LOS ANGELES, Apr 24, 2012 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) –
Twelve of the greatest players in Major League Baseball history come to television on Sunday, May 6, (1pm EDT/10am PDT) when AGA Sports Entertainment and CBS give sports fans the chance to join The Players Club for an hour of competition. Battling it out are legends Bo Jackson, Randy Johnson, Wade Boggs, Steve Garvey, Ozzie Smith, Frank Thomas, Gary Sheffield, John Smoltz, Trevor Hoffman, Rob Dibble, Harold Reynolds and Joe Carter. These Hall of Famers and future Hall of Famers clash in Las Vegas, doing what they do best: competing, but this time the game isn’t baseball. Instead, they face off in five different athletic events – basketball, golf, a skills course, poker, and go-kart racing to see who’s still got it.

Hosting is former MLB bad boy David “Boomer” Wells and CBS Sports personality Amber Wilson, with a special guest appearance that could only happen in Vegas. It’s an opportunity to catch up with your favorite players as they meet on a whole new field of competition.

Executive Producers Bill Garnet and Jacque Lueth of AGA Sports Entertainment, both die-hard sports fans, believe people want to see their heroes having fun while they compete, and plan to expand The Players Club to include athletes from football, basketball, hockey, and beyond. TLK Fusion Founder/President, Ken Collis, stated “Baseball has always been America’s favorite pastime, and being able to bring the most renowned players back into the public eye for something like this is incredible! These are Hall-of-Fame baseball players! We are ecstatic to be a part of a project of this magnitude!”

For more information follow on Twitter @PlayersClubTV and check their facebook page for a up to the minute details at:

http://www.facebook.com/PlayersClubTV

For more information, please contact:

TLK Fusion

Leah James

213.250.6777 ext. 1005

TalktoLeah@TLKfusion.com

www.TLKFusion.com

About AGA Sports Entertainment (
http://theplayersclubonline.com ):

AGA Sports Entertainment has carved out the niche in television and social media of combining sports with entertainment and reality TV. The principals behind AGA Sports Entertainment have a combined 70 years of experience in the sports and entertainment industries and have merged their resources to create this exciting new venture with a number of projects already in the pipeline.

This information was brought to you by Cision

http://www.cisionwire.com

http://www.cisionwire.com/tlk-fusion/r/legendary-baseball-players-come-together-to-compete-on—the-players-club- ,c9250861

The following files are available for download:

This news release was distributed by GlobeNewswire,
www.globenewswire.com

SOURCE: AGA Sports Entertainment

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n>(Reuters) – Pity poor math.

In the American drive to boost science and math education, its science that has all the kid-friendly sizzle: Robots and roller coasters, foaming chemical reactions, marshmallow air cannons.

Math has… well, numbers.

America has a cultural problem with math. Its the subject, more than any other, that we as a country love to hate, said Glen Whitney, a passionate mathematician who worked for years developing algorithms for hedge funds. We dont see it as dynamic. Its rote and boring and done by dead Greek guys a thousand years ago.

A brave group of educators and entrepreneurs think they can change that. With games and competitions, museums and traveling road shows – and a strategic sprinkling of celebrities – they aim to make math engaging, exciting and even fun.

The inaugural Lure of the Labyrinth tournament, designed by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, challenges kids to navigate an online monster lair by solving math and logic puzzles. Top scorers in the competition, which kicked off this month, can win tablet computers.

DimensionU, an online game company, this week launched another national tournament, DU the Math, to encourage kids to play its free math games. Top players can win a personal music lesson from teen pop star Greyson Chance, a day with the hit band Mindless Behavior or a star-studded rock concert in their hometown — all prizes deliberately chosen, company spokesman Tom Schuyler said, to make math cool.

Perhaps the most ambitious effort to give math some sparkle comes from Whitney, the hedge-fund mathematician. He has raised $22 million to build a Museum of Mathematics, due to open this fall in New York City.

And yes, he has heard all the jokes.

Would you rather go to the Museum of Math or the Museum of Broccoli? Whitney asked. Thats the stereotype were trying to combat.

To that end, he is sending a traveling exhibit around the country; it is now at the Boonshoft Museum of Discovery in Dayton, Ohio. It includes such marvels as the square-wheeled tricycle, which can be pedaled along a specially designed, geometrically compatible track.

