He threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to Cam Cleeland for a meaningless score that made it 45-28
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He threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to Cam Cleeland for a meaningless score that made it 45-28

Posted by admin on 6th f, 2010

He threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to Cam Cleeland for a meaningless score that made it 45-28.Steven Jackson, who had 46 yards in a 162-yard first quarter for the Rams could do little after that, finishing with 88 yards on 17 carries. St Louis were coached by the assistant head coach, Joe Vitt, with Martz [...]

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They will be the first high-speed units to enter service since privatisation

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They will be the first high-speed units to enter service since privatisation. The trains will be additional to the present timetable and will deliver half-hourly services to Cardiff.A company spokesman said passengers would enjoy more leg room and "state of the art" catering facilities as part of the package.In 2002 Virgin will introduce a similar CD system on both its west coast mainline routes between London and Glasgow and its CrossCountry network. It will be available for passengers in standard class and in the more upmarket coaches. The "Pendolino" tilting trains being introduced between London and Scotland and the "Voyager" class trains being commissioned on CrossCountry routes will be equipped with audio sockets.Virgin plans four CD channels, one for popular music, one for "easy listening" and a third to be decided.

A fourth will be plugged into radio which will opt into local stations as the train travels the country.Virgin believes the entertainment will be especially important on the London to Glasgow route where it is trying to match the facilities provided by airlines, their main competitors.. A leading Blairite MP is to apologise to the House of Commons authorities after it emerged she had used public money to send a Labour party circular to her constituents. A leading Blairite MP is to apologise to the House of Commons authorities after it emerged she had used public money to send a Labour party circular to her constituents. Siobhan McDonagh, sister of Labour's general secretary Margaret McDonagh, sent out letters on Commons notepaper to residents in her Mitcham and Morden seat. The MP's office had included a Labour questionnaire asking how well the Government was doing on a range of issues including schools, the NHS and crime.Constituents, who were also asked if they thought Tony Blair was a strong or weak leader and which party they would support at the next general election, were asked to reply to the Mitcham and Morden Labour Party via its freepost address in south London.The Conservatives claimed the affair was embarrassing to the party as a whole as Ms McDonagh had broken strict Commons rules forbidding the use of Parliamentary stationery and post-paid envelopes for party political purposes.Under Commons rules, policed by the Serjeant at Arms, MPs are forbidden from sending circulars which are unsolicited. The House rules also state that no letters can be sent which have any connection with "advocating the membership of a political party or supporting the return of any person to public office".John Redwood, former Tory minister and MP for Wokingham, said that Ms McDonagh's office ought to have known the rules about use of official stationery and postage."We know that Blair's babes don't like the House of Commons and don't do very much in it, but she should have found out by now that free post is not there for self-promotion," he said. "I hope she will be reimbursing the taxpayer."When contacted by The Independent, Ms McDonagh's Commons office admitted that an error had been made and the MP would make amends.

A maximum of 200 such circulars would have been sent out.A spokesman for Ms McDonagh said: "It is clearly a mistake This was done from the constituency offices. Siobhan will be contacting the Serjeant at Arms as soon as the recess is over to offer an apology and to offer recompense for envelope use.". Donald Dewar, the First Minister of Scotland and former Cabinet minister, was forced to step down temporarily from his post yesterday after he was taken to hospital for tests in a cardiac unit. Donald Dewar, the First Minister of Scotland and former Cabinet minister, was forced to step down temporarily from his post yesterday after he was taken to hospital for tests in a cardiac unit. Mr Dewar, 62, who has led the Scottish Parliament since its creation last year, had gone to hospital for a check-up about a month ago when a "minor irregularity" was discovered.