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Let meget one thing straight: I got the wrong impression of this movie, and of theRambo character. I had the osmotic impression of a heavily-armed hero, a man ofrighteous action, delivering justice to the forces of evil in the form ofautomatic gunfire.
Frankly,I don't know where I got that impression anymore. The film supported it only awkwardlyat first, then fell through as we see the poignant sympathy with which thevictimized small-town cops are portrayed. Rambo's tearful breakdown at thefilm's climax smashed that impression like a wrecking ball. This man was not ahero, but a tragic victim-- a living, breathing human being transformed into aweapon and unable to turn himself back.
I findit sad that this character, it now seems, has been so myopically Flanderized intonothing but a scowling, M60-brandishing slab of man-meat, forgetting entirelythe powerfully delivered message by the film. I don't know who's fault it is,if it's anyone's-- having not yet seen the later films, it may be that thesequels are themselves to blame. Peering through the foggy glass of the accumulatedstereotype overlaid upon the facts, we find ourselves cheering and rooting forthe very warlike force that the film so pointedly expresses the bitter tragedyof-- egging on the broken soldier for the gratification of the crowd. It's anuncomfortable feeling, I find.
I likedthis movie a lot more than I was expecting to, and for entirely differentreasons than I'd anticipated. It took all the guns-blazing action, all the goreand violence, and made it mean something-- the only thing it could realisticallymean-- and I love it for that. See it if you haven't. If you have, see itagain. It's good stuff.
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  1. Shooting Games 9.441K Plays Play the 8th installment of Boxhead game and defeat hordes of attacking zombies by using various upgradeable weapons. Choose between the characters Baby and Biever, first and send him out to kill as much undeads as possible before the bloodthirsty creatures eat your square head hero.
  2. Just from scanning the hundreds of titles slated to head our way this year, it’s obvious that may be more of a guy’s year at the movies than usual – even with a “Hunger Games” sequel. But there are plenty of pictures with intriguing combinations of story, cast, director and place within the zeitgeist to give us hope. Here are ten of them.
  3. In Priest Vs Evil you have to help the holy man to defeat hordes of zombies using a variety of weapons, like a baseball bat, a sword or a shotgun.

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Stadium mystique makes up for mistakes
By Jeff Merron
Page 2 columnist
http://espn.go.com/page2/s/ballparks/yankee.html
Editor's Note: This is the 11th report card in Page 2's summerlong series rating all 30 ballparks in Major League Baseball.
NEW YORK -- It's impossible to enter Yankee Stadium without an enormous set of preconceived notions. Even if you've never been there before, you've seen the House that Ruth Built countless times on TV during the regular season, and many more times when it's all decked out in its full World Series regalia.
Yankee Stadium is the spine of the baseball history book, the glue that connects teams and the two leagues through the decades. Baseball's Golden Age began when it opened in 1923. The Babe christened the park with a three-run homer on April 18, 1923, the Opening Day ... of all Opening Days, and it was ordained: The nexus of the baseball universe had come to life.
The great moments are countless. The images of Ruth and Gehrig and DiMaggio and Mantle and Stengel and Ford and Berra and Guidry and Jackson and Munson and Nettles and Martin and Mattingly and Winfield and Gooden and Cone and O'Neill and Jeter and Williams and Clemens and Rivera and Pettitte (just to name a few), all wearing pinstripes, are part of our collective baseball consciousness, seeping into the brain crannies and demanding respect, admiration and awe, even if you're not a Yankee fan, even if you're among the many Yankee haters.
And then there's George Steinbrenner, a former shipping executive who has willed himself to fill the larger-than-life part of Yankee owner. He inhabits the ballpark, too, and I cursed him the whole time I was there, cramped in my bleacher seat, enveloped by the sights, sounds (I'll explain below) and smells of garbage. I cursed him when I was frisked like a common criminal upon entering the stadium (up and down, without warning, with force, without any cause for suspicion -- it's apparently standard practice). I cursed him every time I encountered a rude Stadium employee bristling with animosity, which was often. Are paying customers the enemy?
That's how it felt.
But there's more to it. The Yankee players have a real relationship with the fans, acknowledging the shout-outs from the rightfield bleacher creatures as they take the field. The fans, at least on the night I was there, were incredibly spirited (especially as the Yankees and Roger Clemens whomped the Indians), and didn't seem to deserve their reputation for obnoxious rowdyism. And, finally, you're there. Yankee Stadium is deeply woven into the fabric of New York, with all its grandiose glory, with all its obvious (and seemingly insurmountable) faults. It's something that must be experienced.
