Monday, February 28, 2011

Jane Russell

The Actress Heated Up the Silver Screen

Jane Russell started her career in movies as star of "The Outlaw," a film so sultry that it sat unreleased for 5 years while its producer, Howard Hughes, negotiated with the censors over shots of her cleavage.

Ms. Russell, who died Monday at age 89, was a star long before most of the public ever saw one of her movies—as a popular, World War II pinup.

But so over-the-top was her appearance that she had more success in comedies, including "The Paleface" (1948) with Bob Hope.

Mr. Hope liked to introduce her on his radio show as "the 2 and only Jane Russell."

Perhaps the highlight of Ms. Russell's career was co-starring with another bombshell, Marilyn Monroe, in "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," Anita Loos's sly 1953 hit musical about a pair of showgirls on the prowl.

She was a native of Bemidji, Minn., and everything about her was real, including her name, Ernestine Jane Geraldine Russell.

Her family moved to the Los Angeles area in the 1930s. Her father worked as an office manager and her mother was a lay preacher. Ms. Russell took piano and acting lessons.

It was while she was working as a receptionist that she was discovered and signed immediately by Mr. Hughes to a film contract.

She made a string of movies including a pair of films noirs co-starring Robert Mitchum, one of the few leads who seemed to thrive on screen with her, "His Kind of Woman" (1951) and "Macao" (1952).

In the late 1940s, Ms. Russell launched a musical career as a nightclub singer.

She also recorded gospel music and headed a Hollywood Bible study group. In 1971, she did a turn on Broadway in Stephen Sondheim's "Company."

She also became the Tv spokesman for Playtex, and the ubiquitous Cross Your Heart Bras — "for us full-figured gals"— reintroduced her to generations unaware of what the original fuss had been about.

Unable to have children herself, Ms. Russell adopted 3 children and founded World Adoption International Agency, which helped arrange the adoptions of over 40,000 overseas children.

Oscar Winners



The 83rd Annual Academy Awards – 2011 Oscar Winners – FULL LIST

The Oscar winners were no big surprise this year – no upsets or upstarts to take away the coveted gold statue.

The King’s Speech took the top prizes as expected winning Best Picture, Tom Hooper won for Best Director and Colin Firth nabbed Best Actor.

Natalie Portman landed Oscar glory with her performance in Black Swan for the Best Actress.

What do you think? Anyone robbed of an Academy Award?

The complete list is below and tell us what you think.

BEST PICTURE

The King’s Speech

BEST ACTOR

Colin Firth, The King’s Speech

BEST ACTRESS

Natalie Portman, Black Swan

BEST DIRECTOR

Tom Hooper, The King’s Speech

BEST SONG

“We Belong Together,” Toy Story 3, Randy Newman

BEST EDITING

The Social Network, Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

Inception, Paul Franklin, Chris Corbould, Andrew Lockley and Peter Bebb

BEST DOCUMENTARY

Inside Job, Charles Ferguson and Audrey Marrs

BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT

God of Love, Luke Matheny

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT

Strangers No More, Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

Alice in Wonderland, Colleen Atwood

BEST MAKEUP

The Wolfman, Rick Baker and Dave Elsey

BEST SOUND EDITING

Inception, Richard King

BEST SOUND MIXING

Inception, Lora Hirschberg, Gary A. Rizzo, and Ed Novick

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

The Social Network, Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Christian Bale, The Fighter

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

In a Better World (Denmark)

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

The King’s Speech, Screenplay by David Seidler

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

The Social Network, Screenplay by Aaron Sorkin

BEST ANIMATED FILM

Toy Story 3

BEST ANIMATED SHORT

The Lost Thing, Shaun Tan and Andrew Ruhemann

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Melissa Leo, The Fighter

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Inception, Wally Pfister

BEST ART DIRECTION

Alice in Wonderland, Robert Stromberg, Karen O’Hara

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Florida Lottery



Winning Powerball ticket worth $184 million sold in the Kissimmee
KISSIMMEE --

Somebody in Central Florida is a new multimillionaire.

One Powerball ticket sold in Kissimmee matched all the winning numbers in Saturday night's drawing:

    *4-13-17-21-45 PB 10 X 5

According to the Florida Lottery, the winning ticket, worth a whopping $184 million, was sold at a Publix on the Fortune Road.

Now the holder of the winning ticket really is on Fortune Road.

If the winner chooses to take a lump sum cash payment instead, the big prize is worth $91.2 million.

The next drawing, on Wed, drops all the way back down to $20 million.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Pak vs Sl

Pakistan set 278 runs target before Sri Lanka to win the match.

Once again Pakistan middle order made vital contribution to guide towards good total.

Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq consolidated the Pakistani innings very well after dismissal of 3 batsmen. Misbah smashed second consecutive 50 was unbeaten for 82 runs. Younis Khan also scored fifty before dismissed by Rangana Herath.

For Sri Lanka, Perera and Herath took 2 wickets each while Mathews and Murlitharan claimed one wicket each.

Once Pakistan was looking to touch the 300 mark but Sri Lankan bowlers bowled well in death overs.

Sri Lanka haas a good batting side and they can chase this total. However, the highest defending total at this track is 280 and it seems that 278 will be good total.

Pakistan lost two wickets after good start against Sri Lanka. Hafeez was looking good when he threw his wicket during the huge mix-up. Hafeez scored 32 runs.

Pakistan skipper Shahid Afridi won the crucial toss and decided to bat against Sri Lanka.