Whitney says he wants visitors to come away with a sense of awe at the power and beauty of mathematics. Math makes the impossible, possible, he said.

FALLING BEHIND

The new efforts are born of the realization that American students are falling behind in math, even though math skills are more important than ever in careers ranging from manufacturing to healthcare to finance.

American elementary and middle school students score above the international average — though far below math powerhouses such as Singapore and Japan — on standardized math tests given worldwide. By age 15, however, US students plunge in ranking, scoring below countries such as Slovenia, Hungary and Iceland. (By contrast, they remain at or above the international average in science and reading.)

The US made a push to bolster math education during the frenzy of the space race in the late 1950s and 1960s. But even in that post-Sputnik era, math was seen as an elite subject, not necessary for the masses. As late as the mid-1980s, most states required just a year or two of math in high school, according to a scholarly review of math education trends by Alan Schoenfeld, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley.

Even today, many high schools dont offer advanced math. In New York City, for instance, just 10 percent of the high schools with the highest black and Latino enrollments offer Algebra II, according to a report by the US Department of Education.

Educators acknowledge part of the problem is the traditional approach to teaching math. Despite periodic stabs at reform, teachers say math classes are often far too heavy on computation drills and formulas, leaving little time for creative problem solving.

Its as if you took a little kid who really liked music and wanted piano lessons and said, Were going to have you practice scales and chords for the next 15 years, and then and only then will we teach you music, said Kathy Morris, an education professor at Sonoma State University in California. Its a soul crusher.

ICE CREAM, NOT BROCCOLI

Morris recently received a $300,000 federal grant to develop better training for math teachers. She says she wants them to get their students thinking of math as the ice cream, not the broccoli, of the school day.

Similar initiatives are underway in other states and nearly every one has adopted new common core curricular standards that emphasize reasoning and puzzle-solving, not just computation.

To prepare for that shift, major corporations and philanthropies — including Google, the Bill Melinda Gates Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York — have pledged $24 million to recruit and train 100,000 new math and science teachers in the next decade.

On a smaller scale, a new geometry book due out this summer, Girls Get Curves, aims to teach girls math in breezy, teen-magazine-style prose, so its not scary and their brains dont freeze up, said author Danica McKellar, an actress known for her starring role on TVs The Wonder Years. McKellar, a summa cum laude math major at UCLA, already has three top-selling math books to her name, including Kiss My Math and Hot X (about algebra).

Whether all this will succeed in making math fun has yet to be seen.

When the pop band Mindless Behavior touted the DU the Math tournament on its Facebook page, a few fans gamely said theyd give it a go. But many more gave up at once, posting comments such as i HATE math or me and MATHS ARE ENEMIES!!!

Yet the new techniques have won a few converts. Dina Cohn, a 13-year-old student in Newton, Massachusetts, said she was lukewarm about math until she joined a local club, Girls Angle, that explores math concepts in depth, then embeds challenging puzzles into treasure hunts. I enjoy it more now, she said. If they did that in school, it would make it more interesting.

While he applauds the tournaments and treasure hunts and most especially the math museum, veteran math teacher J. Michael Shaughnessy says it will take more than good PR to boost maths appeal. It will take a cultural revolution.

Every time he hears a parent tell a child, Ive done fine without math, or You dont really need to know that, he quietly but urgently interrupts.

That gives kids permission not to try hard at a subject thats really challenging for everyone, said Shaughnessy, the president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Its doing national damage.

(Editing by Jonathan Weber and Christopher Wilson)

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The Turlock Regional High School Art Show will be on display Monday through April 20 at the University Art Gallery at California State University, Stanislaus.

The show, featuring work from high schools in the Stanislaus County region, was started in 1985 by Turlock High School art instructor Bob Dennison and Roselawn High Schools Ann Williams-Bailey. Since its inception, the show has grown to exhibit more than 250 pieces of student art every year, representing 10 to 12 high schools.

This show represents so much more than the raw talents of the youth in our community, Pitman High School art teacher Larry DeTomasi said in a news release. It provides an avenue for students to express themselves and connect with their peers through personal growth and cooperative learning experiences. The show also gives us local art teachers an opportunity to connect with our peers and share new ideas in art education.

