Saturday, December 31, 2011

Republican official: MN GOP's debt load 'some ugly stuff'

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MN GOP Party chair Tony Sutton, center, was a driving force in the recount of the 2010 gubernatorial election. MN GOP officials say that recount is partly to blame for the party's financial woes. Sutton was joined by deputy party chair Michael Brodkorb, at left, and attorney Tony Trimble, at right, at a recount news conference on November 3, 2010. (MPR File Photo/Tim Nelson)

View full slideshow (2 total images) by Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio

December 30, 2011

St. Paul, Minn. ? The Republican Party of Minnesota is heading into 2012 facing a debt of nearly $2 million, although they say they're contesting more than $700,000 in legal bills that make up part of that total.

Party leaders released an internal financial review Friday that shows the debt is much worse than previously reported. It includes $415,000 in payments from the last three years that had not been reported and a $120,000 fine from the Federal Election Commission.

The Big Story Blog is following this story today.

Republican National Committeeman Jeff Johnson said party officials wanted to get the full story out.

"The debt number is honestly higher than anyone wants it to be. There is some ugly stuff in here," Johnson said. "We decided we were going to disclose everything that we owed, ugly or not ugly."

Mike Vekich, who did the financial review, said his findings should not be considered a financial audit. He said the next steps are trying to determine how to reduce the debt and pay any fines that they could owe for not fully disclosing the party's finances. He called the debt "surmountable."

"The more important part is that they have a handle on it now," Vekich said. "Going forward you have leadership here that is committed to making sure that this does not happen again."

Former party chair Tony Sutton abruptly resigned last month. Republican Party members meet Saturday in St. Cloud to discuss the party's finances and to elect a new chair.

Source: http://feeds.mpr.org/~r/MPR_Politics/~3/mRHxuAk2AtY/

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APNewsBreak: Russell Brand, Katy Perry to divorce

FILE- In this Tuesday, April 19, 2011 file photo, British actor Russell Brand and his wife Katy Perry arrive for the European premiere of Arthur, in London. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, FILE

FILE- In this Tuesday, April 19, 2011 file photo, British actor Russell Brand and his wife Katy Perry arrive for the European premiere of Arthur, in London. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, FILE

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Russell Brand and Katy Perry are getting a divorce, the British comedian told The Associated Press Friday.

"Sadly, Katy and I are ending our marriage. I'll always adore her and I know we'll remain friends," said Brand, 36, offering no other details.

He and the 27-year-old pop singer were married in October 2010 at a resort inside a tiger reserve in India.

Brand's recent film credits include "Arthur," ''Hop" and "Get Him to the Greek." He is among the ensemble starring alongside Tom Cruise in "Rock of Ages," set for release next year.

Perry's run of No. 1 singles earned her the distinction of becoming MTV's first artist of the year earlier this month. She hosted "Saturday Night Live" on Dec. 10 and gave no indication the couple was in trouble.

The couple got engaged in January 2010 after meeting at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, where he hosted and she performed.

He was effusive about his bride while promoting projects earlier this year, saying marrying Perry has "given me much more strength in what I do."

"For a long while, what I do professionally was all that mattered to me really," he said in March. "Now I think, well, whatever I do, I'll just go back to her, and that's incredibly comforting."

He cited irreconcilable differences in papers filed Friday in Los Angeles Superior Court.

A representative for Perry did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-30-People-Brand-Perry/id-770cfff12dc14f0483f1775141169d6e

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Foxconn to Obtain Assembly Orders for Apple Television?

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Source: http://www.iclarified.com/entry/index.php?enid=19033

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Storage Wars Texas: 12 - Mo' Money, Moe Prigoff - 02:01-02:31AM

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Mo' Money, Moe Prigoff

Episode: 12

Date: December 27 2011

Future Airings

EXCLUSIVE PHOTOS As the bidders arrive at Walt's Longview auction, they notice one major problem. There's a 100-buyer swarm--all of whom are geared up to spend. Ricky and Lesa duke it out for a power tool bonanza. Victor Rjesnjansky strikes it big with a midcentury unit, while Moe Prigoff uses an old friend to transform his locker of junk into a unit of "fabulous" furnishings. With droves of bidders on the prowl--one buyer will have his clocked cleaned, while another cleans up with some antique clocks!

