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This time, surgery was the only option, as doctors inserted anchors to keep the shoulder in place. He sat out the better part of a year, and didn’t make a PGA Tour start for 15 months. |
“I don’t want to ever do that again,” Cauley said. |
Not only could he not play golf, he couldn’t pursue much of anything. |
“I watched a lot of Netflix,” he said with a laugh. “I was not very productive. I put on some weight. Nothing good. |
Even after getting a clean bill of health, it took another year to get his swing back to where it once was. |
Thursday provided the most positive sign yet. The question now is whether he can keep it going for three more days. |
If so, perhaps he’ll have to miss the Bahamas trip again next year — while he defends an RBC Heritage title. |
The Ricoh Arena could host a huge European Cup semi final later this month. |
European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR) has announced that the stadium, owned by Wasps, will host the last-four clash IF Saracens and Scarlets progress through their quarter-final challenges. |
The 32,609 all-seater stadium would host the match-up between the two clubs on either 21 or 22 April and is one of of five stadiums selected by EPCR to host a semi-final game. |
The Ricoh has hosted the semi-finals for the highest level of European competition twice before. |
Cov v Wasps - game on! |
In April 2007, also the first time the stadium had hosted a rugby union match, future owners Wasps defeated Northampton Saints 30-11 in an all English Heineken Cup semi-final. |
The black-and-golds returned to the Ricoh in November 2007 for a pool match against Irish giants Munster, which saw them run out narrow 24-23 victors. |
Later in the same season, Saracens chose it as the venue for their Heineken Cup final four match-up with Munster, which saw the Irishmen progress to the 2008 final after defeating the Fez Heads 18-16. |
Don’t have a date for Valentine’s Day? Me neither! I have plans with friends in the neighborhood, and you can bet that plan involves bringing an easy chocolate dessert to share. (It’s less expensive than buying cute cards for everyone, and really adds a lot more to the party.) I haven’t nailed down exactly what to bake... |
The easy chocolate dessert recipes below are just that. There are cakes, cookies, brownies, fudge and even a rich chocolate pie to choose from. None of them are heart-shaped or covered in pink decorations, because I’m pretty sure that on Valentine’s Day, everyone is already painfully aware that it’s Valentine’s Day. Bu... |
Whether you’re staying in or going out on Valentine’s Day, these easy chocolate desserts are desperate to celebrate with you. They’re perfect for groups, but equally perfect for two people—or just one! |
True to their name, these easy, decadent brownies are the best Valentine. |
Don’t let classic chocolate have all the fun on V-day. These white chocolate cupcakes are a little different, but just as good as darker chocolate options. |
Chocolate mousse isn’t for everybody. If you’re a fan of the stuff, here’s an easy version that you can make for company—or for yourself. |
Sure, you could go out and buy a pint of chocolate ice cream. But is there anything more lovely than the idea of making it yourself? |
If you’re looking for a sweet treat you can eat all night, these fudge meltaways are easy to make—and even easier to eat. |
These chocolatey cookies are double the fun, with no extra effort. |
How can something so simple (fudge!) be so, so special? |
More of a pie person than a cake person? There’s an easy chocolate pie for that. |
Honestly, it’s tough to pick a favorite layer of this triple chocolate cheesecake. |
This ridiculously easy, ridiculously good chocolate cake calls for boxed cake mix, instant pudding mix and sour cream. |
If you can’t decide between chocolate desserts, this easy mousse cake is sure to hit several cravings at once. |
Who says you need to bake on Valentine’s Day? This no-bake chocolate peanut butter dessert proves that actually, it sometimes pays not to. |
I’d advocate for baking this easy chocolate cobbler in several small ramekins, so that you can just scoop some ice cream on top and go to town. |
Chocolate cake, caramel and chocolatey whipped topping—what’s not to love about this easy chocolate poke cake? |
This heavy-duty, easy-to-make chocolate cake has a really intense flavor, thanks to chocolate chips, espresso powder, yogurt, cocoa powder and all kinds of other deliciousness. |
Chocolate lava cake is kind of the OG surprise-inside cake. |
NEWMARKET — Florence E. (Arendt) Smith, 92, formerly of 358 Wadleigh Falls Road, Newmarket, died peacefully at Langdon Place in Exeter, Monday, Aug. 27, 2007. |
She moved to Greenland, where she continued to raise her daughters. In 1964, she married Edward (Ned) C. Smith of Dover. She and Ned made their home in Dover for a short time before moving to Newmarket. After Ned's death in 1989, she continued to live on her farm until a few years ago. |
Florence is survived by five devoted daughters, Norma Curti and her husband, Raymond, of Dover, Jane Pinney and her husband, Richard, Priscilla Syphers and her husband, Leroy, and Gail MacKenzie, all of Greenland; also Adrienne Rubino and her husband, Robert, of Newmarket. |
