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Screenshot of a computer-generated prototype of a drone armed with a machine gun.

In April 2012, Rand Paul’s nightmare seemingly came true nearly a year before he’d even gotten the chance to dream it. Four people were having a dinner party and playing cards when all of a sudden, a robotic plane showed up outside their window and interrupted their game with a barrage of bullets.

[PHOTOS: The Expansion of the Drone]

For 13 hours on the Senate floor this March, Paul railed on the government’s willingness to use armed drones on American civilians, even suggesting that the government could use an unmanned plane to kill an American eating dinner with his family. But he never mentioned the possibility that the person flying the drone could be a neighbor.

That idea sounds farfetched, but some legal scholars think that Second Amendment rights might extend to robotic arms, including drones outfitted with weapons.

Fortunately, the poor card players that went down in a hail of drone-borne gunfire last year was a family of prop dummies, and the bullets were computer generated. The video was designed to promote the release of Call of Duty Black Ops 2, where players can control an unmanned attack drone. But the nation collectively freaked out when Kyle Myers, known online for blowing stuff up with big guns, posted video of that “Prototype Quadrotor with Machine Gun” on YouTube. It has since been viewed more than 18 million times.

But soon, the technology to arm your own personal drone might become a reality.

Most commercially-available drones, for the time being, aren’t strong enough to carry a firearm, and experts say the recoil from firing most types of guns would likely down a small drone. But as technology improves and guns with little- or no-recoil become more commonplace, armed drones could become an issue.

In Texas, for instance, the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department floated the idea of arming drones with a no-recoil shotgun that shoots rubber bullets and tear gas dispensers. In other YouTube videos, hobbyists claim to have created homemade armed drones.

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The Next Gun Debate? Armed Drones Could Be Protected By the Second Amendment

May 18, 2013 – Frontier League (FL) Florence Freedom The Freedom bats were silent once again in a 4-1 loss to River City in the finale of a three-game season-opening series at University of Cincinnati Medical Center Stadium.

Rascals starting pitcher Justin Sarratt (W, 1-0) went six innings of one-hit shutout ball to earn his first win of the season. Sarratt held the Freedom hitless through three innings and allowed just two walks.

The game was halted for 55 minutes in the top of the fifth inning due to rain, and once the game resumed, the Rascals bats went to work. The Rascals worked back-to-back walks off of Freedom starter Brandon Mathes (L, 0-1) to open up the sixth inning.

That would be all for Mathes who allowed two runs on three hits in five-plus inning of work. Corey Deighan would enter the game for Florence and would promptly give up a single to centerfielder Evan Crawford to load the bases. Second baseman Andy Scott would then break the scoreless tie with a two-run double. The rascals would score another run one batter later on an RBI groundout by DH Steve Carrillo and would tack on one more later in the sixth on an error.

That would be all the offense the Rascals would need as they allowed just one run to the Freedom, on an eighth inning bases-loaded passed ball by catcher Anthony Foulk. Gabe Shaw (S, 1) would enter with runners on first and second and end the Freedom threat. Shaw would go on to pitch a perfect ninth to record his first save of the season.

The Freedom now have three off days before they are back in action at UCMC Stadium this Wednesday when they take on the Schaumburg Boomers in a double header. First pitch of game one is at 5:45 with game two starting 30 minutes following the conclusion of game one. Gates open at 4:45. Tickets are available at the UCMC Stadium box office or by calling (859) 594-HITS.

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Freedom Bats Silent in 4-1 Loss to Rascals in Series Finale



Portal 2 – E06: For Freedom
Casual playthrough of Portal 2. Again, no commentary, because really all I'm doing is just recording myself play through the game without any sort of require…

By: infrasparker

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Portal 2 – E06: For Freedom – Video

May 17, 2013 – Frontier League (FL) Florence Freedom After an Opening Night rout of the River City Rascals last night, the Florence Freedom bats went quiet in a 5-1 loss to the Rascals in game two of a three game series at University of Cincinnati Medical Center Stadium.

River City Starter Tommy Mendoza (W, 1-0) threw six innings of five-hit, one-run ball and got just enough production from his lineup to beat the Freedom and even the series at a game each.

