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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: altair19 who wrote (156478)12/19/2008 6:48:35 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361942
 
Al Franken up by 251 votes at the end of today's recount...;-)



To: altair19 who wrote (156478)12/19/2008 6:51:01 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361942
 
Furyk still in front at Sherwood
_______________________________________________________________

Thousand Oaks, CA (Sports Network) - Jim Furyk bogeyed the last hole on Friday, but still managed a one-under 71 and stayed atop the leaderboard after the second round of the Chevron World Challenge.

Furyk, the overnight leader by two, remained ahead by that margin at Sherwood Country Club. He finished 36 holes at five-under 139 and has the midway lead in pursuit of his first title at this event.

In years past, tournament host Tiger Woods made it difficult for anyone but the host to win. Woods titled in four of the previous nine championships, but with the game's best reduced to a spectator, Furyk and several others have a reasonable chance in the last golf event on the 2008 calendar.

"I tried to give him a run last year, but he overtook me on the back nine," said Furyk, who took third behind Woods in 2007. "Late in a tournament, you slip up on Tiger Woods, he puts the tournament away. There's also 15 world- class players here and they'll be chasing me."

Camilo Villegas, who won twice in the FedEx Cup Playoffs, fired the low round so far this week with a five-under 67. He is tied for second place with K.J. Choi (71) and Anthony Kim (70) at three-under 141.

Fred Couples managed a three-under 69 on Friday and is tied for fifth place with Steve Stricker, who posted his second one-under 71 in as many rounds, at minus-two.

Furyk, who held the first-round lead at this event for the fourth time on Thursday, was steady as ever on the front nine. He opened with eight straight pars, then rolled in an eight-footer for birdie at the ninth to reach five- under par.

Several players matched Furyk in first, but none stayed very long. Furyk could've extended his margin at various points, but his flat stick turned on him.

He missed a six-foot birdie putt at the 10th and his eight-footer for birdie at the next hole slid by on the left side. Furyk had 10 feet for birdie at 13 and pushed that one right, but appeared to be in big trouble at 14 after he hit his approach short. Furyk's chip hit the flagstick and he saved yet another par.

Furyk parred the 15th and tried for his first birdie on a par five this week at 16. Never one of the longest golfers in the sport, Furyk reached the green in two at 16 and two-putted for his first birdie on his 10th par-five attempt.

That birdie got Furyk to six-under par for the championship. He parred No. 17 and found the fairway off the tee at the par-four closing hole. On Thursday, Furyk made an incredible birdie from the trees at 18, but one day later, he pulled his approach into a greenside bunker from the dead center of the short grass.

Furyk blasted out to 10 feet, but he missed another makeable putt. The bogey cost Furyk a stroke, but he's still two clear and disappointed.

"I wasn't all that comfortable with my swing," admitted Furyk. "I got the ball on the green, I got it in the fairway, but I wasn't clicking on all cylinders today. I found a way to get it around."

Villegas birdied three straight to start the round, but lost all three strokes with bogeys at five, nine and 10. He eagled the 11th after a sensational second, then birdied 13, 16 and 17 to get into a tie for second.

Choi also flew out of the gate with three straight birdies on Friday, but mixed an eagle, two birdies, four bogeys and a double-bogey the rest of the way for his 71.

Kim birdied one and two and played even-par over his next 16 holes, including a double-bogey at four and birdies at seven and 17.

Hunter Mahan (72), Vijay Singh (72) and Boo Weekley (73) share seventh place at minus-one. Ben Curtis (73) and Kenny Perry (72) are tied for 10th at plus- one.

Paul Casey of England shot an even-par 72 and is alone in 12th at two-over 146, while fellow countryman Luke Donald, who carded a three-over 75, is 13th at plus-four.

Stephen Ames and Mike Weir both posted rounds of one-under 71 and share 14th at plus-five, and Justin Leonard shot another three-over 75 and is in 16th at six-over 150.

12/19 18:28:38 ET



To: altair19 who wrote (156478)12/19/2008 6:58:33 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361942
 
For inauguration prayer, Obama splits ticket

google.com

The clergy chosen by President-elect Barack Obama to pray at his inauguration fill separate symbolic roles: One is a nod to the civil rights activists who made Obama's election possible. The other is an overture to conservative Christians who rankles some Obama supporters.

The Rev. Rick Warren, who will give the invocation, is the most influential pastor in the United States, and a choice that has already caused problems for Obama.

Warren is a Southern Baptist who holds traditional religious beliefs and endorsed California's Proposition 8, which banned gay marriage. But he also wants to broaden the evangelical agenda to include fighting global warming, poverty and AIDS.

