2012年7月18日星期三

Growth, hiring slowed in parts of U.S., Beige Book finds

Houston braces for Linsanity

London cabbies make Olympic protest

London cabbie
     
 

LONDON (AP)


Hundreds of London taxi drivers have blocked a major intersection in the heart of the city to protest their exclusion from the road lanes dedicated to Olympic traffic.
Drivers in black London cabs blared their horns as they jammed Parliament Square on Tuesday, sending lines of traffic snaking back along surrounding streets.
The cabbies are miffed that they are not allowed into the "Games Lanes" reserved for Olympic athletes, officials and VIPs.
The first lane already opened near Heathrow Airport and the rest start two days before the games, which run from July 27 to Aug. 12.
Jonathan Myers of the United Cabbies union said it's "unacceptable" that cabs were not allowed, adding that "this is a working city and we need to get around and do our job."
Transport for London commissioner Peter Hendy condemned the action.
He told the BBC he had "no sympathy" for the "trumped-up" demonstration.

olympic torch bearers

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A spokesman for TFL said there had been discussions with cab drivers since 2009.
He said they would be able to access some of the special lanes to collect fares, including the nearside Games Lane in Park Lane, central London.
John Mason, director of London Taxi and Private Hire, called the protest "completely irresponsible."
"We strongly urge taxi drivers to ignore calls to join these unnecessary protests and instead show why they are regularly voted the best in the world," Mason told the BBC.
The Metropolitan Police said the planned demonstration affected Whitehall and Trafalgar Square as well as Parliament Square.

Team sports seen as key factor in preventing childhood obesity

Children who play on several sports teams are nearly 40 percent less likely to be obese, according to study by Hood Center for Children and Families



 Kids who play multiple team sports are 40 percent less likely to be obese.

Kids who play multiple team sports are 40 percent less likely to be obese.


Parents who want fit kids shouldn’t make them diet, they should make them play team sports.
New research finds that children who play on several sports teams are nearly 40 percent less likely to be obese.
"Team sport participation had the strongest and most consistent inverse association with weight status," wrote researcher Keith M. Drake, of the Hood Center for Children and Families at Dartmouth in Lebanon, New Hampshire, and colleagues in Pediatrics, in a study published July 16. "Obesity prevention programs should consider strategies to increase team sport participation among all students."
"Adolescents who played on three sports teams or more in the last year were 27 percent less likely to be overweight/obese and 39 percent less likely to be obese compared with adolescents who did not play on any sports teams," write the researchers.

The researchers also found that teens who walked or biked to school more than three days a week had a 33 percent lower risk of obesity than those who took the bus or rode in a car.

In the study, researchers surveyed 1,718 New Hampshire and Vermont high school students and their parents about their daily habits, diets, weight, and physical activity.
Other factors associated with a lower risk of being overweight or obese included extracurricular physical activity and eating fruits and vegetables.

A separate study published this March in the journal Obesity finds that the number one way parents can help an obese child lose weight is to lose weight themselves. In the study, parents who served as role models and shed weight themselves proved to be the most inspiring and motivational method for their own children -- more than making changes to the home food environment or enrolling kids in physical activities, researchers said.

Brennan Boesch, Tigers rally past Angels: AL roundup

Posted: Jul 16, 2012 11:11 PM ET

Last Updated: Jul 16, 2012 11:51 PM ET Brennan Boesch of the Detroit Tigers, left, celebrates with Prince Fielder during the seventh inning of the game against the Los Angeles Angels.Brennan Boesch of the Detroit Tigers, left, celebrates with Prince Fielder during the seventh inning of the game against the Los Angeles Angels. (Leon Halip/Getty Images)

Tigers 8, Angels 6

DETROIT — Brennan Boesch hit a tiebreaking two-run homer in the seventh inning and the Detroit Tigers rallied for an 8-6 victory over the Los Angeles Angels on Monday night.
The Angels led 5-2 after a four-run fifth, but the Tigers chipped away, scoring two runs in the bottom of that inning and three more in the seventh. Delmon Young tied it with a sacrifice fly and Boesch followed with a homer off reliever LaTroy Hawkins (2-2) to make it 7-5.
Octavio Dotel (3-2) got the win in relief. Joaquin Benoit worked the eighth and Jose Valverde pitched the ninth for his 17th save in 21 chances.
Torii Hunter had four hits and drove in three runs for Los Angeles, and Mark Trumbo hit his 25th homer of the season.