River City wasted no time getting on the scoreboard as they put up two runs in the top of the first inning. Rascals left fielder Eric Williams led off the game with a walk followed up two batters later with another free pass to first baseman Jason Taylor. With DH Phil Wunderlich at the plate, the Rascals attempted a double steal. The throw from Freedom catcher Jimmy Jacquot went into centerfield allowing Williams to score. Wunderlich then grounded out to second base to score Taylor.

The Freedom cut the lead in half in the bottom of the first inning on an RBI single by DH Byron Wiley, scoring second baseman Eric Groff.

With one out in the top of the fourth, Rascals center fielder Evan Crawford doubled to left field, stole third and then scored on a sacrifice fly from second baseman Andy Scott to give the Rascals a 3-1 lead.

Freedom Starting Pitcher Justice French (L, 0-1) went 5 1/3 innings in his Florence debut, surrendering three runs, but only two earned.

River City would add another run in the seventh on a two-out throwing error by Freedom shortstop Junior Arrojo and would add one more in the top of the ninth on a wild pitch by Freedom reliever Jason Wilson. None of River City’s five runs came on base hits.

The Freedom and Rascals meet again tomorrow night for the rubber match of this three-game season opening series. First pitch is 6:05 at UCMC Stadium, gates open at 5:05. Tickets are available at the UCMC Stadium box office or by phone at (859) 594-HITS.

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Freedom Bats Quieted in 5-1 Loss to River City

May 16, 2013 – Frontier League (FL) Florence Freedom The Florence Freedom offense exploded for seven runs in the sixth inning to roll past the River City Rascals 12-6 on Opening Night at UC Medical Center Stadium.

The Rascals opened the scoring in the top of the first inning with a two-run triple by centerfielder Evan Crawford to take a 2-0 lead. The Freedom responded with two runs of their own in the bottom of the first on a two-run throwing error by River City second baseman Will Block.

The game stayed tied until the bottom of the fourth inning when Kyle Bluestein cranked a two-run home run off of River City starting pitcher Casey Barnes into the Rascals bullpen behind the left field wall to give the Freedom a 4-2 lead after four innings.

But the Rascals weren’t finished scoring yet. Rascals catcher Andrew Edge led off the top of the sixth inning with a walk. Shortstop Bo Cuthbertson was hit by Freedom starter Brent Choban. It would be Choban’s last batter as he gave way to Daniel DeSimone. DeSimone (W, 1-0) then gave up a two out double to Rascals DH Jason Taylor to tie the game at four.

From then on out it would be all Freedom. They sent 10 men to the plate in the bottom of the sixth. DH Byron Wiley, Kyle Bluestein, first baseman Bo Folkinga and second baseman Eric Groff all had RBI hits off of Rascals right-hander Cameron Bayne (L, (0-1), but the big blow came off the bat of left fielder David Harris, who hit a 2-run home run to put the Freedom up 11-4 after six innings.

The Freedom would tack on another run in the seventh with a solo home run off the bat of catcher Jimmy Jacquot. River City would score one run in the eighth and one more in the ninth, but the Freedom bullpen would hold the lead and close out a 12-6 win on Opening Night.

The Freedom and Rascals meet again tomorrow night for game two of three in this season opening series. First pitch is 6:35 at UC Medical Center Stadium. Tickets are available at the UC Medical Center Stadium box office or by phone at (859) 594-HITS.

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Freedom Offense Explodes in 12-6 Opening Night Win over River City



Kingdom Hearts – HD 1.5 ReMIX [JPN] [KHRe:CoM Part 12] [Destiny Islands]
Want to see this game but without commentary and battles that are super amazing? Check Everglow! Equivalent Vids https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDwqHwrrdZw …

By: wariorcamicase

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Kingdom Hearts – HD 1.5 ReMIX [JPN] [KHRe:CoM Part 12] [Destiny Islands] – Video

From Liberty athletics:

LYNCHBURG, Va. After Duke scored three runs in the top of the eighth to take a 3-2 lead, the Liberty Flames answered with two in the bottom of the inning for a 4-3 victory over the Blue Devils, Sunday afternoon at the Liberty Baseball Stadium.

