Saturday, August 29, 2009

Quality Road is one to beat in Travers Stakes

travers stakes
travers stakes

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (AP) — There's a reason Quality Road is the morning-line favorite over Belmont Stakes winner Summer Bird in Saturday's $1 million Travers: He was the Kentucky Derby favorite before hoof injuries sidelined him for the Triple Crown season.

Now he's back, and in record-setting form.

Earlier this month, Quality Road returned to the races for the first time in more than four months and won the 6½-furlong Amsterdam Stakes at Saratoga in track record time of 1:13.74.

Previously, the 3-year-old colt won the 1 1/8-mile Florida Derby at Gulfstream Park in track record time of 1:47.72.

The big question going into the 1 1/4-mile Travers is whether Quality Road is ready to stretch out in distance.

"He's a special horse," Todd Pletcher said of Quality Road, who was trained by Jimmy Jerkens but sent to Pletcher in June by owner Edward P. Evans. "It takes a special kind of horse, with both speed and the ability to carry that speed over a distance of ground, and I think he's that kind of horse."

Kiaran McLaughlin, who sends out Charitable Man, believes Quality Road is the one to beat in the "Mid-Summer Derby"

"I have to give Todd great credit in getting him ready to run, after the layoff to win so impressively at 6½ furlongs," McLaughlin said. "He (Pletcher) is trying to do all that he can do to ensure that he will get the mile-and-a-quarter, and I'm sure that he will."

Quality Road, the 8-5 choice, will be ridden by John Velazquez. Summer Bird, with Kent Desormeaux up, is 3-1, with Jim Dandy winner Kensei 7-2, followed by Charitable Man (6-1), Warrior's Reward (8-1) and Hold Me Back and Our Edge, both 15-1.

The National Weather service forecast for Saturday is calling for a 90 percent chance of rain — occasional showers with thunderstorms. Quality Road has never run on a wet track.

"It's like always with the weather," Pletcher said. "You wish that it was going to be perfect conditions, but you have absolutely no control over it so you just hope for the best."

Missing from the Travers is Preakness-winning filly Rachel Alexandra and Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird.

Rachel Alexandra is skipping the race because she will be taking on older boys next week in the Woodward Stakes, and the Derby winner is out as he continues to recover from throat surgery.

The field is still a strong one.

"Even if you go by what they say on paper — you have the Florida Derby winner, the Belmont winner, the Jim Dandy winner, the Peter Pan winner, the Barbaro winner (that's us) ..." says Hall of Fame trainer Nick Zito, who will saddle Our Echo.

"There are so many great qualifications in there. If you had the Kentucky Derby winner in there, it would have been special, but it's a special race anyway."

Summer Bird's trainer Tim Ice is looking for a big race from his Belmont winner, who was a solid but distant runner-up to Rachel Alexandra in the Haskell Invitational at Monmouth Park on Aug. 2.

"He's run a couple of big races, but I still think he has a lot left to show just how good he is," Ice said. "I'm really happy with the way he's coming into the race."

Kensei comes into the 140th Travers off victories in the Dwyer Stakes at Belmont on July 4 and the Jim Dandy on Aug. 1. The son of Mr. Greeley missed the Triple Crown races, but now has a chance to move out of the shadow of stablemate Rachel Alexandra.

"This is the defining moment for him," said Stonestreet Stables owner Jess Jackson, who also co-owns Rachel Alexandra. "It won't be the final moment, but it will be the defining moment."

Chip Woolley, who trains Mine That Bird, said Quality Road was the horse he would have feared most.

"You don't know how good that horse really is. He has shown great talent," Woolley said. "He's a very fearsome sight out there."

Offutt Air Show promises to be great this year

offutt air show
offutt air show

The Offutt Air Show, Defenders of Freedom '09 looks to be a great outing for the younger kids this year. Normally, the heat is up in the lower 90s around this time of year but the weather report for Saturday and Sunday has the overall temperature being in the mid 70s. The air show runs from 9am - 5pm daily. Performers include the US Navy Blue Angels, US Army Golden Knights parachute team, an assortment of US Air Force aircraft, fake dog fights, and Tops in Blue will perform Saturday at 4pm.

Static displays from the Air Force, Navy, and retired aircraft will be available to the public. There is even a B-2 Motorcycle crafted by Northrop Grumman to celebrate 20 years of the B-2 Stealth Bomber. Units from local organizations and military presenters will have booths set up around the flightline.