She is also survived by 17 loving grandchildren, Patricia Daigle of Washington, D.C., Donna Hand and her husband, William, of Portsmouth, Darlene Pearl and husband, Scott, of Newfields; Caren Peloso and her husband, Michael, of Dover, Jana Curti of Dover and Gina Curti of Thornton; Joanna Buell and her husband, David, ... |
She was predeceased by her daughter, Barbara and son-in-law, Donald Daigle, grandson, Dale Daigle, all of Portsmouth; granddaughter, Deanna Michniewich of Florida and son-in-law, James MacKenzie of Greenland. |
She also leaves 27 great-grandchildren and two great-great grandchildren; a half-brother, William Smith of Rochester, and half-sisters, Alice Leavitt of Madison, Maine, and Ruth Francis of Tucson, Ariz. |
President Trump addresses rally in Harrisburg, PA on April 29, 2017. Screenshot from NBCNews. |
Six months removed from the last U.S. presidential campaign, it seems silly, and perhaps a bit painful, to realize that the first campaign ad of the 2020 presidential election – still 42 months away – hit airwaves yesterday. |
Almost immediately after Donald Trump unexpectedly prevailed in the 2016 race, the Republican and his team took steps to prepare for his re-election effort. With that in mind, the Trump 2020 campaign team has already set up an office, staff, campaign rallies, and an ongoing fundraising operation. |
And it has advertising, which Trump’s campaign has already managed to screw up. |
President Donald Trump’s campaign organization removed a television ad from its YouTube account after questions that it may have violated military policy. |
The ad, which Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. announced Monday it would spend $1.5 million airing nationwide, originally included video of National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster shaking Trump’s hand at Mar-a-Lago, in uniform, after he accepted his new position in February. |
Military rules prohibit these kinds of appearances in campaign ads, so Team Trump yanked the commercial and replaced the footage with new content. |
We’re accustomed to thinking about Trump screwing up big things, but we’re occasionally reminded that he’s quite capable of getting little things wrong, too. |
Stepping back, however, there are a few angles to this ad launch that are worth keeping in mind. |
Second, as a New York Times fact-check noted, the ad isn’t exactly honest. |
Third, having a campaign run an ad touting a president’s first 100 days in office, after the president denounced the 100-day standard as “ridiculous,” starts to make a political operation look a little desperate. |
And finally, for the love of all that is good in the world, do we really need a 2020 campaign operation to hit the airwaves with a $1.5 million ad buy more than three years ahead of the next presidential election? |
Our environment is such that it has become difficult to escape noise. The Noise is everywhere, all the time; whether you drive, walk along the road, at work, at home relaxing, engaged in other activity or just standing still, you are subject to some sort of noise. Noise pollution is so omnipresent in today’s society th... |
Most of us are used to the sounds we hear in everyday life both in urban and rural areas and rarely does it disturb us. Road traffic, sounds from cars, buses, ambulances etc. In construction, sounds like drilling or other heavy machinery in operation, workplace sounds, loud music in or near commercial venues, industria... |
The noise made in our households; we not even consider as noise pollution. But the gadgets and equipment we use; the sound from the television to music playing on the stereo or computer, vacuum cleaner, fan, refrigerator, cooler, mixer, grinder, washing machine, dishwasher, lawnmower etc. we make considerable amount of... |
Proper understanding of the hazards of noise pollution can help us to lower its impact on the human beings and the environment. The worrisome effects of noise are dangerous enough that noise problem can be considered next to crime. Noise at certain levels and durations of exposure, can cause physical damage to the eard... |
Noise louder than accepted levels has been correlated with significant risks to cardiovascular health. Excessive noise exposure can raise blood pressure and pulse rates, cause irritability, anxiety, and mental fatigue. Sleeplessness, recreation, reduced efficiency, annoyance, depression, increased stress, and mental br... |
The urban population is more affected by, and exposed to such pollution. The small towns/villages in rural areas along side roads and closer to industries are also victim of this problem. Noise is becoming an increasingly omnipresent, yet unnoticed form of pollution. The human activities are the major sources of this u... |
By and large there are laws to deal with most hazardous situations. However, it’s not the lack of law, but it is the lack of enforcement. In the past there was enforcement of the law concerning the limits of “sound level” of vehicle horns and sirens, also music played inside passenger transport busses. There were laws ... |