The Yankee Stadium bleachers: Where the unruly are and the beer ain't
The ratings:
1. Seat comfort: From our leftfield bleacher benches, we had a straight-on view of the distant field, from which we were separated by Monument Park and the visitor's bullpen. The incessant racket created by the Waste Management dumpsters being emptied about 10 yards away from our place in the farthest leftfield corner was a major distraction.
Seats throughout the rest of the stadium appeared standard issue, and were even padded in the dugout-level boxes. 3.5
2. Quality of hot dogs: The sign says 'Nathan's,' but these weren't the mouth-watering dogs I remember from Coney Island. A friend volunteered to eat a couple, and gave them a 3.5 during the game. The next day he got sick, and blamed the weenies. Seemed like a plausible hypothesis.
On the subway home. I got to talking with a fan who sat in the loge boxes on the leftfield side. He said he ordered a hot dog with sauerkraut at one stand near his seat. This left the concessionaires befuddled. They told him that if he wanted sauerkraut, he'd have to go to a hot dog stand on the other side of the stadium. If you're in the even-numbered sections, no sauerkraut for you! 2
3. Quality/selection of other concession-stand fare: The choices under the leftfield bleachers are extremely limited. But throughout the rest of the park, which I managed to tour only by flashing my press pass (secured just for these purposes) and arguing my way past half a dozen 'ushers,' the selection is average, but pricey.
A shout-out goes to the hot pretzels, which were big, warm, crunchy on the outside, and soft on the inside. A shout-down goes to the nachos. An interminable line leads you slowly to a, um, unique gastronomic experience. 'Let me put it this way,' a nacho-munching neighbor said when asked if they were any good. 'I ate a piece of my napkin with my nachos, and I didn't notice.' 2.5
4. Signature concession item: Probably the sausages. A compadre ate one, and proclaimed it tasty and filling. 4
5. Beer: The bleachers are alcohol-free, meaning you can't get beer in the cheap seats. Depending on your perspective, that could be a good thing, but The Babe would surely disapprove. When I snuck into the middle-class area I did score a fine Brooklyn Lager, and there was a fair selection of other brews. 4
6. Bathrooms: Not filthy, and no lines. 3
7. Scoreboard: It's possible to catch the big video scoreboard from the far end of the leftfield bleachers, and it looked fine from there. A demerit point for only flashing three out-of-town scores at a time. 4
8. Quality of public address system: It's loud, and it's worthy of Bob Sheppard. 5
9. Fun stuff to do besides the game: Heckling is both a sport and an art at Yankee Stadiium, and we did hear some good ones: 'The cereal and the board game are the only ones I know on the other team, and that's only because they have stupid names.' (Have a look at the Indians roster.) Another guy noticed that Terry Mulholland was sitting in the Indians bullpen, not far from our seats. 'You suck, Mulholland!' he shouted. Simple, straightforward.
That's New York Style, and if you can, appreciate it. Tim Morris, a Stadium regular before he moved to Texas, still misses it. 'There was teamwork and camaraderie in the bleachers,' he wrote in a funny, fond remembrance of his time among the Creatures.
I'd be remiss if I didn't mention the Yankee grounds crew dancing and dragging the infield to the infectious sound of 'YMCA.' A great act. 4.5
10. Price/selection of baseball souvenirs: The selection is standard, the prices higher. Stick a Braves logo on a baby rattle, and it's $5. Put a Yankee logo on the same item, and it's $7.50. Are those rally monkeys they're selling under the bleachers? Looked like it. That's just strange. The selection is fine, but the prices -- well, it is New York. 3.5
11. Ticket price/availability: A week before I went, I scored six bleacher seats together for a Friday night game for $12 each ($8 plus a hefty $4 Ticketmaster charge). That's a bargain, about the same price as a movie in New York. But for less, you get less. As it says clearly on the Yankees Web site, 'All Bleacher tickets are within our Alcohol-free family sections and those fans are restricted to Bleacher seats ONLY. There is no access to Monument Park or other areas of the Stadium.'
I didn't see that until it was too late. If I had, I would have ponied up for more expensive Tier Reserved seats ($18), and gotten to see a lot more. And, from what I've been told, been treated a bit better.
