2016年10月4日星期二

No Owners, No Coaches, No Players, No Express

No Owners, coachoutletonline No Coaches, No coach online outlet Players, No Express
Let me see if I've got this coach outlet store right. The L.A. Express played the 1985 season with no owner. Next year they will play with no coaches. Am I wrong in concluding that the 1987 season will be played with no players? How large a stadium do you figure coachoutlet.com the USFL will deem necessary for these extravaganzas? 100,000? 5,000?
Harry Usher says he is optimistic.
DANA MERINO
Burbank
Raveling Named Coach of Year
USC's George Raveling was named coach of the year by the National coach outlet sale Assn. of Basketball Coaches on Sunday.
Raveling, who also was named coach of the year by Basketball Weekly and CBS, guided coachoutletonline USC to a school-record 24 victories, including upsets over UCLA, Ohio State and Arizona.
Duke's Christian Laettner was named the player of the year by the NABC.

Taiwanese Nationals Charged in Military Technology Plot

Taiwanese Nationals Charged in Military Technology Plot Two Taiwanese nationals already accused of trying to smuggle drugs through a New Jersey port were charged today with plotting to export sensitive U.S. military technology to benefit the Chinese government. Hui Sheng Shen, 45, and Huan Ling Chang, 41, who were arrested in February and are being held without bail, appeared before a judge today in Newark, New Jersey. They are accused of conspiring to buy unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, as well as E-2C Hawkeye surveillance airplanes and stealth technology related to F-22 fighter planes. Shen and Chang “purportedly acted on behalf of agents of the People’s Republic of China and sought to acquire assets and information which, in their words, ‘would hurt America,’” according to an amended criminal complaint. Agents posing as crooked importers recorded the pair, U.S. authorities said. The two were among 29 people charged with smuggling $325 million in counterfeit consumer goods from China, including phony Nike Inc. sneakers and Coach Inc. handbags, through a New Jersey port, authorities announced March 2. Shen and Chang were charged with trying to import 50 kilograms (110 pounds) of crystal methamphetamine from Taiwan to the U.S. “Initial investigations into counterfeit goods importation led federal law enforcement to a meth trafficking operation and an alleged plot to export some of America’s most sensitive weapons and related technology to China,” U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman said in a statement. Life SentencesShen and Chang may face life sentences on the drug count and as long as five years in prison on charges brought under the Arms Export Control Act. “My client coach outlet sale asserts her innocence and we look forward to her vindication on all of the charges,” said Chang’s attorney, Maria Noto. Shen’s attorney, Ken Kayser, declined to comment. Shen portrays himself as a logistics expert who can move contraband around the world, according to the complaint prepared by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Chang portrays herself as a schoolteacher who is fluent in English, Spanish and coach factory outlet online Mandarin, the FBI said. They were charged with coach factory outlet online trying to import crystal meth with Soon Ah Kow, 72, of Hong Kong, who was indicted in January and arrested Feb. 18 in Manila. He was also accused of illegally importing cigarettes and footwear. ‘Sample Load’Shen and Chang had discussed selling 50 kilograms of crystal meth to undercover FBI agents, and delivered one kilo as a “sample load” concealed in tea bags hidden in a computer inside a coach online outlet cargo container, authorities said. While negotiating the meth sale, Shen and Chang said they were “working with a special adviser to a high-ranking Chinese government official,” according to the complaint. They asked agents about “nuclear technology, Global Hawk drones, Reaper drones, Raven drones, control panels of aircraft engaged in advanced radar warning systems, and F-22 stealth technology,” authorities said. In a series of recorded conversations about military technology, Shen and Chang told the agents that their associates were “connected coach outlet online to the Chinese government, worked for a Chinese intelligence company like the CIA, and would be using government money to make the purchases,” according to Fishman’s statement. Geng Shuang, a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington, didn’t respond to an e-mail or call seeking comment on the allegations. ‘Hurt America’The FBI said an agent was recorded as saying: “I would prefer not to make money on something that would hurt the United States.” Shen replied, “I think that all items would hurt America,” according to the U.S. Chang and Shen came to New York on Feb. 18 to discuss drug and weapons transactions, according to the FBI complaint. Shen and Chang told agents they bought cameras to photograph military technology. They said they intended to take pictures, delete them on their memory cards to avoid detection, and have a friend in China retrieve them after leaving the U.S., the FBI said. In discussing how he would remove one military item from the U.S., Shen said “he could use techniques that he had learned from narcotics coach outlet online trafficking, such as using scuba divers to swim out to a ship docked offshore with parts,” according to the FBI. He also said he would load parts onto a “remote controlled semi-submersible vehicle,” and rendezvous with a ship, the FBI said. On Feb. 24, agents showed Chang and Shen manuals for two weapons. They photographed both manuals, according to the FBI. “Before defendants could delete the photographs, law enforcement officers arrested” them, the FBI said. The case is U.S. v. Shen, 12-mj-7062, U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey (Newark). Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal. LEARN MORE