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Shane Carwin to Face Jon Olav Einemo At UFC 131

On March 24, 2011, in Uncategorized, by debetween


Mike Chiappetta
MMA Writer

The waiting game is over for Shane Carwin. The onetime UFC interim champion finally has an opponent, as UFC president Dana White revealed during a Seattle Times live chat that Carwin would face octagon newcomer Jon Olav Einemo.MMA Fighting first reported Einemo’s signing earlier this month.The 35-year-old is a member of Team Golden Glory and has a 6-1 record in MMA, though he has not fought over four years.
Einemo made his MMA debut in 2000 and competed once in PRIDE, losing to Strikeforce star Fabricio Werdum. He abruptly quit the sport after a Nov. 2006 win over James Thompson.The 6-foot-6 Norweigian is the only man ever to beat multiple-time BJJ champion Roger Gracie in the Abu Dhabi Combat Club tournament. A renowned submission grappler, Einemo captured the 2003 ADCC tournament after defeating Gracie in the semi-finals of the 88-98 kg weight division. Carwin, meanwhile, is returning from surgery to address neck, back and nerve problems. He has not fought since his UFC 116 championship loss to Brock Lesnar.A source with knowledge of the situation told MMA Fighting that the UFC had expected to pair Carwin with the winner of this Saturday’s fight between Mike Russow and Jon Madsen until going to plan B.UFC 131 takes place on June 11 and emanates from the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia.

 
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Yogaslackers: The Expedition Experience Ultra Endurance AcroYoga Flow (video)

On March 21, 2011, in Uncategorized, by debetween


Breath, life, vitality of the spirit.
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In Kabul, A ‘Dressmaker’ Sows Entrepreneurial Seeds

On March 17, 2011, in Uncategorized, by debetween

The Dressmaker of Khair KhanaBy Galye Tzemach LemmonHardcover, 288 pagesHarperList Price: $24.99

