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4 Oct 2007 at 9:15am 22 min - Oct 4, 2007 Includes officiating points of emphasis for the 2007-08 season. 22 Aug 2008 at 5:24pm ![]() 2 min - Aug 22, 2008 Before a baseball game, an umpire should go over the ground rules with both managers. Learn how to go over ground rules as a baseball umpire in this free video on sports officiating. 30 Jun 2007 at 8:00pm 40 sec - Jul 1, 2007 Nagws Volleyball Rule Book 1999-2000: Official Rules, Interpretations & Officiating (Ncaa Women's Volleyball Rules and Interpretations), Other, Books 4 Feb 2008 at 7:08pm ![]() 2 min - Feb 5, 2008 Denver voters said marijuana possession arrests should be a low police priority, but exactly how to implement that mandate is problematic by Laura Main, News2 January 28, 2008 DENVER (KWGN) ? Last November, Denver voters approved a measure to make adult possession of less than an ounce of marijuana the lowest law enforcement priority in the city. To make sure that happens, Mayor John Hickenlooper created a review panel made up of citizens, police, prosecutors and city council members. . The panel has until the end of March to establish a police reporting system to make sure marijuana possession of less than an ounce is treated less seriously than say jaywalking. But this first meeting was largely about trying to sort out bigger issues. Panel member Brian Vicente started the meeting off by saying, "Our job, according to this, is to make sure that the law is implemented to the greatest extent possible and that's what the voters want us to do." But some members questioned the panel's usefulness at all. "I mean, we're just wasting our breath. [Denver Disrtict Attorney] Mr. [Mitch] Morrissey has refused to be even on this panel, so I don't know that anything we do is going to have impact on his office's policy decisions," said Public Defender Frank Moya. Morrissey was invited to be on the panel, but he declined for legal reasons. His spokesperson, Lynn Kimbrough, said, "Participating in a panel whose objective is to dictate a priority in criminal prosecution simply goes against both the constitutional oath and the oath of office that he has sworn to uphold." Since marijuana possession is still illegal under state law, police and prosecutors say they're obligated to uphold the law, which conflicts with the city ordinance. But they point out, being caught with less than an ounce is a $100 fine -- that's less than the fines for driving without insurance or speeding. So, they say, it's already considered the lowest law enforcement priority. Sergeant Ernie Martinez with the Denver Police Department says, "Marijuana to this degree has always been a so-called low priority because there are other crimes we want to take care of," said Denver Police Sergeant Ernie Martinez. And both prosecutors and defense attorneys on the panel point out that they see very few of these cases in court. But panel member Mason Tvert, whose pro-pot organization, SAFER (Safer Alternative for Enjoyable Recreation), was behind the original ballot initiative, said statistics prove otherwise. "They say it's not a blizzard of enforcement here, but it's clearly a far greater storm than it is in many other major cities in this country. In Seattle for example, that's a city with a greater population than Denver yet they only had 125 marijuana citations last year versus Denver that had 2,400-plus." Over the next few weeks, the panel wants to get good, hard statistics about marijuana arrests and convictions in the city from both the police department and the City Attorney's office. Then they'll come up with recommendations to send on to the City Council. Copyright © 2008, KWGN 25 May 2008 at 9:50pm 18 min - May 26, 2008 This DVD was created to assist in focusing the spirit and intent of the rules as well as an aid to the training of all involved in FIBA basketball including: coaches, players and referees. In this video learn how to officiate when a player commits a charge or a block. Also watch more sports how to videos including tips, tricks, advice, and directons on basketball how to for free. 7 Apr 2007 at 1:20pm 2 min - Apr 7, 2007 I am the owner of this video. This shows the #1 High School Player OJ MAYO in the world being ejected from a basketball game and looks like the Referee fakes a fall to try to get him tossed for one year. West Viriginia Basketball rules are that anyone getting two technicals in a game will be suspended for the next two games. Any player touching a Ref could be out for one year! Referees are Judges of games and they have nobody over them. OR DO THEY? However, a real Judge in the court of Law steped in and allowed OJ Mayo and 5 other Huntington Players that left the bench when the police came on the floor to play those games. This Video could change the way High School basketball is being Refereed and these REFs have to much power! 19 Jun 2008 at 2:17pm ![]() 8 min - Jun 19, 2008 An overview of some common rules violations with comments on scoring. 1 Feb 2008 at 1:35am 11 min - Feb 1, 2008 Youth hockey officiating rules and interpretations for the 2006-07 season. 