If you're meeting friends at Yankee Stadium, make sure you each have your own ticket in hand before arriving. The Yankees have put together a byzantine system for leaving tickets at the will call window. I followed the instructions precisely, leaving one envelope containing three tickets for one set of friends, and another envelope with a ticket for another. The three-ticket envelope made it through the system properly, but the other ticket was lost, as was my friend for that evening. Fortunately, he's an experienced New Yorker, and, we learned later, left to see the ponies once he realized the situation was hopeless. 3
'Ticket? I got ya freakin' ticket right here!'
12. Exterior architecture: Like most of the great cathedrals, Yankee Stadium is both classic and monumental. Lots of exterior elements are so big that they can't be fully appreciated from upclose. But they're there, and stunning -- the 120-foot-high replica of Babe Ruth's bat at Gate 4, which is a favorite (and prominent) meeting place. The 'Y A N K E E S T A D I U M' sign wrapping around the top. And the unmistakable pinched-horshoe shape, best seen on TV from a blimp camera, or in an aerial photo. 4.5
13. Interior architecture: Yankee Stadium is the classic ballpark, beautiful to look at from within. The grass seems greener there, the outfield facade lends a nice touch, and there are just enough weird angles to make the configuration interesting. In the bleacher area, you could exit quickly and easily through wide passageways that spill out into the street. I'm told that the escalators that take you down from the upper decks elsewhere are major bottlenecks, and the concourses and aisles are narrow. 4
14. Access: Go by subway. It's easy and relatively inexpensive. Getting there by car, parking, and getting out can be a major, long-lasting hassle. That's New York.
The Yankee Clipper seems like it's worth a splurge, especially if you're coming from Jersey. 4
15. Ushers: They screen for ignorant and hostile applicants. Then they hire them. 0
16. Trading-up factor: As noted above, I was restricted to the bleachers. But considering the usual big crowds and the medium-level prison security presence, it's hard to imagine moving down to the good seats under most circumstances. 2
17. Knowledge of local fans: 'Like lab rats that will stimulate themselves to death on the pleasure bar, Yankee fans are so addicted to the thrill of winning that they derive no joy from the glory of our national pastime,' wrote Joe Queenan in last Sunday's New York Times. That sometimes obscures their excellent knowledge of baseball. 5
18. Seventh-inning stretch: There's Kate Smith singing 'God Bless America.' There's a rendition, on organ, of 'Take Me Out ...' Then there's the unique sight of John Luhrs dancing to the rollicking sound of the Rednex 'Cotton Eye Joe.' 4
19. Pre-and-postgame bar-and-restaurant scene: In the block surrounding the stadium, there's Billy's Stadium Sports Bar, the Yankee Eatery, Stan's Sports Bar, Stan the Man's Baseball Land, and the Ballpark Sports Bar and Grill -- plenty of places to hit before the game. But Yankee Stadium is in the south Bronx, which is not a place that invites the casual visitor to just hang out after the final pitch. Folks head for the subways pretty quick. 3
20. Wild-card: Outside the Stadium, it's dirty. Inside, it's absolutely filthy. By the fifth inning, heaps of garbage overflowed from huge bins under the bleachers, and it didn't look much better in the rest of the stadium. In general, it appears that Steinbrenner has let the Stadium go to seed. It's like an aging beauty queen who still takes a terrific picture, but upclose and in person looks worn down, her appearance buoyed only by the misty haze of memory.
Or to put it another way, what you see on the tube is much more glorious than what you get in person.
Even if you're not a Yankee fan, the history, the memories and the unmistakeable Yankee Stadium feeling, which emanates all the way from the mighty George down to the bleacher creatures, all combine to make a visit to Yankee Stadium worthwhile. There's Monument Park. There's the highest-quality heckling in all of baseball. There is the sense, the knowledge, that the immortals once prowled these same grounds. Even the infamous (but winning) mortals, the late 1970s 'Bronx Zoo' Yankees, seem to inhabit the place. That's all good.