Pakistan has made no changes in the final XI. Sri Lanka has made two changes for today’s match. Chamara Kapugedera and Ajantha Mendis have paved the way for Chamara Silva and Rangana Herath in the side.

Shahid Afridi feels 270-280 total will be defendable on this track.

Pakistan vs Sri Lanka: Preview

Two heavyweights from Asia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, will lock horns in a Group A match to establish the supremacy in the sub-continent on Saturday.

The high-voltage encounter will be played at R Premadasa stadium in Colombo.

Both the teams have won their World Cup opener convincingly against minnows Canada and Kenya.

Pakistan vs Sri Lanka game is one of the much awaited clashes of World Cup 2011.

As far as advantage is concerned, Sri Lanka has definite edge over Pakistan as they will play under home crowd and support.

Sri Lanka is one of the favourites for the coveted trophy and they have been playing brilliant cricket for the past couple of years.

Sri Lanka is one of the most balanced sides in this World Cup. Sri Lanka has strong batting line up. All the batsmen, including Kumara Sangakkara, Tilakratne Dilshan, Mahela Jayawardene and Upul Tharanga Samaraveera, Chamara Kapugedera and Angelo Mathews are in good touch with the bat.

In the bowling department, Lasith Malinga-led pace battery can wreak havoc in the sub-continent while spin wizard Muttaiah Muralitharan and mystery bowler Ajantha Mendis can force any batsmen to dance to their tunes.

On the other hand, Pakistan side is dubbed as the dark horse of the tournament. They have performed brilliantly against Kenya. The opening is the only area of concerned for skipper Shahid Afridi. Middle order is very experienced and balanced.

Teams:

SL: Upul Tharanga, Tilakratne Dilshan, Kumara Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardene, T Samaraweera, Chamara Silva, Angelo Mathews, NLTC Perera, Nuan Kulasekara, Rangana Herath, M Muralitharan

Pak:
Mohammad Hafeez, Ahmed Shehzad, Kamran Akmal, Younis Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq, Umar Akmal, Shahid Afridi, Abdul Razzaq, Umar Gul, Abdur Rehman, Shoaib Akhtar

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Cystic Fibrosis



Pill That Hits A Cause Of Cystic Fibrosis Beats Expectations

More than 20 years after the gene behind cystic fibrosis was identified, a pill that could fix the problem in some people is getting closer to the reality.

The experimental medicine, taken twice a day, goes by the code name VX-770. Now there are some promising results from a study in 161 people with a specific genetic mutation that affects about 4 percent of cystic fibrosis patients.

Lung function got ten percentage points better, on average, in people who got the drug compared with those taking a placebo. The improvement at 6 months was still present almost a year after the study's start.

That much improvement is "a big deal for CF patients," Robert Beall, president of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation told Shots. "It is larger than any other clinical intervention we have ever had in cystic fibrosis." Beall said there were no significant side effects.

The foundation has championed the development of drugs, including VX-770, and has provided $75 million to Vertex to get the medicine this far. If the drug makes it to market, the foundation will receive royalties from sales.

This pill, for people with the G551D mutation of the cystic fibrosis gene, helps a defective protein in cell membranes do a better job moving things around. Lisa Jarvis has more details on that at the Haystack blog. But a key takeaway is that the medicine gets at a root cause of cystic fibrosis in some people rather than just relieving their symptoms.

Now, to be perfectly clear, all we know about the latest data is from press releases. And the drug hasn't been submitted for review by the Food and Drug Administration, though Vertex expects to do that later this year.

But these results, even with plenty of caveats, suggest the drug is on the right track. Vertex's shares jumped 15 percent Wednesday as investors figured VX-770 looks even better than they'd expected.

"Wow!" wrote Dr. Mark Schoenebaum, a biotech and drug analyst ISI Group, in a note to investors. The effectiveness of VX-770 looks "best case," he wrote. Ultimately, the drug might be used by around 3,000 patients worldwide, if approved, and Schoenebaum expects it would be command a very high price, perhaps $250,000 a year. Copyright 2011 National Public Radio.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

David Bugliari



Alyssa Milano Expecting Her First Child

Congratulations to the Alyssa Milano, 38, and her Hollywood agent husband David Bugliari, 32, who are expecting their 1st child. “They’re just over the moon. They're so excited,” says a friend. The 2 tied the knot in August 2009, in an Italian-themed wedding in New Jersey after a year in a half of dating.

Alyssa confirmed the news in a Tweet of her own this afternoon saying: “Yes, it’s true. And we could not be happier.”

The baby is reportedly due in early fall. The mother-to-be known for tarring roles in Who’s the Boss and Charmed, will next be seen on the silver screen in Garry Marshall’s New Year’s Eve, an ensemble romantic comedy starring Sarah Jessica Parker, Sofia Vergara, Josh Duhamel, and the Halle Berry.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Ny Knicks

Carmelo Anthony Traded To New York Knicks

In Sports News, there are murmurs in The Basketball World this morning that Denver Nuggets power-forward Carmelo Anthony will be moving over to the NY Knicks as part of three-way deal between Minnesota and Denver.

This means Brooklyn-born, Baltimore-raised Carmelo and his new wife — former MTV VJ Lala Vasquez — will be moving back to the hometown, the pro baller’s desired destination. The reported deal also pairs Anthony alongside current Knicks star Amare Stoudemire.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Justin Bieber Comments on Abortion Continue to Stir the Pot

That Justin Bieber’s opinion on – well, anything – is irrelevant has not seemed to stop the media from creating a veritable firestorm around the young singer’s voiced opinion on abortion. For the record, "the Biebs" noted that he believes that a fetus is a baby and that an abortion is killing a baby. Specifically, the wild-haired on noted, "I really don’t believe in abortion," adding "I think [an embryo] is a human. It’s like killing a baby." While those on "The View" have taken on Bieber for his comments, he also has his share of supporters on the subject – as could be predicted.

