moore is being held without bond in the Gaston County jail. He will have a video arraignment Tuesday,Clive Palmer and Kevin Rudd in airport standoff, authorities said. His first court appearance will be determined then.
This was not Moore s first arrest. Since 2009, Moore has been found guilty in multiple breaking and entering and larceny cases, court records show.
Moore is also scheduled to stand trial in September for a 2011 driving while impaired charge,Overdose deaths pass national road toll for first, according to court records.</html>