Liberty left fielder Nick Lacik used a 12-pitch at bat to draw a walk to open the home half of the eighth and moved to second on a single through the left side of the infield by center fielder Ryan Cordell. Two batters later, Duke first baseman Chris Marconcini’s errant throw in an attempt to retire Cordell at second went into the outfield, allowing Lacik to score and tie the game at 3-3.

Shortstop Dalton Britt was then intentionally walked to load the bases with Flames. Third baseman Jake Kimble followed with a well-executed squeeze play to plate Cordell and give Liberty what proved to be the final score of 4-3.

The Flames move to 27-21 on the season. Liberty has won five out of its last six games. Duke falls to 25-22. It was the first meeting between the two schools on the diamond since 2010.

After a scoreless first four innings, the Flames plated two runs in the fifth for a 2-0 advantage. Outfielder Ashton Perritt beat out an infield single and second baseman Bryan Anderud singled to begin the frame. Catcher Trey Wimmer followed with a single to score Perritt and give Liberty a 1-0 lead. The next batter, Danny Grauer, then lifted a sacrifice fly to bring home Aanderud for a 2-0 edge.

Meanwhile, Liberty right-handers Josh Richardson and Brooks Roy kept the Blue Devils in check, combining to allowed only four hits through the first seven innings.

However, in the top of the eighth, Duke broke through, benefiting from a Liberty error, for three runs. After Roy walked second baseman Anthony Perez to lead off the inning, Perritt came on to pitch for the Flames, promptly retiring the next two Blue Devils.

With two outs, Marconcini reached on a fielding error by Liberty’s Britt to keep the frame alive. Designated hitter Aaron Cohn was then hit by a pitch to load the bases. Center fielder Grant McCabe followed with a two-run single, knotting the game at 2-2. McCabe and pinch runner David Perkins then pulled off a double steal, scoring Perkins for a 3-2 advantage and setting up the Liberty eighth.

In the top of the ninth, Perritt retired the Blue Devils in order, sealing the 4-3 win.

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Liberty Wins, Virginia Tech Loses on the Diamond



Boston Marathon Joggers “Illuminati Card Game Foretold Bombings”
No one ever suspects a harmless jogger is written on a Illuminati Card Game.

By: Reptilian Resistance

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Boston Marathon Joggers "Illuminati Card Game Foretold Bombings" – Video

Wow. Just wow. I wont lie about this. I am completely floored that this kickstarter has raised so much. Its original goal was 14,000$. It reached that goal in 12 hours and have been blowing through its stretch goals. It has currently broke its fourth stretch goal at 40,000$.

Posthuman Studios have rightly earned all the cash fans are throwing at them. Not only do they release quality books, but they honestly care about their game. Every single question thats been asked in the comment section of the kickstarter was answered within an hour, sometimes even MINUTES of the question being asked.

Eclipse Phase is truly a unique world for a science fiction setting. Or I guess the better term would be worlds since every one of the planets in our solar system becomes populated by mankind. There are the Quartz morphs on Venuss surface mining and terraforming. People with wings flying on earths moon. Hyper intelligent dolphins and whales in the oceans of Europa studying alien coral reefs. Even the sun has been populated at this point, granted it is still a brutal environment.

Even if you are only now hearing about Posthuman studios and Eclipse Phase, go check them out. Pledge 1$ and then go check out the EP rulebooks that the studio have released FOR FREE online. I am confident that after seeing the world they have made you will up that pledge. If I am wrong and you arent interested then simply cancel the pledge.

Transhuman Kickstarter

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Transhuman Kickstarter Breaks Fourth Stretch Goal | Cardboard …

GLEN DANIEL Jake Lacek looked no different in the seventh inning than he did the rest of the game. But when first baseman Dylan Keel caught the ball to complete a game-ending double play, Laceks reaction proved he knew exactly what was going on.

Thats a no-hitter! Lacek exclaimed, giving a high-five to Liberty head coach J.J. Tabor after his 1-0 win over PikeView Tuesday in Glen Daniel.

Lacek, who threw 91 pitches, faced only two batters over the minimum. He struck out five, walked two and hit a batter, but got help from his defense throughout the game.