Red Sox 5, White Sox 1

BOSTON — Adrian Gonzalez spoiled Kevin Youkilis' return to Fenway Park, hitting a tiebreaking three-run homer in the eighth inning to lift the Boston Red Sox to a 5-1 win over the Chicago White Sox on Monday night.
Boston traded Youkilis on June 24, sending the three-time All-Star and cash to Chicago for utilityman Brent Lillibridge and a minor league pitcher. Youkilis went 3 for 4 with two doubles in his first game back at his former home.
Carl Crawford returned to Boston's lineup after missing the entire season with left elbow and wrist injuries, going 1 for 3 with a walk.

Indians 3, Rays 2

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Zach McAllister shrugged off being struck in his pitching arm by a line drive to finish six solid innings and the Cleveland Indians held on to beat the Tampa Bay Rays 3-2 on Monday night.
McAllister (4-1) appeared to get hit in the right arm above the elbow by Jeff Keppinger's RBI single in the fourth inning. He remained in the game to retire the next six batters and eight of the last nine he faced overall.
Shin-Soo Choo had a RBI double in the third after he had what initially was ruled a home run overturned by instant replay in the first for Cleveland.
The umpires huddled after Rays outfielder B.J. Upton signalled the ball hit off the wall instead of clearing it. Choo was sent back to second base and eventually scored on a passed ball.

Mariners 9, Royals 4

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Casper Wells homered and drove in a career-high five runs, all of them against Jonathan Sanchez, and the Seattle Mariners beat up the Kansas City Royals and their beleaguered starter in a 9-4 victory Monday night.
Justin Smoak also had a two-run homer off Sanchez (1-6), pulled after allowing a season-high seven runs in a season-low 1 1-3 innings. The left-hander who once threw a no-hitter for San Francisco gave up seven hits and a walk before he was yanked to a chorus of boos.
Jason Vargas (9-7) took advantage of the rare output from one of the American League's worst offences. The left-hander gave up homers to Salvador Perez and Billy Butler, but still managed to last six shaky innings and win his second straight game.

Twins 19, Orioles 7

MINNEAPOLIS — Denard Span had three hits and five RBIs plus two highlight-reel catches in centre field to help the Minnesota Twins stop their five-game losing streak and beat the Baltimore Orioles 19-7 on Monday night.
Ben Revere made two remarkable running grabs himself in right field to go with four hits and three RBIs, Joe Mauer homered and drove in two runs and Justin Morneau had four of Minnesota's 20 hits.
Chris Tillman (1-1) gave up seven runs in the first and didn't finish the inning, the shortest appearance by an Orioles starter this season. Six of the runs were unearned, due an untimely two-out error by first baseman Mark Reynolds.
Reynolds hit a three-run homer off Scott Diamond (8-3), but the Twins starter won his third straight decision.

 

Jeremy Lin to Sports Illustrated: ‘Honestly, I preferred New York’


On his way out of New York, Jeremy Lin tells his side of the story. (Getty Images)
(I promise: We're going to talk about other stuff soon. Hang in there.)
We got the New York Knicks' side of the decision not to match the offer sheet that Jeremy Lin signed with the Houston Rockets on Wednesday morning, thanks to tabloid beat man Frank Isola of the New York Daily News. Isola reported that the Knicks declined to bring back the restricted free-agent point guard, in part, because owner James Dolan felt "betrayed" and "deceived" by Lin agreeing to a restructured three-year, $25.1 million deal that would have been much more financially onerous for New York to equal than the four-year, $28.8 million sheet initially floated by the Rockets, which the Knicks said they would match.
Whether or not you think there's any validity to the owner's feelings — and, y'know, I don't — that's the spin coming out of Madison Square Garden. We didn't bring the kid back because the kid's a no-good traitor. Well, we got the no-good traitor's side of the story on Wednesday afternoon, thanks to Pablo S. Torre of Sports Illustrated.
Shortly after the Knicks announced they wouldn't match and Lin officially became a Rocket, Torre spoke with the 23-year-old point guard about where he is, how he got there and where he'd have liked to be: "Honestly, I preferred New York."