Mo' Money, Moe Prigoff

As the bidders arrive at Walt's Longview auction, they notice one major problem. There's a 100-buyer swarm--all of whom are geared up to spend. Ricky and Lesa duke it out for a power tool bonanza. Victor Rjesnjansky strikes it big with a midcentury unit, while Moe Prigoff uses an old friend to transform his locker of junk into a unit of "fabulous" furnishings. With droves of bidders on the prowl--one buyer will have his clocked cleaned, while another cleans up with some antique clocks!

Episode: 12

Date: December 27 2011

Source: http://aetv.com/listings/episode_details.do?episodeid=1279411&airingid=151032

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Families awarded $17.8 million in military jet crash

Fred Greaves / Reuters file

Firefighters battled flames after a military jet crashed into homes in the University City neighborhood of San Diego on Dec. 8, 2008.

By Michelle Wayland and Paul Krueger, NBC San Diego

SAN DIEGO ? Two families whose relatives were killed when a military jet crashed into a University City neighborhood in 2008 have been awarded almost $18 million for their loss. The amount is about one-third of the $56 million that the lawyers had hoped to recover for the family.

Young Mi Yoon, 36, her daughters Grace, 15 months, and Rachel, 2 months, and her mother, Suk Im Kim, 60, were killed Dec. 8, 2008, after one of the engines on an FA-18-D Hornet died as a student Marine pilot headed to MCAS Miramar.

On Wednesday, a judge ruled that Young Mi Yoon's husband, Don Yoon, should receive $9.6 million in compensation for the loss of his family. Sanhyum Lee, Suk Im Kim's husband, was awarded $3.7 million. Young Mi Yoon's three siblings were awarded $1.5 million.

Read the original story at NBC San Diego

The jet destroyed two homes, including the Yoons' house.?

The government admitted liability, but the two sides could not agree on how much money Don Yoon and Young Mi Moon's family should get for their loss.


A federal judge heard the evidence in an emotionally grueling two-day trial earlier this month, which included tearful testimony from the families.

Don Yoon described how it rained for just a few minutes the day of the funeral as his wife's casket was lowered into the ground. He thought the rain was his dead wife's tears, being shed for him.

In closing arguments, the families' attorney said Don Yoon should get a total of $27 million in emotional damages for the loss of his wife and two children.

Young Mi Yoon's father, Sanghyun Lee, should get $20.2 million, his lawyers argued. That figure included $230,000 in economic loss from his wife's death and $20 million in emotional damages.

The lawyers also asked Judge Jeffrey Miller to give Young Mi Yoon's three siblings $2.5 million apiece in emotional damages.

Attorney Brian Panish criticized the government for what he called its callousness in this case, telling Miller "there has been no evidence of repentance" by any government agency.

In their closing argument, government lawyers did not give the judge a counter-figure of what they thought would be a fair amount for emotional damages.

Instead, U.S. Justice Department attorney Bruce Ross urged Miller to be "fair and reasonable, without being excess or punitive," in his award to the family.

Don Yoon was awarded the following:

  • $1.2 million for the total wage loss, past and future, of wages that his wife would have earned.
  • $250,000 for the total loss of household services, past and future, that his wife would have provided.
  • $2 million for past non-economic damages resulting from the death of his wife.
  • $4 million for future non-economic damages resulting from the death of his wife.
  • $65,000 for the loss of personal property.
  • $300,000 for the past non-economic damages resulting from the loss of his daughter Grace Yoon.
  • $1 million for future non-economic damages resulting from the death of his daughter Grace Yoon.
  • $200,000 for past non-economic damages resulting from the death of his daughter Rachel Yoon.
  • $600,000 for future non-economic damages resulting from the death of his daughter Rachel Yoon.

Don Yoon's father in law, Sanhyum Lee, was awarded the following:

  • $230,000 for economic damages, past and future, resulting from the death of his wife, Seokim Kim-Lee.
  • $1 million for past non-economic damages, resulting from the death of Seokim Kim-Lee.
  • $2 million for future non-economic damages, resulting from the death of Seokim Kim-Lee.
  • $250,000 for past non-economic damages resulting from the death of his daughter, Young Mi Yoon.
  • $250,000 for future non-economic damages resulting from the death of his daughter, Young Mi Yoon.
  • $500,000 for past non-economic damages resulting from the death of Seokim Kim-Lee.

The rest of the money was divided among other family members.

