| World Rankings
Just look at the Order of Merit system in darts, Fans are made very well known about Prize monies and the current table so they can update the system. And I remember how easy it was to follow the LG order of merit in 2003-4. But if this is used again then pts coming in at later stages. I'm open to your opinions .
Entre Nous with Richard Pound, Chancellor
"The best part of being Chancellor is at convocation when you see all the finished products walking across the stage," says Richard Pound. "It's a great feeling of accomplishment." Entre nous with Richard Pound, Chancellor Fair play's vocal champion By Neale McDevitt | His allies call him the sports world's conscience. His critics, some of them athletes doing their best to deny a positive test result, call him a pit bull. Here at McGill, we call him Chancellor. Considered one of the most influential men in sports, Dick Pound was largely responsible for brokering the television deal that turned the Olympics into a billion-dollar industry long before he became known as the sardonic, straight-shooting drug czar at the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). A favourite with reporters for his damn-the-torpedoes attitude when it comes to speaking his mind, Pound sat down with the McGill Reporter to talk a little sports.
Michael Jackson Wants A Giant Robot Of Himself
Los Angeles (eCanadaNow) - Michael Jackson wants a giant robot of himself which shoots laser beams for his Las Vegas show. The ‘Thriller' singer is reviewing plans for a 50 foot robotic replica should he decide to agree to a show in the casino capital. Mike Luckman of Luckman Van Pier, an entertainment consultancy firm, said: "It would be in the desert sands. Laser beams would shoot out of it so it would be the first thing people flying would see. Neon is wonderful, but it's old school." Share This Article Related News Michael Jackson Visits Troops In TokyoNew Michael Jackson Song LeakedDinner With JacoMichael Jackson Items Auctioned OffMichael Jackson In Legal Trouble Again .
A Herd of Frisky Robots Illustrates the Appeal Of an Innovative ...
Twenty-four dessert-plate-sized, blue "Scribbler" robots on wheels were dancing, drawing and making music in a Park Science Building classroom on April 17 as students showed off what they've accomplished in a groundbreaking Introduction to Computing course offered for the first time at Bryn Mawr College this spring. The course is also the first offering from the Institute for Personal Robots in Education (IPRE), a joint venture of Bryn Mawr, Georgia Tech and Microsoft Research aimed at increasing student enrollment particularly of women and underrepresented minorities in computer science (see earlier story). Tuesday's exhibition was part of the official IPRE grand opening on Bryn Mawr's campus. The course is the first Introduction to Computing course in which each student gets her own personal robot.
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