The Fun Zone will be set up for children including 17 inflatables, glitter temporary tattoos, and photos in a F-4 Phantom Cockpit are offered at the event. There will be food and drink vendors available throughout the event.

If you plan to attend, please remember that security will be tight. Backpacks, coolers and tote bags must be left in your vehicle. Small fanny packs, small purses, strollers, wagons, and small diaper bags will all be allowed subject to hand-search at the gate. Large diaper bags may not be permitted but individuals can return to their vehicles to get extra clothes, diapers, etc. You can bring electronics without restriction but large camera bags will not be allowed. Water, drinks, and food are also allowed to be brought in if they are hand-carried. Plan accordingly so you do not get stuck at the gate.

Parking will be available on base, in limited quantities, via Bellevue Gate (off Galvin Rd), If you can ride the shuttle, parking will be available at Southroads Mall, Bellevue University, and at Bellevue East and West High Schools. Handicap parking is available at the Offutt Field House parking lot through the Capehart Rd/STRATCOM gate. Shuttles will all run from 8:45am - 6pm on both days. No pets will be admitted. Admission, as always, is free.

Arthur Ashe: A Life Dedicated to the Welfare of Others

arthur ashe kids day 2009
arthur ashe kids day 2009

Arthur Ashe is more than the name on the stadium with all the luxury boxes. He is more than the inspiration for the Eric Fischl statue at the south gate to the United States Open.

Lately, Ashe’s widow has come to think of him as a Bodhisattva — “a beautiful Buddhist term for a person who is dedicated to the ultimate welfare of other beings,” as Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe put it the other day.

She considers the possibility that Arthur achieved Buddhahood, either during his 49 years or after his life was cut short in 1993 by AIDS from a blood transfusion.

Arthur Ashe remains the only man of color to win the United States Open (in 1968), the Australian Open (in 1970) or Wimbledon (in 1975). He is also the inspiration for the annual Arthur Ashe Kids’ Day, which will be held at the expensive bazaar on Saturday. And he is one of the founders of the National Junior Tennis and Learning network, which prepares young people for sport and for life.

He remains a presence. Every time I hear his name, I think of the slim young player, peering owlishly at the clubby world of the West Side Tennis Club at Forest Hills, which he had worked so hard to reach, and I also think of the wan retired athlete, stricken by the heart trouble that would indirectly kill him.

In the late 1980s, Ashe would wear a naval-officer-style cap with a gold braid on it — never asked him why — and he would sit in the press box and schmooze with the regulars. I miss him. Miss the stuff he would teach us, in a kind way. Books. Concepts. History.

“I began to see Arthur’s life journey as caring about all sentient beings,” Moutoussamy-Ashe said recently. “So much of Buddhism reminds me of Arthur’s goals in life, but while he certainly knew about Buddhism he was not a student.”

Moutoussamy-Ashe does not live in the past. She keeps her name (“Just like me: I could have a name with four letters but I choose to have one with 15,” she said) and continues to work as a photographer, her path when they met. He dropped the world’s worst line — “Photographers sure are getting cuter” — but he did not let her get away.

As an artist still taking stylish photographs in black and white, she has published three books, but does not yet work with a digital camera. (“I am a Neanderthal,” she said.) She had input into the statue the United States Tennis Association placed at the south end of the National Tennis Center, now named after Billie Jean King.

The statue by Fischl, known for his ability to shock, depicts a man, a nude man, coiled into the serve position, but with only the handle of a racket in his hand. Some people gasp or titter when they see the statue for the first time.

“This is a figure — serving,” Moutoussamy-Ashe said, patiently. “The message is service. There is no racket. It’s so metaphorical.” She paused and added, “I voted for it.”

A ball that Arthur tossed deftly into the air in 1969 remains in play. He and Charlie Pasarell, his college teammate and friend for life, and Sheridan Snyder, another friend, formed the National Junior Tennis League for children like Ashe, who had moved from Virginia to Missouri so he could play tennis beyond the bounds of overt segregation. Recently the word “league” has been replaced by “learning,” which was always part of the program.

