Archive for June 16th, 2009

KD’s NBA Finals roundup

The Finals are over, the city of Orlando has kindly asked me to leave, and I actually slept for more than three hours last night. Still, I have some catching up to do. So while I attempt that, in case you missed it, here’s a roundup of some of the things we came up with while following the Lakers and Magic in Los Angeles, and Orlando.

Behind the Box Scores

*BtB, where we have a champion
*BtB, where the Lakers put the hammer down
*BtB, where the Magic had something to say
*BtB, where the Magic wouldn’t go away
*BtB, where the Laker were dominant

Columns

*Phil, at ease
*Defining Pau Gasol’s martyrdom
*The Kings are building around Paul Westphal
*Finally, Orlando’s time
*Blake Griffin works out for the Clippers … and others
*The Magic, and ‘anything can happen
*Lose the muzzle, Jeff Van Gundy

Gamers

*Lakers pull away from Magic, win championship in five games
*Lakers win 2009 NBA championship
*Lakers take hold of series, down Magic in overtime
*Magic strike back, take Game 3
*Lakers escape with overtime win in Game 2
*Bryant strikes first, Lakers take Game 1

Press conference roundups

*Game 5 pre-game presser roundup
*Saturday’s media availability roundup
*Off day notes, Bobcats broke, ‘Zo, Whitlock go off
*Stan Van Gundy: NCAA ‘worst organization going’
*Game 3 coaching presser reaction
*Practice thoughts: Lakers confident, Magic … confident?
*David Stern’s State of the NBA press conference
*Dissecting the coaching pressers

Previews

*BDL’s Game 5 preview
*BDL’s Game 4 preview
*BDL’s Game 3 preview
*Game 2 preview, Magic on the rebound?
*Watch ‘em and weep: NBA Finals, Game 1
*Finals pick? Lakers in six
*Five ways for the Lakers to win it all
*Five ways for the Magic to win it all

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umpire ejects entire crowd during baseball game

An umpire emptied the stands at a high school baseball game, ejecting the entire crowd of more than 100 fans for being unruly.

Umpire Don Briggs said he had no problem with any of the student athletes during Thursday’s game between Winfield-Mount Union and West Burlington.

He said he had to take action because fans were being unruly, yelling and arguing.

However, West Burlington Superintendent James Sleister said he didn’t see any unusual behavior and said he thought the umpire overreacted.

The game resumed after a 40-minute delay. West Burlington won 12-11.

The umpire called police as a precaution. West Burlington police officer Al Waterman says there were no arrests.

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Letterman apologizes again for ‘bad’ Palin joke

David Letterman said his joke about Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s daughter was a lousy joke, no matter how you cut it, and he’s sorry.

But the late-night host insisted that what’s got people really riled is the misconception over which Palin daughter the joke was about.

On Monday’s edition of “Late Show,” Letterman explained that the risque joke thought by some to have targeted Palin’s underage daughter, Willow, was actually referring to 18-year-old daughter Bristol. The name of the daughter wasn’t mentioned in the joke, which was part of Letterman’s monologue on last Monday’s show.
It was “a coarse joke,” “a bad joke,” Letterman told viewers. “But I never thought it was (about) anybody other than the older daughter, and before the show, I checked to make sure, in fact, that she is of legal age, 18.”

“The joke, really, in and of itself, can’t be defended,” he declared.

Even so, the ongoing outcry, led by Palin and her husband, Todd, has centered on Letterman intending to make a joke about the Palins’ 14-year-old daughter having sex with a Yankees baseball player.

Todd Palin issued a statement last week that said “any ‘jokes’ about raping my 14-year-old are despicable.”

And Sarah Palin charged Letterman with “sexually perverted comments made by a 62-year-old male celebrity.”

On Monday’s show, Letterman said, “I’m wondering, ‘Well, what can I do to help people understand that I would never make a joke like this?’ I’ve never made jokes like this, as long as we’ve been on the air, 30 long years.”

If that’s the misconception — that the joke was aimed at a 14-year-old — he understands why people are upset, he said. “I would be upset myself.” Letterman has said from the beginning that he thought the Palin daughter who attended the Yankee game was Bristol.

“I feel that I need to do the right thing here and apologize for having told that joke,” he said. “It’s not your fault that it was misunderstood, it’s my fault that it was misunderstood.”

