Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Sorted this way

  • From the minds of Not Literally -- a Harry Potter-themed comedy group-- comes an interesting parody of Lady Gagas Born This Way.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • James Troisi could soon be on his way to Italian giants Juventus according to his father. The Australian midfielder recently departed Turkish club Kayserispor and could sign for Juve even though a mooted loan to Pescara appears to have fallen over.
  • (Tribal Football)
  • Summer is here, so what better way to enjoy the outdoors than by visiting a local park?  Here is a listing of various programs happening at parks in Orange County during the month of July, sorted first by topic and then by date.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • Michael Schumachers future in Formula 1 will be sorted out within the next six weeks better results on track but there have been problems on the car or the way we have dealt with the races.
  • (Autosport Online)
  • This is a great way to store magazines or books you often find that you don't have that catchall space that you do with a larger apartment. Mail must be sorted each day and laundry must be done of a regular basis.
  • (The Business Insider)
  • The way things are shaping up at the moment Rays had tumbled back to earth and below the streaking Sox in the standings.
  • (Boston Herald)
  • Although there is another week of Super Rugby to come after this round, this is the week where everything will be sorted for the finals have to win this game and hope results go their way in other matches to qualify for the top six.
  • (The Roar)
  • One thats separated and sorted by the sponsors wallet size its another headache for some. I guess this is the way the game is played, a tournament director said.
  • (CBS Sports)
  • Now, they are saying tickets would cost an average of $81 each way, with "express" tickets for the fastest remains highly speculative and important details have not been sorted out.
  • (Salon)
  • "So until we see that issue sorted out, we are multi-years away from knowing whether but the long-term issue remains economic growth and whether European countries can grow their way out of the crisis.
  • (Financial Times)

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