In 1999, the network began a contest for the best essay about the life of Ashe. The winner was 12-year-old Blake Strode from St. Louis, who this year graduated from the University of Arkansas with a 3.972 grade-point average. Strode has delayed his entrance to law school at Harvard to try the tennis circuit for a year.

“The N.J.T.L. gave me a kick-start,” Strode said the other day. “I had already started playing tennis, but at 9 my mom dropped me off every morning in Forest Park. The clinics and the tennis were the highlight of my day.” He said the racial picture has improved greatly since the days of Ashe and Althea Gibson, the first black female champion, but added that tennis still presented economic and social barriers.

The junior tennis league, backed by the U.S.T.A., reaches an estimated 220,000 youths each year. “It’s family,” Moutoussamy-Ashe said. “It’s Thanksgiving. It’s Christmas. There may be some people you don’t want to see, but it’s family. It’s always there. It’s never not a part of me.”

Moutoussamy-Ashe told how she slipped 6-year-old Camera (now a student at Hunter College in Manhattan) into the hospital, against the rules, and how the little girl recoiled at the grim reality. Her bed-ridden father held her and called her Precious and told her it was all right to be scared.

“Arthur was a mixture of common sense, kindness and doing,” Moutoussamy-Ashe said. And she added, “Now everything is about you.” Ashe came from a time and place when people had a glimmer of some communal good. Only now is his wife able to put a name on what she thinks he achieved: a state of Buddhahood.

Kennedy’s Closest Confidante, in Politics and Life

victoria reggie
victoria reggie

BOSTON — It was 1991, the worst year of Senator Edward M. Kennedy’s life since Chappaquiddick, 22 years earlier. With scandal unfolding that spring in Palm Beach, Fla., involving his nephew, the senator was humiliated by tabloid photos that showed him in a nightshirt after their boys’ night out, an aging, dissolute playboy.

In the Senate, he was engaged in a difficult struggle over a major civil rights bill. And then, that fall, with accusations of sexual harassment dominating the Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings, there was the televised spectacle of Ted Kennedy — long a champion of women’s rights — sitting mute and powerless, silenced by the Palm Beach case. His approval ratings plummeted.

But 1991, as it turned out, was also one of the best years of Ted Kennedy’s life. That was the year he fell in love with Victoria Reggie, the canny, razor-smart, beautiful 37-year-old daughter of old family friends, who was also a top banking lawyer.

Ms. Reggie was having her own struggles. Newly divorced from Grier C. Raclin, a lawyer, she was juggling her demanding career and life as the single mother of two small children. And back home in Crowley, La., her father, Edmund Reggie, a longtime judge and political insider, was facing felony charges of misapplying bank money. That June, her parents invited Ted Kennedy to a small dinner for their 40th wedding anniversary at Vicki’s home in Washington. When the senator showed up alone, Vicki joked in front of everyone: “What’s the matter? Couldn’t you get a date?”

“My mother, I think, was horrified,” Mrs. Kennedy would say later, in an interview with her husband’s biographer Adam Clymer. “ ‘Oh, don’t talk to men that way, poor Vicki.’ ”

The next day Mr. Kennedy made what he — and everyone who knew him — would later view as the smartest move of his life. He called to ask Vicki out to dinner.

In recalling the courtship, Vicki Kennedy told Mr. Clymer that she had been aware of the senator’s low approval ratings, which he had mentioned over dinner one night. They had fallen into the mid-40s. “And I said, ‘Oh, wow, I’ve never gone out with anybody whose approval rating wasn’t at least 48.’ ”

The senator proposed to her in January 1992 at a performance of “La Bohème” at the Metropolitan Opera in New York — a love of opera was one of many passions they shared. They married that July at his home in McLean, Va., in front of about 30 family members.

And that was the beginning of the extraordinary relationship —a love story as well as a political partnership — that would define the final years of Mr. Kennedy’s life, both personally and professionally. Mrs. Kennedy brought him a happiness, his friends said, that had long eluded him, seeing him through until the end, and to even now, as she presides at his public memorials in Boston and prepares for his burial at Arlington National Cemetery.

“I have seen political couples come and go for four decades,” said David Mixner, 63, a writer and civil rights activist who got his start in politics at age 14, when he volunteered for John F. Kennedy’s presidential campaign. “I don’t think there has been a partnership and a love story in American politics like this one.”