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Q: Mr. Baker, I count on you to advise me about what art to see. Based on your insights, I try to go to gallery shows and museum exhibits I might otherwise overlook. Often I convince my family or friends to go with me and we have a wonderful day in the city. Thats why I find it frustrating and bewildering when you write a tantalizing piece about a show – such as that of Todd Hidos photographs – on the day it is closing! What is the thinking behind this?

Deborah Burstyn, Walnut Creek

A: I try to avoid reviewing shows as theyre about to close, but now and then its going to happen. In the case of the Hido show at the Wirtz Gallery, which you mention, I didnt see it until a few days before it ended.

Because the show surprised and impressed me, I preferred to call it to the attention of those who might still catch it rather than to let it pass unmentioned. Readers who had already seen the show might well have an interest in my comments also.

These problems are indicative of a lack of copy space that accompanies an explosion of local events in all the arts.

Im sorry for the frustration that these circumstances will inevitably cause readers on occasion. But the importance of even a last-minute notice to the artist and others whove worked on a show should not be underestimated.

- Kenneth Baker

Kenneth Baker is The San Francisco Chronicles art critic. kennethbaker@sfchronicle.com

This article appeared on page F – 7 of the San#xA0;Francisco#xA0;Chronicle

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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – A group of e-commerce start-ups, backed by some of the tech worlds most pedigreed financiers, are betting that Facebook Inc can become an e-commerce powerhouse to rival Amazon.com Inc and eBay Inc.

As the worlds largest social network hurtles toward a $5 billion initial public offering, it will come under more pressure from Wall Street to find new sources of profit growth and reduce its reliance on advertising, which accounted for 85 percent of its 2011 revenue.

Some entrepreneurs and investors increasingly think f-commerce – meaning e-commerce on Facebook – is the answer. Start-ups such as BeachMint, Yardsellr, Oodle and Fab.com are coming up with novel ways to persuade Facebook users to not just connect with friends on the social network, but to shop as well.

Backed by tens of millions of dollars from venture capital firms like Accel Partners and Andreessen Horowitz, and other big investors like Goldman Sachs (GS.N), these start-ups are pushing out shopping apps, hosting online garage sales and testing out new business models on Facebook.

E-commerce is a huge category with very strong tailwinds and its a natural move for Facebook, said Sam Schwerin of Millennium Technology Value Partners, which owns Facebook shares and has a stake in BeachMint.

Amazon revolutionized online shopping by crunching lots of customer and purchase data to come up with relevant, personalized recommendations. In the same vein, Facebooks combination of data, analytics and payment technology could fuel the next generation of e-commerce, Schwerin said.

Harvard MBA David Fisch, a former executive at eBays StubHub online tickets business, oversees Facebooks e-commerce efforts, working with retailers to build social commerce businesses on the platform.

People have always shopped with their friends; now they expect it online, Fisch wrote in a December blog. Companies who think differently about social will find success.

Fisch declined to comment, but investors said Facebook understands the importance of having an e-commerce strategy.

Its a big imperative for them, said Theresia Gouw Ranzetta of Accel Partners, an early backer of Facebook. They understand its an important strategic benefit for them to make e-commerce players successful on the platform.

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BIG BRAND STORES FLOP

Facebook had 845 million monthly active users at the end of 2011, far higher than Amazons 164 million active accounts or the eBay online marketplaces 100 million active users.

But despite that huge base, Facebook is primarily a way to connect with friends, and not an online shoppers first destination. Big retailers including JC Penney (JCP.N), Gap (GPS.N) and Nordstrom (JWN.N) had previously set up stores on Facebook but shut them after generating few sales.

That has not stopped venture capital firms from pouring money into rookie companies they think have cracked the code.

There is a lot of buzz about Fab.com, which has amassed 3 million users who broadcast purchases via a bought button that advertises their shopping habits to friends. Fab built its user base in part by offering $5 a month to those who agree to share their Fab purchases and favorites on Facebook. Chief Executive Jason Goldberg said tens of thousands opted in.

BeachMint co-founder Diego Berdakin said his company had set up a live video event called StyleMint.tv last holiday season featuring a brief appearance by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerbergs sister, Randi Zuckerberg. For about two hours, they showcased BeachMint products that people could buy with one click.

More than 50,000 Facebook users watched the show and a huge percentage bought something, Berdakin said, adding, At the time, it was the biggest day in our history in terms of sales.