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

  • Police deaths rise sharply in 2011
  • B-word? Toys 'R' Us receives complaints over doll
  • Melee at nation's largest mall leads to more security
  • Sears Holdings struggles to hold on
  • Gingrich memo praised Romney's health reform
  • Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9778765-families-awarded-178-million-in-military-jet-crash

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    Thursday, December 29, 2011

    Canadian skydiver dies in California accident

    A Canadian skydiving instructor, described as "passionate" about the sport by a former employer, is dead after attempting a risky landing in California, the Riverside Sheriff's office said Wednesday.

    Mike Ungar, 32, hit the ground hard just after 5 p.m. ET Tuesday in Perris, California, and died at the scene, according to a news release from the sheriff's office.

    "He just loved to skydive. He would do anything to skydive. He would get up at 6 o'clock in the morning to go up, hoping there'd be someone there to jump with," said Tim Grech, who employed Ungar during the 2010 and 2011 seasons at Niagara Skydive in Dunnville, Ont., 55 kilometres south of Hamilton.

    Ungar was a fun man and a competent, experienced skydiver, said Grech, who met him five years ago.

    "That's why I hired him to do tandem (jumps)," Grech said.

    Ungar was originally from Aylmer, Ont., about 190 kilometres southwest of Toronto.

    He moved to California to teach at Skydive Hollister after Niagara Skydive's 2011 season ended in October, Grech said.

    On Tuesday, Ungar landed in a pond on the property of the Perris Valley Skydiving facility, according to the sheriff's office. Friends pulled him out of the pond and medical personnel performed CPR, but he died at the scene.

    Ungar's parachute was open and his equipment was all functioning properly, said Dan Brodsky-Chenfeld, manager of Perris Valley Skydiving.

    While this is the fifth fatality at Perris Valley Skydiving this year and the sixth in 15 months, Brodsky-Chenfeld said the drop zone is as safe as it possibly can be.

    "Obviously, we take it very to heart," Brodsky-Chenfeld said of safety concerns. "The (United States Parachute Association) has their guidelines for safety, and we have theirs plus additional. There's only so much that you can do."

    Perris Valley is a busy drop zone, said Jim Crouch, director of safety and training for the United States Parachute Association. Based on the numbers, he said, there are bound to be more deaths at that location.

    "I can't think of the last time they've had a year with many fatalities, so it is unusual, but I do know they're working very hard to keep everyone as safe as possible," Crouch said.

    At the time of his death, Ungar had been attempting a landing manoeuvre called "swooping," Brodsky-Chenfeld said.

    A swooping manoeuvre is executed about 150 to 210 metres above the ground, Crouch said.

    A skydiver accelerates by parachuting into a steep turn, moving at a speed of about 97 to 113 kilometres an hour towards the ground, Crouch said. The speed lifts the parachute as it gets closer to the ground, allowing it to fly level with the ground like an airplane when it lands.

    "(Ungar) had aspirations to compete in swooping competitions," Grech said. "It is the discipline that seems to be getting the most attention in skydiving right now because it is very spectator-friendly."

    But it can be risky if the skydiver misjudges the landing, Crouch said.

    "People occasionally make errors with this type of landing and it results in a fatality or an injury," he said. "In the past 13 years, it's ranged anywhere from seven per year to one per year of people who have been killed attempting this type of a landing."

    In 2010, 21 people in the United States died while skydiving, according to the United States Parachute Association. Out of the estimated three million jumps in the U.S. that year, there were 1,308 injuries reported.

    Skydiving will never be completely safe, Crouch said, but statistically, the number of deaths is low and safety has improved over the years.

    hroberts(at)postmedia.com

    Twitter.com/hilarytroberts

    ? Copyright (c) Postmedia News

    Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F75/~3/0UlJlPsDW_c/story.html

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    Friday, December 16, 2011

    Bid to block first Gulf leases since BP spill

    U.S. Coast Guard / Getty Images, file

    The Deepwater Horizon drilling rig burns on April 21, 2010.

    By Miguel Llanos, msnbc.com

    A day before?the Obama administration aims to showcase?that the Gulf of Mexico is ready for new?drilling, environmental groups on Tuesday sued to try to stop the?leases.