Law is already there relating to many activities and sources producing noise. Accordingly areas are designated as Low, Medium, High and silent, noise Zones with maximum permissible noise limits within each area. Maximum Noise Levels for the construction activities during the Day time and the Night time distinguishing t... |
The noise pollution made by deliberately adapted vehicles with thrumming engines, screaming horns and the motorcycles with modified super-loud exhaust pipes are an utterly unnecessary, obnoxious noise disturbing quiet environment and peaceful atmosphere. They disregard everyone else when roaring down the road, rattling... |
The authorities have to try out ways of curbing this utterly unwanted noise pollution. The authorities can formulate a system such as issuing spot fines to drivers with excessively loud cars or motorcycles bringing it out as an offence under the Motor Traffic Act. It would be a deterrent to the motorist and the motorcy... |
The current law enforcement offers a more reactionary approach to curbing noise, rather than provide a direction on curbing it. The Authorities should adopt an approach aimed at bettering noise pollution by setting a goal to decrease noise over a period of time. They could also consider new challenges, which wasn’t nea... |
Changing attitudes are as important as catching violators. People who wouldn’t dream of emptying a trash can onto the street think nothing of polluting the sounds cape. The Local Authorities can play an important role in this effort to address noise though the bylaw system. One idea is putting up Decibel Readouts at ke... |
We are very, very much looking forward to the adoption of such a law. I live in a house where 60 apartments and speakers on poles, which are hung in the immediate vicinity of the house 5-10 meters from the bedroom balcony, is unbearable. I use earplugs and headphones, but they don't help. Music until late at night and ... |
The King Arthur story is remade for 21st-century kids in this family comedy. |
Louis Ashbourne Serkis contemplates Excalibur in the face of evil in "The Kid Who Would Be King." |
Ever since I saw Monty Python and the Holy Grail at the age of 13, it has ruined all other movies about King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table for me. Every time I hear some actor say, “Camelot!” in those reverential tones, I reflexively think, “It’s only a model,” and I giggle to myself. I tell you this so tha... |
This is the creation of Joe Cornish, the British filmmaker who made a splash back in 2011 with his science-fiction comedy Attack the Block, which starred a pre-Star Wars John Boyega and a pre-Doctor Who Jodie Whittaker. That movie drew its power from its specific Britishness and its commentary on race relations in that... |
At the same time, a 12-year-old London boy named Alexander Elliott (Louis Ashbourne Serkis, the son of Andy Serkis) is running away from two school bullies (Tom Taylor and Rhianna Dorris) when he stumbles into a construction site where he finds a sword embedded in a stone. Once he pulls it out, Merlin reincarnates as a... |
Cornish’s sensibility is completely modern, so Alex and his best friend Bedders (Dean Chaumoo) use the Star Wars, Harry Potter, and Lord of the Rings movies as cues while they go about their quest. The writer-director finds some great comic inspiration in the young Merlin failing to blend in with the other schoolkids a... |
It does seem a bit too easy how Alex, in following Arthur’s example, convinces the bullies to join his quest as a way of uniting his enemies. (What did I tell you? Brexit!) Still, Cornish knows how to balance action sequences like a giant climactic showdown at his school with more character-driven things like Alex find... |
Starring Louis Ashbourne Serkis, Dean Chaumoo, and Patrick Stewart. Written and directed by Joe Cornish. Rated PG. |
DENVER — From medical records to wristbands, Colorado hospitals and health systems are finding new ways to change how they record patients’ gender identities, The Denver Post reports. |
This year, Kaiser Permanente changed its electronic medical record system so physicians can note patients’ gender identity and preferred pronouns alongside their legal names and other information typically included in medical records. |
Children’s Hospital Colorado still uses “male” and “female” gender designations in medical records, but it has removed them from patients’ wristbands. |
“We also are committed to offering culturally responsive care for the diverse populations we serve so that we can create a welcoming, supporting and safe environment that is so important for all of our patients and families,” spokesperson Elizabeth Whitehead said in an email to The Denver Post. |
Roughly 20,850 individuals in Colorado identify as transgender according to a 2016 study by the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law. |
One of the barriers transgender people face in accessing health care is that they fear discrimination and the possibility that a provider will use the wrong name and pronouns, said Daniel Ramos, executive director of One Colorado. |
