FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2010
United comes up a little short, 1-0
89th-minute goal by Seattle further hurts playoff chances
by Jorge Castillo Sitting five points behind
fourth-place Chicago with 15 games remaining entering Thurs- day night’s match against the Se- attle Sounders, D.C. United knew time was running out in its pur- suit of an MLS playoff spot after a nightmarish start to the season. Thursday night’s result may
have dug a hole United can’t get out of. In its first league match at RFK Stadium since June 5, United dominated play but couldn’t capi- talize on any of its numerous op- portunities. Instead, D.C. surren- dered a heartbreaking goal in the 89th minute and lost, 1-0, in front of an announced crowd of 13,716. Everything seemed to go right
for United but the score. After just registering one shot in Satur- day’s scoreless draw against New York, United came out aggressive. Energized by midfielder Andy Najar and forward Jamie Mo- reno, who made his first start in league play since May 22, D.C. had four shots in the first half, while the Sounders countered with seven of their own. After the seesaw first half, the hosts dominated play and pro- duced a number of chances in the second but still couldn’t finish.
In the 65th minute, United had its best scoring opportunity when Kasey Keller, the Sounders’ vet- eran goalkeeper, came out of the box to clear a ball Najar was pur- suing. Najar managed to slide and deflect the ball away from Keller, who stayed on the ground in pain after the collision. Najar passed to midfielder Santino Quaranta, who tried chipping the ball over two Sounders defenders protecting the goal in Keller’s ab- sence. The shot wasn’t high enough, however, and a Sounders defender headed it out of bounds for a corner kick. In the 76th minute, Quaranta struck a shot from 30 yards out that Keller just deflected over the crossbar for a corner. It was all for naught. In the
89th minute, Sounders forward Fredy Montero dribbled down the right side into the box before crossing to forward Roger Le- vesque on the other side of the box. Levesque’s diving header snuck past United goalkeeper Troy Perkins along the post be- fore he could get over to defend it. United’s only opportunity to tie it came on a free kick in the 91st minute. Quaranta’s grounder that was well off target. Pablo Hernandez and Branko
Boskovic made their debuts off the bench for United. Hernandez, who is on loan from Uruguay’s Club Defensor, provided a spark when he was in- serted for Moreno in the 56th minute. In the 67th minute he nearly opened the scoring, head-
KLMNO SOCCER
S BASEBALL NOTEBOOK
Wieters put on 15-day DL with strained hamstring
Associated Press
The Baltimore Orioles placed catcher Matt Wieters on the 15-day disabled list with a strained right ham- string on Thursday. The move is retroactive to
last Saturday. In his second season with Baltimore, Wieters is batting .245 with six homers and 29 RBI in 77 games. Wieters left Friday’s game
in Texas after running the bases and remained on the bench for the rest of the week- end. The Orioles waited be- fore placing him in the DL, hoping the injury would heal during the all-star break.
Beckett on track Red Sox pitcher Josh Beck-
JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST Santino Quaranta, left, and Seattle’s James Riley collide in United’s first MLS match at RFK since June 5.
ing a corner at Keller, who man- aged to block the shot. Nineteen minutes later he redirected a cross with his left foot that forced Keller to dive for the save. Boskovic, who came over from Austria’s Rapid Vienna, replaced Stephen King in the midfield in
CYCLING As Cavendish wins stage, Renshaw butts in and is banished by Jamey Keaten
bourg-les-valence, france — In the frenzied and dangerous mass sprints at the Tour de France, competitors of- ten need to keep their heads. Mark Renshaw decided to use
his. The Australian lead-out man for sprint specialist Mark Caven- dish was kicked out of the race af- ter head-butting a rival Thursday, which cleared a path for his Brit- ish teammate to win his third stage at this year’s Tour. “This is cycling. It’s not wres-
tling,” said course director Jean- Francois Pescheux, who called Renshaw’s aggressive tactics “fla- grant” and the punishment nec-
essary. “There are rules to respect,”
Pescheux said. Andy Schleck of Luxembourg
retained the yellow jersey, and rode conservatively during the 114.6-mile ride from Sisteron to Bourg-les-Valence so that he could save his energy for tough climbs in the Pyrenees during the final week. The 25-year-old race leader cruised into the finish in the main pack after riding part of the stage discussing a vacation with his main rival, defending cham- pion Alberto Contador. “It was quiet and we can act
like normal people,” Schleck said through a translator. “So we spoke about — we remembered — our holidays.”
