Texas Rangers Trades: Rangers Hall of Fame Predictions Part 2 of 3

Array Best of all, Huntington Masters Swim Team and Triathletes were well represented.Full MarathonRichard Young 3:34:03Half MarathonHarry Slutter 1:33:46Nancy Lipira 1:43:43Lynn Perzesty 1:52:56Tim Sullivan 1:53:55Jim Imhof 2:07:46 Thanks to an email from Tim Sullivan, here are some additional LI Half Marathon results for some people I missed: (And please forgive me for missing you on the first go ’round — in my defense, the size of the font in Newsday was really very small.
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It all started…well, it actually started Tuesday morning when I frantically threw things together in preparation for the hectic departure I knew would ensue following my less-than-rushed ride home (my driver likes to take it easy). It was only the beginning… So, we headed to Koriyama, and got a quick dinner before heading back out into the frigid air (yes, in May) to find our bus. Our flight was scheduled to leave at 8:30, so we left in plenty of time to get lost a couple of times. We went to the train station and were informed, by an attendant who dropped the directions he so painstakingly sketched out for us, that we needed to head to the subway station. We got to the airport in plenty of time to get thoroughly confused by the high-end technology required for printing our tickets (all in Japanese) and still get on the plane in time (which in Japan doesn’t start boarding until 10 or even 5 minutes before scheduled departure time…weird). We realized very quickly that people in Kyushu (the island) are a lot more relaxed than people in Honshu (the island where we live), especially when our bags took their good old time coming down the conveyer belt. So we waited our turn to change our ticket times. For the train at the new time. “Maybe it’s just because it’s spring here.” “No, it’s more than that.” Then it clicked for both of us at the same time. We arrived in Nagasaki at around 1:30ish, and after freshening up a bit and stowing our bags in lockers, headed for a quick lunch and then off for our full day of sight-seeing. A couple things that stood out to me were a pile of coins that had melted together from the heat of the blast, shadows of leaves left on buildings (the walls were charred, but the leaves left a space not as black), stories of mothers with their children, pictures of charred, blistering bodies, clocks– broken from the blast and stopped at the exact same time: 11:02. We strolled down the main isle, Adriane bought a shirt, (which, by the way, is wicked cute), and headed in what we thought was the direction of the Dutch area of town and the oldest Christian church in Japan. So, by this time starving, we turned around and headed for some caloric nourishment. By this time we were nearly famished, so we headed back to the station to retrieve our bags (we still didn’t know where our hotel was), and get some food. After retrieving our bags and realizing that our hotel was, in fact, right next to the place we had just been wandering for 2 hours, we headed back there by street car, joyful for a clean beds and rooms that didn’t smell like smoke (this hotel was part of our package…for that reason, it was probably the nicest one I’ll ever stay in while I’m in Japan = ). No, maybe more like “panic.” This wasn’t like the train from Fukuoka. This was a bus that only ran about every hour, was probably full during every time slot, and was taking us to a friend on the other end, whose phone number we had absentmindedly forgotten to ask for. Praise God (truly), we made the streetcar just in time to get to the station at 8:35, but we didn’t know where to go. Believe it or not, it’s the first time I’ve actually seen the ocean in Japan (except from the bus). For the rest of the afternoon we yukuri shimashita (literally “did slowly”, but it’s something like “took it easy.” That is, if I wrote it correctly…) In the evening, as the sun was setting, we headed back to the beach to a beautiful sea-side restaurant with walls of windows facing the ocean and mountains as the sun went down. After dinner we headed up into the mountains, to a nearby town called Yufuin, to stay the night at Keiko’s boss’ summer guest house. Nonetheless, it was beautiful, and we got to enjoy watching remote control planes and a man hand gliding while we were there…on top of taking pictures that looked like we were falling off the side, and in the process, getting my feet utterly filthy. = ) Then, after grabbing some ice cream on the way back to the car, we headed to Aso itself, and there we went up by ropeway to the top to see the volcano itself. (in food and other things) = ) After dinner we headed back to the house and stayed up late chatting. Poor Keiko (a doctor who works with elderly patients) had to get up early to go to work the next day, but the rest of us slept in and had a lazy morning before heading off to the actual town of Yufuin for some shopping. It looked like really runny concrete, and it gurgled and bubbled like a cauldron. After our other-worldly experience we headed back to reality – otherwise known as KFC, and filled ourselves with our last American food before going “home.” Keiko tried a twister for the first time, and we all enjoyed the non-chicken chicken a great deal. Normally not a big deal, but we were pressed for time to get the last shinkansen that would get us to Koriyama in time for the last train to Funehiki. Anyway, that left us about an hour to get our bags from baggage claim, go through the checkpoint, buy tickets, take the monorail (transportation number 7) to the main Tokyo railway line, change trains, take the railway to Tokyo station, buy shinkansen tickets, and get on the shinkansen (transportation mode number 8). Though I enjoyed it all immensely, I think the best part of the trip was getting to spend time with Keiko. I meant to say 20,000 yen.Tammy (talking about how her cousin feels about his new girlfriend): “He thinks she’s the one, but I’ve heard that before.”Adriane: “That sounds like a country song.”“My English is suck.” Keiko.
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And then the reaction that the recent demise of Kannada films’ stalwart Rajkumar brought forward has been nearly unprecedented – pelting stones, burning cars and processions were all a part of the hullaboo, wih fans coming-togrips- with-their-loss….For Complete Article, Click on IIPM ArticleSource :- IIPM Editorial, 2006

