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Posts Tagged ‘slip’

Video Game Sales Slip in November

The video game industry continues its sales slump as consumers cut back on purchases of hardware, software and accessories.
– Lower console prices and hotly anticipated titles
couldnt save the video game industry from experiencing another drop in sales
as the apex of the holiday shopping season grows near: Sales slid 7.6 percent
in November, to $2.7 billion, for a year-to-date total of $14.1 billion, down
12 percent fr…


Suntec REIT may slip on dilution from placement, says Dow Jones

Suntec REIT (T82U.SG) may slip when trading resumes due to dilution as property trust seeks to place out 128.5 million new units to raise up to $152.9 million to pare debt, says Dow Jones newswires.

The private placement will increase the unit base by 7.7% and the indicative pricing range at $1.16–$1.19, representing 9.4%–7% discount to last closing price of $1.28. Net proceeds work out to at least $147.3 million, based on low end of pricing range.

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Sullivan Hall 2 Year Ann Slip, Benevento, Martin

Sullivan Hall 2 Year Anniversary Celebration with The Slip, Benevento, Martin

The Slip

On January 2, 2010, NYC’s Sullivan Hall will celebrate its two year anniversary with The Slip, Marco Benevento Trio featuring Billy Martin and more.

Tickets go on sale Tuesday December 1 at ticketweb.com.


Singapore visitor arrivals slip 0.5% in Oct

Visitor arrivals in Singapore in October fell 0.5%  from a year earlier, the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) said on Tuesday. 
 
The STB said there were 845,000 visitors in October. The total days spent by tourists in Singapore fell 4.6% to 3.3 million.

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MSNBC Contessa Brewer Mistakes Jesse Jackson For Al Sharpton (VIDEO)

Here’s a hilarious slip of tongue: Anchor Contessa Brewer accidentially called Jesse Jackson for another Bible-thumpin’ civil right activist — Rev. Al Sharpton — on MSNBC Wednesday. Let’s just say Jesse was not amused…

“Blogs Are Best at Debunking Myths That Can Slip Through a Lot of the Traditional Media Outlets”

Guess who just said: Blogs are best at debunking myths that can slip through a lot of the traditional media outlets. ? Some rabbid blogger? A radical proto-terrorist? A neo-nazi? Some loser who lives in his mom’s basement? Wrong. Obama just said it. So next time an Obama official (or someone from a future administration) [...]

Clarke and Haddin hold up England

Second Ashes Test, Lord’s (day four, close):
England 425 & 311-6 dec v Australia 215 & 313-5
Match scorecard

Michael Clarke celebrates his hundred with Brad Haddin

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Lord’s

A superb marathon stand between Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin kept England frustrated as the home side chased victory in the second Ashes Test.

Andrew Strauss’ men seemed poised to go 1-0 up against Australia with a day to spare when Marcus North was bowled by Graeme Swann in the first hour of the afternoon session on Sunday.

At that stage, England needed just five further wickets to win. But Clarke (125 not out) batted for four and a quarter hours and Haddin (80 not out) for more than three.

And when the last 11 overs were lost to bad light, Australia were 313-5, needing another 209 to pull off what would be an extraordinary victory.

Following a short, heavy shower just before the scheduled start, play was delayed by 15 minutes. Strauss declared England’s innings on their overnight 311-6 which left an astronomic target of 522 for Australia to chase down.

Two debatable wickets for Andrew Flintoff in the first 10 overs left Australia in dreadful shape and England confidently scenting further success.

First, Simon Katich felt for a ball he might have ignored outside off stump and edged to Kevin Pietersen, one of two gullys posted. But replays later showed that Flintoff had marginally overstepped the crease – so umpire Rudi Koertzen should have called no-ball.

Phillip Hughes was uncharacteristically dropped by Flintoff at second slip off the immaculate James Anderson, but he failed to make England pay.

Ricky Ponting plays on to his leg stump

Flintoff, in the middle of a furious spell of 2-9 in seven overs, pitched another ball in the perfect area for testing a left-hander’s defences, and the edge travelled low to Strauss at first slip.

Strauss claimed the catch, Hughes lingered at the crease and was told by Ponting to stay where he was. Now, standing umpire Koertzen asked his counterpart at square-leg, Billy Doctrove, whether the edge had carried – and the West Indian said yes it had.

In the circumstances, Koertzen could no longer refer the appeal to the third umpire, though if he had done Jeremy Lloyds would have seen pictures that were inconclusive as to whether the catch was a fair one or not. In such an event, Hughes would have probably been reprieved.

From 34-2, Ponting and Michael Hussey did their best to weather the storm, though neither man ever looked particularly secure. Even when the support seamers, Graham Onions and Stuart Broad, came on, the batsmen were frequently beaten or hit on the pads.