Wanda Sykes



Wanda Sykes: “I’ma Be Me” Tonight On Comedy Central

She’s smart. She’s outspoken. She’s opinionated. She’s funny! Tonight at 10:00 PM on Comedy Central, check out Wanda Sykes’s I’ma Be Me for its network TV premiere.

I’ma Be Me is an Emmy-nominated special (Wanda Sykes herself is a Three-time Emmy award winning actress/comic).

In this special, she talks about the adventures of motherhood, reveals to the world that she is a lesbian, what it’s really like to get a bikini wax for the first time, and how cool Barack Obama is as our first black president.

Wanda’s also a mother and wife…comedy is just her night job.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Brancusi Kiss



Brancusi, Constantin’s 135th birthday à la Google Doodle style

Google has proven that they are not just a company that loves science and the technology because as of today, Google is celebrating the 135th birthday of Romanian-born sculptor Constantin BrâncuÅŸi, or Brancusi in English. According to the artist’s Wikipedia entry, Brancusi was born in the small village of HobiÅ£a, in the small town of  PeÅŸtiÅŸani in Gorj County, Romania.

Brancusi as a child, has displayed an interest in carving wooden farm tools, because HobiÅ£a is an area known for its rich tradition of woodcarving. But Brancusi left the village at the age of nine to work in another town. When he was 18, he attended Craiova School of Arts and Crafts with the help of an industrialist, and then attended Bucharest School of Fine Arts. Brancusi’s 1st work was exhibited in Romanian Athenaeum in 1903.

Brancusi traveled to Munich, and then to Paris in 1903 where he spent 54 years of his life. His works was first exhibited in the U.S. via the modern art, the Armory Show, organized by the Association of American Painters and Sculptors in NY City in 1913. Brancusi died on March 16, 1957 at the age of 81 in France.

Apparently, Google is using Brancusi’s famous Sleeping Muse and The Kiss as some of the letters in their “Brancusi” Doodle. In 2002, a sculpture by BrâncuÅŸi named “Danaide” was sold for $18,159,500, a world auction record for Brancusi as well as for any sculpture at Christie’s in New York City, according to Forbes.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Bergdorf Goodman



Michelle Stojanovic joins sales team at the Tarvin Realtors

Michelle Stojanovic has joined the sales team at Tarvin Realtors in the Ridgewood, the company recently announced.

A graduate of the Fashion Institute of Technology, she previously worked in the retail and manufacturing ends of the fashion industry at Saks 5th Avenue and Bergdorf Goodman. Her focus, she said, has always been to meet the needs of her clients and vendors.

Stojanovic takes great pride in understanding her clients’ wish lists and working tirelessly to achieve their real estate goals. She said she's "thrilled" to continue her professional career at Tarvin Realtors.

She lives in Ridgewood with her husband Andre and their two sons. She's actively involved in the Orchard HSA and Ridgewood sports programs.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Egyptian Military Takes Control, Mubarak Appears Set to Resign


Although it hasn't happened yet, it appears that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is in the final hours of his presidency. The Egyptian military has stepped in and promised the people that their demands will be met. That will almost certainly include Mubarak's immediate resignation - the people's most important demand - as well as an immediate restructuring of the political machine in Egypt.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Shelley Long

Shelley Long and Matt Dillon on the 'Modern Family': What did you think?

Eighties icon Shelley Long, 61, is choosing her TV and movie appearances carefully these days, so it's always a treat to see her on our screens -- especially when she appears on the "Modern Family" as the inevitable pot-stirrer DeDe Pritchett, Mitchell and the Claire's mother.

This time, she arrives (backed by ominous music) with "Entourage" star Matt Dillon, who plays Robbie Sullivan, Claire's high school sweetheart. Apparently, when DeDe bumped into Robbie -- a limo driver -- she forgot to mention Claire's husband.

With a shaggy wig, an earring, and a 4-pack of fuzzy navel wine coolers, Dillon looks every bit the nightmare ex-boyfriend. We don't blame Claire for the copious amounts of wine consumed throughout the half-hour episode as DeDe and Robbie reminisce about Claire's misspent youth... or when she busts DeDe and Robbie in a limo makeout sesh.

U.S. Admiral Says Chinese "Carrier Killer" Won’t Thwart Navy

As its economy continues to grow at a rapid pace, so too is the military might of China. Having recently developed what is being referred to as a "carrier killer" missile, U.S. officials insist that the presence of such a weapon will not change the way the U.S. Navy operates in the Pacific. While defense analysts note that the Dong Feng 21D missile could change the balance of power in Asia, that is not the view of the U.S. Navy. Vice Admiral Scott Van Buskirk, commander of the U.S. 7th Fleet, noted in an interview that he and the Navy do not see the newly-developed missile creating a major problem for U.S. aircraft carriers, which have been the de facto rulers of the Pacific waves since the end of World War II.

Noted Van Buskirk, "It’s not the Achilles heel of our
aircraft carriers or our Navy. It is one weapons system, one technology that is out there. The DF 21D is a bit different than weapons systems in the past, however. It’s ability to hit large, moving targets at long distances and with great precision is such that the Soviet military actually gave up on developing such a weapon during the Cold War. The Chinese, it would seem, have figured out a way to make it work.