As the team congratulated Lacek, someone had to tell his big brother, Joey, what had happened.

It was? Joey said. Hey, my brother pitched a no-hitter!

Jake now has one up on his brother. Joey, who has signed to play at Concord, has never thrown a no-hitter.

No, Im not much of a pitcher, Joey said, smiling. I had no idea. He pitched a heck of a game. Im happy for him. Hes only a sophomore so that is a big accomplishment for him. Hopefully there are many more big things to come. Being his big brother, I was elated for him. Its really exciting.

Jake wasnt aware of the situation until Tabor actually told him before he took the mound for the seventh.

No, not at all, Jake said when asked if he felt pressure after Tabor spilled the beans. I just went crazy after I threw it. (I threw) my fastball for strikes, and they were fouling off a lot, giving me more strikes. So that was working.

Hes always had good stuff, but I thought he did a good job of pitching today, Tabor said. Every time he needed a big pitch, he made it.

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Liberty’s Jake Lacek no-hits PikeView

With the Battlefield players mustache experiment earlier in the season a bit of a non-starter the Bobcats had more scruff than fluff junior left-hander Joe Williams has decided to see how long he can grow a curl out of the back of his cap.

Hes looking like the guy from Grease, junior catcher Nick Feight said.

Hey, if Williams, an effective pitcher up from last years junior varsity, keeps pitching like he did Friday night in a 5-3 win at Freedom-South Riding, the Bobcats will let him wear his hair however he wants with minimal razzing.

Williams went the distance, striking out five and walking none while relying on his trusty curveball. He also threw out a runner at home on a bunt attempt for the first out of the fourth inning after the first two Eagles had reached base.

Feight hollered Four! and Williams fielded the ball and fired home.

Play of the game right there, Williams said. They had all the momentum going up there and we just stole it from them on that play.

Battlefields win completed a regular season sweep in the series and enabled the Bobcats (14-2, 6-1) to pad its lead over Patriot (11-3, 4-2) and Freedom (11-3, 4-3) in the Virginia AAA Cedar Run District.

Burned by the bunt in past games against Freedom, Battlefield emphasized bunt defense in practice this week. The Bobcats were plenty opportunistic on the bases themselves, taking advantage of four walks, four errors, a wild pitch, two sacrifice bunts, a sacrifice fly and another flyout that moved a runner from second to third.

Three of the Freedom errors came in the sixth, when Battlefield scored three runs to stretch the lead to 5-1. Freedom senior ace Zach Newell left the mound that inning after the first two batters, junior Cameron Skaff and senior Daniel Tavenner, banged out hits, the latter an RBI triple.

Offensively when you get up, it kind of minimizes the things that they can do, Battlefield Coach Jay Burkhart said.

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Joe Williams pitches Battlefield baseball past Freedom-South Riding

Whip out your wallets everyone. The much awaited Kickstarter for the Eclipse Phase Player guidebook has just begun and already they are halfway funded. [NOTE: 12 hours after starting, it has reached its goal and is close to reaching its second stretch goal. It's clear people love this game and want this book badly] If you play Eclipse Phase then you owe it to yourself to throw money at this. Character creation is the most important aspect of this game world and it will have more than just rules on how to build them, it will have tons of additional morphs and generation options. Creating a stat-ed NPC will no longer be a slog, and new players will find it much easier to build the character they want to build.

Transhuman Kickstarter

Go. Throw money at them. Do it now. I threw 100$ at them but you could send them only 1$ if thats all you got.

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The Transhuman Kickstarter has Started | Cardboard Castle

Apr 142013



HvK Trials | Slow and Steady!
Website: http://smokacola.com Twitch: http://twitch.smokacola.com Twitter: http://twitter.smokacola.com [Video Information] Loving this game, and I can tell …

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HvK Trials | Slow and Steady! – Video



STARCRAFT 2: 1v1 VERSUS @YOUTUBABLE – GAME 1
http://www.KOSDFF.com http://www.twitter.com/KOSDFF http://www.facebook.com/xKOSDFF T-Shirts US: http://KOSDFF.spreadshirt.com T-Shirts UK: http://KOSDFF.spr…

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STARCRAFT 2: 1v1 VERSUS @YOUTUBABLE – GAME 1 – Video

18-year-old Austin Whaley stopped into a Kentucky bingo parlor packed with mostly elderly bingo players when he yelled the word that caused pandemonium: BINGO!