Lunch came with Australia 76-2 from 22 overs, and Ponting departed early in a cold, dank afternoon session. Trying to thump Broad off the back foot through the covers he succeeded only in chopping onto his stumps.

Broad celebrated maniacally, the Lord’s crowd – though slightly depleted by those on late lunches – simultaneously roared its approval and despite the leaden, ominous skies the odds seemed to favour an England win with a day to spare.

That impression only intensified when Hussey and Marcus North both fell to Swann in the space of six overs, though Hussey did not appear to nick the ball that was sharply taken by Paul Collingwood at slip.

North was comprehensively bowled through the gate. Nevertheless, Australia would have been entitled to feel hard done by given that three of their first four dismissals were shrouded in controversy.

The rest of the day belonged entirely to the tourists.

Clarke, who had come in at the fall of Ponting’s wicket, was the only Australian batsman who played with a degree of comfort from the start. Though he was about two inches away from being bowled by Broad’s first ball, he subsequently raced along with some fine drives through the off side.

606: DEBATE

"If this partnership is not broken up soon, and they come back tomorrow in glorious sunshine, could we see a stunning Aussie triumph"

deez08

Flintoff produced another aggressive spell from the Pavilion End and was unlucky not to remove Haddin in an over in which the Aussie wicketkeeper almost gloved to Matt Prior and then edged through the vacant third slip area.

Clarke’s 58-ball half century finally gave the Australian fans something to cheer about and suddenly England were searching for wickets when before they had fallen into their lap.

By tea, the score was 178-5 and as the final session started both batsmen made patient, serene progress. As England counted down the overs to the second new ball, Swann and Collingwood – neither looking likely to create a breakthrough – were the men entrusted with the bowling.

One ball after Haddin had cut Swann for a single to reach 50, Clarke – whose second 50 had occupied 101 deliveries – flicked the spinner through midwicket for his 11th Test ton.

Finally, as the floodlights flickered into action, the second new ball was taken just before 1800 BST with 18 overs still left in the day.

But there was no immediate reward for Anderson and Flintoff, though a couple of edges off each batsman flew tantalisingly just out of reach.

Monday, which will begin with the new ball only six overs old, will be a tense occasion for both teams. The draw looks out of the equation, but although the odds still favour an England win, nothing will be taken for granted.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

England open up huge Lord’s lead

Second Ashes Test, Lord’s (day three, stumps): England 425 and 311-6 v Australia 215
Match scorecard

Matt Prior

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Lord’s

England put themselves in a powerful position after three days of the second Ashes Test at Lord’s as they reached 311-6 in their second innings to lead Australia by 521 runs.

After bowling out Australia for 215, they held a 210-run lead but opted against enforcing the follow-on – and put the tourists’ bowlers to task again.

Following a sterile session between lunch and tea when England added just 73, Matt Prior’s sparkling 61 off just 42 balls turned a turgid innings into a run spree.

The Aussies will need to shatter the previous record for a fourth-innings chase when England declare their innings – an event that will surely come early on day four as the hosts seek to secure the lead in the five-match series.

Most of the damage had been done on Friday, when Australia crashed to 156-8 in reply to England’s 425.

The excellent James Anderson was unable to add to his four-wicket haul, leaving Graham Onions to mop up the tail, which he did after Peter Siddle (35) and Nathan Hauritz (24) had added 44 for the ninth wicket, all but four of those runs coming on Saturday.

Stuart Broad disappointed from the Pavilion End, but two edges fell frustratingly a metre short of Paul Collingwood at third slip when Anderson was bowling.

England’s irritation ended as soon as he was replaced by Onions – a third edge heading in Collingwood’s direction was smoothly held to end Hauritz’s stay at the crease.

Nevertheless, the follow-on was a tantalising 30 runs away when Siddle was joined by last man Ben Hilfenhaus, and three more Siddle boundaries off Broad brought the deficit down even more.

But it was Onions’ morning. He intelligently probed away in the channel outside off-stump and finally, in his third over, picked up the last wicket when Siddle sliced a drive to Andrew Strauss at first slip.

Strauss now had to decide whether to let his bowlers loose again, or strap on his pads. He made the more cautious choice of batting and that immediately took the tension out of the game.

Ricky Ponting fumbles a dropped catch off Peter Siddle

In some of the most placid conditions of the match, Strauss and Alastair Cook laid into Mitchell Johnson, whose three dreadful overs were hit for 17 – and we did not see him again until the final hour of the second session.

Hilfenhaus was more accurate, but Cook had the confidence to go after him with some bold off-drives and at lunch England had rattled up 57-0 to lead by 267.

