| Hillary Frey
Moss, Culpepper talk about reuniting via free agency
Though their relationship ended a little rocky when Moss left the Vikings to go to the Raiders in a trade, Moss and Culpepper stayed in touch with each other and stayed friends. They joked that at some point they might be free agents at the same time and might have a chance to unite. As Moss spent his second day in unrestricted free agency Saturday, he started to think about Culpepper, who also is a free agent. What they had talked about for years all of a sudden was true. .
Frail: Hearts need killer touch
I'd love Robbo back but not as manager as of yet, still a few too many question marks there...Frail and Robbo would make great coaching back-up to an experienced and proven manager but i think that most managers would want to bring in their own people first. Jefferies and Brown with Robbo as strikers coach would perhaps work but then frail would probably just be left with the U19's and with us just signing Murray's new contract that might not be an option. We should definitely find a place for Frail at the club and repay the work he has done behind the scenes to keep things together. Hearts have been guilty of not repaying loyalty from the people we should call the 'Hearts family' of late and that is only counter-productive to the team. Robbo's treatment first time round was a disgrace but the apointment of Burley was a master-stroke (albeit short lived and eventually ruined by others' stupidity)...lets not get sentimental here though Robbo is someone we should have around the club much the same way as McCoist was always part of the foundations at Ibrox but as for the manager's position we need another Burley style apointment...Scala? .
Activists Bare Teeth Over Foreclosures
The commotion was the work of an in-your-face activist group called the East Side Organizing Project, with a paid staff then of just two, mobilized to battle Cleveland's mortgage "loan sharks." Years before the rest of the country was rocked by the fallout from aggressive lending, their neighborhoods were already home to the nation's highest concentration of foreclosures -- and they were fed up. .
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