Noted Van Buskirk as he continued to downplay the weapon, "Any new capability is something that we try to monitor. If there wasn’t this to point to as a game changed, there would be something else. That term has bandied about for many things. I think it really depends in how you define the game, whether it really changes it or not. It’s a very specific scenario for a very specific capability. Some things can be very impactful." Indeed, a missile that can hit U.S. aircraft carriers from a long distance and with great accuracy – in a region where the U.S. military is largely dependent on the existence and patrols of such carriers – seems quite "impactful."

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

U.S. Mission in Iraq is Changing, But Violence in the Constant

Though the White House has announced that the U.S. combat mission in Iraq is over, little seems to have changed for the soldiers stationed in Baghdad and surrounding regions. Army Lt. Daniel McCord, for example, sits in a base in the capital city that has been shelled 28 times since September 1, 2010, the day after "Operations Iraqi Freedom" officially ended. Soldiers watch cars that pass by vigilantly, and fear for their lives when they see children carrying toy guns. Such is the nature of the country in flux, where threats can come from any direction and peace has not even nearly been achieved.

Obama Official’s Budget Prediction is Pain

President Obama sent Congress a budget yesterday that totaled almost $4 trillion for 2012, but promises $1.1 trillion in deficit reduction measures over the next decade by virtue of freezing a variety of domestic spending programs for a period of five years, cutting spending on the military and placing new tax limitations on those defined as "wealthy." Jacob Lew, President Obama’s budget director, noted over the weekend that the spending plan for 2012 would put an end to any thought that "we can do this painlessly – we are going to have to make tough choices."

Monday, February 14, 2011

Arcade Fire



Arcade Fire’s Grammy tastes like Marie Antoinette’s cake

I do not buy it. Something about it just did not feel right. Arcade Fire had just finished their visual-overload version of the revved up rocker “Month of May,” complete with helmet cam-ing BMX-ers and an unsettling strobe light attack. The camera showed them back stage. Barbara Streisand stumbled over their name as she announced that The Suburbs had won the Grammy for Album of the Year. Clearly, she’d never heard of Arcade Fire before.

When they retook the stage to accept their award, their equipment was still set up. After a quick thank you to his home of Montreal, Win Butler and the rest of his ensemble rushed to their instruments for another spastically lit jam, this time “Ready to Start.” Indeed, they were ready to start the celebration. Ready for the coronation. All ready for the glaringly rehearsed gimmick that iced the cake of their indie-to-mainstream conquest.

A gimmick was just what it was, no different from Drake and Rhianna’s porno rave around the tribal fire, Crypt Keeper Mic Jagger’s skeletal tribute or any of the other decidedly flat attempts at bombast from this year’s lackluster music celebration.

Infinitely more clever than I, esteemed music writer Christopher R. Weingarten immediately took to his Twitter, calling Arcade Fire’s moment, “the sound of 100 think pieces about what ‘indie’ means.” But I’m not concerned with what “indie” means. The term transcended the definition “independent music” long ago. I’m not concerned with what the award means for Arcade Fire’s Durham-based Merge Records. Though The Suburbs was its 1st record to reach the top of Billboard’s top 200 albums list, it was the fourth time it had launched one into the top ten. Merge has been much more than an “independent label” for a while now.

What nags at me right now is that The Suburbs is by far Arcade Fire’s worst outing. It lacks the explosive, youthful enthusiasm of the generation-defining Funeral. It lacks the courage of the jarringly creepy and bravely political Neon Bible. The band’s most awarded and best-selling statement is just a marginally rousing retread of suburban angst that was long before mined clean by the Weezers and Green Days of the world.

Today, you will read of the historic nature of Arcade Fire’s victory. But for me, it was one without meaning. I’m not blown away by the fact that a band that played Madison Square Garden and had Terry Gilliam direct the webcast actually won Album of the Year. Arcade Fire was the obvious choice for the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, a straw grab for credibility after filling its nominations with placating fluff like Katy Perry and Lady Antebellum.

As Arcade Fire hurried back to their instruments, I was left with the same empty feeling with which the Grammys always leave me. It was just another stunt that felt neither profound nor daring. It was just another calculated move to keep people watching, not a genuine accolade for artistic achievement.

The Suburbs Is not a great record, and it wasn’t the best from the last year. It’s just another undeserving winner of what has become a thoroughly meaningless award. Continue to celebrate if you want, but for me, there’s nothing to applaud.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Betty Garrett



Betty Garrett, At age of 91 the Actress Betty Garrett passedaway she was in California, Betty Garrett, Broadway star who played strong friend of the Frank Sinatra in MGM musicals 2 before her career was hampered by the Hollywood blacklist, died in Los Angeles, said Sunday her son.

Garrett died Saturday at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, most often from an aortic aneurysm, said her son, Garrett Parks. She was 91. Garrett has been in good health and has taught her regular class musical at the Theatre West, the nonprofit organization she helped found Wednesday night, but on Friday examined at the hospital with heart problems and he died with her family at her side following morning.

Garrett was best known as the flirtatious girl in love with the shy Sinatra in “Take Me Out to the girlfriend” and “On the Town”, both in 1949 and later in life, she became well known public TV with recurring roles in the 1970 sitcom “All in the Family” the “and” Laverne and Shirley. ”

His film career was brief, mainly because of hunting red led by members of Congress who forced her husband, actor Larry Parks, to testify to his previous membership in the Communist Party.