Hauritz bowled a terrific spell after lunch, however, to remove both of England’s openers for 32. Cook, playing around his front pad, was lbw for the third time in succession and Strauss nicked a lovely off-break to slip.

Reckoning his spinner would be less effective against the right-handers, Ponting now teamed Siddle and Hilfenhaus together and could have had England four down for under 100.

But when Kevin Pietersen, on 20, went walkabout following a big lbw appeal off Hilfenhaus, Ponting himself – from second slip – missed a golden opportunity to run him out, rushing his shy at the stumps.

606: DEBATE

"I think he’ll set them maybe 600 – and that’s at least 50 more than we need in my book"

Tastytunes

Then Ravi Bopara, having made just nine, saw Ponting drop his edge off Siddle – the easiest slip catch imaginable – and the crowd guffawed at the error in a way that Lord’s crowds of previous vintages would never have done.

But as Bopara and Ponting searched for form, the run-scoring dried up, and there was a fallow period of 11 overs without a boundary before Pietersen square-cut the tiring Hilfenhaus to the cover-point fence.

Bopara now played a horrid pull off Johnson, in the last over before tea, that almost carried to Hauritz at mid-on. The fielder claimed a catch, but it did not look a clean one to the naked eye and the decision was referred before the appeal was rightly rejected.

Ponting and Pietersen had a friendly discussion about the incident and soon afterwards the players took tea, with England on 130-2, leading by a very healthy 340, despite some very scratchy form shown by the two batsmen at the crease.

Early in the long final session, Bopara cover-drove Hauritz sweetly for four, but in the spinner’s next over he was surprised by a slower, straighter delivery and pushed the ball meekly to short-leg. He had made 27 from 93 balls, with just 13 scoring shots.

Pietersen now tried to impose himself, driving Siddle for two boundaries, but his painful 101-ball innings was ended on 44 when an inside-edge off the same bowler was caught by wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.

Andrew Flintoff

England’s number four had looked badly hampered by his Achilles problem, and a number of runs went begging because he was struggling to run between wickets.

But any danger that Australia might end up with an attractive target vanished when Collingwood and Prior added 86 from 73 balls.

Hitting plenty of boundaries, they also scampered twos, threes and an all-run four, the scoring rate rapidly improved.

Prior was particularly impressive, with some booming drives off the seamers and some sweeps off Hauritz that were timed and placed to perfection.

He fairly raced to his half-century and was unlucky to get out when he did, a victim of a brilliant bit of fielding from Marcus North, who ran him out with a direct hit from the deep.

Flintoff sauntered out to play his final Test innings at Lord’s and was given a rapturous welcome. With no pressure on him at all, he smacked the bowling about merrily, adding 51 off 48 balls with Collingwood until Siddle took Australia’s sixth wicket.

But just moments after Collingwood had edged to Haddin, the rain came down and the final 10.4 overs of the day went unbowled, with Flintoff unbeaten on 30.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

High Sierra Additions: Salmon, Slip, AOD, DeVotchKa

ONE OF THE SUMMER’S SWELLEST GATHERINGS SWELLS

Marc Friedman (Slip/Davis) :: HSMF ’08 :: by Scott Galbraith

The 2009 High Sierra Music Festival, taking place Thursday, July 2 – Sunday, July 5, 2009 in Quincy, CA, has announced the following additions to this year’s lineup:

DeVotchKa
Leftover Salmon
Greensky Bluegrass
Delhi 2 Dublin
Orchard Lounge
Assembly of Dust
The Slip
Surprise Me Mr. Davis
These United States
Red Cortez

Big Light
Lubriphonic
Zach Gill (special kids show)
Alice DiMicele & Friends

Paper Bird
Izabella
Bourgeois Gypsies
Raina Rose
Loyd Family Players

These artists join the already announced initial lineup:

John Butler

Umphrey’s McGee

Ani DiFranco

Disco Biscuits

Galactic

The Del McCoury Band

Steve Kimock Crazy Engine feat. Melvin Seals

The Wailers

Tea Leaf Green

Ollabelle

Mike Farris and the Roseland Rhythm Revue

ALO

Vieux Farka Toure

Dr. Dog

Devil Makes Three

The Travelin’ McCourys

The Lee Boys

Cornmeal

Bonerama

Marco Benevento Trio

McTuff feat. Skerik, Joe Doria, Andy Coe & D’Vonne Lewis

Skerik will also appear as an artist-at-large

Joe Craven and Sam Bevan Duo

Joe Craven will also appear as artist-at-large and emcee

Nathan Moore

Fareed Haque and The Flat Earth Ensemble

Pretty Lights

Everest

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band

Pimps of Joytime

J-Boogie and Dubtronic Science

Poor Man’s Whiskey

Living Folklore