He apologized to both daughters, “and also to the Governor and her family and everybody else who was outraged by the joke,” he said as the studio audience applauded. “I’m sorry about it, and I’ll try to do better in the future.”

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Letterman apologizes again for ‘bad’ Palin joke

David Letterman said his joke about Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s daughter was a lousy joke, no matter how you cut it, and he’s sorry.

But the late-night host insisted that what’s got people really riled is the misconception over which Palin daughter the joke was about.

On Monday’s edition of “Late Show,” Letterman explained that the risque joke thought by some to have targeted Palin’s underage daughter, Willow, was actually referring to 18-year-old daughter Bristol. The name of the daughter wasn’t mentioned in the joke, which was part of Letterman’s monologue on last Monday’s show.
It was “a coarse joke,” “a bad joke,” Letterman told viewers. “But I never thought it was (about) anybody other than the older daughter, and before the show, I checked to make sure, in fact, that she is of legal age, 18.”

“The joke, really, in and of itself, can’t be defended,” he declared.

Even so, the ongoing outcry, led by Palin and her husband, Todd, has centered on Letterman intending to make a joke about the Palins’ 14-year-old daughter having sex with a Yankees baseball player.

Todd Palin issued a statement last week that said “any ‘jokes’ about raping my 14-year-old are despicable.”

And Sarah Palin charged Letterman with “sexually perverted comments made by a 62-year-old male celebrity.”

On Monday’s show, Letterman said, “I’m wondering, ‘Well, what can I do to help people understand that I would never make a joke like this?’ I’ve never made jokes like this, as long as we’ve been on the air, 30 long years.”

If that’s the misconception — that the joke was aimed at a 14-year-old — he understands why people are upset, he said. “I would be upset myself.” Letterman has said from the beginning that he thought the Palin daughter who attended the Yankee game was Bristol.

“I feel that I need to do the right thing here and apologize for having told that joke,” he said. “It’s not your fault that it was misunderstood, it’s my fault that it was misunderstood.”

He apologized to both daughters, “and also to the Governor and her family and everybody else who was outraged by the joke,” he said as the studio audience applauded. “I’m sorry about it, and I’ll try to do better in the future.”

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May housing construction jumps by 17.2 percent

Construction of new homes jumped in May by the largest amount in three months, an encouraging sign that the nation’s deep housing recession was beginning to bottom out.

The Commerce Department said Tuesday that construction of new homes and apartments jumped 17.2 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 532,000 units. That was better than the 500,000-unit pace that economists had expected and came after construction fell in April to a record low of 454,000 units.

In another encouraging sign, applications for building permits, seen as a good indicator of future activity, rose 4 percent in May to an annual rate of 518,000 units.

The better-than-expected rebound in construction was the latest sign that the prolonged slump in housing is coming to an end, which would be good news for the broader economy.

The current recession — the longest since the Great Depression — was triggered by a collapse in the housing market that led to soaring loan losses and a banking system crisis. A healthy home market is needed to support an economic recovery.

President Barack Obama is scheduled to unveil on Wednesday the administration’s plan to overhaul financial regulation in an effort to crack down on the lending abuses that triggered the most severe upheaval in the nation’s financial system in seven decades.

Even with the encouraging news, analysts don’t expect a quick rebound in housing, since the economy is still shedding jobs and home prices are falling in many places, making people hesitant to commit to buying a new home.

Many economists say home construction likely will stop falling in the current quarter but any sustained rebound isn’t expected to take hold until next spring. That’s partly due to the huge overhang of unsold homes and a record wave of mortgage foreclosures dumping more unsold homes on the market.

With foreclosures and other distressed properties for sale at deep discounts, builders often can’t compete. Rather than launching new developments, they are waiting for signs of a broader recovery. Many economists believe that home prices will keep falling until next spring and that sales won’t start to show significant gains until the summer of 2010.

The 17.2 percent rise in housing construction for May still left activity 45.2 percent below where it was a year ago.

The jump reflected a 7.5 percent rise in construction of single-family homes, the third consecutive increase in this critical segment of the market.

Construction of multifamily units rose 61.7 percent in May to an annual rate of 131,000 units. This volatile part of the market plunged 49.4 percent in April.

Construction rose nationwide led by a 28.6 percent surge in the West. Construction rose 6.8 percent in the South and 11.1 percent in the Midwest. The Northeast had the smallest gain of 2 percent in May.

