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In this July 29, 2010 photo, former professional baseball player Emilio "Millito" Navarro, 104, holds his signed baseball card while posing for a picture in his home in Ponce, Puerto Rico.  Navarro, believed to be the last surviving player of the Negro American League, was chosen to be honored as America's Outstanding Oldest Male Worker for 2010, over dozens of candidates nominated in 30 U.S. states by Experience Works, the United States' largest nonprofit training center for older workers. Navarro still keeps the books and controls the finances at the game machine business he started.
In this July 29, 2010 photo, former professional baseball player Emilio “Millito” Navarro, 104, holds his signed baseball card while posing for a picture in his home in Ponce, Puerto Rico. Navarro, believed to be the last surviving player of the Negro American League, was chosen to be honored as America’s Outstanding Oldest Male Worker for 2010, over dozens of candidates nominated in 30 U.S. states by Experience Works, the United States’ largest nonprofit training center for older workers. Navarro still keeps the books and controls the finances at the game machine business he started.
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President Barack Obama is an equal-opportunity hoops kind of guy. On Sunday, he checked out the WNBA’s Washington Mystics after spending the morning shooting some hoops. Obama, his daughter Sasha and a friend of Sasha’s had courtside seats for a women’s basketball game between the Mystics and the Tulsa Shock at the Verizon Center in downtown Washington. Obama has attended basketball games at the Verizon Center before. In January, he had front-row seats for a Duke-Georgetown game, and last year he saw his hometown Bulls lose a game to the Wizards at the arena. The AP

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