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Sunday, November 19, 2017
Saturday, October 7, 2017
Indians fans travel from near and far for postseason baseball
Indians fans travel from near and far for postseason baseball
Published: October 5, 2017 - 8:51 PM | Updated: October 6, 2017 - 6:58 AM
- Image 1 of 8Fans walk to the left field entrance before Game 1 of the ALDS between the Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees on Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland.(Leah Klafczynski/Akron Beacon Journal)
- Image 2 of 8Edwin Encarnación fans (from left) Adam Saintz, Coley O'Brien, Evan Merten, and Tyler Abels walk to meet their fifth parrot, Kate Began, at the ticket gate before Game 1 of the ALDS between the Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees on Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland. (Leah Klafczynski/Akron Beacon Journal)
- Image 3 of 8Baseball fans wait in line outside the left field gate before Game 1 of the ALDS between the Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees on Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland. (Leah Klafczynski/Akron Beacon Journal)
- Image 4 of 8Cleveland police atop the parking garage before the Cleveland Indians take on the New York Yankees in Game 1 of an American League Division Series on Wednesday at Progressive Field in Cleveland. (Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal)
- Image 5 of 8Cleveland Indians fans wait for the gates to open in left field before the team's game against the New York Yankees, Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland. (Leah Klafczynski/Akron Beacon Journal)
- Image 6 of 8Cleveland Indians fan Krista Ebberson of Perry appears as the main gaits open before Game 1 of the American League Division Series between the New York Yankees and Cleveland Indians Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland. (Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal)
- Image 7 of 8Cleveland Indians fan Griffin Starr, 11, of Lakewood waits outside for the gates before Game 1 of the ALDS between the Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees on Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland. (Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal)
- Image 8 of 8Edwin Encarnación fans (from left) Kate Began, Adam Saintz, Evan Merten, Coley O'Brien and Tyler Abels pose in their parrot costumes before Game 1 of the ALDS between the Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees on Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland. (Leah Klafczynski/Akron Beacon Journal)
By Craig Webb
Beacon Journal staff writer
Cleveland: They waited 162 games for just this moment.
The postseason.
The memories of the extra-inning loss in Game 7 of the World Series to the Chicago Cubs left a feeling of unfinished business among Indians fans.
So they gathered by the thousands well ahead of the start of Thursday’s night game against the New York Yankees to be among the first inside Progressive Field.
Buoyed by a 102-win season — second most in team history — hope and optimism were flying higher than a Francisco Lindor home run as fans waited patiently for the gates to swing open.
Clevelander Kate Began stood in line in a full parrot costume.
Began’s costume and that of four of her feathered friends honors Indians slugger Edwin Encarnacion’s trademark home run strut with his right arm hoisted in the air.
The flock of feathered fans has been wearing the parrot costumes to Friday regular-season games for a month or so.
They had only witnessed one loss so far from their perch in the ballpark’s Corner Bar.
Began proudly points out she is the only female in the nest.
“I’m the momma parrot,” she said.
During one game, Encarnacion waved his arms like a bird and pointed at them, which was “pretty cool.”
What’s not cool, Began said, is the costume, so they’ve been thankful for night games.
And being the superstitious parrots they are — there will be no trips to the bird bath until the Indians win the World Series.
“We’re full-blown parrots,” she said. “I do Fabreze mine.”
One of the earliest arrivals at the ballpark was Erin Baker who showed up around 1 p.m. for a 7:38 p.m. game start.
She sat, leaning against the gate and crocheting mittens for life after baseball.
But the Clevelander is confident there’s still plenty of baseball ahead for her team well into the World Series, and possibly into November.
“I am very optimistic, but I am generally a very optimistic person,” she said. “I hate to think of the alternative.”
There were signs of optimism all over the ballpark. And most of them were tucked under the arm of ultimate Indians fan Jim Stamper.
He’s the guy who dresses in a white tuxedo jacket and holds up giant Chief Wahoo signs at games.
His postseason slogans this round range from “The Will to Win” to his perennial favorite “Not in My Teepee.”
The Cleveland resident has cheered a lot of teams since his first game in 1959.