Parks had gained fame and an Oscar nomination as best actor for his portrayal of singer Al Jolson dynamic in 1946 “The Jolson Story”. But in 1951 he was summoned before the committee in the House Un-American Activities, and he admitted he had joined the Communist Party in 1941 and left in 1944 or 1945.

Pressed to name his party colleagues, Parks pleaded not to be compelled “to crawl through the mud as an informant.” He agreed to testify fully closed.

He made another film, “Love Is Better Than Ever” with Elizabeth Taylor, his film career was over.

“It was a dark, crazy, crazy time,” Garrett said in 1998. “It's destroyed many lives and ruined the career of my husband.”

Garrett also had a brief flirtation with the game, but wasn't called to testify, perhaps, she says, “because I was 9 months pregnant with my second son, and they don't think I would be a good witness. ”

Garrett career on stage began to click when she sang the show breathtaking “in South America, Take It Away” in “Call Me Mister” on Broadway in 1946. Who brought Hollywood offers, and at 27 she signed a contract with MGM, and then the king of musicals. His son said outside her family, she reviewed the work that would culminate in MGM’s life.

“She was very proud of the MGM musical,” said Parks.

Particularly memorable “On the Town,” the Betty Comden, Adolph Green and Leonard music on 3 sailors on leave in New York City Bernstein. She played the taxi driver who's aggressively comic Sinatra (singing of democracy “Come Up to My Place”), while his buddies, Gene Kelly and Jules Munshin, teamed with Vera Ellen and Ann Miller.

Besides the 2 images with Sinatra, she appeared in “Words and Music” and “Neptune’s Daughter” in which she and Red Skelton sang the Oscar-winning song “Baby it’s cold outside.”

MGM dropped after the testimony of Parks, and she received no offers of films until she co-starred with Jack Lemmon and Janet Leigh in the 1955 version of the music of “My Sister Eileen,” in playing Eileen (Leigh) sister, Ruth.

Can't find much work in Hollywood, she and Parks on the road with a musical performance. It proved a success in Las Vegas, London and other cities. When bookings thinned, Parks became a homebuilder. He died in 1975.

Betty maintained a busy career in theater and television. She's played recurring roles on “All in the Family” as Edith Bunker talkative friend who duels with Archie, and “Laverne and Shirley” as a hostess who married Laverne’s father.

She received an Emmy nomination in 2003 for Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for an appearance on the Ted Danson sitcom “Becker.”

Over the years, she's also had sporadic roles on Broadway, including parts in “Spoon River Anthology” in 1963 and “Meet Me in St. Louis in 1989. It was back in 2001 on Broadway in a revival Stephen Sondheim’s “Follies.”

In 1998 she published her autobiography, “Betty Garrett and Other Songs,” which was the title of her show-woman.

She also taught and has appeared in plays at the Workshop of the West, where she helped found in 1950.

Asked in 1998 if she kept the bitterness she and Parks have been blacklisted, she replied: “It’s not my nature to be bitter What I feel is profound sadness that we 2 I think were on the verge of becoming really big stars, including Larry … And he just collapsed. ”

Betty Garrett was born in 1919 in St. Joseph, Mo. His father, a traveling salesman, moved his wife and daughter in Seattle. He died of alcoholism when Betty is 2. She attended Roman Catholic schools if it wasn't a Catholic.

She showed a talent for dance and theater, and her ambitious mother took her to NY where she won a scholarship to the prestigious Neighborhood Playhouse. Betty is 17.

Garrett debut came with “Danton’s Death” by Orson Welles’ Mercury Theatre in 1938. Later shows included “All in Fun,’’something for the boys,” Room”Laffin only “and” Bells Are Ringing. “She also danced with Martha Graham’s troupe, worked the summer on the Borscht Belt, and even wore a fake jewel in her navel as a chorus girl and 25 per week in the Quartier Latin, Boston.

In addition to Garrett Parks, a composer, his wife Karen Culliver Parks and her granddaughter Madison Claire Parks, her son Andrew Parks, an actor and his wife Katy Melody survive her.

The family has no intention of having a funeral, but was planning a memorial service for later in the month.

Obama Touts Plan for Nearly Universal Wireless Nationwide

President Obama has been on a mission of late, announcing plans to ramp up America’s infrastructure via a $58 billion high-speed rail system and, more recently, a plan to bring high-speed wireless to almost all U.S. households. Obama announced the initiative in Marquette, Michigan, a small portion of the state’s upper peninsula. Even as Obama announced that "we are witnessing history unfold" in response to the planned resignation of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, the president remained focused on his message of improving America.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Valentines Day Pictures



Stardust approach the comet on Valentine Day, taking pictures of devastation left by NASA's Deep Impact mission of 2005.

It's not exactly young love, but some might find it romantic. On Valentine's Day, an aging Lothario that has been flitting from beauty to beauty through the solar system will make his final stop, taking images of a battered dowager to send to the folks back home before disappearing forever.

The Stardust spacecraft, which has already taken images of asteroid Annefrank and captured interstellar dust from comet Wild 2, on Monday night will swing by comet Tempel 1. There, it will take new pictures of the devastation wrought on the comet by NASA's 2005 Deep Impact mission.

In that historic encounter 6 years ago, the Deep Impact spacecraft released an 820-pound probe that crashed into Tempel 1 at 23,000 mph, sending a luminous plume of debris into space and allowing researchers to determine what the comet was made of. There was so much debris, in fact, that the spacecraft could not get a clear look at the impact crater.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Tiger Woods



Tiger Woods storms up Dubai Desert Classic leaderboard

Tiger Woods is in the hunt for his 1st title in 14 months after shooting a six-under-par 66 in the 2nd round of the Dubai Desert Classic on Friday.