While no one who knows her would ever describe Vicki Kennedy as a woman who needed rescuing, her friends say that Mrs. Kennedy, who had never expected to marry again, was also transformed. She gained a worshipful husband who adored her children, shared her deep religious faith, consulted with her on everything from Kennedy family matters to campaign strategy, and made her his partner in a life of politics and public service that she had been introduced to as a girl by her father and that she loved herself.

“She saw him as many of us did, as the person carrying on the progressive tradition of the Democratic Party,” said Marylouise Oates, a writer and friend of the Kennedys who is married to Robert M. Shrum, the Democratic strategist and former speechwriter for Mr. Kennedy. “He was the love of her life — and the icon of her life.”

It was the blending of two large, powerful political families, the Irish-American, Roman Catholic Kennedys from Boston and the Lebanese-American, Roman Catholic Reggies from Crowley, a relationship whose seeds were planted at the Democratic National Convention in 1956, when Ted was 24, and Vicki was 2.

That was when Edmund Reggie helped deliver his state’s delegates for John Kennedy, who was running for the vice-presidential nomination, but lost to Senator Estes Kefauver. It was the beginning of a lifelong friendship between the Reggies and the Kennedys.

Mrs. Kennedy revealed what a valuable asset she was during her husband’s hard-fought campaign for re-election in 1994 against Mitt Romney, a 47-year-old multimillionaire venture capitalist.

For the first time in decades, Mr. Kennedy was contending with a viable Republican opponent. Mr. Romney cast the 62-year-old senator as an old, tired, out-of-step liberal.

Mrs. Kennedy was instrumental in the campaign’s creation of a series of devastating advertisements that challenged Mr. Romney’s proclamations about his record as a venture capitalist in creating jobs in recession-battered Massachusetts. The spots focused on the workers at the Ampad stationery factory in Marion, Ind., where Mr. Romney’s company, Bain Capital, had eliminated jobs, reduced wages and discarded the union contract.

In a strategy session that spring, Mrs. Kennedy urged her husband’s advisers to learn more about Mr. Romney’s company. Although Mr. Romney was claiming that he had created thousands of jobs in Massachusetts, it was her experience as a banking lawyer, she said, that when venture capitalists took over businesses, there could be a lot of downsizing and layoffs.

As a result of her urging, the campaign hired The Investigative Group Inc., a detective firm headed by a former Senate Watergate counsel, Terry Lenzner. The firm discovered how Bain management had handled the Ampad workers after taking over the factory. The advertisements ran in the fall.

“She was key,” Mr. Shrum said of Mrs. Kennedy. “She had a very good strategic sense.”

In an interview on the 1994 campaign with Mr. Clymer, Mrs. Kennedy demonstrated great attention to detail, down to her objection to a health care-related commercial that put her husband in a lab coat — not because it made him look fat, as had been reported, but because he did not look like himself.

“It looked like a costume as opposed to what he really was doing,” she said.

The interview also revealed the intimacy of their political bond. She told Mr. Clymer that two days before a debate with Mr. Romney, her husband “was brushing his teeth in Boston, and he just apropos of nothing turned to me, and he said, ‘I’m ready, you know.’

“And I said, ‘Yeah, I know.’ Because I did. I knew. You could just see it.”

The senator was credited with besting Mr. Romney in the debate.

Years later, Mr. Mixner would observe Mrs. Kennedy in action at a 2004 fund-raising reception she and the senator had at their home in Washington for the gay, lesbian and bisexual community.

Vicki Kennedy greeted each of the some 300 guests at the front door. “She remembered every single name — and where each person was from,” Mr. Mixner recalled this week. “I would just say a name, and then she would greet them, and say just the right thing — ‘Thank you for your work on the environmental community.’ I was floored.”

The people at that event, Mr. Mixner said, helped elect seven Democratic senators that fall.

“The two of them never wasted a day,” Mr. Mixner said of the senator and his wife. “They sailed, they sang, they laughed, they told great old Irish political stories.”

And even as she was by his side in the last year of his life, helping him navigate the doctors’ appointments and medical care, friends say, she was also the one making sure his life was as full as he wanted it to be. That meant time to work on health care legislation and on his memoir, to sail with friends and family, to enjoy her cooking, and to sit on the porch with their Portuguese water dogs, Sunny and Splash — and the newest addition, as of last winter, Captain Courageous.