The News Arrives and Everything Changes “Kamila Jan, I’m honored to present you with your certificate.” The small man with graying hair and deeply set wrinkles spoke with pride as he handed the young woman an official-looking document. Kamila took the paper and read: This is to certify that Kamila Sidiqi has successfully completed her studies at Sayed Jamaluddin Teacher Training Institute. “Thank you, Agha,” Kamila said. A snow-melting smile broke out across her face. She was the second woman in her family to finish Sayed Jamaluddin’s two-year course; her older sister Malika had graduated a few years earlier and was now teaching high school in Kabul. Malika, however, had not had the constant shellings and rocket fire of the civil war to contend with as she traveled back and forth to class. Kamila clasped the treasured document. Her headscarf hung casually and occasionally slipped backward to reveal a few strands of her shoulder-length wavy brown hair. Wide-legged black pants and dark, pointy low heels peeked out from under the hem of her floorlength coat. Kabul’s women were known for stretching the sartorial limits of their traditional country, and Kamila was no exception. Until the leaders of the anti- Soviet resistance, the Mujahideen (“holy warriors”), unseated the Moscow-backed government of Dr. Najibullah in 1992, many Kabuli women traveled the cosmopolitan capital in Western clothing, their heads uncovered. But now, only four years later, the Mujahideen defined women’s public space and attire far more narrowly, mandating offices separate from men, headscarves, and baggy, modest clothing. Kabul’s women, young and old, dressed accordingly, though many—like Kamila—enlivened the rules by tucking a smart pair of shoes under their shapeless black jackets. It was a far cry from the 1950s and ’60s, when fashionable Afghan women glided through the urbane capital in European-style skirt suits and smart matching headscarves. By the 1970s, Kabul University students shocked their more conservative rural countrymen with kneeskimming miniskirts and stylish pumps. Campus protests and political turmoil marked those years of upheaval. But that was all well before Kamila’s time: she had been born only two years before the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, an occupation that gave rise to a decade-long battle of Afghan resistance waged by the Mujahideen, whose forces ultimately bled the Russians dry. Nearly two decades after the first Russian tank rolled into Afghanistan, Kamila and her friends had yet to experience peace. After the defeated Soviets withdrew the last of their support for the country in 1992, the triumphant Mujahideen commanders began fighting among themselves for control of Kabul. The brutality of the civil war shocked the people of Kabul. Overnight, neighborhood streets turned into frontline positions between competing factions who shot at one another from close range. Despite the civil war, Kamila’s family and tens of thousands of other Kabulis went to school and work as often as they could, even while most of their friends and family fled to safety in neighboring Pakistan and Iran. With her new teaching certificate in hand, Kamila would soon begin her studies at Kabul Pedagogical Institute, a coed university founded in the early 1980s during the Soviet years of educational reform, which saw the expansion of state institutions. After two years, she would earn a bachelor’s degree and begin her teaching career there in Kabul. She hoped to become a professor of Dari or perhaps even literature one day. Yet despite the years of hard work and her optimistic plans for the future, no joyful commencement ceremony would honor Kamila’s great achievement. The civil war had disemboweled the capital’s stately architecture and middle-class neighborhoods, transforming the city into a collapsed mess of gutted roads, broken water systems, and crumbling buildings. Rockets launched by warring commanders regularly arced across Kabul’s horizon, falling onto the capital’s streets and killing its residents indiscriminately. Everyday events like graduations had become too dangerous to even contemplate, let alone attend. Kamila placed the neatly printed certificate into a sturdy brown folder and stepped out of the administrator’s office, leaving behind a line of young women who were waiting to receive their diplomas. Walking through a narrow corridor with floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked Sayed Jamaluddin’s main entrance, she passed two women who were absorbed in conversation in the crowded hallway. She couldn’t help overhearing them. “I hear they are coming today,” the first woman said to her friend. “My cousin told me they are just outside Kabul,” the other answered in a whisper. Kamila immediately knew who “they” were: the Taliban, whose arrival now felt utterly inevitable. News in the capital traveled at an astoundingly rapid pace via a far-reaching network of extended families that connected the provinces across Afghanistan. Rumors of the arriving regime were rampant, and the word was out that women were in the crosshairs. The harder-to-control, more remote rural regions could sometimes carve out exceptions for their young women, but the Taliban moved quickly to consolidate power in the urban areas. So far they had won every battle. Kamila stood quietly in the hallway of the school she had fought so hard to attend, despite all the dangers, and listened to her classmates with a feeling of growing unease. She moved closer so she could hear the girls’ conversation more clearly. “You know they shut the schools for girls in Herat,” the sharp-nosed brunette said. Her voice was heavy with worry. The Taliban had captured the western city a year earlier. “My sister heard that women can’t even leave the house once they take over. And here we thought we had lived through the worst.” “Come, it might not be so bad,” answered her friend, taking her hand. “They might actually bring some peace with them, God willing.” Holding her folder tightly with both hands, Kamila hurried downstairs for the long bus ride that would take her to her family’s home in the neighborhood of Khair Khana. Only a few months ago she had walked the seven miles after a rocket had landed along the road in Karteh Char, the neighborhood where her school was located, damaging the roof of a hospital for government security forces and knocking out the city’s bus service for the entire evening. Everyone in Kabul had grown accustomed to seeking safety between doorjambs or in basements once they heard the now-familiar shriek of approaching rockets. A year earlier the teacher training institute had moved its classes from Karteh Char, which was regularly pummeled by rocket attacks and mortar fire, to what its director hoped was a safer location in a once-elegant French high school downtown. Not long afterward yet another rocket, this one targeting the nearby Ministry of Interior, landed directly in front of the school’s new home. All these memories raced through Kamila’s mind as she boarded the rusty light blue “Millie” bus that was once part of the government-run service and settled into her seat. She leaned against the large mud-flecked window and listened to the women around her while the bus began to maneuver bumpily through Karteh Char’s torn-up streets. Everyone had her version of what the new regime would mean for Kabul’s residents. “Maybe they will bring security,” said a girl who sat a few rows behind Kamila. “I don’t think so,” her friend answered. “I heard on the radio that they don’t allow school or anything once they come. No jobs, either. We won’t even be able to leave the house unless they say so. Perhaps they will only be here for a few months . . .” Kamila gazed through the window and tried to tune out the conversations around her. She knew the girl was probably right, but she couldn’t bear to think about what it would mean for her and her four younger sisters still living at home. She watched as shopkeepers on the city’s dusty streets engaged in the daily routine of closing their grocery stores, photo shops, and bakery stalls. Over the past four years the entrances to Kabul’s shops had become a barometer of the day’s violence: doors that were wide open meant daily life pushed forward, even if occasionally punctured by the ring of distant rocket fire. But when they were shut in broad daylight, Kabulis knew danger waited nearby and that they, too, would be best served by remaining indoors. Excerpted from The Dressmaker of Khair Khana by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon. Copyright 2011 by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon. Excerpted by permission of Harper, a division of HarperCollins, Inc.