According to news reports of the incident, the game was stopped for several minutes to verify the bingo claim, and when the false utterance was discovered, it caused an uproar. After he refused to apologize, Whaley was arrested for disorderly conduct. As punishment, he received no jail time but was ordered not to utter the word bingo for six months. And while, after his brush with the law, Whaley probably never wants to say the word bingo again as long as he lives, it makes those of us who love the Constitution (if not the game of bingo) wonder: Is that a violation of his right to free speech? Like most interpretations of the Constitution, First Amendment protection of free speech can be understood by taking a look at Supreme Court decisions on the matter.

Source: Wikimedia Commons.

One of the seminal cases to the understanding of free speech rights involved a man named Charles Schenck, who was chairman of the U.S. Socialist Party. Schenck was staunchly opposed to the United States involvement in World War I. He printed up 15,000 leaflets opposing the draft, advising people to Assert Your Rights and cautioning them not to submit to intimidation. For this, he was convicted of violating the Espionage Act of 1917, one of the most controversial laws criminalizing conduct during wartime and creating penalties against anyone who shall willfully cause or attempt to cause insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny, or refusal of duty, in the military or naval forces of the United States, or shall willfully obstruct the recruiting or enlistment service of the United States, to the injury of the service or of the United States. Schenck appealed his conviction to the Supreme Court, claiming that it violated his First Amendment right to freedom of speech.

The Supreme Court in Schenck v. U.S. unanimously upheld Schencks conviction, saying that the United States government during a time of war had the right to limit speech that it said would lead to an imminent risk of harm. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, in what has become the most widely known exception to the right to freedom of speech, wrote:

The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic. The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent.

Over time, the Supreme Court has modified slightly the clear and present danger test first articulated by Justice Holmes. In Brandenburg v. Ohio, a 1969 case involving the arrest of members of the Ku Klux Klan, the court found that to be illegal, speech must have the intent and the likelihood of causing imminent violence.

And so we must ask: How much violence is likely to occur if one gets between a bingo player and her game? Should someone have the right to falsely shout Bingo in a parlor full of people who are likely to become furious when they realize that youve made a mockery of their game? Whaley may have been judged not just by the word he uttered but by the fact that he was not, apparently, at the bingo hall for any reason other than to cause a disruption. But had he chosen to fight his arrest on free speech grounds, the prosecutor would likely have been hard-pressed to prove that as infuriated as the elderly bingo patrons might have been, Whaleys actions had neither the intent, nor the likelihood, of causing imminent violence.

Amy E. Feldman is the Legal Education Consultant to the National Constitution Center. She is the General Counsel of The Judge Group, Inc., a leading global professional services based in Philadelphia.

Recent Constitution Daily Stories

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First Amendment limits: Is ‘bingo’ the new ‘fire’?

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Sam Ostarello heard all the talk for the past week about how the Liberty Lady Flames rebound better than anyone in the country. Then the Purdue senior went out and showed she’s pretty good at hitting the boards herself.

Ostarello scored 10 points and grabbed 17 rebounds as fourth-seeded Purdue routed Liberty 77-43 Sunday in the opening round of the NCAA tournament.

”I wanted her to wear a Liberty jersey yesterday, so she just sort of proved me right,” Liberty coach Carey Green said.

The Boilermakers (25-8) improved to 19-1 in the first round with their 16th straight victory to open the tournament. They will play No. 5 seed Louisville, a 74-49 winner over 12th-seeded Middle Tennessee, in the second round Tuesday night in the Oklahoma City Regional.

No. 13-seeded Liberty (27-7) hadn’t played a Big Ten team since 2005 when the Lady Flames beat Penn State for their first NCAA tournament win. Liberty had the nation’s best rebounding margin with a 17.5 edge per game, but couldn’t beat Purdue on the boards in ending a 14-game winning streak.