As is, of course, the standard (high) quality of Yankee baseball, which is worth seeing in person. 8
TOTAL SCORE FOR YANKEE STADIUM: 73.5
REPORT CARD
Yankee Stadium
Capacity: 57,478
Opened: April 18, 1923
Surface: Grass
Our Ratings:
Seat comfort: 3.5
Hot dogs: 2
Concessions: 2.5
Signature food: 4
Beer: 4
Bathrooms: 3
Scoreboard: 4
P.A. system: 5
Fun stuff: 4.5
Souvenirs: 3.5
Tickets: 3
Exterior: 4.5
Interior: 4
Access: 4
Ushers: 0
Trading up: 2
Fan knowledge: 5
7th inning stretch: 4
Local scene: 3
Wild card: 8
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total: 73.5
YANKEE STADIUM BUDGET
Here's what Page 2's Jeff Merron spent during his day at Yankee Stadium:
Ticket: $8 (+$4 Ticketmaster charge)
Round-trip subway from midtown Manhattan: $4
Hot pretzel: $3.50
Brooklyn Lager: $6.50
'Dippin' Dots' ice cream: $4
Bottled water: $4
Cherry icee: $4
Total: $38
THE GRADES
Grades for ballpark we've visited so far on our summer tour:
Pac Bell (Giants): 93
Dodger Stadium (Dodgers): 82.5
Fenway Park (Red Sox): 81.5
Safeco Field (Mariners): 81.5
Jacobs Field (Indians): 81
Turner Field (Braves): 81
Yankee Stadium (Yankees): 73.5
SkyDome (Blue Jays): 67
Qualcomm Stadium (Padres): 58
Tropicana Field (Devil Rays): 56
Olympic Stadium (Expos): 49
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Yanks for the memories
By Jim Caple
Page 2 columnist
http://espn.go.com/page2/s/caple/030724.html
Henry Ford founded his auto company, the Wright Brothers made the first airplane flight and the American League played the National League in the first World Series in 1903, but that year wasn't all good. The New York Yankees were also born in 1903.
Jesse Orosco is applauded for his service in the Spanish-American War.
If you weren't aware of their birthday, you're not alone. Thanks to the notorious midwest media, the Yankees have never gotten their full due over the years. In fact, they've received so little coverage that you might not remember these important dates from the first century in New York history ...
Jan. 9, 1903: Businessmen Frank Farrell and Bill Devery purchase the defunct Baltimore Orioles and relocate the team to New York and rename them the Highlanders. In their first official move as owners, they sign left-handed relief specialist Jesse Orosco.
Jan. 10, 1903: Columnists and small market owners accuse New York of trying to buy the pennant.
April 1913: New York officially renames the team the Yankees, forcing Boston vendors to sell their entire stock of 'Highlanders Suck!' T-shirts at a huge loss.
Jan. 3, 1920: In the most infamous and lopsided deal in American sports, the Red Sox sell Babe Ruth and their immortal soul to New York for $24 worth of beads.
April-Sept. 1920: Ruth hits 54 home runs to shatter the single-season record and earn two dozen nicknames, including the Bambino, The Sultan of Swat, the Consigliore of Crunch, the Lieutenant Governor of Lumber, the Chief Operating Officer of Bash, the Senior Vice-President in Charge of Purchasing and Slugging Percentage, the Right Honorable Ensign of Clout and the Notary Public of Horsehide.
April 18, 1923: Affectionately known as the House That Ruth Built, Yankee Stadium opens, setting the stage for many additional structures such as the Apartment That Rizzuto Built, the Townhome That Skowron Erected, the Duplex That Horace Clarke Leased and the Low Income Housing Complex That Pepitone Gutted And Sold Off As Luxury Condominiums.
Oct. 15, 1923: After the Yankees beat the Giants to win their first world championship, columnists and small market owners complain that there needs to be better revenue sharing, because the Yankees win the World Series every year.
April 1925: Ruth misses the first two months of the season when he accidentally eats a hot dog from the Yankee Stadium concession stand.
June 1, 1925: In a very poor career decision, Wally Pipp calls in sick and stays home laying on the couch and watching TV.
May 16, 1928: Billy Martin is born. He is bottle-fed by Ballantine.
July 4, 1930: The unsuspecting victim of a witches' coven, Rosemary Woodhouse, gives birth to the son of Satan, George M. Steinbrenner III.
George also sold personal seat licenses at the family dinner table.
August 12, 1931: Steinbrenner utters his first words, telling his nanny, 'You're fired.'
Oct. 1, 1932: In one of the most dramatic moments in World Series history, the Babe steps to the plate, points to center field and orders two dozen hot dogs.