It wasn’t nearly so quiet near the front of the pack, at least at the finish line.
With the sprinters’ teams bar- reling toward the finish at about 40 mph, Renshaw rammed his head three times into the shoul- der of Julian Dean of New Zea- land, the lead-out man for Amer- ican sprinter Tyler Farrar on Gar- min-Transitions. It was an apparent bid to push Dean, who was then in the lead, out of the way during the final sprint. After reviewing video of the
finish, the race jury said Renshaw was “removed from the competi- tion for a particularly serious case.” They also said the HTC Co- lumbia rider was fined 200 Swiss francs (about $192) for a grave case of “irregular sprint.”
SCOREBOARD CYCLING Tour de France 11th Stage; A 114.6-mile plain stage
From Sisteron to Bourg-les-Valence, France (mostly downhill after one Category 3 climb) Overall Standings (After 11 stages) 1. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Team Saxo Bank, 53 hours 43 minutes 25 seconds.
2. A. Contador, Spain, Astana, 41 seconds behind. 3. S. Sanchez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 2:45.
FOOTBALL 2010 NFL Supplemental Draft
Chicago — Harvey Unga, rb, BYU Dallas — Josh Price-Brent, de, Illinois Note: Chicago and Dallas forego seventh-round picks in the 2011 NFL Draft.
Canadian Football League Friday’s Games
Winnipeg at Hamilton................................................ 7 Montreal at B.C. ........................................................ 10
Arena Football League Friday’s Games
Spokane at Iowa ......................................................... 8 Utah at Arizona.................................................... 10:30
SOCCER Major League Soccer
EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA Columbus ...................... 8 3 4 28 20 13 New York ....................... 8 5 2 26 18 17 Toronto FC ..................... 6 4 4 22 17 15 Chicago .......................... 4 5 5 17 18 19 Kansas City ................... 4 8 3 15 12 19 New England ................. 4 9 2 14 15 26 D.C. United ..................... 3 10 3 12 11 26 Philadelphia .................. 3 8 2 11 16 25
WesternConference W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles ................. 11 2 3 36 25 7 Real Salt Lake ............... 9 3 3 30 28 11 Dallas .............................. 5 2 7 22 17 13 Colorado ........................ 6 4 4 22 16 13 San Jose ......................... 6 4 4 22 18 16 Houston .......................... 5 7 4 19 21 22 Seattle ............................ 5 8 4 19 18 24 Chivas USA .................... 4 9 2 14 17 21
Thursday’s Result
Seattle 1 ............................................. at D.C. United 0 Saturday’s Games
Toronto FC at Philadelphia.................................. 3:30 New York at Columbus......................................... 7:30 Real Salt Lake at Dallas........................................ 8:30 Kansas City at Colorado............................................ 9 Sunday’s Game
Los Angeles at D.C. United...................................7:30
Seattle ................................... 0 1 — 1 D.C. United............................ 0 0 — 0
Second half — 1, Seattle FC, Levesque 1 (Montero, Nyassi), 89th minute. Yellow Cards — James, D.C. United, 54th; Gon- zalez, Seattle FC, 85th.
Lineups
Seattle — Kasey Keller [GK], Patrick Ianni, Leo Gonzalez, Nathan Sturgis, James Riley, Jeff Parke (Tyrone Marshall, 62nd), Steve Zakuani, Mike Seamon (Osvaldo Alonso, 73rd), Fredy Montero, Roger Levesque, Pat Noonan (Sanna Nyassi, 88th).
D.C. United — Troy Perkins [GK], Julius James, Jor- dan Graye, Dejan Jakovic, Devon McTavish (Adam Cristman, 81st), Andy Najar, Stephen King (Bran- ko Boskovic, 72nd), Clyde Simms, Chris Pontius, Jaime Moreno (Pablo Hernandez, 56th), Santino Quaranta. Attendance: 13,716
TENNIS
ATP SkiStar Swedish Open T. Robredo (5), Spain, def. A. Golubev, Kazakh- stan, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2; F. Verdasco (2), Spain, def. S. Robert, France, 6-1, 6-1; F. Skugor, Croatia, def. E. Eleskovic, Sweden, 6-1, 6-1; N. Almagro (4), Spain, def. J. Nieminen, Finland, 6-4, 6-4.