    The Interior Department's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the coalition argues in?its?complaint,?relies on an environmental impact statement that:

    • "Fails to adequately consider the impacts of the Deepwater Horizon spill;
    • "Does not incorporate new understandings of the risks posed by offshore driling, particularly in deepwater;
    • "Ignores new information?regarding the oil spill containment and response capabilities of industry; and
    • "Fails to assess impacts using a post Deepwater Horizon baseline for species and habitats in the Gulf."

    Catherine Wannamaker, an attorney representing the coalition in court, called it "illegal and irresponsible" for "the government and oil companies to return to business as usual without considering the oil spill?s impacts on the Gulf."

    Live Poll

    Is it time to allow new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico?

    • 170734

      Yes, industry and regulators are prepared for any disaster.

      57%

    • 170735

      No, the needed safety measures are still not in place.

      43%

    VoteTotal Votes: 195

    "We did not ask for an injunction of tomorrow?s sale, though we have apprised the government of our case and asked that they delay the sale or at a minimum notify bidders of the lawsuit," Wannamaker told msnbc.com. "We have not heard an answer, but my guess is that the sale will commence tomorrow."

    The administration on Wednesday intends to announce the winners of the first oil and gas lease sale in the Gulf?since the BP spill.

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar will even travel to New Orleans "to mark a major milestone in jumpstarting restoration of the Gulf region," the department said in a statement.

    Twenty companies have submitted 241 bids on 191 tracts off Texas, the department added.

    Following the Deepwater Horizon explosion on April 20, 2010, which killed 11 men and led to the worst U.S. oil spill, the Interior Department reorganized how it regulates the offshore energy industry.

    BP and partners Transocean and Halliburton have been cited in various government reports as sharing responsibility for the disaster. The reports?have also urged changes in corporate?and regulatory culture, but many of?the recommendations have yet to be implemented.

    The National?Academy of Engineering and National Research Council are coming out with their offshore drilling?recommendations on Wednesday.

    Tuesday's complaint was filed before the District Court in Washington, D.C., by Oceana, Defenders of Wildlife, the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Center for Biological Diversity.

    The judge hearing the complaint is not required to rule before Wednesday's sale.

    But if "the judge ultimately decides in our favor," Oceana campaign director Jackie Savitz told msnbc.com, "the government may have to buy back the leases."

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/13/9420253-bid-to-block-first-gulf-leases-since-bp-spill

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    Tuesday, December 6, 2011

    Six killed in attack in volatile northeast Nigeria (Reuters)

    BAUCHI, Nigeria (Reuters) ? Gunmen killed three people on Sunday, including a policemen and a soldier, when they bombed police buildings and a bank in northeast Nigeria, a region beset by attacks by Islamist sects.

    The attackers fired assault rifles and threw explosives in the attack early on Sunday on two police stations in Azare, a town in northeast Bauchi state, where the Islamist sect Boko Haram has been blamed for an assault earlier this year.

    "One policeman, one soldier, one civilian and three suspected attackers were killed," Ikechukwu Aduba, Bauchi police commissioner, told Reuters.

    Witnesses said a bank was looted and the two police buildings were set ablaze.

    Boko Haram, whose name translates at "Western education is forbidden" in the local Hausa language, has been blamed for dozens of attacks in northeastern states this year, most of which are aimed at figures in authority.

    The sect carried out a prison raid last year in Bauchi, freeing around 700 inmates.

    Boko Haram also claimed responsibility for two bombings in the capital Abuja this year, the latest a suicide attack on United Nations headquarters in August, which killed 24 people.

    (Reporting by Bello Buhari, Ibrahim Mshelizza and Shuabu Mohammed; Writing by Joe Brock; Editing by Tim Pearce)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111204/wl_nm/us_nigeria_attack

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    Monday, December 5, 2011

    Conrad Murray?files appeals notice

    The doctor sentenced to four years in prison for causing Michael Jackson's death has filed a notice that he intends to appeal the conviction.

    1. More Entertainment stories
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        The news anchor tells Ann Curry about the next step in her treatment to beat breast cancer.

      2. 'SNL' lights up with Miley Cyrus drug parody
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      4. Year of the Hunk: Can Clooney, Pitt save Oscars?
      5. Kardashians fire back at 'Teen Mom' Farrah

    Conrad Murray signed the notice that was filed in Los Angeles on Friday seeking all records and transcripts from the case. The filing does not indicate the basis on which Murray will argue to overturn his conviction or sentence.