The National Association of Home Builders said Monday its housing market index slipped by one point in June, reflecting many builders’ uncertainty about when their business prospects might improve. The Washington-based trade association said the index fell to 15. It was the first decline since January, when the index dropped to a record low of 8.

That report was “proof that the rise in U.S. mortgage rates lately is dampening activity,” Jennifer Lee, an economist with BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a research note.

Earlier this month, major builders Toll Brothers Inc. and Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. reported smaller quarterly losses, rosier sales trends and more prospective buyers visiting model homes. Industry executives, however, say the recession and fear of job losses are keeping many would-be homebuyers on the fence.

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Brad Pitt, family give $1M to Missouri hospital (AP)

Brad Pitt and his siblings have given $1 million to help a Missouri hospital open a new pediatric cancer center that will be named for their mother.

Pitt and his siblings’ families, Doug and Lisa Pitt and Rob and Julie Neal, gave the money to St. John’s Hospital in Springfield, Mo., on Saturday in honor of their mother’s passion for children’s issues.

The hospital is opening the Jane Pitt Pediatric Cancer Center this summer in the town where Pitt and his siblings grew up. The donation will pay to hire the only pediatric oncologist and hematologist in the southwest Missouri region.

The new center will make St. John’s one of six affiliates of St. Jude’s Children’s Research in Memphis, Tenn., meaning the center will be able to participate St. Jude’s clinic research trials.

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Jessica Alba won’t face vandalism charges (AP)

Police have decided against pursuing a criminal vandalism case against Jessica Alba over some posters that were plastered around downtown Oklahoma City.

Police Sgt. Gary Knight said none of the owners of property on which the posters were placed wanted to press charges against Alba, who has apologized.

Police never interviewed the 28-year-old co-star of the “Fantastic Four” movies, “Sin City and “Good Luck Chuck.” She is in Oklahoma City shooting a movie, “The Killer Inside Me.”

Police found the posters — aimed at raising awareness about sharks’ declining numbers — glued to a downtown bridge, utility boxes and a billboard for the United Way charity.

Knight said it is typical not to pursue vandalism charges when property owners don’t want to prosecute.

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At U.S. Colleges, Binge Drinking Is on the Rise

Binge drinking among American college students is on the rise, along with its consequences of drunk driving and drinking-related deaths, U.S. health officials report.

In fact, drinking-related deaths among students aged 18 to 24 years have increased steadily from 1,440 a year in 1998 to 1,825 in 2005, according to a report from the U.S. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Binge drinking also increased during this time, with the proportion of students who said they’d binged on alcohol in the past month going up from 42 to 45 percent.

The proportion of students who admitted to driving under the influence of alcohol rose from about 26 to 29 percent, according to the report.

“Unfortunately, what we see is the proportions of college students who engage in binge drinking has increased,” said lead researcher Ralph Hingson, director of the institute’s division of epidemiology and prevention research.

“There’s a whole culture that needs to be changed around drinking and driving under the influence among young people in the United States,” he said. Adding to the problem is that alcohol is cheap and many alcohol beverage makers target high school and college students, Hingson said.

Often the problem begins before college. “The younger people are when they first become intoxicated,” he said, “the greater the likelihood that when they are in college they will meet alcohol-dependence criteria: that they will drive after drinking; that they will ride with drinking drivers; they will be injured under the influence of alcohol; or they will have unplanned and unprotected sex after drinking.”

To reach their conclusions, Hingson’s team used information from government databases and national surveys on alcohol use. Their report appears in a supplement to the July issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.

Not only are the people who binge drink putting themselves at risk, but their drinking can have serious consequences for others, Hingson said.

“We estimate there are probably 700,000 students who are assaulted each year by a drinking college student and 100,000 sexual assaults that are linked to college drinking,” he said. “Plus half of the drinking-related traffic deaths among college students are people other than the drinking driver.”

Dr. David L. Katz, director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine, said that to reverse the trends, society needs to take drinking among college students more seriously.

“Options for bad judgment available to a college student are determined by society, and ours is decidedly ambivalent about alcohol,” Katz said. “Drinking to excess is often given favorable treatment in the media, and in social groups.”

To change these trends, young people drinking to excess will need to be discouraged by the very people whose opinions matter most to them — friends in their own peer group, Katz said.