Courtney Moses scored 21 points, going 5 of 8 from 3-point range for Purdue. KK Houser added 15 points. Ostarello came in leading the Big Ten with 9.9 rebounds per game and set the tone as Purdue had a 40-38 edge on the boards.

”I was just really focused on that assignment,” Ostarello said. ”They’re the top rebounding team in the nation by margin, and they get a lot of their points on second-chance opportunities, which is my defensive rebounds. So I just needed to go in there and every board was going to be mine. And if not, my teammates were going to clean it up.”

Devon Brown led Liberty with 21 points.

Purdue was up 33-17 at halftime and by 35 late in the game as the Boilermakers won their fifth straight. They had this game so in control that 12 Boilermakers played. Purdue’s reserves outscored Liberty 28-8.

”Our defense was the key to set the tone for us to be able to get up and down and run,” Purdue coach Sharon Versyp said. ”And for us to be able to have our bench come in and score 28 points I think was very big for us.”

Continued here:
Purdue women beat Liberty 77-43 in NCAA 1st round

Launching a new site, or any major site update, for a large enterprise comes with some unique challenges. A short summary of some of the most common include those listed below.

The above misinformation deserves its own brief discussion. Many believe that Google changes the rules at its whim, and hence, no SEO effort is sustainable. They have not yet bought into the basic concept that modern SEO is not about tricking Google; it is, in fact, a form of branding activity that uses many tactics that support the overall brand in ways well beyond pure ranking in the SERPs.

There are many other types of problems, but you notice that none in my above list have anything to do with the actual execution of the new website project. Let me hit you now with the stunning conclusion: the real opportunity for you occurs long before the project planning starts.

Ideally, it starts months before. That is the timeframe in which the game will be won or lost. You want to get out in front of this before the people involved begin to generate any level of activity on the project at all. If you know that the plan is to begin working on a new site in July of 2013 (or even October of 2013), the time to begin doing your work is now.

Getting the best result depends on educating the people involved, and getting their incentives aligned properly. (You can read some thoughts on how to help with the education process in my articles: Selling the Benefits of SEO in a Large Enterprise, and Getting Top Management Buy-in for Enterprise SEO).

In addition to what you see in those two articles, below are two more ideas about speeding up the education process.

I wrote about one example of this in my last Enterprise SEO column. If you search on the generic term [diapers], Pampers and Huggies are not part of the first 6 organic SERPs:

As you can see, Pampers and Huggiesare far and away the biggest brands in this space but do not rank prominently. The same thing happens if you search on another generic term such as [aspirin]:

The rest is here:
SEO Opportunities Begin Well Before New Website Development

NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Liberty have added four former players to the coaching staff, hiring Barbara Farris and Taj McWilliams-Franklin as assistants and Teresa Weatherspoon and Tamika Whitmore as associate coaches for training camp and various times during the season.

Farris and McWilliams-Franklin both won WNBA championships with the Detroit Shock under Liberty coach Bill Laimbeer before each subsequently came to New York. Farris, who spent six seasons in Detroit and was on the Shock’s 2003 WNBA championship team, played for the Liberty in 2006-07. McWilliams-Franklin won a title with Detroit in 2008, and played in New York in 2010 before spending the last two seasons in Minnesota – winning another championship in 2011.

”I wanted assistant coaches that played the game and understand what championship teams are all about,” Laimbeer said in a release announcing the hirings. ”Taj and Barb are both familiar with my coaching style and know what it takes to win a championship.”

McWilliams-Franklin ended her 14-year playing career after helping the Lynx reach the Finals for the second straight year last season before they lost to Indiana. One of two players in league history – along with Lisa Leslie – to have 5,000 points, 3,000 rebounds and 400 blocked shots, she was an assistant at Rice during the 2012-13 season.

Weatherspoon was a four-time All-Star while playing for the Liberty during the league’s first seven seasons and led New York to four WNBA Finals appearances (1997, ’99, ’00 and ’02). Whitmore spent five seasons with the Liberty, appearing in the Finals three times.

”I reached out to Teresa and Tamika to understand the Liberty culture, it’s important to respect past success,” said Laimbeer. ”Both are hard-nose competitors, which is what I believe the culture has been and will continue to be with this team.”