Yardsellr, started in 2010 by former eBay manager Danny Leffel, organizes people into 3,000 communities, or blocks, based on common interests. When someone posts a product for sale, it is sent to the news feeds of people in that block and purchases can be made with a few clicks.

Gross merchandise sales, a measure of the value of products, has been growing about 30 percent a month, according to Leffel. Social commerce could be bigger than eBay, he argued.

Then theres Oodle, a start-up headed by Craig Donato, who runs Facebooks official marketplace, which boasts more than 3 million unique monthly users. When buyers and sellers post items, their Facebook identities are attached, giving users more confidence in the transactions, Donato said.

MAKING MONEY

For now, Facebook is making money mostly by selling ads to merchants trying to target potential customers. But many experts say it is a matter of time before the eight-year-old social network will ask for a cut of shopping transactions, or seek other ways to profit.

They point to Facebooks relationship with online games developer Zynga Inc (ZNGA.O) as an example. Facebook takes a 30 percent cut of revenue generated from the sale of virtual goods used to play Zynga games.

Gamers pay for those virtual goods using Facebook Credits, a virtual currency that could eventually be used to buy physical goods, according to some Internet entrepreneurs.

Facebook has a huge opportunity to monetize e-commerce, said Christian Taylor, chief executive of Payvment, a startup that operates thousands of Facebook stores. They have the infrastructure and team to pursue that.

Others downplay the potential for Facebook Credits, saying physical goods offer much thinner profit margins than virtual products.

The 30 percent model is great for products with near-zero cost of goods sold, said Kevin Hartz, head of ticketing start-up Eventbrite, which works closely with Facebook. But selling a TV with thin margins, that model will just not apply.

Nevertheless, if e-commerce on Facebook takes off, many expect the social network to find a way to make money off it.

When you build on top of a platform like Facebook, there is always the risk that the platform provider decides to change the rules later on, said Laura Valverde of Beetailer, which runs more than 3,000 stores on Facebook.

We have seen this with Facebook Credits and games. So, once social commerce fully takes off, it will only be natural that Facebook tries to benefit one way or another from it.

(Editing by Edwin Chan, Tiffany Wu and Bob Burgdorfer)

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WINNIPEG, MANITOBA–(Marketwire – Feb. 28, 2012) – The Manitoba chapter of the Canadian Public Relations Society (CPRS) is pleased to announce that Scott Brown, Senior Director, Corporate Communications for True North Sports amp; Entertainment Limited, is the recipient of the 2012 Manitoba Communicator of the Year Award, which will be presented in Winnipeg at a special luncheon event on Tuesday, March 27, 2012, at the Hotel Fort Garry.

In a year with a new airport and spring flooding, arguably the biggest news story of 2011 in Manitoba was the return of the National Hockey League to Winnipeg. The media buzz and Winnipeg Jets fans appetite for information (and tickets) were at extremely high levels. From a media relations standpoint, the announcement of the return of the Winnipeg Jets, and the strategic rollout that followed-from the logo to the uniforms, the team name and tickets purchases-took place seamlessly.

Theres no question that a great deal of rehearsal, planning, strategizing and thought had to happen behind the scenes, said Siobhan Kari, president of CPRS Manitoba. The media attention on the return of the Jets was enormous locally, nationally and internationally and the pressures to meet all requests must have daunting. Yet it was all handled professionally.

We thank the Canadian Public Relations Society for the recognition as the Communicator of the Year, said Brown. It was indeed a tremendous challenge to bring the National Hockey League back to Manitobas passionate hockey fans, not only on the communications front, but in all areas. We have been overwhelmed by the publics support of the team and the organization, from the Drive to 13,000 to the unveiling of the logo and jersey to the vocal presence at not only every home game, but games away from MTS Centre as well. The return of the NHL has truly been a community success.

CPRS Manitoba received two separate nominations to acknowledge Scott Brown with this award for work providing strategic communications while True North Chairman and Winnipeg Jets Governor, Mark Chipman, was the public face of the return of the Winnipeg Jets.