ATP Mercedes Cup
D. Gimeno-Traver, Spain, def. N. Davydenko (1), Russia, 7-6 (9-7), 2-6, 6-1; M. Chiudinelli, Switzer- land, def., B. Phau, Germany, 7-6 (7-3), 6-3; G. Monfils (3), France, def. P. Andujar, Spain, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4; F. Mayer, Germany, def. G. Garcia-Lopez, Spain, 6-3, 6-1; J. Carlos Ferrero, (4) Spain, def. H. Zeballos, Argentina, 6-7 (7-1), 7-6 (7-3), 6-2.
WTA ECM Prague Open
P. Schnyder, Switz., def. A. Cornet, France, 6-2, 6-1; A. Medina Garrigues (5), Spain, def. C. Casta- no, Colombia, 6-4, 6-2; L. Hradecka, Czech Rep., def. M. Niculescu, Romania, 6-1, 6-2; A. Szavay (7), Hungary, def. I. Benesova, Czech Rep., 6-1, 7-5.
WTA Palermo Open
K. Kanepi (5), Estonia, def. I. Raluca Olaru, Ro- mania, 6-1, 6-2; R. Oprandi, Italy, def. M. Zec Pes- kiric, Slovenia, 6-4, 7-5; S. Errani (3), Italy, def. M. Lucic, Croatia, 6-0, 7-6 (7-4); A. Rezai (2), France, def. M. Duque Marino, Colombia, 7-6 (7-3), 6-3.
Eastern Conference W L Pct. GB xN.Y. Sportimes....................... 6 3 .667 — xWashington............................ 6 3 .667 — xBoston ..................................... 3 5 .375 2A xPhiladelphia ........................... 3 5 .375 2A N.Y. Buzz ................................... 1 7 .125 4A Western Conference W L Pct. GB Sacramento.............................. 5 3 .625 — xSt. Louis................................... 4 3 .571 xKansas City............................. 4 3 .571 xSpringfield.............................. 4 3 .571
World Team Tennis
A A A
xNewport Beach...................... 3 4 .429 1A x-Late Game.
Thursday’s Results
Washington at N.Y. Sportimes........................... Late Boston at Philadelphia ........................................ Late St. Louis at Newport............................................. Late Springfield at Kansas City .................................. Late Friday’s Games
Newport Beach
...................................at Kansas City Philadelphia
.............................................at N.Y. Buzz Sacramento
..........................................at Springfield
GOLF
Matt Bettencourt ....................................32 34 — 66 -6 Chris DiMarco .........................................34 33 — 67 -5 Will MacKenzie .......................................36 32 — 68 -4 Craig Bowden ..........................................31 37 — 68 -4
PGA Reno-Tahoe Open At Montreux Golf and CC; In Reno, Nev. Purse: $3 million; Yardage: 7,472; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round, Leading Scores
LOCAL GOLF
Army Navy-Arlington 22, Mount Vernon 14 Army Navy-Fairfax 21 1
NVRMGA Matches ⁄2
Chantilly 22, Belle Haven 14 Fort Belvoir 18, Springfield 18 Heritage Hunt 20 1
⁄2 ⁄2 , International 15 1
Hidden Creek 25, Fairfax National 11 Westwood 25 1
, CC of Fairfax 10 1
, River Bend 15 1 ⁄2
Bryce Resort — Don Bailey, Jim Beator, Barry Ma- dia and Frank Wise won the best ball tournament. Congressional — In the mixed twilight event, the team of Charles and Sheila Wagner and Bill and Deborah Outman won low net with 59. Kenwood — In the men’s weekday member/
⁄2 ⁄2
guest, Chris Huebner and Rob Whitmore won low net with 58. Mark Handwerger and Kevin McDon- nell won low gross with 66. Lakewood — In the ladies 18-hole member/guest, Jisoo Lee, Sunny Lee, Jung Ae Chung and Ser- aphino Chun won low net with 114; Mim Bern- stein, Kathy Frank, Bonnie Berliner and Sandy Sherman won low gross with 148. Norbeck — In the men’s senior member/guest, Jerry Hroblak and Gene Doria won low net; Larry Yud and Len Pettiford won low gross. National Golf Club at Tantallon — Clare Connally won the WDCGA junior girls Goldstein Memorial Tournament with a 79. Caroline DeLoach won the nine-hole division.