    Murray was sentenced Tuesday for his involuntary manslaughter conviction, but the term will be automatically cut in half.

    Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor criticized Murray's conduct, calling him a disgrace to the medical profession.

    Murray's challenge would be heard by a state appeals court in Los Angeles.

    Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45530847/ns/today-entertainment/

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    Sunday, December 4, 2011

    Space Washing Machine Could Blast Laundry with Microwaves (SPACE.com)

    Imagine putting dirty clothes into a washing machine, leaving, and only coming back once the freshly cleaned clothes have been dried out by microwaves. That out-of-this-world-laundry concept could someday become a reality for astronauts and space explorers headed for the moon, asteroids or Mars.

    Such a washing machine is designed to clean dirty astronaut clothing inside a sealed plastic bag that can also receive a drying blast of microwaves. The simple one-step process represents an energy- and water-efficient solution that spares space travelers from hauling a water-intensive washing machine up into space or bringing along disposable clothing.

    Astronauts aboard the International Space Station can get by with specially engineered, stink-free underwear and steady resupply missions launched from Earth. But longer-lasting missions beyond the moon won't have such luxuries.

    "On a long-duration mission to Mars you won't have resupply ? you either have to fly naked or have a washing machine," said William Michalek, project manager at the UMPQUA Research Company. "I haven't heard of them flying naked, and I don't think that's really an option."

    NASA recently chose UMPQUA's washing-machine concept as part of its selection of Small Business Innovative Research proposals eligible to receive up to $125,000 in early funding.

    An earlier version of UMPQUA's machine avoids making the foamy mixture of detergent, water and air ? something that would be troublesome to handle in the seemingly weightless space environment. The company also faced the challenge of washing clothes without the tumbling or back-and-forth action of typical washing machines that require Earth's gravity to work.

    "We developed a system of water jets inside a plastic bag with clothes and water and no air," Michalek told InnovationNewsDaily. "The jets would bend the clothes back and forth to work the soap solution through all the fibers."

    The water only enters the plastic bag through connected tubes after all the air has been sucked out first. Once cleaning is done, the clothes stay in the bag within a larger chamber as a microwave generator irradiates them ? similar to heating up a microwave meal inside a Tupperware container.

    Finally, a tumble cycle uses air jets to make any space laundry extra soft. The design conveniently saves astronauts time they might normally spend switching wet clothes from a washer to a separate dryer.

    UMPQUA plans to make a more energy- and water-efficient version of its device with the new NASA funding. It also wants to vaporize some of the water with outside vacuum pressure on the bag in order to temporarily free up more room inside the bag during the cleaning process ? a concept it must prove within the next six months.

    The company originally worked with Westinghouse, a home-appliances manufacturer, on the microwave-drying concept. That could still find its way into commercial washing machines on Earth, Michalek said.

    But Westinghouse didn't like the idea of a combined washing and drying machine because it doesn't allow people to simultaneously wash and dry big loads of laundry quickly, even if it might be more time-efficient for astronauts' purposes.

    So when might people on Earth see a water-efficient washing machine that combines both cleaning and drying?

    "When we get to the point where we're wearing dirty clothes because we don't have enough water to wash them," Michalek said.

    This story was provided by InnovationNewsDaily, sister site to SPACE.com. You can follow InnovationNewsDaily Senior Writer Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @ScienceHsu. Follow InnovationNewsDaily on Twitter @News_Innovation, or on Facebook.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111202/sc_space/spacewashingmachinecouldblastlaundrywithmicrowaves

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    No. 23 Saint Louis handles Portland 73-53 (AP)

    ST. LOUIS ? For the first 10 1/2 minutes, Portland stayed right with No. 23 Saint Louis. The deficit was just three points.

    Then, as coach Eric Reveno noted, "the bottom fell out a little bit."

    Brian Conklin made all seven shots with a strong inside game and scored 19 points in a 73-53 victory in Saint Louis' first home game as a ranked team since 1994 on Saturday night.

    Portland lost a week earlier at top-ranked Kentucky. Saint Louis' big first half convinced Reveno that the Billikens are better.

    "We've played some good teams and they're the most skilled and toughest team that we've probably played in terms of execution and just good basketball," Reveno said. "Would they win at Kentucky? I'm not going to say that. But I think they're very good."

    Portland has had a tough early schedule, also losing to Washington and Washington State.The Pilots were picked to finish seventh in the West Coast Conference.