25 May 2008 at 9:50pm 14 min - May 26, 2008 This DVD was created to assist in focusing the spirit and intent of the rules as well as an aid to the training of all involved in FIBA basketball including: coaches, players and referees. In this video learn how and when to make a traveling call. Also watch more sports how to videos including tips, tricks, advice, and directons on basketball how to for free. 23 May 2008 at 3:26pm 4 min - May 23, 2008 For those unfamiliar with mixed martial arts, referee Herb Dean gives a brief tutorial on what fighters are allowed to do once they get into the ring. 31 Aug 2007 at 3:00am 15 min - Aug 31, 2007 Update on 2007 North Carolina High School Athletic Association football rules and points of emphasis. Hosted by Eddie Lance and Mike Moak of the WNC Officials Association. Featuring the 2007 Asheville High Football seniors and Head Coach Danny Wilkins. Produced by the Asheville High School Cougar Sports Network. 5 Jun 2008 at 11:08pm ![]() 6 min - Jun 6, 2008 Barack Obama, now cast as the Democrats' standard-bearer, moved quickly to put his imprint on the national party Thursday, eager to reinforce its fundraising operation and pursue an aggressive general election campaign. Howard Dean will remain as chairman of the Democratic National Committee, an affirmation by Obama of Dean's bottoms-up rebuilding of the party across all 50 states. Still, Obama is installing one of his top strategists, Paul Tewes, to help expand the DNC staff and oversee party operations. The move puts Obama's ample fundraising machine at the party's disposal. In so doing, Obama imposed on the DNC the same ban on money from federal lobbyists and political action committees that he has placed on his campaign. The DNC has trailed its GOP counterpart in fundraising. Over the past 17 months, the Republican National Committee has raised $166 million to the Democratic National Committee's $82.3 million. The DNC also has spent heavily, leaving little cash on hand while the Republican National Committee has built up its reserves. By keeping Dean as party chairman, Obama ended up taking sides in a long-running dispute between Washington-based Democratic Party leaders and state party officials. Although Obama campaign officials have expressed concern in the past that the party did not have enough money, Obama shares Dean's goal of building the party from the ground up, even in states where Republicans dominate. Dean has spent party resources creating a comprehensive national voter file and placing an average of four staffers in each of the 50 states. The strategy was a hit with state party officials but encountered skepticism in Washington, where some congressional leaders angrily pressed for the party to spend money on winnable contests. In a statement, Obama spokesman Bill Burton said: "Senator Obama appreciates the hard work that Chairman Dean has done to grow our party at the grass-roots level and looks forward to working with him as the chairman of the Democratic Party as we go forward." Dean welcomed Tewes to the DNC, saying he would help the party transition to the general election. "Over the last three years, the DNC staff has worked tirelessly to ensure that the Democratic Party is strong in all 50 states and that we communicate our values to Americans across the country," Dean said in a statement. "The DNC and the Obama campaign are now working together to continue this effort." By banning federal lobbyist and PAC money from the DNC, Obama sought to avoid an inconsistency with his own campaign's fundraising policy. The ban applies to future fundraising, meaning the party won't have to return money it has already raised from lobbyists and PACs. "Today as the Democratic nominee for president, I am announcing that going forward, the Democratic National Committee will uphold the same standard ? we will not take a dime from Washington lobbyists," Obama said at a town-hall meeting in Bristol, Va. "We are going to change how Washington works. They will not run our party. They will not run our White House. They will not drown out the views of the American people." Obama is pressing his case that McCain is under the influence of special interests because of his advisers' lobbying ties. McCain's senior advisers are former lobbyists, including campaign manager Rick Davis. McCain was stung last month by the disclosure that two advisers ? now gone ? had worked for a firm that had represented the military junta in Myanmar, also known as Burma, which has restricted foreign assistance for cyclone victims. The Arizona senator instituted a new lobbying policy that says no campaign staffer can be a registered lobbyist, resulting in three more departures from his campaign, including a top fundraiser, former Texas Rep. Tom Loeffler. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080605/ap_on_el_pr/democrats_money 14 May 2008 at 1:46am 5 min - May 14, 2008 1st major fight in Jet Li's Born to defence. Jet Li played an ex-soldier who did not know the rules of boxing and broke the rules by using leg(3:29), elbow(3:53), head(4:40) and wrestle(4:47). The referee warned him against that but in the end, both fighters put aside the rules and fought for real. 13 May 2008 at 3:32am 12 min - May 13, 2008 This is an extract from a W&L video: Baston n°2<br /><br />Fighters: Pascal du Kosto des Lascards vs Tor'Akim des Castagneux Sentimentaux. <br /><br />From their website: <a class="link" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.W-and-L.com">http://www.W-and-L.com</a><br /><br /> W&L tournaments are out of this world : the fighters prefer to face each other with neither rules nor referee, and the winner is the guy who manages to score the greatest number of submissions in the space of 25 minutes. All holds are permitted and in some particularly aggressive matches, fighters don?t think twice about using their fists, feet, elbows, shins and indeed heads for additional firepower !