“In that first week, when the diagnosis came — how she put the entire medical profession through their paces,” Joseph Kennedy Jr., a nephew of the senator, said in an interview Friday after the wake. “And then she basically put my uncle, who had always carried our entire family on his shoulders, she put him on hers, and she just carried him.”

On Thursday and Friday, dressed in simple black, she was carrying on as his partner, friends say, presiding at his wake in Boston, greeting the tens of thousands of mourners. She stood for hours at the Kennedy library, shaking hands, saying a few words to each person who came through, extending herself, Joe Kennedy said, to Teddy’s people as he would have wanted, just as they had planned it, together.

There has been the inevitable talk of Vicki Kennedy’s running for her husband’s vacant Senate seat. But her friends say she has not expressed interest in it.

With her husband gone, “I think she will do exactly what he wanted her to do,” Mr. Mixner said, “and continue living life to the fullest — with great sorrow, with a great sense of loss,” but not, he added, “as a victim or as a widow.”

Details of President Obama’s eulogy of Senator Kennedy

obama eulogy

Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton says that the eulogy President Obama will deliver at Senator Kennedy's funeral mass later this morning, "will be a personal message from the President about Senator Kennedy's impact as a friend, legislator, mentor, colleague and family member on those around him and our entire nation."

The President has, according to a senior official, consulted with top political adviser David Axelrod. He has also worked with his speech writing team, led by Jon Favreau. Assisting was former Kennedy staffer and WH speech writer Cody Keenan.

Senator Kennedy's funeral mass will take place at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica in Boston at 1030a.m. Watch Fox News Channel for full coverage.

Carter Visit Brings Big Costs

jimmy carter
jimmy carter

In less than a month, former US President Jimmy Carter will become the second person to accept the Mahatma Gandhi Global Nonviolence award at JMU. Hosting prestigious guests, like Carter, comes at great cost and requires months of preparation.

Harrisonburg has played host to a few of the most influential men of our time. In September 2007 it was Archbishop Desmond Tutu, in October of last year, then candidate Barack Obama and in September, former President Jimmy Carter will join the city's list of v.i.p. visitors.

"It's a unique opportunity and I think it's about some topics that many folks find very meaningful," says JMU Spokesman, Don Egle.

But to host big names, the city and JMU must also spend big. The university will shell out about $80,000 to bring in the Carters. Harrisonburg has agreed to contribute $15,000 through in-kind donations, like police overtime. Those writing the checks say it's not an expense, but an investment.

"Some of the in-kind funds are actually received by the city on behalf of taxes or things like that where people are coming to the restaurants," says Harrisonburg Mayor, Kai Degner.

Harrisonburg alone won't reap the benefits of Carter's lecture.

"I think these types of events add value to what happens on the university campus, it adds value to the student experience in general and for faculty and staff but even beyond that, I think it adds value to the surrounding community," says Egle

When Barack Obama spoke at JMU, Harrisonburg spent $9,000 on police, $4,000 on transit and as much as $2,000 on public works. In all, the campaign reimbursed the city close to $15,000.

"Obviously we want to be careful about where we're spending money and what we're supporting. I think an event of this magnitude certainly justifies a contribution," says Degner.

JMU will raise money for the Carter lecture through ticket sales and a dinner.

"Yeah, it's not cheap, but it's nice that we have different avenues of revenue that have come in to help cover the cost," says Egle.

Fundraising isn't all that's being done in preparation for the Carters. Logistics for parking, promotions and seating started months ago.

Former President Carter will lecture on September 21st in the JMU Convo at 7 p.m. You can buy tickets by calling 568-3853. Tickets are $10 - $5.

There will be about 7,000 seats available. You will find a link to online ticket sales by clicking on the "hot button," section of this Web site.

Mass Lottery Mega Millions!

mass lottery

Below again are the Mass Lottery and Mega Millions Winning Numbers from last night August 25, 2009. The Mega Millions Winning Numbers prompted state lottery websites to crash last night. Last night’s draw was the third largest in U.S. history: $252 million.

The Mega Millions winning lottery numbers : 3, 12, 19, 22 and 40 with the Mega Ball, 2.

Additionally, that Powerball last week that went for $260 million yielded one winner - Solomon Jackson Jr., a former South Carolina state employee. Solomon was already enjoying retirement. Now Solomon will REALLY be enjoying retirement.

