Rutgers' play carried a very loud message

No doubt the Bulls will be banished from all polls for the remainder of the season.Rutgers tormented quarterback B.J Daniels all night USF only managed 159 yards total offense There was no ground attack for the Bulls Daniels was sacked seven times. It was ugly.Rutgers and its true freshman quarterback Tom Savage manged 354 yards on offense. Joe Martinek, the blue-collar runner for the Scarlet Knights, put up 128 yards on the ground. USF has no excuses for this latest travesty. "It's as though they have no sense of urgency."Perhaps he was right. USF is the team with the stars on defense, a team going up against Savage, a first year player.Rutgers let its play do the talking.Cornerback Devin McCourtney was all over the field for Rutgers, on defense and special teams and was the sparkplug of the destruction of the Bulls."We're not going to talk about what we're going to do. We're just going to prepare and come out and play," he said afterwards.Rutgers' play carried a very loud message.And yet another message was sent to South Florida:Stay away from Thursday nights and stay clear of Rutgers.. NEW YORK (Reuters) - A dispute over seven nude photographs of Marilyn Monroe taken in a hotel room six weeks before her death has been settled, lawyers said on Monday.

Entertainment PeoplePhotographer Bert Stern, who owns the rights to thousands of Monroe images, shot the photographs in July 1962 at Los Angeles' Bel Air Hotel. The session, which became known as the last sitting, is believed to be the final time the star, who died six weeks later at age 36, posed for pictures.In a lawsuit filed in September in New York State Supreme Court, Stern said he lent the pictures to Eros Magazine and that they were never returned.Stern said he did not realize they were missing until he was approached by photographers Michael Weiss and Donald Penny, who had the pictures and wanted to license them.Stern sued the two photographers demanding the return of the photographs plus $1 million and unspecified punitive damages for lost income relating to the licensing of the images.Penny and Weiss said they had been found in a trash can, according to their lawyer, Jamie Brickell."The parties have resolved all issues and are moving forward amicably," Brickell said in a statement.Stern said on Monday that he no longer believed the pictures had been stolen. Other details of the settlement were not disclosed.(Reporting by Edith Honan; Editing by Cynthia Osterman) Entertainment People. Hudson Institute's Bradley Center for Philanthropy and Civic Renewal and theCenter for Neighborhood Present 'A Post-Racial America' A Panel DiscussionFeaturing William Raspberry, former syndicated columnist; the ReverendDeForest Blake "Buster" Soaries, Jr.; attorney Edward Norton, and CNEpresident Robert Woodson, Sr.

Bradley Center Director William Schambra willmoderate the discussion.(Logos: http:// and http://)WHAT: A luncheon panel discussion about whether or not America, on the eve ofthe inauguration of the first African-American president, has entered a"post-racial" era and what that might meanWHEN: 12:00 - 2:00 p.m. Thursday, January 15, 2009WHERE: Hudson Institute, 1015 15th Street, NW, Suite 600, Washington, DCWEBSITE: http:// This event will not be webcast live. Audio and video recordings ofthe event will be available online () by Friday, January 16. Acomplete transcript will be posted approximately one week after the event.