Saturday, March 31, 2018

Sunday, April 1, 2018
Track CodeTrack NameEntryScratch1st Post
ET
1st Post
Local
Time
Zone
Stakes Race(s)Stakes GradeT.V.
Indicator
GGGOLDEN GATE FIELDS7203:15 PM12:15 PMPDT
GPGULFSTREAM PARK72012:35 PM12:35 PMEDT
SASANTA ANITA PARK72243:30 PM12:30 PMPDT
SUNSUNLAND PARK168242:30 PM

mock or praise andrew cuomo

for closing nassau otb on one easter sunday in preference to the other?


for putting into the state budget in anticipation of the us supreme court decision  in janus  measures to impede the public employees at nassau otb etc from ceasing to pay union dues


Sunday, April 1, 2018
Track CodeTrack NameEntryScratch1st Post
ET
1st Post
Local
Time
Zone
Stakes Race(s)Stakes GradeT.V.
Indicator
GGGOLDEN GATE FIELDS7203:15 PM12:15 PMPDT
GPGULFSTREAM PARK72012:35 PM12:35 PMEDT
SASANTA ANITA PARK72243:30 PM12:30 PMPDT
SUNSUNLAND PARK168242:30 PM

Fox's Laura Ingraham taking vacation as 


Sunday, April 1, 2018
Track CodeTrack NameEntryScratch1st Post
ET
1st Post
Local
Time
Zone
Stakes Race(s)Stakes GradeT.V.
Indicator
GGGOLDEN GATE FIELDS7203:15 PM12:15 PMPDT
GPGULFSTREAM PARK72012:35 PM12:35 PMEDT
SASANTA ANITA PARK72243:30 PM12:30 PMPDT
SUNSUNLAND PARK168242:30 PM



advertisers flee amid controversy

March 31 (Reuters) - Fox News show host Laura Ingraham announced on her show late Friday that she is taking next week off, after almost a dozen advertisers dropped her show after the conservative pundit mocked a teenage survivor of the Florida school massacre on Twitter.
Eleven companies so far have pulled their ads after a pushback by Parkland student David Hogg, 17, who called for a boycott of her advertisers.
A Fox News Channel spokeswoman said Ingraham was taking a pre-planned spring vacation with her children.
Hogg took aim at the host's show, "The Ingraham Angle," after she taunted him on Twitter on Wednesday, accusing him of whining about being rejected by four colleges to which he had applied.
RELATED: Laura Ingraham's most controversial moments
Slideshow preview image

6 PHOTOS
Laura Ingraham's most controversial moments
SEE GALLERY
Hogg is a survivor of the Feb. 14 mass shooting that killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in the Parkland suburb of Fort Lauderdale. He and other classmates have become the faces of a new youth-led movement calling for tighter restrictions on firearms.
Hogg tweeted a list of a dozen companies that advertise on "The Ingraham Angle" and urged his supporters to demand that they cancel their ads.
On Thursday, Ingraham tweeted an apology "in the spirit of Holy Week," saying she was sorry for any hurt or upset she had caused Hogg or any of the "brave victims" of Parkland. But her apology did not stop companies from departing. The companies announcing that they are canceling their ads are: Nutrish, the pet food line created by celebrity chef Rachael Ray, travel website TripAdvisor Inc, online home furnishings seller Wayfair Inc, the world's largest packaged food company, Nestle SA, online streaming service Hulu, travel website Expedia Group Inc and online personal shopping service Stitch Fix. According to CBS News, four other companies joined the list Friday: the home office supply store Office Depot, the dieting company Jenny Craig, the Atlantis, Paradise Island resort and Johnson & Johnson which produces pharmaceuticals as well as consumer products such as Band-Aids, Neutrogena beauty products and Tylenol.

Saturday, March 31, 2018

Sunday, April 1, 2018
Track CodeTrack NameEntryScratch1st Post
ET
1st Post
Local
Time
Zone
Stakes Race(s)Stakes GradeT.V.
Indicator
GGGOLDEN GATE FIELDS7203:15 PM12:15 PMPDT
GPGULFSTREAM PARK72012:35 PM12:35 PMEDT
SASANTA ANITA PARK72243:30 PM12:30 PMPDT
SUNSUNLAND PARK168242:30 PM

the cardinal and the bishop remain silent


dear euenio scalfari and La Repblica:
  nassau off track betting corporation chooses to close on roman catholic easrer sundsy in preference to orthodox easter sunday. i worked with a member of the orthofox church tonight. he celebrates Easter Sunday next Sundsy. andrew cuomo is a believer although he does not seem to believe in ny const art 1 sec 3.  if the orthodox church is to be treated with respect as the Pope seems to have opined, it would be enlightening to know how he fels about andrew cuomo treating fellow Christians and non believers   in this manner.