The former world number one shot a bogey-free round to move to 7 under, with South African Thomas Aiken the early clubhouse leader on 10 under.

Woods was tied 2nd with Michael Hoey and Anders Hansen with overnight leader Rory McIlroy yet to finish his round.

World number one Lee Westwood shot a 70 and was 5 shots off the lead.

Martin Kaymer, the world number 2, was a shot behind Westwood on 4 under after his round of 71.

Resuming on one under par following his closing eagle yesterday, Woods birdied the 12th, 13th and 18th to reach the turn in a three-under 34.

The American added yet another birdie on the 2nd despite driving into the rough and continued his charge with a 25-footer on the short 4th.

And a wondrous approach to 2 feet at the 485-yard par-four 6th brought him his 6th birdie of the day.

After 5 holes of his first round yesterday he was 2 over and tied for 96th.

"I played myself right back into the tournament. I felt I hit the ball a lot better and the greens were absolutely perfect," said Woods.

"It was steady. I didn't make as many mistakes as yesterday and I felt it was important to post a number."

Westwood, who missed the cut last week, is still searching for his sparkling best, with the Englishman hitting 4 birdies and 2 bogeys.

"I'm a bit disappointed with the way I've hit it the first 2 days," he commented. "You've chances out there - you've just got to be on your game."

Aiken, who started on the 10th, birdied his first hole of the round and was to add a further 5 with his only blemish a bogey on the par 4 16th.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Banana Republic



Is India in danger of the becoming a banana republic? How can we prevent this?

On Feb 9, 2011, a Ghaziabad court rejected the CBI's closure report and ordered Rajesh and Nupur Talwar to the face trial on a charge of killing their only daughter Aarushi.

Reacting to the order, Rajesh Talwar said, “I shouldn't have been born in this country. It's nothing but a banana republic.” Aarushi and the Talwars' domestic help Hemraj were found murdered 2 years ago.

In December last year, taking strong objection to the leakage of his conversation with his public relations officer Nira Radia, Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata had also warned that India was in risk of becoming a banana republic.

The income-tax department had tapped Radia's phones as part of its investigation into alleged irregularities in allocation of mobile telephony spectrum. The conversations were later leaked to the media.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Nokia Meego



Nokia drops 1st MeeGo phone before launch -sources

Nokia (NOK1V.HE) has ended development of its first smartphone using its new MeeGo operating system before it was ever launched, 2 industry sources close to the company said. A spokesman for Nokia declined to comment.

The yet unproven MeeGo software platform, seen as a key weapon in Nokia's battle against Apple (AAPL.O) and Google (GOOG.O) in the high end smartphone market, was created early last year from the merger of Nokia and Intel's (INTC.O) Linux-based platforms Maemo and the Moblin. [ID:nLDE61E0Z2] Analysts said Nokia could still show the next MeeGo device, even if unfinished, later this week at its investor day in London on Friday or news conference in Barcelona on the Sunday.

Pirates



Greek oil tanker seized by pirates off the Omani coast

A Greek-flagged oil tanker was seized by pirates off the coast of Oman Wed, the vessel's manager said.

The Irene SL, which was transporting 266,000 tonnes of the Kuwaiti crude oil to the Gulf of Mexico, was sailing approximately 200 nautical miles (about 370 kilometers) off the Omani coast when it came under fire by armed men and then lost contact, the Piraeus-based company said.

It said the ship had a crew of twenty-five, including 7 Greeks, one Georgian and 17 Filipinos.

The seizure of the oil tanker has been confirmed by Greek authorities and the Bahrain-based Combined Maritime Forces.

It's the second oil tanker to be hijacked in 2 days in this piracy-plagued patch of the Indian Ocean, where international naval forces have staged an intensive anti-piracy campaign.

On Tues, armed pirates hijacked a medium-sized Italian-flagged oil tanker and diverted it toward Somalia. The vessel had 22 crew members.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Current tv



Olbermann said to be joining Al Gore's Current TV

Keith Olbermann, the liberal former "Countdown" host who left MSNBC abruptly last month, is expected to the announce Tues that he will join a public-affairs cable channel co-founded by Al Gore.

The NY Times reported Monday night that Olbermann, who had been an anchor — literally and figuratively — for the liberal-leaning network, is likely to join Current TV.

"Current TV has set up a presentation with advertisers for Wednesday afternoon in Manhattan to announce its future plans," the Times reports. "The channel may be betting on Mr. Olbermann to put it on the cable map. The low-rated five-year-old channel needs the help. Targeting young people, it originally subsisted on YouTube-style submissions and video journalists. More recently it started producing and acquiring traditional television series, like repeats of 'This American Life.' "

The Times suggested Olbermann could also pursue other ventures, including "an Internet destination."

A conference call is scheduled for 11 a.m. Tues, according to a publicist's e-mail, which promised that Olbermann and his partners “will make an exciting announcement regarding the next chapter in his remarkable career.”

Reina



Liverpool goalkeeper Pepe Reina admits he wants to challenge for the titles as Manchester United look for Van der Sar replacement

Liverpool goalkeeper Pepe Reina has refused to rule out leaving the club as Manchester United look for a replacement for Edwin van der Sar in the summer.

Reina has risked the anger of the Kop by doing little to quash the rumours that he may be interested in a move to the Old Trafford.