    Cody Ellis had 16 points and Kyle Cassity and Mike McCall added 10 apiece for the Billikens (7-1), who had a 25-3 run in the first half and led by 26 early in the second. Those three combined for Saint Louis' seven 3-pointers, with Cassity going 3 for 5.

    The Billikens could drop out of the Top 25 after losing at Loyola Marymount on Tuesday night in their fourth game in six days, but have a good chance to beef up the record with the next five also at home against beatable opponents.

    Thomas van der Mars had 12 points before fouling out with 6:30 remaining for Portland (3-5), which has lost five of six. Nemania Mitrovic, Portland's leading scorer with an 11.9-point average, was held to two points on 1-for-6 shooting.

    "It was primarily turnovers that were our downfall," Reveno said. "Against a great team on their court, you don't have any margin for error."

    Ellis, Saint Louis' sixth man, didn't play a minute due to defensive concerns in the school's loss at Loyola Marymount.

    Portland committed 12 of its 16 turnovers in the first half, and also missed five of its first six from the free throw line. Portland's 16 first-half points and the final total were both season worsts.

    The Pilots outscored Saint Louis 37-35 in the second half.

    "We were running uphill with all kinds of different lineups and just kind of junking it up a little bit in the second half," Reveno said. "I liked how we hung in there."

    All five of Saint Louis' first-half 3-pointers came in the 25-3 run that made it 37-12 with just under 2 minutes to go, and the Billikens led 38-16 at the break.

    Portland was in it the first 10 1/2 minutes, trailing 12-9, but was down 37-12 after Mike McCall's 3-pointer with 1:52 to go. The Pilots were 1 for 6 at the free throw line, committed 12 turnovers and got off only 17 shots against Saint Louis' half-court pressure.

    Portland had one turnover the first eight minutes of the second half, helping cut the deficit to 15 at 50-35. Ryan Nicholas and Tanner Riley added 11 apiece for the Pilots.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111204/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkc_t25_portland

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    Friday, December 2, 2011

    SEC championship: 2 teams with nothing to lose?

    Georgia center Ben Jones, left, and quarterback Aaron Murray laugh during a brief walk through practice at the Georgia Dome, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Atlanta. LSU will face Georgia in the Southeastern Conference Championship NCAA football game on Saturday. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

    Georgia center Ben Jones, left, and quarterback Aaron Murray laugh during a brief walk through practice at the Georgia Dome, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Atlanta. LSU will face Georgia in the Southeastern Conference Championship NCAA football game on Saturday. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

    LSU coach Les Miles speaks during an NCAA college football news conference Friday, Dec. 2, 2011 in Atlanta. LSU will face Georgia in the Southeastern Conference Championship football game on Saturday.(AP Photo/John Bazemore)

    Georgia coach Mark Richt smiles during an NCAA college football news conference Friday, Dec. 2, 2011 in Atlanta. LSU will face Georgia in the Southeastern Conference Championship football game on Saturday.(AP Photo/John Bazemore)

    LSU head football coach Les Miles, left, and Georgia coach Mark Richt pose with the Southeastern Conference Championship trophy during an NCAA college football news conference Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Atlanta. The two teams are scheduled to face each other on Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011, in the SEC championship football game. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

    (AP) ? Given little chance to knock off the nation's top-ranked team, Georgia doesn't have a lot to lose in the Southeastern Conference championship game.

    Then again, No. 1 LSU probably doesn't either.

    In all likelihood, the Tigers have already put together a resume that's impressive enough to get them to New Orleans for the BCS title game ? even if the 12th-ranked Bulldogs pull off a huge upset Saturday.

    Count Georgia coach Mark Richt among those who feels LSU (12-0, 8-0 SEC) deserves to play for the national championship, whether they win or lose to his team. He can certainly read a schedule, noting the Tigers have already beaten three teams among the top eight in The Associated Press poll ? No. 2 Alabama, No. 6 Arkansas and No. 8 Oregon ? as well as 22nd-ranked West Virginia.

    "If you look at all the one-loss teams and if, in fact, they became a one-loss team, just look at who they played," Richt said Friday. "I would think they'd be a shoe-in to play (for the national title). I know that's not what they're focusing on, because you don't go 12-0 unless you can focus on every game."