As expected, Microsoft's Surface with Windows 8 Pro tablet is on track to launch at the end of January, according to several reports. |
Microsoft hasn't announced an exact release date for the Surface Pro. The company has only said that the Intel-based tablet would launch “about 90 days” after the arrival of the Surface with Windows RT, which launched last October 26. By that timing, the Surface Pro would launch on January 26. |
To put all this another way, it doesn't seem that Microsoft is pushing out the Surface with Windows 8 Pro ahead of schedule, despite talk of slow sales for the Windows RT version. Microsoft has tried to boost Surface sales by expanding distribution outside of its own stores, to retailers such as Best Buy. It's unclear ... |
The Surface with Windows 8 Pro runs on an Intel Core i5 processor, so it has full support for legacy desktop software, unlike Surface with Windows RT, which can install only modern-style apps from Microsoft's digital storefront. The Surface Pro also has a 1080p display, comes with double the basic storage capacity at 6... |
However, it also has some drawbacks compared to the Surface RT: It's about 0.15 inches thicker and a half-pound heavier, and will have roughly half the battery life. It's also much more expensive, priced at $899 for the tablet alone, compared to $499 for the Surface RT. Touch Covers and Type Covers will be sold separat... |
At this point, the big dilemma for prospective Surface Pro buyers might be the looming launch of Intel's Haswell architecture, which promises much better battery life for Ultrabooks and hybrid devices. Although it's unclear when Haswell-based processors will be ready—a May or June launch is expected—Intel is also plann... |
Germany’s Bild newspaper promised on Thursday that Germans would not hog hotel sunloungers and would make key concessions to the England football team if the UK voted to stay in the European Union. |
“Dear Brits, if you remain in the EU … then we ourselves will recognise the Wembley goal,” Bild declared above a picture of Geoff Hurst’s controversial extra-time goal in the 1966 World Cup final, when England beat West Germany. The paper said Germany would go without its goalkeeper in the next penalty shootout between... |
Bild also pledged to supply the baddie for every James Bond film, put its clocks back one hour so they would be in the same time zone as Britain, not use suntan lotion out of solidarity with sunburnt Brits, and introduce an EU guideline that bans froth on beer, if Britain votes to remain. |
Libération ran a double issue, Who’s in and who’s out, warning that Nigel Farage’s “Breaking Point” poster summed up the whole referendum debate – warning of “a country that is suspicious, that tenses and closes in on itself, even though Great Britain has made remarkable efforts to integrate its minorities and open up ... |
The editor, Laurent Joffrin, cautioned that a Brexit would be “an example, a precedent, a dangerous shock that would encourage nationalism, that poison for which Europe is the antidote”. |
The headline “Brexit or Not Brexit” – dotted across French media in recent days – was meanwhile still going strong on the front pages of both Le Figaro and Le Parisien. |
In Le Figaro, the rightwing mayor of Calais, Natacha Bouchart, reiterated her long-held view that if the UK votes to leave the EU, France should immediately renegotiate the 2003 Le Touquet accord – the bilateral treaty that, by allowing British border officers to carry out passport checks in Calais, effectively places ... |
Bouchard said Brexit would provide a good opportunity to pull out of the agreement and push the border and migrants back to Kent. Because the accord is between Britain and France, and not a European one, there is no automatic need to review it, but Bouchard said a Brexit vote would put France “in a strong position to b... |
Le Parisien warned that a vote to leave would have “a snowball effect” – bringing to the fore competing nationalisms in Europe where “populist and Europhobic movements” had already gained ground in the Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark and France. |
The vote dominates Italy’s front pages, deemed “Europe’s longest day” by La Repubblica and the business daily Il Sole 24 Ore. |
Rome’s top paper, Il Messaggero, carried a bleak image of the “anxiety and fear of the British, divided on the destiny of the kingdom”, and says the climate in Britain has become even more poisonous since the murder of the Labour MP Jo Cox. |
The staunchly anti-EU Il Giornale carried a photo of a “Keep Calm & Vote Leave” van, declaring that whoever won, Brussels had lost. |
The rightwing Berlingske published an English-language editorial imploring Britain to “please stay” in the EU, amid fears Denmark could lose a key ally in Brussels. |
“As a nation, we in Denmark understand your scepticism about the EU, perhaps better than any other country. Three times we voted no - in 1992, 2000 and 2015 - but never out. |
A cartoon on the paper’s front page showed a door marked with an EU flag slamming shut on a half naked man with a bowler hat and an umbrella, tearing off his Union Jack suit as it closed behind him. |
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