Monday, March 7, 2016

Peyton Manning to announce retirement Monday


Report: Peyton Manning Will Retire Tomorrow

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) -- The Latest on quarterback Peyton Manning"s retirement news conference (all times local): 12:10 p.m. In the final moments of his retirement news conference, Peyton Manning really got choked up when he talked about how hard he prepared during his 18-year career. "When I look back on my NFL career I"ll know without a doubt that I gave everything I had to help my team walk away with a win," he said, voice breaking with nearly every word. "There were other players more talented, but there was no one who could outprepare me. And because of that I have no regrets." He then paraphrased from the Bible: "I have fought the good fight. I finished my football race and after 18 years it"s time. G*d bless all of you and G*d bless football." ------ 11:50 a.m. Peyton Manning says nothing is going to overshadow this "joyous day," especially not something that happened decades ago. In a new lawsuit filed last month that claimed a hostile work environment for women at the University of Tennessee, Manning was cited for his alleged harassment of a female trainer in 1996. "It is sad that some people don"t understand the truth and facts. I did not do what is alleged," Manning said. "I"m not interested in re-litigating something that happened when I was 19. ... Like Forrest Gump said, `That"s all I have to say about that."" ------ 11:45 a.m. Peyton Manning is going to miss quite a bit about football. Here are some he listed during his retirement news conference: -- Steak dinners at a place in Indianapolis after wins. -- Battles against players such as John Lynch and Troy Polamalu (to name a few). -- Going against coaches like Bill Belichick and Jeff Fisher, Rex Ryan (again, to name a few) -- Figuring out blitzes with longtime center Jeff Saturday. -- Demaryius Thomas constantly telling Manning he loved him and thanking Manning for coming to town each time he caught a TD pass. -- Handshakes with Tom Brady -- The fans, even those in Foxborough and, "they sure should miss me, because they sure did get a lot of wins off me." ------ 11:40 a.m. Peyton Manning started off his retirement remarks talking about another gunslinger, former Baltimore Colts star Johnny Unitas. Manning talked about the struggles of his rookie season, when Indianapolis went to Baltimore -- the Colts former home -- and lost. Unitas shook his hand after the game and told Manning he was rooting for him. Manning said that the words of Unitas, who died in 2002, stayed with him. "I hope he knows that I stayed at it, and I hope he"s a little proud of me," Manning said is starting off his retirement comments. ------ 11:33 a.m. Peyton Manning"s voice is cracking as he reminisces about his 18-year NFL career. He"s also using his wit to break the ice. He noted that he still owns the NFL record for 28 interceptions as a rookie and says, "Every year I pull for a rookie to break that record." He said little brother Eli might have broken it had he started all 16 games his rookie year. ------ 11:25 a.m. Broncos coach Gary Kubiak says he"s only coached Peyton Manning for nine months "but I"ll remember it for a lifetime." Speaking after executive John Elway paid tribute to Manning"s four seasons in Denver, Kubiak said he"s spent 17 seasons trying to beat Manning and he "wasn"t very successful." He also told a story about how he had several private meetings with Manning after Week 9 as he came back from injury. The two worked together to make sure Manning"s presence helped the team and didn"t cause any disruptions. ------ 11:06 a.m. The Peyton Manning retirement news conference is underway. Team president Joe Ellis calls it a "historic day for the Denver Broncos and the National Football League." Ellis says Manning made the team, organization and the community better. Broncos executive VP John Elway has now taken the podium to talk about Manning. "I know this is a tough day for him," Elway said. ---- 11 a.m. Peyton Manning has quite a few big names at his retirement announcement. There are former teammates such as John Lynch, Jeff Saturday and Brandon Stokley. Demaryius Thomas and Emmanuel Sanders are chatting with Manning"s wife and children. Sitting in the front row are Manning"s parents, Archie and Olivia, along with his brother, Cooper. Also on hand is Bennie Fowler, who caught Manning"s last pass on a 2-point conversion to cap Denver"s 24-10 win over Carolina a month ago in Super Bowl 50. ------ 10 a.m. Peyton Manning, this is your life. About 150 media, family and guests are expected to attend Manning"s retirement news conference today in the Denver Broncos" team meeting room. And that doesn"t include those in an overflow room where the news conference will be piped in for dozens of more reporters stationed outside the UCHealth Training Center. The Broncos media relations department is limiting seating and issued orange stickers to the invitation-only event. The Broncos have a couple of framed Manning No. 18 jerseys, one home and one road, and a game ball to present to the quarterback that lists his accomplishments during his four seasons in Denver. The team has also produced a glossy program especially for the goodbye news conference that features Manning hoisting the Lombardi Trophy following Denver"s 24-10 win over the Carolina Panthers a month ago.