A rep for the New Jersey told press last night before the draw:

“With jackpots of this size, you start to see people who don’t normally play a game like Mega Millions buying a ticket. They may notice it’s over 100 million, and they’ll say, ‘OK, I’ll take a shot at it.’”

A Georgia official additional said the following:

“Whenever we have a large jackpot, there is always excitement across the state and that translates into additional dollars for the educational programs we fund.”

Yo-Yo Ma, Domingo to perform at Kennedy funeral

yo yo ma
yo yo ma

BOSTON — Cellist Yo-Yo Ma and tenor Placido Domingo will perform at the funeral Mass for Sen. Edward Kennedy.

The Rev. Philip Dabney, associate pastor of Boston's Mission Church, says Saturday's service will be a "regular Catholic funeral" — with superb music.

In addition, there will be a contingent from the Boston Symphony Orchestra and mezzo-soprano Susan Graham.

Several clergy members will be on hand. The Rev. Donald Monan, the chancellor of Boston College, will be the principal celebrant.

The Rev. Mark Hession of Our Lady of Victories Parish on Cape Cod will delivery the homily, and Boston Cardinal Sean O'Malley will lead the final prayers of commendation.

President Barack Obama will delivery the eulogy.

AP Top News at 12:23 p.m. EDT

basilica
BOSTON — Leaders and other luminaries paid final tribute Saturday to Edward M. Kennedy, mourning the loss of a senator who made an indelible impact on U.S. life over 47 years in Congress and the man who held up America's most famous family during tragedy and triumph. President Barack Obama was delivering the eulogy at a two-hour Roman Catholic funeral Mass for Kennedy. The service drew to Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica three of the four living former presidents, dozens of Kennedy relatives, pews full of current and former members of Congress and hundreds of others affected by the senator in ways large and small. Kennedy died Tuesday night at 77, after battling brain cancer for more than a year.

Next step not clear for Vicki Kennedy

caroline raclin
caroline raclin

Even in a family sadly experienced in public mourning, the sight of Victoria Reggie Kennedy standing by her husband’s casket at the John F. Kennedy Library, greeting a seemingly endless number of well wishers, or leading a group of prominent political figures in honoring Ted Kennedy’s memory at a service Friday night, seemed to have special meaning. They were, in a sense, the public affirmation of the role the dark-haired Louisiana lawyer who became Kennedy’s second wife had come to play in his life.

Friends of Kennedy say it was Vicki who rescued him from his famously self-destructive habits when they were married 17 years ago, becoming both confidante, protector and adviser. As Kennedy battled with the brain cancer that would ultimately kill him, she organized his treatment and managed his time, and after he died she planned how he would be remembered and who would be attending. “It was as if the good Lord had sent her,” former Sen. John Warner, a close friend of Kennedy’s, said in an interview with POLITICO.

Vicki Kennedy played a far more active part in her husband’s career than the wives of John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy — Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Ethel Skakel Kennedy, whose grief over their slain husbands embedded them in the national consciousness. And as a widow she is likely to live a different kind of life — though how she will define it is not clear.

Her very public moments this week left some wondering whether Vicki Kennedy will remain on the national stage, pushing her husband’s issues—including the one he never saw to fruition, health care reform. But it is at least as likely that she will revert back to the life she had before she met Kennedy, this time as a 55-year-old working mother with two grown children, Curran Raclin and Caroline Raclin, now in their twenties.

Kennedy has told friends she isn’t interested in filling her late husband’s Senate seat either temporarily—if state lawmakers revert back to an old system that would allow the governor to fill the vacancy—or in the long-term, by running in a special election. “All this stuff about her going to the Senate is completely wrong,” Bob Shrum, the longtime Kennedy speechwriter and adviser, said in an interview.

But that hasn’t stopped the pundits—and even some Kennedy aides— from chattering about the possibility. Appearing on ABC News on Thursday, Cokie Roberts called Kennedy a “political person” and said she wouldn’t be surprised if she did in fact make a run for the Senate. “She knows politics. She knows substance. It’s normal for someone who’s been that involved to want to stay involved,” Roberts said.

A former longtime Kennedy aide agrees: “She’s the logical choice to keep the seat. She’s a very sharp lawyer, she knows the issues well, and she could carry the torch for Teddy on the health care issue. She would complete his mission.”

