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17Apr/100

Lawrence Wilson Named To Lott Trophy Watch List

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. - University of Connecticut linebacker Lawrence Wilson (Tuscaloosa, Ala.) has been named to the 2010 Lott Trophy Watch List it was announced Thursday in Newport Beach by Ronnie Lott and the Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation. Wilson was among the leading tacklers in the nation last season when he had 140.

"This is a superb list of young men," said Lott as he announced the list. "We at the Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation are always pleased to see the accomplishments of such outstanding student-athletes, all of whom are worthy of consideration for the Lott Trophy."

Sponsored by The Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation, the award is given to a player who exhibit's the same characteristics Lott embodied during his distinguished career: Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community and Tenacity.

Voters for the award include selected members of the national media, previous finalists, members of the Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation Board of Directors, the Legends Coaches and distinguished alumni of various schools around the nation.

The winner, who will be announced at the annual black-tie gala in December, receives $25,000 for his school's general scholarship fund. Three runnerups each receive $5,000.

A full look at the complete watch list after the jump.

2010 Lott Trophy Watch List

  • Sam Acho, DL, Texas, 6-3, 260, Dallas
  • Akeem Ayers, LB, UCLA, 6-4, 252, Los Angeles
  • Mark Barron, S, Alabama, 6-2, 215, Mobile, Ala.
  • Jeremy Beal, DE, Oklahoma, 6-3, 261, Carrollton, Tx
  • Brandon Boykin, S, Georgia, 5-10, 185, Fayettville, Ga.
  • Rashad Carmichael, CB, Virginia Tech, 5-11, 186, Clinton, Md.
  • Ugo Chinasa, DE, Oklahoma State, 6-5, 252, Richardson, Tx.
  • Jared Crick, DL, Nebraska, 6-6, 285, Cozad, Ne.
  • Brian Duncan, LB, Texas Tech, 6-1, 240, Baton Rouge, La.
  • John Graves, DE, Virginia Tech, 6-3, 277, Richmond, Va.
  • Mark Herzlich, LB, Boston College, 6-4, 238, Wayne, Pa.
  • Cameron Heyward, DT, Ohio State, 6-6, 287, Suwanee, Ga.
  • Ross Homan, LB, Ohio State, 6-0, 229, Coldwater, Oh
  • Jeron Johnson, S, Boise State, 5-11, 194, Compton, Ca.
  • Tejay Johnson, S, TCU, 6-1, 212, Garland, Tx.
  • A.J. Jones, LB, Florida, 6-1, 226, Tampa
  • Greg Jones, LB, Michigan State, 6-1, 228, Cincinnati
  • Thomas Keiser, DE, Stanford, 6-5, 257, Wexford, Pa.
  • Ryan Kerrigan, DL, Purdue, 6-4, 263, Muncie, Ind.
  • Casey Matthews, LB, Oregon, 6-2, 235, Agoura Hills, Ca.
  • Cliff Matthews, DE, South Carolina, 6-4, 249, Cheraw, SC
  • Josh McNary, DE, Army, 6-1, 225, Houston
  • Wyatt Middleton, S, Navy, 6-2, 208, Norcross, Ga.
  • Von Miller, DE/LB, Texas A&M, 6-3, 240, DeSoto, Tx.
  • Dontay Moch, DE, Nevada, 6-1, 245, Chandler, Az.
  • Mike Mohamed, LB, Cal, 6-3, 237, Brawley, Ca.
  • Rahim Moore, S, UCLA, 6-1, 197, Los Angeles
  • Stephen Paea, DT, Oregon State, 6-1, 285, Los Altos, Ca.
  • Patrick Peterson, CB, LSU, 6-1, 211, Pompano Beach, Fl.
  • Robert Quinn, DE, North Carolina, 6-5, 260, Ladson, SC
  • Andrew Rich, S, BYU, 6-3, 223, Ogden, Utah
  • Greg Romeus, DL, Pitt, 6-6, 270, Coral Springs, Fl.
  • Kenny Rowe, DE/LB, Oregon, 6-3, 232, Long Beach, Ca.
  • Tyler Sash, DB, Iowa, 6-1, 210, Oskaloosa, Ia.
  • Kelvin Sheppard, LB, LSU, 6-3, 239, Stone Mountain, Ga.
  • Malcolm Smith, LB, USC, 6-1, 225, Northridge, Ca.
  • J.T. Thomas, LB, West Virginia, 6-2, 225, Ft. Lauderdale, Fl.
  • JJ Watt, DE, Wisconsin, 6-6, 287, Pewaukee, Wi
  • Deunta Williams, S, North Carolina, 6-2, 205, Jacksonville, NC
  • Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut, 6-1, 220, Tuscaloosa, Al.
  • Alex Wujciak, LB, Maryland, 6-3, 225, West Caldwell, NJ
  • Anthony Wright, CB, Air Force, 5-10, 190, Cleveland