Van der Sar has announced that he will retire at the end of the season, and The Sun reports the Spain international goalkeeper could move to Old Trafford in a £20 million transfer, and while Reina reiterated he's contracted to the Anfield club, he also admitted he wants to challenge for top honours again.

"Yes, well Van der Sar will hang up his gloves in the summer so of course they're looking," Reina told Spanish radio station Onda Cero.

"I can't do anything. I can't say anything logically as I've a contract with Liverpool.

"Of course one likes to fight for titles and be in a team that does that.

"We always fought to be in the Champions League and try to win the title.

"But unfortunately it hasn't been the case in the last couple of years."

Reina has been a central figure for Liverpool and Kenny Dalglish will be eager to retain the services of the Spaniard, who's considered as one of the best goalkeepers in the world.

Sir Alex Ferguson is looking to trigger a £20m clause in the goalkeeper's contract that would see Liverpool unable to refuse the offer and allow Reina to speak to United.

Liverpool’s fortunes on the pitch have improved since Dalglish took over in January and a top-four finish is looking more possible with every point gained. But Reina conceded that he wants to be challenging at the highest level.

He added: "I will not lie, I want to play in the Champions League and challenge for titles."

Monday, February 7, 2011

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Super Bowl

Super Bowl XLV: Christina Aguilera fluffs national anthem

Christina Aguilera fluffed her lines while singing the national anthem at the start of the Super Bowl last night, in front of a TV audience of more than a hundred million.

The 30-year-old singer, who opened the match between the Green Bay Packers and the Pittsburgh Steelers, was supposed to sing the lyrics "O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming."

But instead she repeated and mangled an earlier line, singing: "What so proudly we watched at the twilight's last reaming".

Following the performance, she said: "I can only hope that everyone could feel my love for this country and that the true spirit of its anthem still came through."

The mistake immediately set social networks abuzz as people pointed out the error.

She is not the first person to mangle a rendition of The Star-Spangled Banner at a major sporting event. In 2001, Macy Gray was famously booed for her off-kilter rendition of the national anthem.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Keith Olbermann



MSNBC, Olbermann Call It Quits, Cancel Show

Cable host Keith Olbermann and the news channel MSNBC abruptly parted ways Fri night, as the network announced that his contract had ended and the last installment of his show would air that evening.

The surprise announcement strips MSNBC of its most-watched evening anchor after an increasingly tempestuous relationship, coming less than 3 months after the network briefly suspended the fiery host.

"MSNBC thanks Keith for his integral role in MSNBC's success and we wish him well in his future endeavors," the network said in an emailed statement just before the end of Mr. Olbermann's program.

MSNBC and Mr. Olbermann have been discussing ending his contract for some time, according to a person familiar with the matter. Neither side offered an explanation for their split. On the air, Mr. Olbermann said Friday would be his last show, and thanked viewers and staff.

The quick change set off a game of musical chairs, as MSNBC moved to fill the hole Mr. Olbermann will leave behind. The network said its 10 p.m. host Lawrence O'Donnell would move into Mr. Olbermann's 8 p.m. slot beginning on Monday.

Ed Schultz, who's hosted a 6 p.m. show on MSNBC since 2009, will take over Mr. O'Donnell's 10 p.m. time slot.

Executives have said tensions between Mr. Olbermann and the network have been running high since their spat in November, when the host was suspended for making 3 donations to Democratic candidates without seeking approval beforehand.

Mr. Olbermann missed 2 broadcasts during his suspension. MSNBC asked Mr. Olbermann to make a public apology for running afoul of its ethics rules before reinstating him, according to a person familiar with the matter. But Mr. Olbermann resisted so long as MSNBC kept him suspended, the person said.

Merkel



Clinton urges Mideast reforms

The Mideast faces a "perfect storm" of unrest and leaders in the region should implement democratic reforms to ward off further instability, United States. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on the Saturday.

Speaking to a security conference in Munich, Clinton said the status quo throughout the region is "simply not sustainable."

"The region is being battered by a perfect storm of powerful trends," she said. "Leaders in the region may be able to hold back the tide for a little while, but not for long."

Clinton was addressing the International Conference on Security Policy in Germany as a 12th day of anti-government protests began in the Egyptian capital.

She said change is a "strategic necessity" that will make Arab nations stronger and their people more prosperous and less susceptible to extremist ideologies. The region will face greater threats and insecurity without political reforms, she said.

"This isn't simply a matter of idealism; it's a strategic necessity," she said. "Without genuine progress toward open and accountable political systems, the gap between people and their governments will only grow, and instability will only deepen."

Her statement was made as tens of thousands of people gathered in Cairo's main square to again demand the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak.

The scene was tense, but calm, after another round of stone-throwing between demonstrators and Mubarak supporters in street sides just east of Tahrir Square on Friday.

The energy level remains high as protesters wave flags, clap, bang on metal barricades, chant and play music, CBC's Susan Ormiston said, reporting from Cairo.

"There's a lot of running around the square as various groups run to different entrances, perhaps trying to fend off any attempts to breach the security around the square," Ormiston said.

"We have not seen any visible confrontations between pro- and anti-Mubarak supporters this morning, but one more tank has rolled in a little closer toward one end of the square, and the guns are pointing in."

Officials say at least 109 people have been killed since the protests began on Jan. 25.

There are some signs that the Egyptian government and opposition parties may be opening talks on a transfer of power. American diplomatic sources say Mubarak's Vice-President Omar Suleiman is expected to meet with opposition leaders, later Saturday.