*****

DENVER, CO (ABC) --Five-time NFL MVPPeyton Manningwill announce his retirement after 18 years during a news conference Monday at theDenver Broncosheadquarters, a source familiar with the quarterback"s decision told ESPN"s Chris Mortensen.

The Broncos" Super Bowl 50 victory over theCarolina Pantherswas indeed his last rodeo.

History will show the quarterback was in the NFL 18 seasons, made four Super Bowl trips with two titles, set a mountain of records and earned a place on football"s Mount Rushmore.He will retire as NFL"s all-time leader in pass touchdowns (539), passing yards (71,940) and quarterback wins (186, tied withBrett Favre).

Manning, who played 14 seasons with theIndianapolis Colts, was a first-ballot Hall of Famer-in-waiting before spinal fusion surgery caused him to miss the 2011 season. He went to the Broncos as a free agent in 2012 and authored the most prolific season of any quarterback in history in 2013. The Broncos made two Super Bowl trips in Manning"s final three seasons.

When he embracedNew England PatriotscoachBill Belichickafter the Broncos" AFC Championship Game victory in January, NFL Films cameras captured audio of Manning hinting to the coach that the 2015 season would be his last.

"This might be my last rodeo. So it sure has been a pleasure," Manning said.

Manning was a five-time MVP, a Super Bowl MVP, a 14-time Pro Bowl selection and a seven-time first-team All-Pro. His team made the playoffs in 15 of his 18 seasons. He had 14 4,000-yard passing seasons, and of the three seasons in league history in which a quarterback threw at least 49 touchdown passes, Manning has two of them.

In the Broncos" record-setting 2013 season, when they scored a single-season record 606 points -- the first time in league history a team topped 600 -- Manning set single-season records for passing yards (5,477) and touchdown passes (55).

The final season of Manning"s career was the "most unique" he has had in the league. He missed seven starts with a tear in the plantar fascia near his left heel. In November, Manning had a cast on his left foot; in December he was running the scout team; and by January he was back in the lineup for one more playoff run.

All the while there were reports, which he strongly denied, debating Manning"s skills as a teammate and linking him to human growth hormone. The first report alleged he would refuse to be the backup quarterback. He called that "bulls---." Then Al-Jazeera America reported that HGH was allegedly shipped to his wife, Ashley. Manning repeatedly said the report was "garbage."

Manning also is among the athletes cited in a lawsuit filed by a group of women alleging that the University of Tennessee violated Title IX regulations and created a "hostile sexual environment" through a policy of indifference toward assaults by student-athletes.

The Tennessee lawsuit alleges that in 1996, when Manning was the Volunteers" quarterback, he placed his n***d genitals on the face of a female athletic trainer while she was examining him for an injury. Manning has denied that he assaulted the trainer, saying instead that he was "mooning" a teammate. Manning was never the subject of a police investigation in the incident.

The trainer, Dr. Jamie Naughright, later sued Manning. In documents filed on her behalf in the case, the player whom Manning said he was "mooning," Malcolm Saxon, contradicted Manning"s account.

Naughright"s lawsuit against Manning was settled in 1997 with the agreement that she leave the university.

In the NFL, Manning"s return from his 2011 surgery surprised many in the league. He could barely throw a football 10 yards when he began his recovery, and even after he signed with the Broncos in March 2012, there was enough uncertainty that the team used a second-round pick to selectBrock Osweilerin the draft.

"What he"s done, man, he"s the greatest," Broncos cornerbackChris Harris Jr.has said. "Some people ... you have to say, "You remember that guy?" and then you keep saying things. He"sPeyton Manning. That"s it. You just say Peyton Manning."