Named after Pro Football Hall of Fame member, Ronnie Lott, The Lott Trophy is awarded to college football's Defensive IMPACT Player of the Year. Founded in 2004 by The Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation, The Lott Trophy is the first and only college football award to equally recognize athletic performance and the personal character attributes of the player. The Lott Trophy is given to the player who exhibits the same characteristics Lott embodied during his distinguished career: Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community and Tenacity. Voters for the award include selected members of the national media, previous finalists, the Board of Directors of the Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation and the Legends Coaches which is a distinguished group of former college football head coaches. The seventh annual Lott Trophy dinner will be held December 12th at The Pacific Club in Newport Beach, California. For more information on The Lott Trophy visit: www.LottTrophy.com.

17Apr/100

Mlg Kicks Off Pro Circuit Season In Orlando April 16-18

NEW YORKApril 12, 2010Top pros, aspiring amateurs, and thousands of fans are set to convene in Orlando as the 2010 Major League Gaming (MLG) Pro Circuit debuts next weekend. With the addition of exciting new game titles, more great broadcast programming, and an impressive prize pool, the first event takes place April 16-18 at ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando, Florida. The competition is the first of a challenging five city US Pro Circuit tour that will place the most talented players alongside their toughest opponents to culminate in a national championship event.

MLG is thrilled this year to bring fighting games back to the competitive fold. Storming the circuit is Tekken 6, a fast-paced gaming experience that demands the most highly technical skills. Also making its 2010 season debut and bringing with it an intensely devoted Smasher fan base is Super Smash Bros. Brawl for the Wii. The popular Halo 3 FFA (free-for-all or individual) competition is also on deck for the 2010 season thanks to the support of BIC Flex4. The top FFA players from each event the BIC Flex4 Elite will be flown to the finals at the 2010 National Championships to compete for the $2,500 first prize.

Halo 3 makes its third season return to the Pro Circuit and 2010 promises to bring tougher competition than ever before. 208 teams will compete in a three-day, double-elimination tournament in Orlando.

The Orlando competition will also feature home team favorites and league superstars Str8 Rippin, one of the best Halo teams in the world and one of the biggest success stories of the MLG Pro Circuit. Competing in the circuit will be leader Tsquared, one of Halos greatest and longest-standing players alongside teammates Snipedown, Heinz and Legit.

Another strong contender on the Pro Circuit is Orlando-based, Sean Legend Hinsinger. The 24 year old led his former team Classic to second place at the 2008 Pro Circuit and is now heading up team Darkest Hour.

Eight winners from the 2010 MLG Doritos Pro-Gaming Nashville Combine, the first dedicated amateur competition for the league, will also compete at the Orlando event as part of their prize package. Included in the lineup is 17-year-old Ryan a.reallygoodnoob Geddes from Zephyrhills, Florida who wowed the MLG evaluators in Nashville and promises to be a home favorite at the Orlando competition.

Fans can purchase passes for the Orlando competition and experience first-hand the biggest home to competitive gaming. Spectators will see world-class competitive gaming up close, interact with fan favorites during Play-a-Pro matches, and put their own skills to the test in exhibition matches, participate in merchandise giveaways throughout the weekend, as well as be in the audience for MLGPro.coms live broadcasts of The Pre-Game Show, Friday Night Kick-Off, MLG Saturday Night, and MLG Championship Sunday.