Weatherspoon, inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2010, has been the women’s coach at Louisiana Tech since 1999 and will continue in that capacity.

”This is a great opportunity for me to learn from someone like Bill Laimbeer, and I can’t thank Louisiana Tech enough for allowing me to take this opportunity to grow as a coach,” she said. ”Words cannot express what it feels like to return to a place that is so special and dear to me.”

The Liberty open training camp on May 6, and visit Connecticut in the season opener on May 25. New York’s home opener is May 31 against Tulsa.

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Liberty hire 4 former players to coaching staff

The folks over at Team 17 apparently don’t subscribe to the idea of opening a whole new can of worms. Each new incarnation of the popular Worms franchise plays like a mere expansion of the previous outing, and in many regards, Worms: Battle Islands for the PSP is no different. Granted, these worms work well for Team 17–so well that they’ve shied once again from drilling any new wormholes into the franchise. The difference here is in the details. The controls have never felt so effortlessly intuitive, the customization options have seldom been so extensive, and the multiplayer modes have rarely been so welcoming. That said, it’s still simply Worms. Battle Islands is palatable bait for series newcomers, but even devoted veterans may find their time better spent elsewhere.

For the uninitiated, Worms places you control of a battalion of adorable oligochaetes as they assault another team with missile launchers, exploding sheep, and the occasional concrete donkey. Here you bounce over hills and burrow through tunnels with flamethrowers, worming your way out of dangers such as proximity mines. Combat is turn-based, and you have only a minute to slither over to your enemy and make your move. Of course, this same tactic works for your nightcrawling foes, so there’s a chance that you’ll find yourself staring straight at your killer with nowhere to run.

The single-player campaign comprises 30 moderately challenging missions spread across six islands based on widely different themes. For instance, you start out in a postapocalyptic nuclear test site and work your way through tropical jungles and frozen wastelands. In each case, you wreak havoc on the jagged landscape with your rocket launcher or some other goodie from your weapon stash, and in certain cases you can assign snipers to eliminate the competition before a round even starts. As a welcome new addition, blueprints now drop from the sky in each campaign level (and sometimes land in absurdly unreachable locations), and you can use these to modify items like your unassuming baseball bat into something decidedly more threatening.

Indeed, customization has always been at the heart of the Worms games, and easily pleased thrill seekers will be happy to know that you can customize your worm’s appearance with prizes earned from missions (including new items like masks and backpacks). If you’ve always wanted to see your murderous worm squiggle about with a Jason Voorhees-style hockey mask, this is your chance. You can even customize your victory dance or what kind of tombstone appears after you die, and there’s a welcome option to design your own level.

Aside from the campaign, you can also test your skills through a series of time attacks or challenging puzzles. In one of the timed trials, you need to speed through multiple laps in a cavern while using only your jetpack; in another, you swing through a canyon using only a ninja’s grappling rope while avoiding a lake of ectoplasmic goo. The puzzles are considerably more rewarding: in one, you must kill two opponents in the same turn; elsewhere, you need to finish off an enemy with only a weak mine and a punch. Still need training? Battle Islands offers three training modes and a free-for-all firing range to test out your new toys.

Be prepared for several difficulty spikes as you progress through the levels. In earlier levels, your worms can sometimes stand in plain sight before their enemies and watch as the missiles intended for them head off in the other direction; in later levels, enemy projectiles find your worms as though guided by your very thoughts–even if you were “safely” buried several yards within a bunker.

The five options in Battle Islands’ robust online and offline multiplayer modes will easily keep you occupied for hours–provided you can find anyone online. The usual suspects are all here, including Deathmatch, Racing, Triathlon, and Forts, which gives you a base of operations, and each features leaderboards for those eager to become the Emperor Worm. Of particular note is the new Tactics mode, which lets you return to your war room at any time during the battle as well as see the battlefield for a minute before the match so you can place traps in advance. Best of all, you can even win items from your opponents in an online session.