Broncos coach Gary Kubiak has worked with great quarterbacks throughout his career. He was theSan Francisco 49ers" quarterbacks coach in 1994 and was the Broncos" offensive coordinator from 1995 to 1998 with John Elway as his quarterback.

"I like to say I"ve been blessed and fortunate enough to coach three Hall of Famers," Kubiak has said. "There"s Steve Young, John, and they"re in the Hall of Fame. And there"s Peyton, and he"s in. We all just have to wait a few years for it to be official."

Elway, now the Broncos" executive vice president of football operations and general manager, promised Manning he would do everything in his power to send him out with a championship. Elway also said he liked "to sign Hall of Famers with chips on their shoulders."

Beyond the numbers, the production and the fact he helped four head coaches reach the Super Bowl, Manning"s legacy is that he put the game back into the hands of the quarterback. From the time the Colts made him the first pick of the 1998 draft and then-coach Jim Mora played Manning for every snap of his rookie season, Manning has been the man in charge.

Manning put both the Colts and the Broncos into the annual Super Bowl discussion.

"Peyton Manning is the kind of player, the rare kind of player, where no matter how long you played with him, whether it was a month, a year, 10 years, a week, you"re always going to say "I played with Peyton Manning,"" Broncos tackleRyan Harrishas said. "You don"t say Peyton Manning and I played together or that Peyton Manning was on my team. You say, "I played with Peyton Manning." And people could not know anything about you as a player, or what you did, or if you were any good, and they would immediately know you played with one of the best ever and you were always one of the teams that [had] a real shot at the Super Bowl. He"s forever."

Los Angeles Ramscoach Jeff Fisher has likened facing Manning to "playing a computer who knows what you did before, what you"re doing now and what you"re planning to do later." Manning"s recall of defenses, situations and plays -- he once gave detailed descriptions of the scoring plays of every player who caught just one touchdown pass from him -- was the stuff of football legend.

"Peyton, he made me better. He made a lot of guys better," former Broncos and Colts wide receiver Brandon Stokley said. "We would have made the NFL probably, but Peyton made us all better. We were more because we played with Peyton Manning. And just think about how many guys can say that."

Manning operated with complete freedom at the line of scrimmage. His 14-year career with the Colts resulted in a new stadium and the Midwestern city"s selection to host a Super Bowl.

A sought-after pitchman off the field, Manning put the No. 18 on countless passing hopefuls from coast to coast and will be enshrined in Canton, Ohio, when the Pro Football Hall of Fame"s five-year waiting period is over.

As the late Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams said after Manning"s Colts repeatedly threw at him: "Man, everybody knows that"s the great Peyton Manning ... and Peyton Manning is going to do what Peyton Manning does."

Source: http://www.wkow.com/story/31401636/2016/03/07/peyton-manning-to-announce-retirement-monday

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TV This Week: "House of Cards"; "Downton Abbey" finale; "Bates Motel"; "Underground"; "Damien"


Downton Abbey SERIES FINALE Review

FRIDAY

"House of Cards":Haven"t had enough real-life politics? Season 4 finds Frank Underwood (Kevin Spacey) pursuing a second term as President, even as his marriage to his equally ambitious First Lady Claire (Robin Wright) is tangled in recriminations and conflict. (Episodes stream beginning Friday, March 4; Netflix)

SATURDAY"MythBusters":After 14 seasons, Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman bust their last myth, as the series airs its finale. (8 p.m., Discovery)

SUNDAY"Downton Abbey": Stock up on the embroidered handkerchiefs and strong tea, because the saga of the aristocratic Crawleys and their household staff is ending, with the Season 6 finale. (9 p.m. PBS/10)

"The Walking Dead": So, if you thought the show would turn into a rom-com once Rick and Michonne got together, think again. (9 p.m. AMC)

MONDAY

"Bates Motel": It"s the fourth-season premiere for this show set in the fictional Oregon coastal town of White Pine Bay, which is actually Vancouver, B.C. Young Norman Bates (Freddie Highmore) and his mother, Norma (Vera Farmiga) return, and things are getting scary. (9 p.m. A&E)