Registration for the Orlando event is open online until April 12 and full details about the event and the Pro Circuit are available at http://www.mlgpro.com/pro-circuit/2010. Passes can also be purchased onsite.

16Apr/100

Hot Current News Trends: Huckleberry Finn

Huckleberry Finn

In 2010 marks the 175 anniversary of the birth of Samuel Langhorne Clemens, known to us and Mark Twain. It is also the 125th anniversary of Twains original work was published, and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and the 100th anniversary of his death, which falls on April 21. At the national level, where they lived by, or spent time, large or major communication to the Twain and his work, including the Berkeley, CA Elmira, New York, Hannibal, MO and Hartford, CT, will be celebrated this author vibrant and perhaps one of the most important thing by bloggers to travel the Internet with special events.

Since being rolled out the red carpet, its great to visit some sites Twain. There are two museums dedicated to this major American writer, one substance . Not surprisingly, in the northeast in the state of Connecticut, and the right of the River Mississippi in the Midwest, which is one of the most associated with the author in Hannibal, Missouri. In addition to this, and other sites dedicated to Twain is an extensive library and museum in Virginia City, Nevada, and his past and his final resting place in Elmira, New York, and archival papers Twain and work at the University of California at Berkeley. There is also the site of his birthplace in Florida, Mo, but this is temporarily closed.
The Mark Twain House and Museum (Hartford (Conn.) House Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens Langhorne) 1874 ??? 1891. A house on the Victorian style is a 19-room apartment and Gothic. This is the place where Twain wrote most of his major works, including the age Golden, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The Prince and the Pauper, Life on the Mississippi River, Huckleberry Finn, Tramp and abroad, and there are Yankee Connecticut in the court of King Arthur. House Twain, which is open year-round for tours, and attracts more than 60,000 visitors annually from every state in the United States, as well as from more than 70 countries around the world. and is located in theMark Twain House and Museum 351 Farmington Avenue in Hartford, Connecticut.

16Apr/100

Colonel Angus

latest Updates Christopher Walken, Natalie Wood, Robert Wagner, Nathalie Wood, Natasha Gregson Wagner: Dawson Street Baptist Church in Thomasville. Graveside services with military honors is at 4:30 p.m. CDST at Magnolia Cemetery in Greenville, Ala. Honorary pallbearers are Easy Company comrades of the 160th Infantry of Korean War veterans. Col. Winter died March 28. Born Oct. 14, 1929, in Greenville, Ala., he was a son of the late George F. and Ruth Winter of Greenville. Col. Winter earned undergraduate and masters degrees in animal husbandry from Auburn University where he was a letterman in football and baseball, a member of ROTC and then went on to serve in the Korean War. He was a decorated Korean War veteran earning a prestigious Silver Star award. He retired from the Army Reserves as full colonel and retired as executive director of the Northwest Florida Water Management District. He was a business entrepreneur owning/operating two barbecue restaurants and catering services and the owner of Winter Angus Farm. He was a dedicated Florida State University athletic booster and Auburn University alumni and booster. He has served as a past president, past member of the board of directors and past member of the Florida Angus Association for over 40 years. He was a lifetime member of the Korean War Veterans Association, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Reserve Officers Association, lifetime member of the American Angus Association and American Legion. He volunteered countless hours of service for over 45 years helping 4-H and FFA members and their families of Florida and Georgia with livestock projects. He was a member of First Baptist Church of Tallahassee, Fla. for over 40 years. He was a friend to many and a loyal supporter of the Lighthouse Childrens Home of Tallahassee, Fla. Survivors include children, Cynthia K. Gorgoglione of St. Petersburg, Fla., Calvin A. Sonny Winter Jr. (Martha) of Thomasville, Vicki P. Sweeney (Herb) of Tallahassee, Fla.

