NBey6's Blog

Filthy lucre: Cash-filled shoes tossed in Romania

Filthy lucre: Cash-filled shoes tossed in Romania

Posted: Today at 8:49 a.m.
Updated: Today at 9:10 a.m.

 

BUCHAREST, Romania — Romanian newspapers are reporting that a Romanian family who hid euro40,000 ($57,768) in a pair of old shoes, then threw them away by mistake, has recovered the bulk of its savings.

 

Newspapers Evenimentul Zilei and Gandul reported Wednesday that a man from the city of Alba Iulia hid the savings in the shoes without telling his wife. The papers say the wife cleaned house before Christmas and threw the shoes away.

 

The papers reported that the couple informed police, who discovered that a woman had found the shoes - and bought a euro22,000 cottage. The family recovered euro11,000 from the woman and euro19,000 from the people who sold the house. The woman who found the shoes will be investigated.

Entry #1,876

Thought of the Day

"Therefore shall they eat of the fruit of their own way, and be filled with their own devices."

- Proverbs 1:31 -

Entry #1,875

Vision

Wednesday 1-6-10

545, 800, 286, 176, 230, 713, 621, 106, 367, 073

047, 219, 290, 421, 194, 462, 263, 342, 827, 679

667, 664, 448, 117, 101, 663, 121, 223, 444, 777

5895, 1035, 1030, 1489, 1115, 4667, 3864, 0500

Crystal Ball

Entry #1,873

Sen. Chris Dodd to retire, sources tell CNN

Sen. Chris Dodd to retire, sources tell CNN

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Source: News conference planned for Wednesday to formally announce decision
  • Sen. Chris Dodd was considered one of the most vulnerable Democrats in 2010
  • He has been criticized for ties to the financial industry, especially AIG
RELATED TOPICS
  • Christopher Dodd
  • American International Group Inc.
  • Connecticut
  • U.S. Senate

(CNN) -- Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Connecticut, plans to announce his retirement Wednesday, two sources close to the lawmaker told CNN.

 

Dodd, 65, had been winning congressional elections in his state since 1974, but he's recently been considered one of the most vulnerable Democrats seeking re-election in 2010. He has been trailing likely Republican challengers in recent polls, even though Connecticut typically leans Democratic.

 

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, one of the state's most popular Democrats, plans to announce his candidacy for Dodd's seat Wednesday, a highly placed Connecticut Democrat told CNN.

 

Blumenthal's candidacy could increase the likelihood that Democrats will retain the Senate seat in November's midterm election.

 

Dodd's news conference comes a day after another Democratic senator, Byron Dorgan of North Dakota, announced that he will not seek re-election in November.

 

Dorgan's seat, unlike Dodd's, was considered safe for Democrats, who are trying to hold on to their 60-seat filibuster-proof Senate majority. Most observers believe North Dakota will now become a top GOP target. Some top Republicans are urging that state's popular GOP governor, John Hoeven, to run for the seat.

 

Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele said Tuesday that Dorgan's decision "highlights just how vulnerable both Senate and House Democrats have become since deciding to walk in lockstep with President Obama's government-run policies."

 

Rob Simmons, a Republican who had been leading Dodd in recent polls, said Thursday that he is still in the race.

 

Simmons said Wednesday that any Democratic nominee will have to defend "failed Democratic policies."

 

Dodd has been criticized for ties to the financial industry, which is particularly influential in Connecticut. The senator was criticized last year for his role in handing out big bonuses at AIG, after the insurance giant received taxpayer bailout money. AIG's Financial Products unit is based in Connecticut.

 

Dodd initially denied having anything to do with American International Grouppaying out millions in bonuses, then later acknowledged his role.

 

Dodd, who is chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, acknowledged to CNN that he was responsible for language added to the stimulus bill to ensure that existing contracts for bonuses at bailout recipients, such as AIG, were honored.

 

Soon after that, Dodd acknowledged that his poll numbers had slipped. Rumors about Dodd's retirement have swirled around Washington for months.