He likes this year’s team because it feels different than the storied squads of the past that had a lot of individual athletes.
“I think they are more a team this year than we have ever had,” he said.
Tribe fan Steve Stempkowski drove from Yankees territory in Dunkirk, N.Y., to root for his favorite team.
Living in that state to the east, Stempkowski said, he’s been forced to watch a lot of Yankees games on local TV.
“I root against them,” he said.
The long-distance Indians fan says he has a good feeling about this postseason.
“Last year was a disappointment,” he said. “I think they will bounce back.”
Craig Webb, who is trying really, really hard to not cheer from the press box, can be reached at cwebb@thebeaconjournal.com or 330-996-3547.
Friday, October 6, 2017
Sunday, April 9, 2017
Sherrod Brown
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Monday, April 3, 2017
Rob Portman U.S. Senator's email to me.
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Mar 28 (6 days ago)
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Dear Henrietta,
.
Sincerely,
Rob Portman
U.S. Senator
Thank you very much for contacting me regarding allegations of improper communications between the Trump campaign and Russian officials during the 2016 Presidential election. I understand the seriousness of these allegations, and appreciate your views.
Like you, I have closely followed developments related to contact between Trump campaign and transition officials and Russian intelligence officers. You may know that in recent weeks, I have supported General Flynn’s decision to resign as National Security Adviser and Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ decision to recuse himself from any investigation into the Trump Administration’s improper contact with Russia. I will continue to track this situation closely.
I agree that the extent of Russian contact with Presidential campaigns in 2016 is worthy of bipartisan investigation in the Senate Intelligence Committee. Determining the extent of Russian efforts to influence our election is a matter of national security and is far more important than partisan politics.
I believe the United States must take a principled and tough-minded approach toward the Russian Federation. Recently, on February 9th, I cosigned a bipartisan letter calling on President to maintain the current U.S. sanctions against Russia and Russian entities—and to impose new sanctions as necessary—unless Russia fully respects the Minsk agreements and restores all control over Crimea to Ukraine. The letter also stated that the United States should not enter into any diplomatic or military agreement with Russia regarding Syria until Russia halts its military operations that have caused immense human suffering in Syria and ceases all support for the murderous regime of Bashar al-Assad.
President Putin must know that the United States stands as a beacon of freedom and democracy around the world, and will stand up for what is right.
Thank you again for taking the time to write. I value your opinion and will keep it in mind as I work to protect this nation. For more information on my work addressing the Russia threat, you may visit my website at www.portman.senate.gov
Sincerely,
Rob Portman
U.S. Senator
Tim Ryan's email to me
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Relax with yoga fingers
http://1krecipes.com/stretch-your-ring-finger-with-your-thumb-and-maintain-for-a-few-seconds-reason-youll-love/ This is a fun way to relax with yoga fingers.
enjoy!
enjoy!
Friday, March 31, 2017
Trump Builds a Watergate All His Own | By Michael Winship | Common Dreams
Trump Builds a Watergate All His Own | By Michael Winship | Common Dreams

Trump Builds a Watergate All His Own
Like the scandal that brought down Richard Nixon, the attempted cover-up of the president's relationship with Russia is slowly falling apart.
4 Comments

President Donald Trump waves as he walks on the South Lawn toward the White House on Sunday, March 19, 2017. (Photo: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
It’s déjà vu all over again.
As the Trump Russia story continues to stutter forward, comparisons to Watergate are everywhere — and justifiably so. The revelations and denials, the slow unraveling of deception, the critical role of a free and independent press challenging the cover-up and digging for the truth are all very familiar, especially to those of us who actually were in Washington back during those peculiar days and nights of Richard Nixon.
But another inside-the-Beltway, historic parallel struck me last week when reports emerged of House Intelligence Committee Chair Devin Nunes (R-CA) suddenly jumping from his Uber car into another and covertly racing to the White House grounds, where he met with who-knows-who about who-knows-what. (The New York Times reported on Thursday that White House officials Ezra Cohen-Watnick and Michael Ellis gave Nunes access to “intelligence reports that showed President Trump and his associates were incidentally swept up in foreign surveillance by American spy agencies.” Early Thursday evening, The Washington Post added to the list John Eisenberg, legal adviser to the National Security Council.)