But friends say they take Vicki Kennedy at her word. “I believe her when she says she has no interest in public office,” said Pam Covington, a friend of Kennedy’s for close to two decades. “I’ve never heard her even hint at that.

“I don’t know what’s in her heart of hearts that she’s not talking about,” Covington added. “But my guess is that she is happy to carry on Teddy’s legacy in other ways.”

Rep. Ed Markey, the Massachusetts Democrat and a longtime Kennedy friend, said he can see Vicki continuing to be an advocate for the passage of health care reform. “It’s something that is central to his legacy and I think that she will work to see that legacy completed,” Markey said.

As many have noted in recent days that legacy was sometimes challenged by issues in Ted Kennedy’s personal life. He divorced his first wife in 1982 and his name quickly became shorthand for comedians’ jokes about politicians behaving badly. In the months leading up to his testimony at the rape trial of his nephew William Kennedy Smith, the senator began dating Vicki after she invited him to party celebrating her parents’ 40th wedding anniversary. (The two families had been longtime friends: Vicki’s father Edmund, a judge, supported John F. Kennedy for Vice President in 1956 and Vicki’s mother Doris was the only delegate from Louisiana to vote for Ted Kennedy for president in 1980.)

They married in 1992 and Kennedy aides quickly noticed a difference in him. “She brought sunshine to his life,” one longtime aide recalls. “It’s like she opened the shades and lifted his spirits. He suddenly looked healthy.”

During Friday night's ceremony, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) said Vicki has "been a tremendously wonderful wife to my friend Ted."

"Their marriage in many respects saved Teddy," Hatch continued, adding that their union made him "a better man and a better senator."

Markey and others credit Vicki for helping to win Kennedy’s hard-fought Senate race against Republican Mitt Romney in 1994.

“He obviously loved having her at his side at every event and he turned to her constantly for advice,” Markey said. “She was constantly providing encouragement and advice to him and they became inseparable both personally and professionally.”

While the spotlight was on her husband, Vicki Kennedy took on her own causes, becoming an advocate of children’s safety issues and president and co-founder of “Common Sense about Kids and Guns,” an organization committed to reducing gun violence involving children.

While she’s likely to maintain those interests, it’s unclear whether she intends to resume her legal career. After marrying Kennedy, she left the law firm Keck Mahin & Cate, where she was a partner specializing in banking and restructuring, to focus on her kids—she served on the board at the Maret School, where they were students -- and her husband’s career.

But friends think Vicki Kennedy will return to Washington and resume life in a home she and the senator purchased in the Kalorama neighborhood, far from the Kennedy family’s Massachusetts base, but also outside of the Washington limelight.

"She was not a socialite by any means and they were never part of the Washington social scene,” says Sally Quinn, the Washington hostess and social observer. “He was good at being a pol but not crazy about going to seated dinners. He would often do a 'fly by.'"

"Vicki is very quiet but I don’t see her becoming the grande dame of Washington,” Quinn added. “She was very content being Teddy’s wife and being a mother.”

“I would expect her to be very active in his causes," she said. "I still don’t think she’ll be a major figure in the Washington social scene. She’ll remain much more a quiet figure in Washington.”

Still, she added, "She’ll always be effective at what she does."

That Vicki Kennedy possesses an inner toughness was clear to anyone who came in contact with her during her husband’s illness. News reports have documented one particular squabble between Vicki and Joseph Kennedy II, Kennedy’s nephew, over her husband’s medical treatment.

“It was obvious that there were many demands flying around,” said one longtime family friend. “She became Teddy’s guardian of the gate and that created some tension. To this day, there’s a lot of ice there and some difficulty.”

The friend added that many members of the Kennedy clan including, Caroline Kennedy, were “solidly in Vicki’s corner.”

Even though Ted Kennedy was the “lion” and family patriarch, everyone knew that in the end it was Vicki who would call the shots. “A great reason why he did have as great a year as he did was because of Vicki,” added Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) one of Kennedy’s closest friends, said in an interview. “She gave him a remarkable year.”

She spent her time talking to doctors across the country about the best medical options for her husband, while juggling the cooking, prodding him to finish his memoirs and deciding when the senator was well enough to venture out on his 50 foot-sailboat “Mya” and when he would have to stay in.