15Apr/100

Obama To Nasa: Next Stop, Mars

WATCH THIS VIDEO ABOUT OBAMA'S ADDRESS TO NASA

ERICA WERNER, Associated Press
SETH BORENSTEIN,Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- President Barack Obama predicted Thursday his new space exploration plans would lead American astronauts to Mars and back in his lifetime, a bold forecast relying on rockets and propulsion still to be imagined and built.

"I expect to be around to see it," he said of pioneering U.S. trips, first to an asteroid and then on to Mars. He spoke near the historic Kennedy Space Center launch pads that sent the first men to the moon, a blunt rejoinder to critics, including several former astronauts, who contend his planned changes will instead deal a staggering blow to the nation's manned space program.

"We want to leap into the future," not continue on the same path as before, Obama said as he sought to reassure NASA workers that America's space adventures would soar on despite the impending termination of space shuttle flights.

His prediction was reminiscent of President John F. Kennedy's declaration in 1961, "I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to Earth." That goal was fulfilled in 1969.

Obama did not predict a Mars landing soon. But he said that by 2025, the nation would have a new spacecraft "designed for long journeys to allow us to begin the first-ever crewed missions beyond the moon into deep space."

"We'll start by sending astronauts to an asteroid for the first time in history," he said. "By the mid-2030s, I believe we can send humans to orbit Mars and return them safely to Earth. And a landing on Mars will follow."

Obama said he was "100 percent committed to the mission of NASA and its future." He outlined plans for federal spending to bring more private companies into space exploration following the soon-to-end space shuttle program.

He acknowledged criticism for his drastic changes to the space agency's direction. But, he said, "The bottom line is: Nobody is more committed to manned space flight, the human exploration of space, than I am. But we've got to do it in a smart way; we can't keep doing the same old things as before."

Obama said the space program is not a luxury but a necessity for the United States.

He noted that the Kennedy Space Center has inspired the nation and the world for half a century. He said NASA represents what it means to be American -- "reaching for new heights and reaching for what's possible" -- and is not close to its final days.

Obama sought to explain why he aborted President George W. Bush's return-to-the moon plan in favor of a complicated system of public-and-private flights that would go elsewhere in space, with details still to be worked out.

"We've been there before," Obama said of the nation's moon landings decades ago. "There's a lot more of space to explore."

He said his administration would support continued manned exploration of space "not just with dollars, but with clear aims and a larger purpose."

The Obama space plan relies on private companies to fly to the space station, giving them almost $6 billion to build their own rockets and ships. It also extends the space station's life by five years and puts billions into research to eventually develop new government rocket ships for future missions to a nearby asteroid, to the moon, to Martian moons or other points in space. Those stops would be stepping stones on an eventual mission to Mars itself.

Addressing concerns of job losses to space program workers, particularly in Florida, Obama said that "despite some reports to the contrary," his plan would add more than 2,500 jobs to the Cape Canaveral region over the next two years than would the plan worked out by his predecessor.

"We'll modernize the Kennedy Space Center, creating jobs as we upgrade launch facilities. And there is potential for even more job creation as companies in Florida and across America compete to be part of a new space transportation industry.

"This holds the promise of generating more than 10,000 jobs nationwide over the next few years. Many of these jobs will be created in Florida, an area primed to lead in this competition," he said.

Among his most vocal critics has been Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon. Obama did not mention Armstrong, who did not attend the speech, but he did praise Buzz Aldrin, one of Armstrong's Apollo 11 crewmates.

Aldrin did attend the speech -- flying in with Obama on Air Force One.

Obama also said his administration would rescue a small part of the moon program: its Orion crew capsule.

But instead of taking four astronauts to the moon, the not-yet-built Orion will be slimmed down and used as an emergency escape pod for the space station.

Obama spoke in the vast launch complex's Operations and Checkout building -- the place where Orion is scheduled to be eventually prepared for launch.

The president said, "This Orion effort will be part of the technological foundation for advanced spacecraft to be used in future deep space missions. In fact, Orion will be readied for flight right here in this room."

White House science adviser John Holdren summed up Obama's program as "a faster pace in space, more missions to more destinations sooner at lower cost."

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.