[Abel-tasman] Top 10 Reasons to Apply for Funding...

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July 21, 2013: Phil Mickelson of the United States celebrates after his 
final putt on the 18th green with his caddie Jim Mackay during 
the final round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland.APGULLANE, 
Scotland  Instead of another excruciating loss in a major championship, 
Phil Mickelson got a chance to celebrate early.A brilliant closing round 
at challenging Muirfield made it possible.Mickelson won the claret jug for 
the first time and his fifth major championship with a 5-under 66 
on Sunday, matching the best round of the tournament on a day 
when the other contenders -- including Tiger Woods -- faded away.Lefty birdied 
four of the last six holes, winning by three strokes and emphatically 
erasing the memory of all those close calls that didn't go his 
way -- the latest one just last month when he was runner-up 
at the U.S. Open for a staggering sixth time."This is such an 
accomplishment for me," Mickelson said. "I never knew if I'd be able 
to develop the game and the shots to play links golf effectively. 
To play what is arguably the best round of my career, to 
putt the way I putted, to shoot the round of my life, 
it just feels amazing to win the claret jug."Overall, Mickelson has eight 
runner-up finishes in the majors, including one at golf's oldest major championship 
just two years ago.Now, at age 43, he's finally got his name 
on the claret jug, three-fourths of the way along to a career 
Grand Slam and assuring he
ast thousands of devotees in 
an open-topped vehicle, a plan that would put the thousands of police 
and soldiers dispatched to protect the pope on high alert and require 
more plainclothes security.Brazil's justice and defense ministers, along 
with a top army commander, urged the pope to use an armored 
popemobile instead, but the Vatican has responded that Francis likes to 
jump in and out of his vehicle to greet the faithful, which 
wouldn't be possible in the more protected vehicle."The bulletproofing would 
lessen our worries, it'd be better if he had it," said Gen. 
Jose Abreu, the top officer overseeing the military's role in the security 
scheme. "It's a personal choice and we'll respect it, but it's not 
remotely pleasant for security forces."On the top of everyone's minds are 
the massive and sometimes violent anti-government protests that swept this 
continent-sized country last month. They've continued, albeit with fewer 
people, less than a week before Francis' arrival Monday.Last week, a small 
protest in Leblon, one of Rio's poshest neighborhoods, erupted into looting 
and destruction, with demonstrators smashing storefronts, defacing street 
signs and setting piles of garbage on fire.A handful of protests are 
planned. If violence breaks out near the pope, the world may once 
again see images of demonstrators enveloped by clouds of tear gas, stun 
grenades ricocheting off stately buildings and rubber bullets whizzing through 
the air.Jose

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