Saturday, March 31, 2018


Sunday, April 1, 2018
Track CodeTrack NameEntryScratch1st Post
ET
1st Post
Local
Time
Zone
Stakes Race(s)Stakes GradeT.V.
Indicator
GGGOLDEN GATE FIELDS7203:15 PM12:15 PMPDT
GPGULFSTREAM PARK72012:35 PM12:35 PMEDT
SASANTA ANITA PARK72243:30 PM12:30 PMPDT
SUNSUNLAND PARK168242:30 PM
http://www.repubblica.it/static/servizi/scrivi.html?ref=RHHD-M







Photo

Pope Francis has had several chats with a left-wing Italian journalist who considers himself an atheist and occasionally puts words in the pope’s mouth. CreditMax Rossi/Reuters 

ROME — The Vatican felt obliged this week to reaffirm that Pope Francis believes in a central tenet of Catholicism, that there is a hell.
That odd declaration came after the newspaper La Repubblica published a front-page article on Thursday by an atheist, left-wing and anticlerical giant of Italian journalism, who reported that during a recent meeting the pope had said that hell did not exist.
Bad souls are “not punished,” the journalist, Eugenio Scalfari, 93, reported the pope as saying. “A hell doesn’t exist.”
Nor, for Mr. Scalfari, does a tape recorder or notebook or the orthodoxy of quotation marks.
The Vatican characterized the remarks as misquotations.
In the past, Mr. Scalfari, the founder of La Repubblica, a bible of the Italian left that he edited for decades, has admitted to sometimes putting words in the papal mouth.
Continue reading the main story
But the infernal remarks, especially as the pope prepared for Easter Sunday celebrations, proved too tempting for international tabloids, conservative websites antagonistic to the pope and many others to let go.
“Pope Declares No Hell,” read a screaming headline across the Drudge Report website.
“Does the Pope Believe in Hell?” asked Patrick J. Buchanan in an online column.
“Vatican literally falls apart after Pope Francis says ‘Hell doesn’t exist,’” read a headline in Metro UK, a British newspaper.
The pope, in fact, has often talked about hell as a very real final destination for the wicked, and the Vatican made clear that the “literal words pronounced by the pope are not quoted” and that “no quotation of the article should be considered as a faithful transcription of the words of the Holy Father.”
Mr. Scalfari agreed.
“They are perfectly right,” said Mr. Scalfari in an interview on Friday night, as the pope prepared for a ceremonial leading of the stations of the cross on Good Friday. “These are not interviews, these are meetings, I don’t take notes. It’s a chat.”
While Mr. Scalfari said he remembered the pope saying hell did not exist, he allowed that “I can also make mistakes.” He said he had committed an error of omission by failing to fully explain the pope’s answer on the need for a stronger Europe. “At my age,” Mr. Scalfari said, he was more used to being interviewed than interviewing.
The editor of La Repubblica, Mario Calabresi, said the paper had not labeled Mr. Scalfari’s piece as an interview. It was, Mr. Calabresi said, the fruit of a “cultural exchange and dialogue out of the 19th century between a Jesuit believer and a man of the enlightenment fascinated by religion.”
Sophisticated readers of Italian journalism understand how to read Mr. Scalfari, which is to say, with a grain of salt when it comes to papal quotations.
To many here, Mr. Scalfari personifies an impressionistic style of Italian journalism, prevalent in its coverage of the Vatican, politics and much else, in which the gist is more important than the verbatim, and the spirit greater than the letter.
And yet, despite the public relations headaches Mr. Scalfari has caused, Francis, 81, seems to like talking to him.
The pope, Mr. Scalfari said, has a “need to talk with a nonbeliever who stimulates him.” This month’s meeting was their fifth.
In September 2013, Francis sent a letter to Mr. Scalfari, later published in La Repubblica, in which the pontiff wrote that atheists should “abide by their own conscience” and said that Christians should engage in “a sincere and rigorous dialogue” with nonbelievers.
Weeks later, the pope had a long discussion with Mr. Scalfari, the reconstructed transcript of which the journalist published in La Repubblica.
“Each one has his idea of good and evil and must choose to follow the good and fight the evil as he understands them,” the pope said, according to Mr. Scalfari. He added that efforts to convert people to Christianity amounted to “solemn nonsense.”
At first, the Vatican’s spokesman at the time, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, confirmed the interview as “faithful to the thought.” He subsequently published the article in its entirety on L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican’s official outlet, and in a space on the website of the Holy See usually reserved for papal speeches.
Then the Vatican, which recently digitally blurred out embarrassing lines of a letter sent by Pope Benedict XI, removed the text from its website. “There were some misunderstandings and disagreements about its value,” Father Lombardi said back then.
The two men spoke again in July 2014, and Mr. Scalfari published an article in which he said the pope had estimated that 8,000 members of the clergy, including bishops and cardinals, were pedophiles and that perhaps priestly celibacy should be reconsidered.
The Vatican responded by asking whether a lack of quotation marks suggested “an attempt to manipulate some naïve readers.”
In 2015, Mr. Scalfari quoted Francis as having said that “all the divorced and remarried who ask will be admitted” to Communion. Father Lombardi responded that observers “know the way Scalfari writes.”
But throughout, the Vatican has seemed reluctant to bring down the hammer on an erudite man toward whom the pope apparently had grown affectionate.
Francis stayed in touch with Mr. Scalfari, calling him on the phone and inviting him in for another long chat in November 2016. Mr. Scalfari described their warm greetings and reported that the pope said, “It is the communists who think like Christians.”
This week’s controversy is not the first time Mr. Scalfari and the pope have visited the subject of hell. In October 2017, Mr. Scalfari wrote, “Pope Francis has abolished the places where souls were supposed to go after death: hell, purgatory, heaven.”
But the pope, who is surrounded by a court full of politically attuned cardinals, yes men and conservatives trying to undercut his mission, keeps coming back to Mr. Scalfari.
“We’ve become friends,” Mr. Scalfari said, recalling that the pope helped him into his car during the last visit, and that this time he walked him to the door. “He blessed me, but knowing that I’m not faithful, he blew me a kiss. And I responded in the same mode.”