Rashmi Bansal Publisher of JAMMAG magazine caught red-handed, for details click on the following links.
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I think he is the least deserving on this list but the most popular which makes me think that he will be inducted into the Hall of Fame this year.Percentage 55ÿ¿¿¿¿¿ny Darwin:Danny played with the Rangers from 1978-1984 and in 1995. all-time loss list with 52 but is also 8th on their all-time wins list with 55. all-time shutouts list with 5 and 10th on their all-time strikeouts list with 566. all-time RBI list with 487 and also is 10th on their all-time runs list with 419 (tied with Larry Parrish). all-time walks list 444, 8th on their all-time slugging percentage list at .432, and 9th on their all-time hits list at 914. all-time RBI list with 522 and also is 10th on their all-time runs list tied with Pete O’Brien with 419. He also ranks 7th on their all-time slugging percentage list at .454 and 10th on their all-time hits list at 852. all-time games list at 445 and 2nd on their all-time saves list with 134.
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Array Best of all, Huntington Masters Swim Team and Triathletes were well represented.Full MarathonRichard Young 3:34:03Half MarathonHarry Slutter 1:33:46Nancy Lipira 1:43:43Lynn Perzesty 1:52:56Tim Sullivan 1:53:55Jim Imhof 2:07:46 Thanks to an email from Tim Sullivan, here are some additional LI Half Marathon results for some people I missed: (And please forgive me for missing you on the first go ’round — in my defense, the size of the font in Newsday was really very small.
link