The Rev. Joseph Lowery, 87, is considered the dean of the civil rights movement. For the benediction at the Jan. 20 swearing-in, he says he will pray that the "spirit of fellowship and oneness" at the inauguration endures throughout Obama's presidency.

"He gets a lot with these choices," said David Domke, author of "The God Strategy: How Religion Became a Political Weapon in America."

"Here's a guy who wants to run a progressive administration getting a substantial lift in his wings from the nation's most popular evangelical," Domke said. "But he balances that with Joseph Lowery, who speaks to the more liberal, social justice and African-American heritage."

By picking Warren, Obama is sending another signal, about his willingness to upset liberals by tilting to the center. Gay rights groups are demanding that Obama rescind the invitation because of Warren's opposition to same-sex marriage.

"By inviting Rick Warren to your inauguration, you have tarnished the view that gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Americans have a place at your table," Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said in a letter to the incoming president.

In a news conference Thursday, Obama said he is a "fierce advocate for equality for gay and lesbian Americans." But he said he will build relationships with people of opposing views, and wants his inaugural to reflect that goal.

"That dialogue, I think, is part of what my campaign's been all about: That we're not going to agree on every single issue, but what we have to do is to be able to create an atmosphere when we — where we can disagree without being disagreeable and then focus on those things that we hold in common as Americans," he said.

Warren praised Obama for "his courage to willingly take enormous heat from his base by inviting someone like me."

"Hopefully, individuals passionately expressing opinions from the left and the right will recognize that both of us have shown a commitment to model civility in America," Warren said in a statement Thursday night.

In the past several decades, inaugural prayer has most often been the job of evangelist Billy Graham, who forged relationships with every president from Dwight Eisenhower to George W. Bush. Dubbed "America's pastor," Graham is now 90 and off the public stage.

His son, Franklin, stepped in for his father and gave the invocation at Bush's 2001 swearing-in. Bush's personal pastor, the Rev. Kirbyjon Caldwell, an African-American Methodist from Houston, was chosen to give the inaugural benediction twice. Caldwell supported Bush in both his presidential campaigns, then backed Obama this year.

But Obama no longer has a personal minister. He resigned his membership at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago after an uproar over incendiary parts of sermons by his longtime pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

Obama instead turned to two preachers who could set a tone for his administration.

"I'm overwhelmed. I'm very grateful. I'm humbled and honored," Lowery said in a telephone interview. "When we worked on the Voting Rights Act in the '60s, we hoped and felt that one day there would be an African-American president. I honestly can say I didn't think I'd live long enough to see it."

Lowery's biography reads like a history of the civil rights movement.

As a young pastor in 1950s Alabama, he helped lead the Montgomery bus boycotts. With the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and others, Lowery created the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which anchored the national civil rights movement. In 1965, Lowery played a key role in the bloody, pivotal Selma-Montgomery March. He led a delegation of marchers presenting their demands to then-segregationist Alabama Gov. George Wallace.

Lowery, a Methodist, expanded his agenda in later years to fight poverty, stop violence and end apartheid. In 2006, he drew criticism — and a standing ovation — at Coretta Scott King's funeral by condemning the Iraq war and poverty in the U.S. as Bush looked on.

Warren, 54, has become the most prominent clergyman of his generation.

His Saddleback Community Church in Orange County, Calif., has grown to more than 22,000 worshippers each week. His book, "The Purpose Driven Life" is one of the best-selling books in the world, with more than 30 million copies sold. He is mobilizing churches around the globe to fight poverty and illiteracy through his P.E.A.C.E coalition.

Last month, he joined forces with Reader's Digest Association Inc., to launch a multimedia juggernaut based on his "Purpose Driven" writing. He and his wife, Kay, have become leading advocates for people with HIV/AIDS. On Dec. 1, World AIDS Day, the Warrens gave Bush an award for creating a multimillion-dollar U.S. fund to combat the virus.

With Warren, "Obama shows he is willing to work with a new breed of evangelical and kind of move beyond the tired figures associated with the religious right," said Randall Balmer, a Barnard College professor of religious history and author of "God in the White House."

In August, before the party conventions, Warren hosted Obama and Republican presidential nominee John McCain at Saddleback, quizzing them separately on issues ranging from personal failures to Supreme Court justices. Obama's campaign had done extensive religious outreach. But he hurt his appeal to churchgoing voters when Warren asked when a baby gets human rights. Obama said it was "above his pay grade" to answer "with specificity."

Still, Obama and Warren, who does not make political endorsements, are friendly, and the two men pray together.

"It's nice to see a conservative evangelical pastor play such a prominent role in such an important event," said Tom Minnery, a senior vice president at Focus on the Family, which has fiercely criticized Obama over his support for abortion rights and other issues. "I think what it does is it underscores the importance of evangelicalism in the country."