"Damien":In this thriller developed by Glen Mazzara ("The Walking Dead") and inspired by the 1976 horror film "The Omen," a grown-up Damien (Bradley James) has to come to grips with the fact that he"s the Antichrist. (10 p.m. A&E)Tuesday

"Of Kings and Prophets":Set a thousand years before Christ, this new Biblical drama centers on King Saul, Samuel and David, with plenty of battles and betrayal. (10 p.m. ABC/2)

WEDNESDAY

"Underground":Aldis Hodge, Jurnee Smollett-Bell, Christopher Meloni and Portland native Johnny Ray Gill star in this new historical drama about the Underground Railroad, set in 1857, with slaves on a Georgia plantation working together to escape. (7 p.m., and repeats at 8, 9 and 10 p.m., WGN America)

THURSDAY

"Top Chef":The three top finishers head to Las Vegas as finals begin. (9 p.m. Bravo)

-- Kristi Turnquist

kturnquist@oregonian.com503-221-8227@Kristiturnquist

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/tv/2016/03/tv_this_week_house_of_cards_ba.html

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Card firm apologises for making a Moonpig"s ear of Mother"s Day deliveries


Mother"s Day

Moonpig has apologised to dozens of customers who complained about deliveries of Mothers Day cards and flowers.

The online greeting card and gift firm was bombarded with complaints about items that were damaged, late or failed to arrive. Among the complaints posted on social media were photos of flowers with wilted leaves and snapped stems, and a smashed vase. One customer claimed their mother took delivery of a flower box to find it was empty.

The company spent Mothers Day answering the stream of complaints on Twitter and Facebook before reportedly attributing the problems to an issue with a supplier.

Related: Internet flowers the perils of a thoughtful gift

Michael Blair wrote to Moonpig on Twitter: OMG! Flowers just arrived for Mum - broken, ripped, dead, disgusting! And no card til Monday either!

Becky Peters from Newport, South Wales, tweeted: MoonpigUK two years in a row you have disappointed me, youve lost a customer. Dont advertise your cards to be delivered on Mothers Day if theyre not going to arrive.

Helen Palmer tweeted a photo of a sorry-looking bouquet and a damaged vase along with the comment unhappy Mothers Day, while Jakeyjelly tweeted: MoonpigUK ordered my Mothers Day flowers and got the card but no flowers in sight absolute disgrace! alongside a photo of an empty box.

In adverts ahead of Mothers Day the firm said it would take orders for gifts until 2pm on Friday and flower orders up to 4pm on Saturday. Flowers and plants were supposed to be delivered between 8am and 9pm over the Mothers Day weekend, the company said.

A spokesman for Moonpig told the BBC: We can confirm that an issue with one of our suppliers has delayed the delivery of flowers to some of our customers this weekend.

We know how important Mothers Day is and we have apologised to and compensated all customers who have experienced a delay.

Weve been working hard to put things right and by the end of Mothers Day almost all orders have been delivered. We hope our customers accept our sincere apologies.

Source: http://www.theguardian.com/money/2016/mar/07/moonpig-mothers-day-deliveries-late-damaged-missing-goods

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Katt Williams brawl captured on video


Donkey of the day: Conor McGregor and Katt Williams (Talking Reckless and Getting Defeated):

Comedian Katt Williams is certainly keeping the social-media embers glowing lately.

The week after his arrest in north Georgia on a simple battery charge, followed by allegations that he pointed a gun at some women in downtown Atlanta, he is trending again on Twitter. This time, his 140-character notoriety is spurred by this fracas at a Philly concert. Someone caught it on video (of course) and it landed on TMZ (where else?)

Getty Images

PAST: Katt Williams says racial slur prompted fracas that led to arrest

He did take a break to refuel in between episodes,rolling up to the Atlanta Fish Market last Thursday night in a caravan including a Lamborghini, a stretch limousine and a van with dark tinted windows to accommodate his 10-person entourage. Were told he took home a doggy bag literally selecting some salmon pieces to take home to his pooch.

