Patch Gets Love From TV's "Turtle"
You can not buy the kind of advertising patch received Saturday.
Jerry Ferrara, who portrayed the character "Turtle" on the popular HBO series "Entourage" scored the same type of green t-shirts we are not Hollywood-but-very-Patchy types of wear.
From what I hear, Ferrara heard through mutual friends Patch are big fans and supporters. He keeps an eye on his hometown, Brooklyn, NY, via the patch there, and it's also a big fan of the site of Livingston, New Jersey, every time he is in town.
On Saturday, Ferrara, a fan of the college football great, was a guest on ESPN's College GameDay, which moved to Madison, Wisconsin anticipation of the Big Ten-Nebraska showdown.
Ferrara, who have successfully taken the Badgers as the winner, made by rockin 'a patch t-shirt. While only a portion of the green patch was visible under his jacket zipped up the show, he wandered near Madison with the shirt clearly visible. In fact, Greenfield Police Chief Brad Wentlandt Interim sent me to say he saw before the game.
Environmentalists call Keystone pipeline bad deal for US
WASHINGTON One by one, they took the microphones - Livestock cowboy hats, a retired military veteran, pipefitters, an Olympic athlete, even a Franciscan monk - to rejoice and laugh at TransCanada Keystone XL pipeline proposed.
The U.S. State Department's final public hearing into the controversial $ 7 billion was held in the U.S. capital Friday, with those both for and against Keystone XL turning force to the passion to express their positions.
Dozens waited in line for their three minutes of time to respond before the panel of the State Department.At the end of the four-hour hearing, emotions overwhelmed the police escorted a few members of the public construction of Ronald Reagan in Washington DC downtown
"Kill the pipeline!" One shouted as a member of the International Union of North America told the audience why he hopes the approval of the pipeline.
"Get a haircut!" Someone shouted back.
Duel twelve o'clock there were demonstrations outside the building, with proponents of pipelines Union dressed in orange T-shirts. One of them said: "We understand the need for renewable energy, we're not there today. These are jobs.






The phrase “Jump Around” now appears on Wisconsin T-shirts and is such a part of Wisconsin's identity that its fans become ornery when other universities attempt to adopt the phrase and the jumping that comes with it. When Kluender's fiancée moved to