Thankfully, Worms has lost none of its peculiar charm. Worms shout things like “Bor-ing!” when enemy players miss, although the limited voice options ensure that you can usually predict which phrase you’ll hear next. All the best weapons from previous incarnations are here, including favorites like the holy hand grenade, which triggers Handel’s Hallelujah chorus when launched. Missions are preceded by well-animated cutscenes that are often good for a quick laugh. The backgrounds are decently lively but not distracting, and the island environments are filled with quirky obstacles like downed airplanes and half-sunken ships. The music, while usually subdued, is nevertheless appropriate for the often methodical pace of Worms. All in all, Battle Islands marks a welcome return to the series’ two-dimensional roots after comparatively lackluster offerings like Worms 4.

Almost. Battle Islands suffers from a few minor drawbacks, such as load times that approximate the time it takes an earthworm to traverse a summer sidewalk. Elsewhere, an annoying bug repeatedly insists that your Memory Stick was recently replaced (when it wasn’t) and that you need to reenable autosave. Even so, Battle Islands makes Worms seem like it was specifically developed for the PSP, and not ported from another platform. You can zoom in and out with the left and right bumpers, and you can view every corner of the whole map with the analog stick. You can control your worm and adjust your weapons with the D pad, and trigger chaos with the action buttons. Every other button is mapped as it intuitively should be.

But is it enough? Battle Islands approaches its source material as though all 17 previous incarnations of the game were but worthy betas. Here we have no giant leaps forward; only a finished product that’s been a long time coming. To be sure, newcomers may enjoy worming their way into this enjoyable though worn artillery adventure, but experienced Worms players will likely balk at paying $24.99 for more of the same.

Visit link:
Worms: Battle Islands Review [PSP]

It’s the rare occasion that MLB has any leverage over the NFL, the most powerful non-Illuminati organization in America. So with the Ravens and Roger Goodell begging, pleading, and cajoling the Orioles to move a September game so the Ravens can open up at home, it’s hard to blame Peter Angelos and Bud Selig for just sitting back and enjoying the show.

For eight whole years now, it’s been an NFL tradition that the defending Super Bowl champs get to kick off the next season, at home, in a nationally televised Thursday night game. But there’s a problem for the Ravens. The Orioles are already scheduled for a home game the night of Sept. 5, and downtown Baltimore is remarkably unsuited to hold two big events at the same time. So the Ravens want the Os to get out of the way of FOOTBALL.

They’ve tried being nice, and appealing to justice:

I have called Bud Selig twice and spoken to him about that, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Monday. We are trying to work out an accommodation to allow the Orioles game to happen earlier in the afternoon and the Ravens to celebrate their Super Bowl championship with their fans at home on Thursday night. We think that is the right thing.”

They’ve tried the power move:

I dont know how much goodwill weve built up at both the league level and the team level. I hope its enough that [the Orioles] say, This is a good thing to bend over backwards to accommodate them, Bisciotti said.

They’ve tried buying them offSteve Bisciotti said he’ll compensate the Orioles for any lost revenue. They’ve even tried the guilt trip. Said Biscotti, “The bottom line is if they wanted to do it, they would find a way to do it.”

From Selig and the Orioles: silence. The popular girl is paying attention to us! Don’t blow this!

Seemingly every alternative has its own logistical issues. The Orioles don’t want to move their game up to the afternoon, because they’ll be flying in from Cleveland on the red-eye the night before, and baseball’s getaway day rules don’t allow for day games after night games in a different city. The Ravens don’t want to open on the road, or on a Sunday, to lose the kickoff week festivities that come with the Thursday opener. The NFL doesn’t want to play on Wednesday, because it’s Rosh Hashanah. (Though as this column points out, they played on the holiday last year, and in many past seasons. And the Giants’ 2012 opener was moved to a Wednesday because of Obama’s DNC speech.)

But this isn’t about logistics. It’s about power. For the first time in many, many years, the Orioles have power, and pride. By September, they hope to be in the thick of a pennant race, winning over a city that has longed to care about baseball again for longer than the Ravens have existed. Kowtowing to the NFL would come across as the Orioles being willing to accept second-class citizenship. Stand up for your right to play under the lights! Take back the night! (Or just take the Ravens’ money. You have 80 freaking other home dates.)

See more here:
For Once, Baseball Has The NFL By The Short Hairs



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