 

Dodd's retirement will, at least for the moment, silence his family's long-powerful voice in Connecticut politics. His father, Thomas Dodd, represented the state in the U.S. House from 1953 to 1957, and in the U.S. Senate between 1959 and 1971.

Entry #1,872

Randy Johnson retires after 22 seasons

Randy Johnson retires after 22 seasons

By JANIE McCAULEY, AP Baseball Writer

2 hrs 53 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO – Randy Johnson looked so awkward on the mound early in his career, that shaggy hair dangling down his neck as he fired a blazing fastball in every direction but the strike zone.

Now, after 22 major league seasons, The Big Unit is walking away from baseball as one of the game's greatest pitchers.

The 6-foot-10 Johnson announced his retirement on a conference call Tuesday, a decision that had been expected from the overpowering left-hander who reached 300 wins last June.

"I really wanted to go out on my terms," Johnson said. "I just feel like there's not a lot more for me to do in this game. I just think it's a natural progression when you play this long. Eventually you have to say it's time."

A five-time Cy Young Award winner, the 46-year-old Johnson accomplished just about everything in his remarkable career that a player hopes for in baseball.

He owns a World Series ring and co-MVP honors, and was a 10-time All-Star. He threw two no-hitters, including a perfect game, and ranks second on the career strikeout list.

Johnson finishes with a record of 303-166 and 4,875 strikeouts in 4,135 1-3 innings for Montreal, Seattle, Houston, Arizona, the New York Yankees and San Francisco. His strikeouts are the most by a left-hander and second to Nolan Ryan's 5,714.

"It's all been a bit of a whirlwind. I never really got caught up in what I did," Johnson said. "I never really dwelled on my achievements. They're nice. Maybe now I'll be able to reflect on them."

Johnson overcame several injuries to keep pitching effectively into his mid-40s. He said before last season ended that he looked forward to going home to Arizona and spending time with his family before making a decision about his future.

"It's taken this long into January because I definitely wanted to just kind of relax from the season being over and make sure I had a clear head when I made this decision, and that I would be making it wholeheartedly and would be sticking to it," he said.

Johnson went 8-6 with a 4.88 ERA in 17 starts and five relief appearances for San Francisco last season despite missing more than two months with a strained left shoulder that also had a tear in the rotator cuff. He returned in late September as a reliever, a role he couldn't see himself embracing in order to keep pitching.

His final strikeout came on the season's final day at San Diego, against Adrian Gonzalez to end the seventh inning. Johnson said he developed a better appreciation for relief pitchers last year.

"My 40s have really been learning years," he said. "The last five years of my career, there's been a lot there to sift through, a lot of ups and downs, some great moments in my career and some moments that got my head scratching."

Johnson came out of a game July 5 against Houston with an injury, the first serious shoulder problem of his career. He felt something in his arm on a swing during that start but initially tried to pitch through it. He left the game after committing a throwing error in the fourth inning.

He was on the disabled list from July 6 to Sept. 16, marking the 10th DL stint of Johnson's career. He had four knee operations and three back surgeries, but worked his way back each time.

"This isn't a tall man's sport — basketball is," Johnson said.

But by the time he was done, he had a Hall of Fame resume.

Johnson signed with his hometown Giants before last season to try to help them reach the playoffs. They stayed in the NL wild-card chase well into September but missed the postseason for a sixth straight year.

Pitching in San Francisco, Johnson was only about 40 miles west of where he grew up in Livermore.

"The entire San Francisco Giants organization would like to salute Randy Johnson on a brilliant Hall of Fame career and congratulate him on his retirement," the team said in a statement. "He has been a tremendous champion of this great game, escalating to heights that few have reached. He will go down as one of the greatest pitchers in the history of the game."

Johnson largely stayed to himself in his final season, insisting the 300-win milestone wasn't his top priority. Then on June 4 at Washington, he became the 24th pitcher in big league history to accomplish the feat.