CPRS Manitoba established the Manitoba Communicator of the Year Award to honour individuals or organizations that have demonstrated excellence in public communications in business, politics, entertainment, non-profits, or the community at large. The Communicator of the Year was selected by a panel of senior CPRS Manitoba members and public relations professionals. Previous award recipients are Kevin Walters and Manitoba Homecoming 2010 (2011), Clare MacKay of The Forks North Portage Partnership (2010), Heather Plett of the Canadian Foodgrains Bank (2009) and inaugural winners Gail Asper and Kim Jasper for the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (2008).

Both the award recipient and all the highly qualified nominees demonstrated creativity and solid communications strategies. CPRS Manitoba is proud to be able to recognize the best in the profession.

The event is made possible through the generosity of principal sponsor, Marketwire.

Luncheon tickets can be purchased online at www.cprs.mb.ca.

CPRS Manitoba

As the leading professional association for communicators in the province, CPRS Manitoba includes members from corporations, public relations agencies, government departments and non-profits. Members represent a wide variety of fields, ranging from agriculture and health care, to financial services and manufacturing. On Twitter: @cprsmb, Online: www.cprs.mb.ca.

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Walking New York: The Best of the City

National Geographic, $14.95

National Geographic recently announced publication of a new series of travel books focusing on what it deems to be the worlds top global cities, including London, Paris, Rome and New York. The features of each book include whirlwind tours (such as New York in a day, in a weekend, in a weekend with kids), best of lists of quintessential things to do and see, plus fun and informative sidebars.

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CADDO PARISH, LA (KSLA) -

KSLA has confirmed that the BOLO issued earlier in the week for an eight-month-old infant has been cancelled. The couple and the child were located in Mississippi.

Louisiana law enforcement agencies have issued a Be On the Look Out bulletin fortwo suspects traveling west on Interstate 20with an eight-month-old baby thats reportedly been abducted.

So far KSLA News 12 has contacted Louisiana State Police and Caddo Parish Sheriffs deputies.

Caddo Sheriffs were able to confirmthat the infant was taken from its grandparents home in Dodge County, Georgia.

Louisiana State Policeidentify that infant aseight-month-old Matthew Maskill Johnson. He was reportedly last seen wearing a blue and white striped infant jumper.

State Police also confirmed that the child is traveling with a male and a female.

The suspected driver, according to State Police, is identified as Johnny D. Johnson of Georgia.

Hes described as a white male, 64 tall, 123 lbs., hazel eyes, brown hair. Hes wanted out of Georgia for questioning in an unrelated child molestation and kidnapping case, according to State Police.

The childs non-custodial mother is also reportedly traveling with the suspect.

State Police identify her as 19-year-old Taylor Nicole Maskill. Shes described as a white female, 51 tall, 150 lbs. green eyes and red hair.

The trio was reportedly last seen in Lincoln, Alabama around 4 pm Thursday traveling in a Silver 2002 Isuzu Rodeo with two possible Texas plates, CY8B849 or CH5P601.

Both suspects have warrants, according to authorities. If you see these suspects or this vehicle, authorities advise calling your local law enforcement agency immediately.

Copyright 2012 KSLA. All rights reserved.

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Changes in marketing strategy are being propelled by what Bradley Rencher, Adobes SVP and GM of digital marketing, coins “the digital self.” Speaking during the opening session of Adobes Digital Marketing Summit in Salt Lake City, Rencher defined the digital self as an individuals online persona, which is composed of a persons online social networks, shopping transactions, listening habits and comments, among other things.

“Today, digital marketing is all about reading signals, mapping patterns and learning from this conversation that is alive and chaotic,” Rencher said. “And while big data gets bigger, the details that matter are getting smaller.”

It is up to marketers and advertisers, Rencher continued, to make sense of all these signals and noise, to pick out the valuable bits to create a “special and magical experience” for consumers.

“Thats the power of the digital self,” Rencher said. “It lets you express who you are as a brand to real people, not people who are in columns, spreadsheets and databases, but real people with wants, desires and needs.”

The digital self, Rencher said, has also changed the roles of marketers. Previously there was a webmaster solely responsible for online content. However, marketers must now be digital experts responsible for understanding their consumers.

“It does not matter what your role or position is. Its critical you understand the power of the digital self,” Rencher said.

Consumers and marketers have an unspoken contract, Rencher argued; the more personal information consumers share with marketers, the more tailored experiences consumers expect, he said.

“As marketers, we cant violate that contract, because at the end of the day, the consumer will be the judge of how well we do,” Rencher said.

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