 
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Photos | Justin Bieber’s AMA Night

On March 14, 2011, in Uncategorized, by debetween

Justin Bieber’s AMA Night

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The Champion and the Apprentice

On March 9, 2011, in Uncategorized, by debetween

The Fiat Yamaha team have been surrounded by hype this past few weeks. Not, as an outsider might expect, caused by a battle to re-sign the reigning champion: Rossi’s contract ends at the end of the 2010 championship, and he looks settled, happy, and at one with the bike he helped shape and tune into the best bike in the paddock. The hubbub has been around Rossi’s team mate, The Janitor. He would probably fume at such a moniker but, whether he admits it or not, that is what Jorge Lorenzo’s role is in the Yamaha master plan for now. To learn from Rossi and, eventually, take over his mantle when the GOAT finally retires.
It is not a role which Jorge relishes. It is a necessary part of any racer’s psyche to believe they are the best and can win on any given Sunday. For most of the pack though, there is one truth that is inescapable. That is that Rossi is better than them. For any of the pack to beat him, as Rick Broadbent says in his interview with MGPB, requires his form to dip and the other to be at the peak of their performance.
Lorenzo is unique in the paddock in that he believes he is better than Rossi. It is an unshakable belief, and one which has led us to witness some of the best racing for some time in MotoGP as Lorenzo, along with Pedrosa and Stoner, has pushed Rossi further and faster than he has been pushed before.
This has caused Jorge to head down a couple of paths in the recent weeks. Firstly, he has stood up to Yamaha over his contract negotiations and secondly he has pushed his riding to and over the limit.
The Contract
He has not just rolled over and taken what was first offered by his current employers. He feels Yamaha are not paying him what he is worth and no doubt points to his successes in 2008 even with the injuries sustained early on, and this year his ability to compete with Rossi on the track.
What he has forgotten is that he has not actually become MotoGP champion as yet, and demanding parity with Rossi, who put him in his place by pointing out the stark differences between their roles in the Yamaha garage, is simply daft. He, or more likely his agent, have also made some rather transparent attempts to up his salary. First the threat of a Repsol ride was hanging over the negotiations as Honda appeared to be considering their rider options for 2010. Never a company to make knee-jerk decisions, Honda chose to retain both riders and took the wind out of the Lorenzo argument. Not a week later and leaked salary offers from Ducati for Lorenzo were swirling about the paddock and the Internet. One could almost hear Lorenzo shouting “See! I have options!”
In fact, he is already on the best bike in the paddock (thanks to his team mate) and were he on the Ducati or the Honda, he knows he would be on inferior machinery to Rossi. That would be enough to start the doubt that he could win, and the first cracks in his until-now unshakable belief in himself and his talent. He does not want that.
The Riding
The second path his convictions have led him down relates to his riding. Frequently topping the timing charts in free practice qualifying, he has proven himself fast. He can ride a bike, he believes, better than anyone. “Look,” he might say, “I had half a second on Rossi in FP1 in Brno. I can beat him.”
What he does not allow himself to see is that riding fast is only one part of winning a motorcycle race. A rider also needs race craft. Rossi gave him a lesson in race craft in Barcelona at the final turn. It is a lesson Lorenzo has tried to give back to Rossi on two occasions since. Donington saw him take the lead, only to make a silly error on a wet white line, and crash out. In the lottery that was that race, Rossi himself fell but somehow his luck held out to allow him to remount and score points. In Brno, Jorge passed Rossi again for the lead, at the very limit of the adhesion of his front tyre. Just a few laps later, trying to out-think and out-brake Rossi while still in the lead, he would run wide on the same corner to low side out of the race. Rossi continued on his line, to the line.
Jorge is great for the sport, great entertainment, and is pushing Rossi harder than ever. Make no mistake, he is brilliant. So far he has proven immune to Rossi’s mind-games, and if anything has become stronger more determined though his struggles against him. Whether he likes it or not though, he is still the Champion’s Apprentice and given Rossi’s form at the moment and wiles on the track, he is likely to remain so until Rossi chooses to retire.