May 30, 1939: Lou Gehrig ends his playing streak at 2,130 games, and Mayo Clinic doctors deliver the most obvious diagnosis in medical history, telling him that he has Lou Gehrig's Disease. It is only one of the many ailments named in honor of a Yankees superstar. Others include Epstein-Berra Syndrome, Non-Knoblauch's Lymphoma and of course, Mickey Pox.
July 17, 1941: Joe DiMaggio's amazing record streak finally ends when he signs an autograph without attorney Morris Engleberg charging for it.
May 28, 1944: Rudy Giuliani is born, guaranteeing profitable Yankees souvenir sales for the next 60 years.
Oct. 5, 1951: Mickey Mantle suffers the first of several debilitating knee injuries in Game 2 of the World Series when he trips over his empties.
January 14, 1954: DiMaggio marries Marilyn Monroe and, upon consummating the marriage, delivers the most famous line in baseball history: 'Tonight, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth.'
Oct. 8, 1954: The Giants sweep Cleveland in four games when the Yankees vote to not win the pennant, 'just to see what it's like.'
Oct. 1, 1961: After a long, emotionally ravaging summer, Roger Maris endures another indignity when he hits his record-breaking 61st home run and his family hugs Mark McGwire instead.
Dec. 8, 1972: Fritz Peterson and Mike Kekich swap wives but are unable to complete the entire trade when Luis Polonia claims their daughters on waivers.
Jan. 3, 1973: The Lamb breaks the seventh seal, the Angel blows the seventh trumpet, earthquakes ravage the globe, California sinks into the Pacific, the sun disappears from the sky, the moon runs crimson, zombies roam the earth and Steinbrenner buys the Yankees.
April 16, 1976: Renovated Yankee Stadium opens with Rudy May throwing out the first pitch and bleacher fan Mark Rooney throwing out the first battery.
Oct. 18, 1977: Reggie Jackson slams three home runs in Game 6 of the World Series and headline writers dub him 'Mr. October,' adding him to the pantheon of Yankees greats such as 'Mr. February' Hank Bauer, 'Mr. December' Elston Howard and 'Miss April' Ed Whitson.
Oct. 2, 1978: Bucky Dent officially becomes the leading cause of clinical depression, schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorders in Boston.
Oct. 20, 1981: After losing the final game of the World Series, the Yankees won't reach the postseason for 14 years, leaving columnists and small market owners nothing to complain about.
July 24, 1983: Umpires nullify George Brett's home run after Billy Martin protests that he was using Sammy Sosa's bat. It was 20 years ago today.
May 14,1987: Steinbrenner hires Howard Spira to call up Dave Winfield and ask if his refrigerator is running.
June 6, 1990: Six months after the death of Billy Martin, Steinbrenner orders the body dug up and hires him as manager for the sixth time. There is no apparent difference between the dead Martin and the manager he replaces, Stump Merrill.
The Yankees introduce their new chief counsel while on double-secret probation.
August 10, 1990: After investigating the Spira-Winfield affair, baseball places Steinbrenner on double-secret probation.
Oct. 26, 1996: The Yankees celebrate their first world championship in 18 years by voting Jeffrey Maier a full World Series share.
May 17, 1998: In the finest performance of his career, David Wells retires 27 consecutive beers without spilling a drop.
Nov. 15, 1998: After a very sick DiMaggio enters the hospital's intensive care unit, Morris Engleberg instructs reporters that he is to be referred to as 'The Greatest Dying Ballplayer' in their stories.
Feb. 18, 1999: The Yankees acquire five-time Cy Young winner Roger Clemens. Boston responds by changing the greeting on the club's phone lines from 'Home of the 1918 World Series champions' to 'Yankees Suck!'
Oct. 12, 2001: In Game 3 of the division series with Oakland, Derek Jeter astounds fans across the country by putting his pants on two legs at a time.
April 2, 2002: After a year of hype and anticipation, the 24-hour YES Network debuts in well over a dozen homes.
April 1, 2003: The Yankees celebrate their 100th anniversary by unveiling the commemorative shoulder patches they'll wear throughout the upcoming season: '2003 World Champions.'
July 31, 2003: Steinbrenner gears up for the stretch drive by trading Drew Henson for the entire National League.
Jim Caple is a senior writer for ESPN.com.
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Tale of the Tape: Yanks vs. Hogs
By Nick Bakay
Page 2 columnist
http://espn.go.com/page2/s/bakay/030724.html