BASKETBALL WNBA
Eastern Conference W L Pct GB Atlanta ....................................14 6 .700 — Washington ............................12 6 .667 1 Indiana ....................................11 7 .611 2 Connecticut ...........................11 8 .579 2A New York ..................................9 9 .500 4 Chicago .....................................9 11 .450 5
Western Conference W L Pct GB Seattle .....................................17 2 .895 — Minnesota ................................7 11 .389 9A Phoenix .....................................7 12 .368 10 San Antonio ..............................6 11 .353 10 Los Angeles ..............................5 13 .278 11A Tulsa ..........................................3 15 .167 13A
Thursday’s Result
at New York 75 ..................................Washington 67 Friday’s Games
Atlanta at Indiana....................................................... 7 Tulsa at San Antonio.................................................. 8 Los Angeles at Chicago........................................ 8:30
Liberty 75, Mystics 67
Washington Min FG FT O-T A PF Pts. Currie 31:34 3-8 6-8 0-1 3 5 12 Langhorne 36:56 5-10 9-11 4-10 0 2 19 Sanford 10:27 1-1 0-0 1-1 0 3 2 Harding 33:17 3-9 4-6 1-6 4 3 10 Smith 35:12 4-12 0-0 0-3 1 3 11 Melvin 12:48 0-2 0-0 0-1 0 2 0 Coleman 21:09 2-6 2-2 2-6 0 0 7 Ajavon 17:01 2-4 2-5 0-1 0 2 6 Houts 1:36 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 20-52 23-32 8-29 8 20 67
Percentages: FG .385, FT .719. 3-Point Goals: 4-14, .286 (Smith 3-8, Coleman 1-5, Currie 0-1). Blocked Shots: 1 (Smith). Turnovers: 20 (Currie 6, Lang- horne 4, Harding 3, Ajavon 2, Sanford 2, Coleman, Houts, Melvin). Steals: 10 (Langhorne 3, Coleman 2, Currie 2, Ajavon, Harding, Smith). Technical Fouls: None.
Washington ........................... 13 15 16 23 — 67 New York ............................... 14 14 26 21 — 75
New York Min FG FT O-T A PF Pts. McCarville 34:34 6-11 4-4 2-12 1 3 16 Powell 26:03 4-10 1-2 0-1 0 3 10 McW.-Frnk. 35:16 2-6 5-6 2-4 3 3 9 Mitchell 27:37 1-3 3-4 1-4 3 4 6 Pondexter 34:01 5-12 6-6 1-3 7 5 17 Greene 19:53 5-7 0-0 0-1 1 3 11 Pierson 10:10 0-2 0-0 1-2 1 4 0 Carson 8:40 3-5 0-0 0-1 0 0 6 Spencer 3:46 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 26-56 19-22 7-28 16 25 75
Percentages: FG .464, FT .864. 3-Point Goals: 4-10, .400 (Greene 1-2, Mitchell 1-2, Pondexter 1-3, Powell 1-3). Blocked Shots: 3 (Greene, McWil- liams-Franklin, Powell). Turnovers: 18 (Pondexter 5, Greene 3, McCarville 3, Mitchell 3, Pierson 3, McWilliams-Franklin). Steals: 13 (Mitchell 7, McWilliams-Franklin 4, Greene, Pondexter). Tech- nical Fouls: None. A: 18,162 (19,522). T: 2:06.