Alas, the tranquility apparently didnt last long. Heres the video from TMZ:

Source: http://buzz.blog.ajc.com/2016/03/07/katt-williams-brawl-caught-on-video/

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DeMarcus Ware still vividly remembers The Peyton Manning bootleg

Peyton Manning trots into the end zone for his 18th career rushing touchdown. (AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post)

DeMarcus Ware may never forget The Peyton Manning n***d Bootleg, even if he tried.

You know the play. Against the Cowboys in Dallas in 2013. The 37-year-old Manning faked a handoff to Knowshon Moreno then curled around to the left as the scrum collapsed on Moreno. Without a defender in sight, Manning trotted into the end zone leaving millions watching in disbelief.

Ware included. He was still with the Cowboys at the time and remembers it vividly. While reflecting on his two years with Manning in Denver and congratulating the quarterback on his Hall of Fame career, Ware looked back to that 2013 play.

You always hear about Peyton Manning and how he controls the game, uplifts other players to his standards, and I was fortunate to see it as a teammate and opponent, Ware said. He was one of those guys who was a great competitor who took chances. When I played against him in Dallas (2013 game), I had the bootleg responsibility and I never thought he would do it. The weird thing is, he looked at me before with this image of, I got you.

Being his teammate, I saw how he carried himself, how meticulous he was, how much of a competitor and how great he was off the field. He was one of those guys that if you had an event, a dinner, he was always engaged in every guys life. He knew what the trash mans name was, the trainers, the cafeteria workersall by name. He always thought about everyone else. When you think of the word champion, hes the image that you see.

Source: http://blogs.denverpost.com/broncos/2016/03/06/38705/38705/

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Sunday, March 6, 2016

Republicans Take On Kentucky Caucus


2016 Kentucky Presidential Caucus Video

There will be seven presidential contests this weekend. Most of them will be small caucuses. Reporters in three states Kentucky, Kansas and Maine describe the races they"re covering.

LOURDES GARCIA-NAVARRO, HOST:

No doubt the fireworks will continue. Donald Trump is in Kansas today making a last-minute bid for delegates. Kansas is one of five states holding caucuses and other primaries this weekend. We"ll hear now from reporters in three of those states, starting in Kentucky. That state is holding its first Republican presidential caucus since 1984. Kentucky Public Radio"s Ryland Barton reports.

RYLAND BARTON, BYLINE: The reason why there"s a caucus here this year has everything to do with Senator Rand Paul. He convinced the state Republican Party to switch to a caucus so he could run for president and re-election to his Senate seat at the same time. He was skirting a state law that forbids candidates from appearing on the same ballot twice. It also offered Kentucky another benefit, argues Scott Lasley, a local Republican Party chairman.

SCOTT LASLEY: We"re more important than we were, but we"re still - it"d still be nice to be a little bit more important (laughter).

BARTON: Kentucky did get a little bit of attention from the candidates. Ben Carson stopped in Lexington on Monday.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BEN CARSON: It"s not the evil, rich people. It"s the evil government. It"s the evil government.

BARTON: And then on Super Tuesday, the Donald Trump show came to Louisville.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

DONALD TRUMP: Trump is best on ISIS. Trump is best on military. Trump is best on security. Yeah, don"t hurt him. Don"t hurt him.

BARTON: But other than that, there hasn"t been a whole lot of politicking for Kentucky"s 46 Republican delegates. Meanwhile, Republican officials are left with a big question - will people come out to caucus? Here"s Scott Lasley.

LASLEY: The biggest challenge is really making sure as many people know about it as possible, and that"s probably been a little bit tougher than maybe was anticipated.

BARTON: Most of Kentucky"s 120 counties will only have one caucus location. That means some voters will have to drive far to participate. And even though Rand Paul dropped out of the race a month ago, his name will still be on the ballot of the caucus he created. For NPR News, I"m Ryland Barton in Frankfurt, Ky.

JENNIFER MITCHELL, BYLINE: I"m Jennifer Mitchell in Bangor, Maine, where the state"s governor, Paul LePage, welcomed a special guest at a political rally this week.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

PAUL LEPAGE: The next president of the United States, Donald Trump.