Torre's exclusive interview with Lin — whom he profiled in a pair of late February pieces that made Lin one of just three NBA players to appear on back-to-back SI covers — includes some amazing details about Lin's courtship (or lack thereof) by the Knicks.
While it's hard to pick which is the most revelatory, the fact that New York's brass had "spoken to [Lin] and his representatives only once this month" before a brief phone call from general manager Glen Grunwald late Tuesday night to confirm the team's decision and wish him luck seems like a pretty instructive bit of information, especially considering the Knicks had publicly represented that Lin's return was all but assured, with one source suggesting the team would match any offer "up to $1 billion" and head coach Mike Woodson saying Lin was his starting point guard.
It also lays plain Lin's situation at the time that Houston tendered its reconfigured offer sheet: "By this point, Lin had no real idea what the Knicks would do. But there also wasn't much choice: There was all of one offer sheet in front of him to consider." It just so happened it was the one that included a so-called "poison pill" offer that would leave the Knicks in an even hotter circle of luxury-tax hell in 2014-15 than was previously reserved for them thanks to their own machinations. So he signed it, which seems less like deception or betrayal than doing what literally anyone else would do in the same situation.
Lin also flatly, if indirectly, rebuts bombs lobbed by the likes of ESPN's Stephen A. Smith, who claimed the guard has "been all about the money since the day he burst onto Broadway," and Isola, who had called Lin out on the carpet for choosing not to rush back from knee surgery for Game 5 of the Knicks' first-round playoff series against the Miami Heat because he estimated himself at "85 percent."
Lin pretty quickly brushed aside the financial talk — "If I really wanted to, I could have triple-digit endorsements," he told Torre — but he got into the Game 5 question:
"Every single vet on our team that has been in the league longer than five years pulled me aside and told me that I shouldn't play," Lin says. "And I had arguments with them about why I should."
Dolan — who didn't talk to Lin often but had generally been "really nice to me" — wound up expressing support. "I have plans for you in the future," Lin recalls the owner saying. "This is a long-term investment. Don't rush back."
He didn't — and as I wrote then, he shouldn't have — but I'm sure a certain portion of the New York fan base won't ever let him live it down. Doesn't sound like Lin will hold it against them, though:
"I love the New York fans to death," Lin says. "That's the biggest reason why I wanted to return to New York. The way they embraced me, the way they supported us this past season, was better than anything I've ever seen or experienced. I'll go to my grave saying that. What New York did for me was unbelievable. I wanted to play in front of those fans for the rest of my career."
It'll be fascinating to see what Dolan, CAA or whomever else have up their sleeves if they want to paint that guy as a villain. I'm sure someone in the Garden's Photoshopping Lin with a coat made out of puppies as we speak.

Congress debates military sponsorship of sports

By Dustin Long, Special for USA TODAY
A spirited debate in Congress on Wednesday could foreshadow the demise of an amendment intended to ban military sports sponsorship.
By Stew Milne, US Presswire
A recorded vote is expected to take place this evening. A voice vote indicated that those opposed were in the majority.
Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga, introduced an amendment that would eliminate $72.3 million in the Department of Defense Appropriations Act marked for professional sports sponsorships in the military.
Among the programs targeted was the National Guard's sponsorship of Dale Earnhardt Jr. in NASCAR. The National Guard is spending $26 million on its NASCAR program this fiscal year.
Kingston called such programs ineffective in gaining recruits. He also noted the demographic of NASCAR fans featured 69% who were 35 and older, saying, "So when (the National Guard) goes and they're pushing their advertising at NASCAR, nearly 70% of the people aren't eligible.''
NASCAR stated that 10% of its fans are between the ages of 18-24 and that 17% are between 25-34.
Rep. Betty McCollum, co-sponsor of the amendment, said: "I think it will be just irresponsible and outrageous that Congress would continue to borrow money from China to pay for one race car driver's team.''
Seven representatives spoke to oppose the measure, deriding Congress's micro-managing on how the military seeks recruits.
Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-NC, said: "Let's face it, when we start micro-managing advertising programs to try to recruit National Guard members, we've sort of slipped into the absurd.''
Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Ga., also spoke against the measure.
"A vote for this amendment is a vote against the effectiveness of our military,'' he said.
McCollum offered two similar amendments last year; both were defeated.
An amendment existed in the Department of Defense Appropriations Act but it was struck Wednesday night without a vote through procedural rules.
See photos of: Congress, Dale Earnhardt Jr