RESULTS National Basketball Association
Summer League Thursday’s Results
Washington 88 .............................................Dallas 82 San Antonio 80 ....................................... LA Lakers 71 Golden State 86 ........................................ Phoenix 76 Atlanta 83 .............................................Milwaukee 60 LA Clippers vs. Portland ..................................... Late NBA D-Leage vs. Memphis.................................. Late Friday’s Games
Washington vs. New Orleans ...................................8 Detroit vs. New York ..................................................4 Toronto vs. Sacramento ............................................6 Cleveland vs. Chicago ..........................................8:30 Memphis vs. Minnesota ......................................... 10 Milwaukee vs. Miami ..........................................10:30
Wizards 88, Mavericks 82
Washington Min FG FT O-T A PF Pts. C. Martin 30:32 6-11 8-10 2-5 1 4 23 T. Booker 29:29 1-7 0-2 1-2 1 3 2 J. McGee 26:21 9-10 0-0 3-4 0 6 18 L. Hudson 24:40 3-7 0-0 0-2 2 7 9 J. Wall
J. Randle 11:06 1-2 2-2 0-0 1 1 4 S. Yue
32:28 4-19 13-15 4-7 10 2 21 4:29 0-2 0-0 0-1 1 0 0
K. Palmer 11:56 0-1 1-2 0-1 0 1 1 R. Morgan 9:37 0-2 0-0 2-4 1 1 0 H. Ndiaye 10:12 3-6 0-0 1-3 0 1 6 A. Pettway 4:07 1-1 0-0 1-2 0 4 2 J. Prince
4:59 1-1 0-0 1-1 1 0 2 Totals 200 29-69 24-31 15-32 18 30 88
Percentages: FG .420, FT .774. 3-Point Goals: 6-14, .429 (Martin 3-5, Hudson 3-6, Wall 0-2, Palmer 0-1).
Washington ........................... 30 17 21 20 — 88 Dallas ..................................... 21 19 17 25 — 82
Dallas Min FG FT O-T A PF Pts. J. Giddens 24:32 0-5 0-0 1-1 0 3 0 Mahinmi 26:23 2-6 7-8 4-7 0 3 11 O. Samhan 23:56 6-9 0-0 3-8 0 2 12 D. Jones 34:23 9-17 10-12 2-4 4 6 28 R. Beaubois 15:49 0-3 0-0 1-1 1 5 0 D. Sims J. Lin
16:09 4-6 2-4 3-7 1 3 10 27:18 6-12 0-0 0-2 2 6 13
S. Foster 15:28 2-3 2-4 0-4 1 1 6 M. Faye 13:18 1-3 0-0 0-1 0 1 2 J. Mayo
2:44 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 30-65 21-28 14-34 9 30 82
Percentages: FG .462, FT .750. 3-Point Goals: 1-5, .200 ( Lin 1-1, Foster 0-1, Jones 0-1, Beaubois 0-2).
washingtonpost.com
AMATEUR BASEBALL Industrial League
Fevlock 9, Senators 6 SUMMER BASKETBALL
Jim McKay Chevrolet League — Championship Potomac Falls 67, Chantilly 55 Montgomery County Rec League Boys
Ameritel Cougars 58, Seneca Valley 38 Takoma Tigers 54, Abbey Panthers 45 Covenant Life Cougars 54, Los Suns 27 Einstein 68, Thomas Johnson 55 Potomac Pride 42, River Hill 24 Girls
Vikings 67, Magruder 39 Wootton 53, Stone Ridge 33 The Rock League — Quarterfinals Paul VI Catholic 51, Friendship Collegiate 30 DeMatha 53, High Point 47 McNamara 50, St. John’s 45 Gonzaga 57, Carroll 35
Sleepy Thompson League
Lake Braddock 45, Westfield 30 Ireton 46, Annandale 45 Wakefield 40, W.T. Woodson 23 Hylton 70, Robinson 56
St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes 52, Washington-Lee 39
“I’m extremely disappointed and also surprised,” Renshaw said. “I never imagined I would be removed from any race, espe- cially the Tour de France. I pride myself on being a very fair, safe and a straight-up sprinter, and never in my career have I re- ceived a fine or even a warning.” After the head-butts, causing Dean to shake his head in appar- ent exasperation, he appeared to swerve in front of Farrar. That al- lowed Cavendish to spurt ahead in the final 300 meters, with Ales- sandro Petacchi of Italy in second and Farrar in third. “I only saw open space on my
left. I had no idea Tyler Farrar was there,” Renshaw said. “By no means would I ever put any of my fellow riders in danger.”