MITCHELL: LePage endorsed Trump recently. The governor is well-known for being outspoken and combative, not unlike Trump. And LePage"s conservative policies were the target of another political candidate here this week - Democrat Bernie Sanders.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BERNIE SANDERS: If I"m not mistaken, I think I"m right that you have a governor here who likes to beat up on poor people, right?

MITCHELL: Sanders hopes to do well here. He also won next door in New Hampshire and in his home state of Vermont. For a state with only a few dozen delegates on both sides, there"s been an unusual flurry of campaigning.

JIM MELCHER: Timing wise, Maine is hitting this well.

MITCHELL: Maine never gets this many pre-caucus candidate visits, says Jim Melcher, a political science professor at U. Maine Farmington. He says Mainers have a tradition of going their own way, choosing independent candidates or those who fall outside the so-called establishment.

MELCHER: They don"t necessarily need somebody who"s extremely polished and slick and smooth. And Maine has a political character of really turning out and taking politics seriously.

MITCHELL: In general elections, Maine has voted reliably Democratic for president for nearly 30 years. So after this weekend"s caucus, it may be four years before the national political circus stops here again. For NPR News, I"m Jennifer Mitchell.

STEPHEN KORANDA, BYLINE: I"m Stephen Koranda in Kansas where candidates have been campaigning all week. At a Ted Cruz event in Overland Park, Elizabeth Foster says she loves the Texas senator.

ELIZABETH FOSTER: I feel like he"s someone who will do what he said that he would do. I feel that he stands for my principles, which are Christian values primarily.

KORANDA: Cruz and Senator Marco Rubio are making their pitches to evangelical Kansas voters, a major constituency here. Many of the state"s prominent elected officials, including Governor Sam Brownback, have endorsed Rubio. At a Rubio event in Topeka, Chris Maher says he likes some of Donald Trump"s policies but thinks Trump goes a little too far at times.

CHRIS MAHER: I like the whole make America great again thing that he does, however, I think it"s more than just saying that. You actually have to try to work with other countries rather than just building a wall.

KORANDA: But Trump has been endorsed by the state"s well-known secretary of state, Kris Kobach, who told the "PBS Newshour" that Trump is attracting new blood to the party.

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "PBS NEWSHOUR")

KRIS KOBACH: The Republican establishment is looking a gift horse in the mouth and saying, yeah, we don"t really want those blue-collar workers who are coming over to the Republican Party.

KORANDA: Polls have Trump leading the field here, but in a low turnout caucus, the results will depend on whose supporters are the most passionate. For NPR News, I"m Stephen Koranda in Topeka, Kan.

Copyright 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPRs programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2016/03/05/469299783/republicans-take-on-kentucky-caucus?ft%3Dnprml%26f%3D

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The Cookery Opens Its Doors Saturday for Duke vs. UNC


2015-16 College Basketball: (#20) Duke vs. (#5) North Carolina (Full Game)
If you"re trying to watch the Duke-versus-UNC basketball game Saturday night but have pulled the plug on cable and can"t afford tickets that are going for up to eight thousand dollars on StubHub, here"s an interesting viewing option:The Cookery,on Durham"s Chapel Hill Street, will open its doors for Belly Up, an open house of sorts that will feature local food vendors as well as a giant screen to watch the game.

Pie Pushers will be on hand slinging wings and two variations on knots: dough b***s filled with chicken and parmesan cheese, with either buffalo or Cackalacky sauce. The Sweeter Side will have macarons, cake pops, cookies, and more sweets. Both operations are among several area institutions using The Cookery for mobile food operations.

This is the third open house-style "pub night" that The Cookery has hosted. The interior space is generally reserved for private events, such as wedding receptions. Owner Rochelle Johnson says these nights allow the public to learn about The Cookery as much as their own neighbors.

Its an opportunity for The Cookery to open its doors to the neighborhood," she says."Most of the folks that attend these events live pretty close to The Cookery, and a lot of people are able to gather that wouldnt normally hang out together.

There"s no cover charge or registration required, but Johnson is requesting that people interested in attending RSVP via Facebook, to help Pie Pushers and Sweeter Side plan their prep.

Source: http://www.indyweek.com/food/archives/2016/03/03/the-cookery-opens-its-doors-saturday-for-duke-vs-unc

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