When it comes to paralleling Nunes and his car switcheroo, there hasn’t been such noteworthy bolting from a vehicle in the District of Columbia since a South American stripper named Fanne Foxx dashed from the limousine of House Ways and Means Chairman Wilbur Mills and jumped into the Tidal Basin. That was in 1974, just a couple of months after Nixon’s resignation. Foxe and Rep. Mills were having an affair and soon after his companion’s 2 a.m. dip, Mills, who was considered by many to be the most powerful man on Capitol Hill, had to give up his chairmanship. Foxe had her 15 minutes of fame, during which her exotic dancer sobriquet was changed from “The Argentine Firecracker” to “The Tidal Basin Bombshell.”
No word as to what Rep. Nunes’ stripper name will be, but I’m open to suggestions. Certainly Devin “D for Dumb” Nunes is a real possibility. Which brings to mind another congressional highlight of 1974, and I’m not talking about the superb work of the House Judiciary Committee passing articles of impeachment against Nixon. It also was the year that a start-up magazine, New Times, made a splash with its cover story naming, “The 10 Dumbest Members of Congress.” It was written by Nina Totenberg, now NPR’s star legal affairs correspondent.
No. 1 on her list was Sen. William Scott, Republican from Virginia, a one termer whose stupid-is-as-stupid-does behavior reportedly included racist and anti-Semitic remarks.
During a defense briefing that included information about missile silos in Russia, Scott is alleged to have said, “Wait a minute! I’m not interested in agriculture. I want the military stuff.” Nor did he seem to know the difference between the Suez Canal and the Persian Gulf, so thank God he never was anywhere near the nuclear codes.
To make matters worse, when the article appeared, Scott called a press conference in his office to angrily denounce the story, giving it even wider coverage and proving once and for all that he really was exactly who Totenberg and the magazine said he was.
Which brings us back to Devin Nunes. Certainly, in this current Congress he already has a lot of competition for dumbest. The Texas House Republicans alone include an impressive array of top-tier candidates. (And I say that as a Yankee who nonetheless received half his chromosomes from a smart and capable Texan.)
Or maybe Nunes is dumb like a fox. Between his feckless dashing about Washington like a barely housebroken Scooby-Doo and his postponement of more open hearings that might further reveal the administration’s culpability, he has done his best to obfuscate and obstruct. He’s certainly a tool, his fumbling mistakes and misrepresentations thoroughly mucking up his committee’s investigation, probably beyond redemption. Which doubtless is just what his White House pals wanted.
Hard to believe he wants to go out this way (and he should resign, recuse himself or be replaced by House Speaker Ryan). There are even those who say that when the committee room doors are closed, in private he has been a helpful colleague — until now.
Apparently, Nunes been played and played big-time, a cog in the Steve Bannon machine designed to subvert the current investigations. That classified — and said to be anonymous! — information about which Nunes insisted he had to brief President Trump but at the same time hide from the eyes of his committee turns out to have been leaked to him by the supposedly leak-averse White House itself. In other words, he was briefing the White House on documents he got from the White House. Huh?
And what was in those documents? According to The Times:
“The intelligence reports consisted primarily of ambassadors and other foreign officials talking about how they were trying to develop contacts within Mr. Trump’s family and inner circle before his inauguration, officials said…“Mr. Nunes has acknowledged that the incidental intelligence gathering on Trump associates last year was not necessarily unlawful, and that it was not specifically directed at Mr. Trump or people close to him. American intelligence agencies typically monitor foreign officials of allied and hostile countries, and they routinely sweep up communications linked to Americans who may be taking part in the conversation or are being spoken about.”
Shocker — not. And far removed from the myth of Barack Obama “wiretapping” Trump Tower, as the current president claimed.
Now, how about the men who allegedly handed off the info to Rep. Nunes? There’s Michael Ellis, who’s in the White House Counsel’s office. He used to work for Nunes at the intelligence committee and now reports to the aforementioned National Security Council attorney John Eisenberg.