    LSU's Les Miles, whose team is a two-touchdown favorite, refused to get dragged into the debate. No need to, really, since he's coaching the last unbeaten team from one of the major conferences.

    To some, this game is just an afterthought, something the Tigers must get out of the way before they get on with their rematch against SEC West rival Alabama for an even bigger crown. Miles doesn't see if that way.

    "I do know that's an issue for other folks," he said. "It's not one for us. We're very, very focused on the next game and a very quality Georgia opponent."

    Indeed, there's a sense this team wants a national title that includes no ifs, ands or buts. In 2003, LSU defeated Oklahoma for the BCS title but Southern Cal was voted No. 1 in the AP poll. Four years later, the Tigers became the first two-loss team to win it all, getting plenty of help from other schools along the way.

    This time, it's all in their hands.

    "We've talked about it several times, but not about the what ifs," Miles said. "It's all about what we've accomplished to this point. We've put ourselves in position to play a championship game. That's this Saturday against a very, very talented Georgia team. I promise you, our football team understands that."

    Georgia (10-2, 7-1) might be the hottest team in the country outside of LSU. The Bulldogs have bounced back from an 0-2 start with their longest in-season winning streak since 1982, removing any doubt about Richt's coaching future. But their schedule hasn't been nearly as tough as the Tigers' because of a quirk in the rotation that allowed them to avoid all three of the top teams in the SEC West.

    Still, given the pressure his program was under coming off its first losing mark in 14 years and then dropping its first two games, Richt and his staff have engineered an impressive turnaround that bodes well for the future, given the youth of the team (only five starters are seniors).

    "We've had a lot of really special times with this team," Richt said. "I've enjoyed it maybe as much as any team I've coached."

    Georgia has one of the nation's most accomplished quarterbacks in Aaron Murray, who's set a school record with 32 touchdown passes. The tailback position is another story.

    Freshman Isaiah Crowell missed the regular-season finale against Georgia Tech with an injured left ankle and he's already been involved in at least two disciplinary issues, including a failed drug test that led to a one-game suspension. But Crowell practiced this week and was with the team when it turned up at the Georgia Dome for a light walk-through Friday.

    His top backup, Richard Samuel, has missed the last four games after undergoing ankle surgery and it's not known if he's recovered enough to play against the Tigers. Georgia was so desperate for runners last week that two defensive backs, Branden Smith and Brandon Boykins, got extensive time on the offensive side. The Bulldogs have also pressed into service former walk-on Brandon Harton, who's only 5-foot-6 and 174 pounds.

    Richt has been coy about the situation all week, and that stance didn't change on the eve of the game.

    "I'm not telling," he said, chuckling. "We'll wait. A game-day decision. How about that one? That's a good one."

    LSU had no such concerns. For the first time in school history, the Tigers have four backs with at least six rushing touchdowns, and all figure to touch the ball Saturday. Spencer Ware (687 yards) will get the start, but he's got plenty of help with Michael Ford (721), Alfred Blue (445) and freshman Kenny Hilliard (248).

    "It helps to wear down a defense," offensive lineman Will Blackwell said. "Our guys don't get as tired. We've got fresh legs here at the end of the season. We've got three, four, maybe five guys that can all run the ball and run it hard. The main thing, the best thing for us is we don't have to put the whole load on one guy. When one of those guys comes in, he can just pound it as much as he can and look forward to getting a little break."

    That, in turn, has helped bolster the passing game. Jordan Jefferson took over from Jarrett Lee in the first 1-2 showdown with Alabama and rallied the Tigers to an overtime win. Over the final three games of the regular season, Jefferson completed 33 of 50 passes (66 percent) for 464 yards, with three touchdowns and only one interception. Plus, he gives LSU another running threat (253 yards, three TDs) when he tucks it under his arm.

    "You've got to be able to run the ball to throw the ball," Blackwell said. "That's the philosophy we've taken on this season."

    Georgia just took 'em one at a time, especially when it dug that early hole. Every SEC contest was, in essence, an elimination game. The Bulldogs passed every test, most notably rallying from a 14-point deficit to beat perennial nemesis Florida.

    "From there on out, we were a team that felt, hey, no matter what goes on, no matter what happens, we're going to keep fighting and win out," Murray said.

    ___

    Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-02-FBC-T25-SEC-Championship/id-fa12dcf07da14e1ea8529ac53ef9d61f

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