It all started…well, it actually started Tuesday morning when I frantically threw things together in preparation for the hectic departure I knew would ensue following my less-than-rushed ride home (my driver likes to take it easy). It was only the beginning… So, we headed to Koriyama, and got a quick dinner before heading back out into the frigid air (yes, in May) to find our bus. Our flight was scheduled to leave at 8:30, so we left in plenty of time to get lost a couple of times. We went to the train station and were informed, by an attendant who dropped the directions he so painstakingly sketched out for us, that we needed to head to the subway station. We got to the airport in plenty of time to get thoroughly confused by the high-end technology required for printing our tickets (all in Japanese) and still get on the plane in time (which in Japan doesn’t start boarding until 10 or even 5 minutes before scheduled departure time…weird). We realized very quickly that people in Kyushu (the island) are a lot more relaxed than people in Honshu (the island where we live), especially when our bags took their good old time coming down the conveyer belt. So we waited our turn to change our ticket times. For the train at the new time. “Maybe it’s just because it’s spring here.” “No, it’s more than that.” Then it clicked for both of us at the same time. We arrived in Nagasaki at around 1:30ish, and after freshening up a bit and stowing our bags in lockers, headed for a quick lunch and then off for our full day of sight-seeing. A couple things that stood out to me were a pile of coins that had melted together from the heat of the blast, shadows of leaves left on buildings (the walls were charred, but the leaves left a space not as black), stories of mothers with their children, pictures of charred, blistering bodies, clocks– broken from the blast and stopped at the exact same time: 11:02. We strolled down the main isle, Adriane bought a shirt, (which, by the way, is wicked cute), and headed in what we thought was the direction of the Dutch area of town and the oldest Christian church in Japan. So, by this time starving, we turned around and headed for some caloric nourishment. By this time we were nearly famished, so we headed back to the station to retrieve our bags (we still didn’t know where our hotel was), and get some food. After retrieving our bags and realizing that our hotel was, in fact, right next to the place we had just been wandering for 2 hours, we headed back there by street car, joyful for a clean beds and rooms that didn’t smell like smoke (this hotel was part of our package…for that reason, it was probably the nicest one I’ll ever stay in while I’m in Japan = ). No, maybe more like “panic.” This wasn’t like the train from Fukuoka. This was a bus that only ran about every hour, was probably full during every time slot, and was taking us to a friend on the other end, whose phone number we had absentmindedly forgotten to ask for. Praise God (truly), we made the streetcar just in time to get to the station at 8:35, but we didn’t know where to go. Believe it or not, it’s the first time I’ve actually seen the ocean in Japan (except from the bus). For the rest of the afternoon we yukuri shimashita (literally “did slowly”, but it’s something like “took it easy.” That is, if I wrote it correctly…) In the evening, as the sun was setting, we headed back to the beach to a beautiful sea-side restaurant with walls of windows facing the ocean and mountains as the sun went down. After dinner we headed up into the mountains, to a nearby town called Yufuin, to stay the night at Keiko’s boss’ summer guest house. Nonetheless, it was beautiful, and we got to enjoy watching remote control planes and a man hand gliding while we were there…on top of taking pictures that looked like we were falling off the side, and in the process, getting my feet utterly filthy. = ) Then, after grabbing some ice cream on the way back to the car, we headed to Aso itself, and there we went up by ropeway to the top to see the volcano itself. (in food and other things) = ) After dinner we headed back to the house and stayed up late chatting. Poor Keiko (a doctor who works with elderly patients) had to get up early to go to work the next day, but the rest of us slept in and had a lazy morning before heading off to the actual town of Yufuin for some shopping. It looked like really runny concrete, and it gurgled and bubbled like a cauldron. After our other-worldly experience we headed back to reality – otherwise known as KFC, and filled ourselves with our last American food before going “home.” Keiko tried a twister for the first time, and we all enjoyed the non-chicken chicken a great deal. Normally not a big deal, but we were pressed for time to get the last shinkansen that would get us to Koriyama in time for the last train to Funehiki. Anyway, that left us about an hour to get our bags from baggage claim, go through the checkpoint, buy tickets, take the monorail (transportation number 7) to the main Tokyo railway line, change trains, take the railway to Tokyo station, buy shinkansen tickets, and get on the shinkansen (transportation mode number 8). Though I enjoyed it all immensely, I think the best part of the trip was getting to spend time with Keiko. I meant to say 20,000 yen.Tammy (talking about how her cousin feels about his new girlfriend): “He thinks she’s the one, but I’ve heard that before.”Adriane: “That sounds like a country song.”“My English is suck.” Keiko.
link

And then the reaction that the recent demise of Kannada films’ stalwart Rajkumar brought forward has been nearly unprecedented – pelting stones, burning cars and processions were all a part of the hullaboo, wih fans coming-togrips- with-their-loss….For Complete Article, Click on IIPM ArticleSource :- IIPM Editorial, 2006

Rashmi Bansal Publisher of JAMMAG magazine caught red-handed, for details click on the following links.
link

I think he is the least deserving on this list but the most popular which makes me think that he will be inducted into the Hall of Fame this year.Percentage 55ÿ¿¿¿¿¿ny Darwin:Danny played with the Rangers from 1978-1984 and in 1995. all-time loss list with 52 but is also 8th on their all-time wins list with 55. all-time shutouts list with 5 and 10th on their all-time strikeouts list with 566. all-time RBI list with 487 and also is 10th on their all-time runs list with 419 (tied with Larry Parrish). all-time walks list 444, 8th on their all-time slugging percentage list at .432, and 9th on their all-time hits list at 914. all-time RBI list with 522 and also is 10th on their all-time runs list tied with Pete O’Brien with 419. He also ranks 7th on their all-time slugging percentage list at .454 and 10th on their all-time hits list at 852. all-time games list at 445 and 2nd on their all-time saves list with 134.
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