“For this to occur, our society must both render and convey a clearer verdict opposing this casual form of alcohol abuse,” he said.

Hingson said that a number of interventions have been shown to work, including counseling high-risk drinkers, raising the price of alcohol, and getting colleges, community health departments and police to work together on the problem.

Yet some college presidents think there should be a debate about lowering the drinking age, Hingson noted. “But, when we look at the data, binge drinking and driving is mostly among 21- to 24-year-olds,” he said. “It’s not among the 18- to 20-year-old group,” he said.

“It appears to me that some colleges are not implementing the interventions, where we’ve got evidence that they work,” Hingson said. “The challenge for us is to make sure colleges understand what things are working. We have to get them to expand screening and interventions to reach wider populations of students and work with communities.”

Dr. Marc Galanter, director of the division of alcoholism and drug abuse in the psychiatry department at the New York University School of Medicine, said that binge drinking among college students has far-reaching effects for the students.

“The heavy drinking during college not only results in severe consequences at that time, [but] it also primes college students for later alcohol addiction,” Galanter said. “Heavier drink at this age is a predictor of later alcoholism and is likely a major causative factor.”

And Hingson said that efforts akin to what has been done to reduce smoking are needed to deal with the drinking problem among young people.

“We as a society have a collective responsibility to try and change this culture of drinking at colleges and among young people,” he said.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on alcohol consumption.

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Report: 2 Americans illegally crossed into NKorea

Two American journalists sentenced in Pyongyang last week to 12 years’ hard labor were detained in North Korean territory after crossing into the country illegally, state-run media said Tuesday, providing the first details about the circumstances of their arrest.

Laura Ling and Euna Lee of Current TV were taken into custody on the North Korean banks of the Tumen River after crossing over from China illegally three months ago, the official Korean Central News Agency said.

The women, tried in North Korea’s highest court earlier this month, “admitted and accepted” their punishment of 12 years’ hard labor for committing politically motivated “criminal acts,” the report said.

“The accused admitted that what they did were criminal acts committed, prompted by the political motive to isolate and stifle the socialist system of the DPRK by faking up moving images aimed at falsifying its human rights performance and hurling slanders and calumnies at it,” it said.

The DPRK refers to North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The women were detained March 17 at a time of rising tensions between the North and the United States over the communist nation’s nuclear and missile programs. Weeks earlier, North Korea had announced its intention to send a satellite into space aboard a long-range rocket — a launch Washington called a cover for a test of a long-range missile designed to strike the U.S.

North Korea went ahead with the rocket launch in early April, and in an increasingly brazen show of defiance, conducted a nuclear test on May 25 and fired off a series of short-range missile in the days before the journalists’ June 4 trial.

The women’s families claim Lee, 36, and Ling, 32, had no intention of crossing into North Korea, and many feared they would become political pawns in any negotiations between Washington and Pyongyang. The families have pleaded for leniency and their release on humanitarian grounds.

The details about the case involving the two women working for a San Francisco-based media venture founded by former Vice President Al Gore were released by state media just hours before President Barack Obama was to sit down at the White House with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak.

The two leaders, whose countries fought together against the North during the 1950-53 Korean War, are expected to discuss North Korea and make a strong show of unity at their summit Tuesday in Washington

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Iran bars foreign media from reporting on streets

Iranian authorities are restricting all journalists working for foreign media from firsthand reporting on the streets.

The rules cover all journalists, including Iranians working for foreign media. It blocks images and eyewitness descriptions of the protests and violence that has followed last week’s disputed elections.

The order issued Tuesday limits journalists for foreign media to work only from their offices, conducting telephone interviews and monitoring official sources such as state television.

It comes as foreign reporters in Iran to cover the elections began leaving the country. Iranian officials say they will not extend their visas.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran’s Islamic leadership is prepared to conduct a limited recount of disputed presidential elections, a spokesman said Tuesday, drawing the ruling clerics deeper into a showdown that began with street clashes and quickly moved to the highest levels of power.

The announcement comes after Iran’s state radio reported earlier Tuesday that seven people were killed during clashes in the Iranian capital the previous day — the first official confirmation of deaths linked to the wave of protests and street battles following last week’s disputed election.

