The News Review:
- Artificial turf growing on high school sports teams – Moresports
- Roberts asks for talks on sports TV: Comcast chief: Feud between…
- ther Sports Reporters must go to jail
Artificial turf growing on high school sports teams – Moresports
ESPN – Sep 22, 2006
It’s been raining on and off for three days but the players are ready for a full practice on their field. Last year the athletes’ cleats would have torn up the soggygrass turning it into a sea of mud that would dry into ruts andgrooves. But now Centerville has joined the growing ranks of high schools around the nation that have replaced grass fields with a new generation of synthetic turf that sheds water requires little maintenance and can be used around the clock by football soccer and field hockey teams as well as bands and clubs. Even though they’re spending hundreds of thousands of dollars at a time when most school budgets are under pressure schools from hio to Utah to California are putting in the new turf as a long-term investment.
Roberts asks for talks on sports TV: Comcast chief: Feud between…
Free with registration – Philadelphia Inquirer – AccessMyLibrary.com – Sep 22, 2006
(22-SEP-06) Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia PA). 22–WASHINGTN — The battle over who will get the biggest share of the sports dollar — cable and satellite companies or teams and leagues — has escalated so rapidly that.
ther Sports Reporters must go to jail
Fox Sports – Sep 22, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle reporters Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams have declined to name the source who allowed them access to transcripts of grand jury testimony from top athletes involved in the long-running doping probe including San Francisco Giants baseball star Barry Bonds. "They have said they will go to jail before they will comply" US District Judge Jeffrey White said. "Certainly no fine is going to facilitate the coercive effect of its order. "he only appropriate sentence is to incarcerate these two individuals.