Johnson pitched his first no-hitter in 1990, won 19 games with 308 strikeouts in 1993 and led the Mariners to their first playoff berth with an 18-2 record in 1995. He finished his 10-year stint in Seattle with a 130-74 record before being traded to Houston in 1998.

He signed as a free agent with the Diamondbacks before the following season, beginning one of the most dominating runs a pitcher has ever had. Johnson won the Cy Young in each of his first four seasons with Arizona, capturing the coveted pitcher's triple crown in 2002 with a 24-5 record, 2.32 ERA and 334 strikeouts.

His most memorable moments — and some he's most proud of — were in 2001, when he came out of the bullpen to beat the Yankees in Game 7 of the World Series to give the Diamondbacks the title. He went 3-0 in the Series, sharing the MVP award with Curt Schilling.

At age 40, Johnson pitched a perfect game against Atlanta.

He didn't have as much success after leaving Arizona for the first time following the 2004 season. He won 34 games in two seasons with the Yankees, although the tenure was marred by a run-in with a camera man and postseason struggles.

He returned to Arizona in '07 and won 15 games in two years while struggling with back problems.

"I never thought I was going to play this long. I'm blessed that I did," he said, adding that he plans to coach someday.

Johnson has a one-year service agreement to work in some capacity for the Diamondbacks.

Entry #1,871

Vision

Tuesday 1-5-10

145, 414, 103, 350, 050, 555, 192, 395, 578, 906

772, 327, 073, 577, 331, 851, 212, 531, 506, 777

1035, 0350, 1457, 0760, 4867, 5421, 6002, 2864

Entry #1,870

NC/SC Pick 4 Wildcard

Midday & Evening

** until 1-7-10 **

0124 0134 0145 0146 0147 0148 0149 0157 0167 0245 0246 0248 0267 0345 0346 0348 0367 0456 0457 0458 0459 0467 0468 0469 0478 0489 0567 0678 0679 1234 1245 1246 1247 1248 1249 1257 1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1357 1456 1457 1458 1459 1467 1468 1469 1478 1479 1489 1567 1578 1579 1678 2345 2346 2348 2456 2457 2458 2459 2467 2468 2469 2478 2489 2678 3456 3457 3458 3459 3467 3468 3469 3478 3489 3678 4567 4568 4569 4578 4579 4589 4678 4679 4689 4789 5678 6789 0014 0017 0024 0027 0034 0037 0045 0046 0047 0048 0049 0057 0067 0078 0079 1104 1124 1134 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1157 2214 2245 2246 2248 3314 3345 3346 3348 4401 4405 4406 4408 4412 4413 4415 4416 4417 4418 4419 4425 4426 4428 4435 4436 4438 4456 4457 4458 4459 4467 4468 4469 4478 4489 5504 5514 5517 5524 5534 5546 5547 5548 5549 6604 6607 6614 6624 6634 6645 6647 6648 6649 6678 7706 7714 7715 7745 7746 7748 7768 8804 8814 8824 8834 8845 8846 8847 8849 8867 9914 9945 9946 9948 0004 0007 1114 4441 4445 4446 4448 5554 6664 8884 0044 0077 1144 4455 4466 4488

Smash

Entry #1,869

SC first lady's memoir to be released next month

SC first lady's memoir to be released next month

By BRUCE SMITH, Associated Press

44 mins ago

CHARLESTON, S.C. – South Carolina first lady Jenny Sanford's memoir about dealing with her husband's infidelity will be published next month.

The 240-page "Staying True" goes on sale Feb. 5, according to the Web site for Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House Inc.

The book was to have been published in May and neither Sanford nor the publisher immediately returned calls about the change in release date.

Jenny Sanford filed for divorce from Gov. Mark Sanford last month and a final hearing on the petition is scheduled for late February.

The governor, once a rising star in the Republican Party and a possible 2012 presidential contender, disappeared for five days last summer and returned to publicly confess an affair with an Argentine woman. His staff told reporters he was hiking the Appalachian Trail, but he was actually in Argentina.