The offer by the Guardian Council for a targeted tally — from specific voting sites where fraud has been alleged — is the first direct action by authorities to address claims of irregularities by opponents of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. But it also offers further hints that the non-elected ruling clerics are seeking to calm the protest anger and keep the dissent from spreading into their rarified world.

It was not immediately clear when such a count could begin or how many voting sites would be included. The recount also falls short of calls by reformist challenger Mir Hossein Mousavi to completely annul Friday’s vote, which he says was marred by fraud and robbed him of victory.

Hundreds of thousands of Mousavi’s backers poured through Tehran on Monday in a massive show of unity — that ended in bloodshed when seven people were killed in a confrontation with pro-regime militiamen.

The Iranian state radio report said the deaths occurred during an “unauthorized gathering” at a mass rally after protesters “tried to attack a military location.” It gave no further details, but it was a clear reference to crowds who came under gunfire Monday after trying to storm a compound for volunteer militia linked to Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard.

Any widening of protests by the opposition could begin to challenge the ruling clerics and the true centers of power in Iran.

Mousavi, who served as prime minister in the 1980s, has formally laid out his allegations in a letter to the Guardian Council and in talks with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say in all critical matters and policies.

Unlike past student-led demonstrations against the Islamic establishment, Mousavi has the ability to press his case with the highest levels and could gain powerful allies. Some influential clerics have expressed concern about possible election irregularities and a fierce critic of Mousavi, former President Hashemi Rafsanjani, is part of the ruling establishment.

A spokesman for the Guardian Council, Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei, was quoted on state television as saying the recount would be limited to voting sites where candidates claim irregularities took place. There was no immediate word from Mousavi on the announcement, but he said Monday he was not hopeful that the council would address his charges because he believes they are not neutral and have already indicated support for Ahmadinejad.

The 12-member Guardian Council includes clerics and experts in Islamic law. Its role includes certifying election results. Kadkhodaei did not rule out the possibility of canceling the results, saying that is within the council’s powers. However, nullifying an election would be an unprecedented step. The council is closely allied to Khamenei, who ordered an examination into the fraud allegations although he had initially welcomed Ahmadinejad’s victory.

Claims of voting irregularities went to the council after Ahmadinejad’s upset victory in 2005, but there was no official word on the outcome of the inquiry, and the vote stood.

The council must certify ballot results and also has the apparent authority to nullify an election. The council also serves as a constitutional watchdog and vets candidates running in elections.

The shootings came at the end of the rally by opponents of Ahmadinejad who defied an official ban to march through the city.

The deaths also raise the prospect of further defiance from crowds claiming that Mousavi was the rightful election winner. The protest movement has shown no signs of easing with Mousavi’s backers reportedly planning to gather in a Tehran square later Tuesday where pro-Ahmadinejad crowd also have called a rally to demand punishment of “rioters.”

In a message posted on his Web site, Mousavi said he will not attend the rally and asked his supporters to “not fall in the trap of street riots” and “exercise self-restraint.”

The deaths Monday occurred on the edge of Tehran’s Azadi Square. An Associated Press photographer saw gunmen, standing on a roof, opening fire on a group of demonstrators who tried to storm the militia compound.

Angry men showed their bloody palms after cradling the dead and wounded who had been part of a crowd that stretched more than five miles (nearly 10 kilometers).

The march also marked Mousavi’s first public appearance since shortly after the election. He said he was willing to “pay any price” in his demands to overturn the election results.

Ahmadinejad, meanwhile, arrived in Russia on Tuesday to attend a summit.

A Web site run by Iran’s former reformist vice president, Mohammad Ali Abtahi, said he had been arrested by security officers, but provided no further details. Abtahi’s Web site, popular among the youth, has reported extensively on the alleged vote fraud.

Saeed Hajjarian, a prominent reformist, has also been detained, Hajjarian’s wife, Vajiheh Masousi, told The AP Tuesday. Hajjarian is a close aide of former reformist President Mohammad Khatami.

The huge rally Monday — and smaller protests around the country — display the resolve of Mousavi’s backers and have pushed Iran’s Islamic establishment into attempts to cool the tensions after days of unrest.

The death toll reported Tuesday could be a further rallying point in a culture that venerates martyrs and often marks their death with memorials. One of Mousavi’s Web sites said a student protester was killed early Monday in clashes in Shiraz in southern Iran but there was no independent confirmation of the report.

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