And you may remember Ezra Cohen-Watnick — he’s the guy who national security adviser H.R. McMaster recently wanted to bounce from his position as the National Security Council’s senior director for intelligence. Cohen-Watnick, 30, went running to his protectors, Steve Bannon and presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner. They then went to Trump, who overruled McMaster and saved the kid’s job. After Trump sent his scurrilous tweets about wiretapping, Cohen-Watnick apparently wanted to pay his debt to the boss and seems to have set about trying to find something, anything, that might be interpreted as supporting his president’s fantasy.
Cohen-Watnick is a protégé of McMaster’s short-lived predecessor as national security adviser, the notorious Michael Flynn, who lost his job for, among other sins, purportedly lying to Vice President Mike Pence and others about his conversations with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak. At least that was the cover story. He also may have been involved in a private, half-baked scheme to kidnap Turkish opposition leader Fethullah Gulen from exile in Pennsylvania and turn him over to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and certain death, thus avoiding formal extradition.
Still with me? Earlier reports had indicated that Flynn might be cutting a deal with the FBI, copping a plea in exchange for telling everything he knows about Donald Trump’s team and Russia, including possible collusion in that country’s interference with the 2016 election. Now The Wall Street Journal reports that according to officials, Flynn has offered to be interviewed by the agency and the congressional intelligence committees in exchange for immunity, “but has so far found no takers.” His lawyer wrote, “Gen. Flynn certainly has a story to tell, and he very much wants to tell it, should the circumstances permit.” I’ll bet, but it may take a while; no one seems anxious to grant Flynn’s request anytime soon. And it’s pretty funny coming from a fellow who last September told Meet the Press, “When you are given immunity, that means you probably committed a crime.”
Which brings us back to Watergate. When Woodward and Bernstein started writing their articles in June 1972, there was frustration, because while they were on the front page of The Washington Post almost every day, their reporting was buried in other newspapers around the country and the story got little traction — much as the Russia story has been ignored or denied by Trump’s base. Richard Nixon won re-election in a landslide.
In my memory, Watergate finally began to really crack open months later when the burglars appeared for sentencing in March 1973. One of them, James McCord, had written a letter to Judge John Sirica and then met with him in chambers, begging for a deal and singing like the Vienna Boys Choir about who at the Nixon White House had asked the burglars to take the rap and remain silent in exchange for a payoff.
So maybe now a similar agreement eventually will be reached with Flynn. Add to that the seeming seriousness of Republican Richard Burr, chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, who as of this week — and unlike the hapless Nunes — seems committed to getting honest answers, much as his fellow North Carolinian, Democrat Sam Ervin, sought when he chaired the Senate Watergate Committee. (That said, the apparent commitment of Burr — and Democratic vice chair Mark Warner of Virginia — does not yet negate the real need for an independent, bipartisan inquiry and a special prosecutor.)
Senators of both parties serving on the intelligence committee were stunned Thursday when Clinton Watts, a senior fellow at the George Washington University’s Center for Cyber and Homeland Security, told them in a public hearing that not only had Russia hacked Hillary Clinton but also other GOP presidential candidates who ran against Trump in the primaries, including Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush and Lindsey Graham. What’s more, Watts said, “the commander in chief has used Russian active measures at times against his opponents.”
In part, he noted, that’s why Russia was so successful — Trump played such a willing (if possibly unwitting) role in their scheme: “… Part of the reason these active measures work, and it does today in terms of Trump Tower being wiretapped, is because they [Trump’s associates] parrot the same lines.”
Sure, there’s a chance this will all lead to naught. But we have to find out. Every piece of this puzzle inexorably leads us to the big looming questions one longs to ask Trump and his cohort under oath: If there’s really nothing going on, why are you working so hard to keep the truth from coming out? What exactly are you hiding?
Or is this a knee-jerk authoritarian response to anyone who dares challenge the leader, a dictatorial reaction that will only worsen with time and the consolidation of power? That may be the most frightening question of all.
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