The publisher's Web site says the memoir will reveal Jenny Sanford's private ordeal over her husband's public betrayal. The book, which has a portrait of the first lady sitting by the beach on its cover, will tell how she learned just a day ahead of the public that her husband had not ended his affair with the woman he later called his soul mate.

"She reveals the source of her determination to be honest and forthright instead of the victim in the tabloid passion play that gripped the nation in June 2009," the synopsis says.

Two days after Mark Sanford's confession, Jenny Sanford told the AP she learned about the affair in January 2009 and told her husband to break it off, even though he asked her permission to see his mistress.

"It's one thing to forgive adultery; it's another thing to condone it," she said.

Jenny Sanford, a Georgetown-educated, former Wall Street vice president, did not stand next to her husband during his pained public confession.

She later moved out of the governor's mansion in Columbia and is now living with the couple's four sons at their beachfront home on Sullivans Island near Charleston.

Entry #1,866

Casey Johnson dies at age 30

Socialite daughter of New York Jets owner has died

Tue Jan 5, 6:41 am ET

In this photo taken on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2008, Casey Johnson arrives at the
AP – In this photo taken on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2008, Casey Johnson arrives at the grand opening of Apple Lounge …
Daughter of Jets owner dies at 30 Socialite Johnson, daughter of Jet's Owner, dies Jets Owner's Daughter, Casey Johnson, Found Dead 

LOS ANGELES – Casey Johnson, the socialite daughter of New York Jets owner Woody Johnson and heiress to the Johnson & Johnson business empire has died, a spokesman for the family and police said Monday. She was 30.

TMZ.com reported that Johnson was found dead Monday. Police officers responded to her Los Angeles home around 11:51 a.m. where paramedics had already pronounced Johnson dead, officer Sara Faden said.

Faden said she did not know how long Johnson may have been dead by the time authorities arrived.

She said Johnson's death may have been from natural causes since a preliminary investigation turned up no signs of foul play. But Faden added that a final cause of death will be determined by coroner's officials, who will seek toxicology tests. Results of those tests could take six weeks to obtain.

In a statement released through publicist Jesse Derris, the Johnson family says it "is mourning its tragic loss, and asks for privacy during this very difficult time."

Casey Johnson gained celebrity as the girlfriend of Tila Tequila, a reality TV star best known for "A Shot at Love with Tila Tequila," which ran for two seasons on MTV.

Tequila's publicist says the two were engaged.

On her Twitter page, Tequila wrote, "Everyone please pray 4 my Wifey Casey Johnson. She has passed away. Thank u for all ur love and support but I will be offline to be w family."

Johnson, a high school classmate of fellow socialite Paris Hilton, told Vanity Fair in a 2006 interview that her decision to turn down Hilton's invitation to be her co-star on "The Simple Life" was "the stupidest mistake of my life." Hilton eventually chose Nicole Richie. "I kick myself in the butt everyday," she told the magazine.

Entry #1,865

Justine Henin resumes career with 2-set victory

Sunday, January 3, 2010
Updated: January 4, 12:44 PM ET
Henin resumes career with 2-set victory


Associated Press

BRISBANE, Australia -- Justine Henin hadn't reached her first postmatch news conference since coming back from retirement before the talk of her winning an eighth Grand Slam singles title began in earnest.

 

Henin beat second-seeded Nadia Petrova of Russia 7-5, 7-5 on Monday in the first round of the Brisbane International, the former No. 1's first official tour match since announcing her comeback in September.

 

"I feel better today than when I retired, that's for sure," Henin said. "Better emotionally, mentally, better with myself and that makes a big difference."

 

Henin quit in May 2008 after spending a combined 117 weeks at No. 1, winning seven majors, an Olympic gold medal and 41 WTA titles.

 

The 27-year-old Belgian said she might be fitter than she was 20 months ago, and certainly felt better emotionally after Monday's victory, which followed exhibition wins last month, including one over Petrova in Cairo.

 

"I've been waiting for this moment for so long," Henin said. "At the beginning, everything seemed very big: the stadium, all the people. I'm not used to it anymore."

 

Henin said it only took three or four games to settle back into the rhythm.