<br /><br /> In fact, the absence of a referee allows all sorts of bad behaviour ! What?s more, the time allowed for these matches is usually long enough to allow each fighter?s more primal and passionate characteristics to emerge : arrogance, frustration, pride, humiliation ? all very much in evidence amongst guys who don?t trust each other one inch ; who use their voices regularly to intimidate as well as to insult, and who prolong particularly painful holds with relish and breathtaking cruelty !<br /><br /> W&L encounters are much more than straightforward fights ; they?re titanic clashes of ego and temperament which slowly-but-surely descend to the level of brutal streetfights ! And as submissions alternate between one fighter and another, so the suspense (as well as the score) builds ! Such is the essence of W&L tournaments.<br /><a class="link" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.W-and-L.com">http://www.W-and-L.com</a><br /> 5 Jun 2008 at 10:40pm 41 sec - Jun 6, 2008 He knows how to enforce the rules when need be. 21 Jan 2007 at 7:00pm 15 min - Jan 22, 2007 VOICE ONE: THE MAKING OF A NATION -- a program in Special English by the Voice of America. (MUSIC) The surrender of Japan in August nineteen forty-five ended the Second World War. Americans looked to their new president, Harry Truman of the state of Missouri, to lead them into a new period of peace. [Harry Truman] No one expected President Truman to be as strong a leader as Franklin Roosevelt had been. And at first, they were right. Truman had one problem after another during his first months in the White House. VOICE TWO: Truman's first big problem was the economy. In the days after the war ended, almost two million Americans lost their jobs as arms factories closed. Americans everywhere worried about what would happen next. Only a few years before, the nation had suffered through the worst economic crisis in American history. No one wanted to return to the closed banks, hungry children, and other sad memories of the Great Depression. In some ways, the economy did better than experts hoped. The gross national product dropped only a small amount. Many Americans still had money they had saved during the war. And Congress passed a law to help people to keep their jobs. The situation could have been much worse than it was. VOICE ONE: However, the economy also could have been better -- much better. Suddenly, almost overnight, the price of everything began to rise. Clothes that cost five or six dollars yesterday now cost ten to fifteen dollars. Used automobile tires sold for the surprisingly high price of twenty dollars. President Truman tried to stop the increases through a special price control agency that had been created during the war. However, people by the thousands refused to follow the government price control rules. Instead, they set their own prices for goods. VOICE TWO: Store owners would tell government officials that they were still obeying the price rules. But often they charged whatever they wanted for goods. A meat salesman, for example, might say there was no good meat that day. But for three dollars extra, he would suddenly find a thick piece of meat to sell. A car salesman would sell his cars at the controlled price. But he might insist that the buyers also buy his dog for five hundred dollars. And his dog would return home that night. VOICE ONE: It was not just store owners who were charging more and refusing to obey government price rules. It was also the woman who rented a house to a young family?the farmer selling food?and finally, most importantly, it was organized labor. President Truman had always been a friend of labor unions. But during the first months of his administration, he became involved in a fierce struggle with coal miners and railroad workers. VOICE TWO: The first sign of trouble came in September nineteen forty-five. A group of workers closed down automobile factories at the Ford Company. Then, workers at the General Motors auto company went on strike. Soon there were strikes everywhere. Workers went on strike in the oil industry, the clothing industry, the wood-cutting industry and the electrical industry. The strikes made Truman angry. He believed the striking workers were threatening the economy and security of the United States. He got even angrier when representatives of striking steel and railroad workers came to the White House and refused to accept a compromise wage offer. "You are crazy," Truman told the union leader, "if you think I am going to sit here and let you stop this whole country." VOICE ONE: Truman ordered government forces to take over the railroads and the coal mines. And within a short time, the striking coal miners returned to work. However, the president had less success with the railroad workers. He became so angry with them that he asked