Cavendish rushed to Ren-
shaw’s defense, alleging that Dean had tried to elbow his team- mate. The 25-year-old Cavendish, one of the world’s top sprinters, took his third stage win in this year’s Tour and the 13th of his young career.
Schleck earned the yellow jer-
sey for a third straight day, while Contador remained 41 seconds back. Seven-time Tour champion
Lance Armstrong, who has al- ready ruled himself out of con- tention for the title, lost time for the second straight day. He fin- ished in 114th place, 29 seconds behind the pack, and is 17:51 be- hind Schleck in 32nd place over- all.
— Associated Press
the 72nd minute. After opening the season with
five consecutive losses, the play- offs seemed out of the question for D.C. But United battled back and was 2-1-3 in its last six league matches entering Thursday. Now the team will look to re-
group and finish out its four- game homestand strong. United takes on Landon Donovan and the Los Angeles Galaxy, the league’s top team, Sunday at 7:30 p.m. before hosting two non- league matches.
castilloj@washpost.com
ett is making progress in his rehab from a lower back strain. Beckett, out since May 18 with a lower back strain, will make at least one more rehab start — on Saturday in Syra- cuse — for Class AAA Paw- tucket before sitting down with Manager Terry Francona and the coaches to determine if he can return to the rota- tion next week. “I haven’t even heard this is
my last start,” Beckett said Thursday. Francona left the door open for Beckett to re- turn to his normal spot in the rotation if everything goes well on Saturday and the days that followed.
Cordero is free agent Veteran right-hander Ja-
mey Wright has signed with the Mariners, but former Na- tionals reliever Chad Cordero declined an option to Class AAA Tacoma and became a free agent.
Cordero was selected from
Tacoma on June 3 after Ken Griffey Jr. retired. An All-Star closer for Washington in 2006, he had been out follow- ing right shoulder surgery since April 2008.
Dodgers add Ramírez The Dodgers activated
Manny Ramírez from the 15- day disabled list, and he bat- ted cleanup against St. Louis. Ramírez was 0 for 9 with
five strikeouts during a three- game rehab stint with Class A Inland Empire.
Morneau may go on DL Twins first baseman Justin
Morneau is still out of the lineup and appears headed to the disabled list with a con- cussion. Morneau suffered a concus- sion a week ago against To- ronto and hasn’t played since. Morneau skipped the All- Star Game to rest. He has the third-best batting average in the league at .345, with 18 home runs and 56 RBI.
Heyward starts Rookie right fielder Jason
Heyward has been activated from the 15-day disabled list and was in the Braves’ start- ing lineup against the Brew- ers. Heyward is returning from a left thumb injury that prevented him from starting in Tuesday’s All-Star Game.
D3
Service Appointments Available Immediately! CALL TODAY!
LOW TOYOTA PRICES!
ourismantoyota.com
Visit us: Fairfax 866-493-6915 Chantilly 866-493-9582
Open: Mon–Sat 9–9; Sunday 11–5
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40 |
Page 41 |
Page 42 |
Page 43 |
Page 44 |
Page 45 |
Page 46 |
Page 47 |
Page 48 |
Page 49 |
Page 50 |
Page 51 |
Page 52 |
Page 53 |
Page 54 |
Page 55 |
Page 56 |
Page 57 |
Page 58 |
Page 59 |
Page 60 |
Page 61 |
Page 62 |
Page 63 |
Page 64 |
Page 65 |
Page 66 |
Page 67 |
Page 68 |
Page 69 |
Page 70 |
Page 71 |
Page 72 |
Page 73 |
Page 74 |
Page 75 |
Page 76 |
Page 77 |
Page 78 |
Page 79 |
Page 80 |
Page 81 |
Page 82 |
Page 83 |
Page 84 |
Page 85 |
Page 86 |
Page 87 |
Page 88 |
Page 89 |
Page 90 |
Page 91 |
Page 92 |
Page 93 |
Page 94 |
Page 95 |
Page 96 |
Page 97 |
Page 98 |
Page 99 |
Page 100 |
Page 101 |
Page 102 |
Page 103 |
Page 104 |
Page 105 |
Page 106 |
Page 107 |
Page 108 |
Page 109 |
Page 110 |
Page 111 |
Page 112 |
Page 113 |
Page 114 |
Page 115 |
Page 116