 

"Mentally, I was able to play my best when the score was tight at the end of both sets," she said. "I really enjoyed being out there -- that's what I'm going to remember today."

 

Being more aggressive on her serve has been a priority for the diminutive Belgian, who knows she needs to earn more easy points against the bigger women on the tour to remain competitive.

 

"I worked very hard and changed a few things in my game," she said. "If I want to stay on tour for a few more years I have no choice [but] to be more aggressive."

 

In Hong Kong, where they are taking part in an exhibition tournament ahead of the Australian Open, Venus Williams and Maria Sharapova predicted Henin will once again be a force.

 

 

"She was a great champion before," Williams said. "She can keep on playing great tennis."



 

Sharapova added that Henin's return is good for the women's tour.

 

"It adds to the great storyline of comebacks we've had, with Kim [Clijsters] as well coming back and winning a Grand Slam," Sharapova said. "When you're doing something you love, you're a champion, you're good at it and you don't have it for a while -- to get it back, to get that feeling back as a competitor, it's always great."

 

Henin is playing in Brisbane this week and Sydney next week on wild-card entries as she prepares for the Australian Open, her first major in two years.

 

After sprinting to the net and producing a deep, winning lob in the eighth game of the second set, she yelled "Allez" and pumped her fist in her trademark way. She advanced to play Sesil Karatantcheva of Kazakhstan, who beat Australia's Casey Dellacqua 6-2, 0-6, 7-6 (1).

 

Earlier, 2008 French Open champion Ana Ivanovic won the last three games to finish off a tight tussle over Australian Jelena Dokic 7-5, 1-6, 6-3. The third-seeded Ivanovic hasn't played since a first-round exit at Tokyo in September.

 

"Obviously there were nerves in the beginning," Ivanovic said, "but I did a really good preparation and that gave me a lot of confidence."

 

Russia's Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova beat fifth-seeded compatriot Alisa Kleybanova 6-4, 2-6, 6-2, and Czech player Lucie Safarova beat Anna-Lena Groenefeld of Germany 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-1.

 

Top-seeded Andy Roddick beat Australia's Peter Luczak 7-6 (5), 6-2 in a night match. He clinched the first set with three straight points, closing with his 13th ace, and broke Luczak in the fifth and seventh games of the second while saving a break point before serving out.

 

Defending champion Radek Stepanek extended his winning streak at the Brisbane tournament to six matches with a 6-4, 6-0 win over local wild-card entry John Millman.

 

Richard Gasquet beat Finland's Jarkko Nieminen 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 in his first match since the Court of Arbitration for Sport last month rejected an appeal from the World Anti-Doping Agency and International Tennis Federation over a March drug test.

 

The CAS accepted Gasquet's claim that he inadvertently consumed cocaine by kissing a woman in a Miami club hours after withdrawing from a tournament because of an injury.

 

"It is just good for me to play with nothing in the head," said Gasquet, who was a semifinalist here last year. "It was most important I could play relaxed."

 

In other men's first-round results, Colombia's Alejandro Falla beat seventh-seeded Jeremy Chardy of France 6-4, 6-4, and eighth-seeded Thomaz Bellucci of Brazil defeated Argentina's Juan Ignacio Chela 6-3, 3-6, 6-1.

Entry #1,864

Vision

Monday 1-4-10

493, 236, 411, 040, 432, 448, 691, 327, 837, 827, 370

531, 753, 087, 028, 713, 792, 543, 438, 487, 684, 428

664, 344, 045, 644, 060, 263, 311, 000, 222, 444, 777

6616, 5432, 8769, 2219, 4484, 3864, 0050, 2277, 3388

Entry #1,863

Big quakes rock Solomon Islands, tsunami unleashed

Big quakes rock Solomon Islands, tsunami unleashed

Posted: Today at 7:28 a.m.
Updated: Today at 9:02 a.m.

 

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A tsunami unleashed by a major earthquake plowed into the Solomon Islands on Monday with the crashing waters devastating at least one village.