Congress to give him the power to draft all striking rail workers into the armed forces. The rail strike finally ended. But millions of Americans lost faith in Truman's ability to lead the country, to bring people together, and end disputes peacefully. VOICE TWO: By late nineteen forty-six, most Americans believed that the man in the White House did not know what he was doing. Truman seemed weak and unable to control events. Union members disliked him because of his violent opposition to the coal and rail strikes. Farmers opposed Truman because of the administration's effort to keep meat prices low. Conservatives did not trust the reforms that Truman promised in his speeches. And liberal Democrats watched with worry as many old advisers of Franklin Roosevelt left the government because they could not work well with Truman. VOICE ONE: In November, nineteen forty-six, the people voted in congressional and state elections. The results showed they were not satisfied with Truman and the Democratic Party. Republicans won control of both houses of Congress for the first time in eighteen years. And Republicans were elected governor in twenty-five states. The election was a serious defeat for the Democrats. But it was a disaster for Truman. Some members of his party even called on him to resign. Few people gave Truman much chance of winning a second term in the White House. However, Harry Truman began to change in the months that followed. He started speaking with more strength and firmness. He showed more understanding of the powers of the presidency. And in matters of foreign policy, he began to act more like a president. This was especially true in Truman's reaction to Soviet aggression in Germany. VOICE TWO: Truman wanted to rebuild Germany, as well as the other countries of Western Europe. His administration worked closely with west European leaders to rescue their broken economies through the Marshall Plan. But the Soviets did not want to see Germany rebuild, at least not so quickly. So at first, they flooded Germany with extra German currency in an effort to destroy the value of the German mark. They walked out of economic conferences. And finally, in early nineteen forty-eight, they blocked all the roads to Berlin to try to cut off the city from the western powers. VOICE ONE: The Soviet actions were a direct threat to the west. Truman had three difficult choices. If he did nothing, the world would think the United States was weak and unable to stop Soviet aggression. If he fought the blockade with armed force, he might start a third world war. But there was another choice. That was to fly supplies to the city. The American military commander in Germany proposed the idea of dropping thousands of kilograms of food, fuel, and other goods to the people of Berlin by parachute. Not just once, but every day, as long as the Russians continued their blockade. VOICE TWO: [C-47s unloading at Tempelhof Airport in Berlin] It would be a difficult job. West Berlin was home to two-and-a-half-million people. No one had ever tried to supply so large a city by air. Large C forty-seven transport airplanes would have to take off every three-and-a-half-minutes all through the day and night, every day, to supply the people of Berlin with enough food. The people of Berlin gave needed support from the ground. More than twenty thousand Berliners worked day and night to build an extra landing field for the American airplanes. It was not long before it became clear that the American air rescue would succeed. West Berlin would remain free of Soviet control. The Russians soon understood this fact, too. In May of nineteen forty-nine, almost one year after they had started their blockade, they ended it. VOICE ONE: The crisis in Berlin changed the way many Americans saw their president. Harry Truman no longer seemed so weak or unsure of himself. Instead, he was acting as a leader who could take an active part in world affairs. Truman's popularity increased. However, most Americans did not expect him to win the presidential election in nineteen forty-eight. Almost everyone believed that the Republican candidate would capture the office. The election campaign that year turned out to be one of the most exciting and surprising in the entire history of the nation. That nineteen forty-eight election will be our story next week. (MUSIC) VOICE TWO: You have been listening to THE MAKING OF A NATION, a program in Special English by the Voice of America. Your narrators have been Harry Monroe and Rich Kleinfeldt. Our program was written by David Jarmul. 30 Jun 2008 at 5:55am 54 sec - Jun 30, 2008 Why suffer a penalty from the referee? Watch this explanation of faceoff rules by Coach Tucker and never err again! 25 May 2008 at 9:50pm 6 min - May 26, 2008 This DVD was created to assist in focusing the spirit and intent of the rules as well as an aid to the training of all involved in FIBA basketball including: coaches, players and referees. In this video learn how to officiate when an unsportsmanlike foul is committed (aka technical foul). Also watch more sports how to videos including tips, tricks, advice, and directons on basketball how to for free.< Search for Video right from your Volleyball Crawler Toolbar. It’s easy.Try it.
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