In a separate development, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak met with government officials and the head of the central bank for talks on economic issues.

The ministers responsible for trade, industry, finance and oil portfolios met with Mubarak in an effort to project calm amid the impact the country's political crisis is having on Egypt's economy.

It's estimated the standoff has cost the country an estimated $3.1 billion US.

Trade Minister Samiha Fawzi Ibrahim said exports from Egypt were down six per cent cent in January due to the protests, Reuters reported.

Earlier in the week, Mubarak, who's ruled the country for nearly 30 years, said he wouldn't run in the September presidential election.

He said he would work over the remaining months of his term to guarantee a peaceful transition of power. However, the United States. is pressuring him to begin the transfer of power as soon as possible.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Rumsfeld



United States ex-defence head Rumsfeld defends Iraq war handling

Former US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld remains largely defiant about the Iraq war, saying in a new book that had Saddam Hussein remained in power, the Middle East would be "far more perilous than it's today".

Mr Rumsfeld, 78, has written an autobiography due out next week.

He concedes he could have sent more troops, and that internal United States rivalries hampered post-war reconstruction.

Leaked excerpts have been published by the Washington Post and NY Times.

On the question of troops, he says in the 800-page Known and Unknown: "In retrospect, there may have been times when more troops could have helped."

But he says that if senior military officers had reservations about the size of the invading force, they didn't inform him.

And as the conflict continued, US commanders, even when asked repeatedly for their views, didn't ask him for more troops or disagree with the strategy, he adds.

Although he describes George W Bush as "a far more formidable president than his popular image", he also suggests the former president was at fault for not doing more to resolve disagreements among senior advisers.

Mr Bush "didn't always receive, and may not have insisted on, a timely consideration of his options before he made a decision, nor did he always receive effective implementation of the decisions he made", Mr Rumsfeld writes.

"There were far too many hands on the steering wheel," he writes elsewhere; it was "a formula for running the truck into a ditch".

Regrets

He adds he regrets some of the quips he became famous for, such as "stuff happens" about the early looting in post-war Iraq, or his remark about "old Europe" - meaning Germany and France - not supporting the use of force in Iraq.

He also confirms the National Security Council was rife with tensions between the Pentagon and state department, which some critics had blamed on him.

Mr Rumsfeld says his greatest regret wasn't leaving office immediately after the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Will the Egyptian Revolution Shatter the Illusion of Peace in the Middle East?

The events of the past week in Egypt have grabbed the world’s attention. We’ve been bombarded by it in the news, and analysts have had no lack observations to make about its true meaning. Though the most significant piece I have seen to date was written by Ray Hanania titled Bad news for Israel. And his opening statement basically blows the lid off of what has been hidden from the public all these years, which he states “Democracy will give Egyptian people a voice, and their voice may demand that peace accord be broken.“

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Suez



Egypt's Suez Canal Still Open to Shipping as Protesters Gathering in Cairo

Egypt’s Suez Canal, used to carry about eight percent of global seaborne trade, was operating normally today amid mounting protests against the government, according to an official from the waterway.

56 vessels are passing through the canal, more than the average of about 50, Ahmed El Manakhly, head of traffic for the Suez Canal Authority, said in an interview with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg TVs “The Pulse.” Working hours have been adjusted to comply with a curfew and the military hasn’t deployed to the canal, he said.

“The traffic through the Suez Canal hasn't been affected by the prevailing situation in Egypt,” El Manakhly said. “Traffic from Port Said at the northern entrance of the canal or from Suez at the southern entrance is going with normal rate and with the same and the usual schedule.”

The waterway is the fastest crossing from the Atlantic Ocean to the Indian Ocean, according to the Suez Canal Authority. Should it close, tankers would have to sail around southern Africa. That would add about 12 days to a journey from Saudi Arabia to Houston, Luis Mateus, an analyst at Riverlake Shipping SA in Geneva, estimated last week.

Opposition supporters today poured into Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the weeklong uprising against the President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Newly appointed Vice President Omar Suleiman said late yesterday that Mubarak instructed him to start a dialogue with the protesters. The military promised not to fire on marchers and said that it recognized “the legitimacy of the people’s demands.”

Container Line

A.P.Moeller-Maersk A/S, the container shipping line and terminal operator, kept offices closed in Egypt today and deployed only an emergency staff at Port Said, Michael Storgaard, a spokesman for the Copenhagen-based company, said by e-mail today. Maersk has about 7,000 employees in Egypt.

Frontline Ltd., the world’s largest operator of supertankers, said yesterday that a closure of the canal was unlikely, although delays were possible. The company isn’t aware of any plans to divert ships, Jens Martin Jensen, chief executive officer of the management unit of Frontline, said by phone from Singapore.

A vessel going from Saudi Arabia to Rotterdam can cut the distance traveled by about 42 percent by using the canal rather than sailing around the Cape of Good Hope, data on the canal authority’s website show. To southern France the saving is 57 percent and to NY 30 percent, the data show.

Goldman Sachs

The canal has the capacity to handle 2.2 million barrels of oil a day while that of the adjacent Suez-Mediterranean Pipeline is 2.3 million barrels, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Actual volumes in 2009 were a combined 2.1 million barrels because of cuts in production by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the bank said.

The canal was previously closed for 4 months in 1956-57 and for 8 years from 1967, Barclays said. The closure of the canal this time would remove about 2 million to 3 million barrels of oil and about 2 million barrels of refined products a day, the bank estimates. Much of the northbound oil goes to refineries in the Mediterranean.
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