 

Initial reports said no one was seriously hurt.

 

A series of major quakes have rocked the South Pacific region since Sunday, with three powerful temblors striking Monday, including a 7.2 magnitude tremor. The Solomon Island's National Disaster Management Office said reports of the devastation were beginning to filter in late Monday.

 

The tremors were centered beneath the ocean floor near the town of Gizo, which was badly damaged in April 2007 when a 8.1-magnitude quake sent a tsunami crashing into the coast, killing more than 50 people.

 

Monday's tsunami devastated a village on Rendova Island, some 188 miles (300 kilometers) from the capital Honiara, disaster management official Loti Yates told The Associated Press.

 

"One report from police was that one village was hit by a 6 to 10 foot (2-3 meter) wall of sea water," Yates said. "It was a total inundation police saw in a fly over."

 

Rendova is home to about 3,600 people.

 

Yates said in Baniata village on Rendova's coast, 16 houses were destroyed and 32 damaged by the quake and the wave.

 

"It could be several hundred houses have been damaged ... but that is still not verified," said Yates. "There are two to three villages where the situation could be much worse."

 

Ten foreign tourists were staying on Tetepare Island, an uninhabited eco-tourism site, and the four Germans, four Britons and two New Zealanders were evacuated. Unconfirmed reports said two had been injured.

 

Yates said there were no other reports of injuries. "We're lucky that whatever happened happened during the day and people were able to hike up the hills," he said

 

Two helicopters and a police boat were carrying out damage assessments and a vessel carrying water, food and tarpaulins was dispatched from Honiara.

 

The U.S. Geological Survey recorded eight earthquakes in the region since late Sunday. The magnitude 7.2 was centered 64 miles (103 kilometers) southeast of Gizo, and followed a magnitude 6.5 tremor less than two hours earlier centered 54 miles (90 kilometers) southeast of Gizo at a depth of 6 miles (10 kilometers).

 

The latest aftershock was magnitude 6.1 and struck late Monday, 22 miles (36 kilometers) southeast of Gizo, U.S. Geological Survey said in a statement.

 

Pacific Tsunami Warning Center geophysicist Gerard Fryer in Hawaii said it was too small to create a tsunami. There were no immediate reports of damage.

 

The Solomon Islands lie on the "Ring of Fire" - an arc of earthquake and volcanic zones that stretches around the Pacific Rim and where about 90 percent of the world's quakes occur.

Entry #1,862

AP source: Bills fire entire coaching staff

AP source: Bills fire entire coaching staff

  • by John Wawrow, Ap Sports Writer
  • 1 hr 14 mins ago

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. – The Buffalo Bills opened their offseason with a purge by firing interim coach Perry Fewell and the rest of his staff on Monday.

Though Fewell was dismissed, he will still interview for the team's vacant head coaching job, a personal familiar with the decisions told The Associated Press. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because the team has not announced the dismissals.

The shakeup came a day after the Bills (6-10) closed their season with a 30-7 win over the Indianapolis Colts.

FoxSports.com first reported the firings.

Days after firing head coach Dick Jauron in November, Bills owner Ralph Wilson had said no job was safe as he was preparing to revamp his entire front office once the season ended.

The overhaul already began last week, when national scout Buddy Nix was promoted to general manager, filling a spot that had been filled by the team's chief operating officer Russ Brandon, who had no football background.

The Bills closed their 50th season by missing the playoffs for a 10th straight year, and capping a decade in which they enjoyed only one winning season — a 9-7 finish in 2004.

Fewell, the team's defensive coordinator, finished with a 3-4 record as the interim coach.

Except for highly respected special teams coordinator Bobby April, most of the Bills assistants, including Fewell, had been hired by Jauron.

The timing of the shakeup comes as the Bills embark on their fifth coaching search since Hall of Famer Marv Levy retired after the 1997 season.

Former Steelers coach Bill Cowher has been mentioned as a candidate. Several media outlets, including ESPN and The Buffalo News, have reported the Bills have spoken to Cowher.

Entry #1,861