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By CBSNews s Stephen SmithNot a single inning has been played at Nationals Park, but Keith Stubbs has already witnessed the stadium s energy.Stubbs, who runs a local baseball program for inner-city youths, recently took some of his kids on a tour of the freshly manicured diamond. They re lighting up when you take them down on the field, he says. They can start to visualize and imagine what it would be like to play there. This Sunday, Nationals Park will host the first primetime game of the 2008 season. The newly minted $611 million stadium marks not only a rebirth for the local team, but a potential sea change in the nation s capital. Built along the Anacostia River in southeast Washington, the ballpark is poised to revitalize a long-neglected area of the city
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stanley puodelis hich surround the new stadium. However, as in many cities, baseball hasn t taken off in D.C. s black neighborhoods. Less than a third of Washington s high schools field a team; Howard University, one of the nation s most prominent black colleges, canceled its baseball program for good in 2002. There is no doubt that baseball has not attracted the diversity of African American participants as in other sports, says Alphonso Maldon, a founding pa Ldwq Futurama successfully makes me paranoid
If you ;ve heard of underground coal fires, then you ;ve probably heard of the one raging under the abandoned town of Centralia, Pennsylvania, since 1962. Fifty-two years is a long time鈥攁nd a lot of coal鈥攂ut that barely a blink compared to Burning Mountain in Australia, which has been ablaze for 6,000 years. Coal seam fires are incredibly common, as it happens, and thousands o
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