Even Dodd, one of his closest confidants, admits, “I never went up to see him without talking to her and I never called him without talking to her.”

And in May when Dodd was coping with his own sister’s battle with cancer, it was Vicki, he says, who called him within hours to say she had scheduled an appointment for her to see Ted Kennedy’s doctor.

While the last year provided challenges for Vicki Kennedy, friends say, it also provided her with clarity.

“As tough as it was, I know the last year provided her with some of the happiest moments of their life together,” Covington said. “Her faith and great optimism not only bolstered him, but it bolstered them.”

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Cash for Appliances offers free rebates

cash for appliances

The Obama administration announced the economic stimulus plan dubbed Cash for Appliances last month, but it's gained new attention as the program nears active status.

With some differences to the wildly popular Cash for Clunkers program, one noteworthy change is that a trade-in is not required to obtain monetary incentives.

The incentives will be in the form of consumer rebates which can be used towards the purchase of new refrigerators, washing machines, dishwashers, air conditioners and the like.

Depending on the product and the state of residence, the rebates will run between $50 and $200 for energy efficient purchases.

Cash for Appliances may not only stimulate the economy but help reduce energy consumption and utility bills. Old appliances simply consume more power. For instance a newer washing machine may save $10 or more dollars a month in electricity consumption, a new microwave $5 dollars. It all adds up.

Though program is not without some critics. $300 million dollars in taxpayer monies has been set aside for it and 10 to 25 percent of the money will cover administrative costs. At 25 percent that is $75 million, simply to implement an unproven economic-energy plan.

According to the Department of Energy, the Recovery Act appropriated funds for the program are designed to help achieve the national goals of spurring economic growth, creating jobs, saving energy and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. States and territories can use these funds to leverage the utility companies and energy efficiency program sponsors in their area.

The Cash for Appliances program will be available in some states as early as November, which may help Black Friday fans save more. States are allocated funds based on population and their proposal due October 15.

To check out how much of a rebate is available, look to the Department of Energy website (energy.gov) or your state government website for updates.

Aaliyah: Remembering Her Legacy Eight Years On

aaliyah
aaliyah

One of the last hits from Aaliyah's all-too-brief career was the track "More Than a Woman," released posthumously from her self-titled third LP.

The song and the video both showcased Aaliyah Dana Haughton, then 22, at her finest: flirty, reserved, sultry and, most importantly, it left listeners and viewers with a palpable sense that there was indeed more to come from this talented artist. Unfortunately, her life was tragically cut short when a plane carrying her and her entourage crashed shortly after takeoff. Her death — which occurred exactly eight years ago — still feels like it happened entirely too soon.

Ever since the Detroit singer and dancer debuted in 1994 with Age Ain't Nothing But a Number, we all watched Aaliyah blossom. Her initial look of dark sunglasses and baggy clothes evolved into a more adult look on her next album, One In a Million. She was always beautiful, but later as a young woman she exuded the kind of appeal that was as sexy as a whisper in your ear — so subtle that it never had to be overtly pointed out.

She also possessed the type of talent and charisma that led many to believe her future was as bright as a supernova.

"Aaliyah was one of the finest young women I have ever worked with. She was a consummate professional, an amazing talent with limitless potential and, most importantly, an exceptional person," Lorenzo di Bonaventura, who worked with the singer on the film "Romeo Must Die," said in a statement after her death. "Her passing is a huge loss to her many friends here at Warner Bros. and we extend our heartfelt sympathy to her family and to those who loved her as we did."

Her credits are easy to remember: three albums that were each certified double-platinum along with the aforementioned "Romeo Must Die," which helped to put her on Hollywood's map. Another film, "Queen of the Damned," was released after she passed.

Her legacy is slinkier — immense yet understated, just like her voice. Traces of it lie the way Ciara moved in the video for "Promise." It's there in Rihanna's runway-fashion sense. Keri Hilson's around-the-way persona and Nicole Scherzinger's simmering sexuality share a debt to her. And the sense of what her career could have ultimately become is evident in Beyoncé's multimedia presence.

During Aaliyah's rise, she and her contemporaries shared a number of similarities, most notably an affinity for going by just one name: Brandy, Monica, Mya, etc. All of them did well from the very beginning. Since then, of course, they've continued to experience success, but each with the usual ups and downs that fame tends to dish out. Aaliyah undoubtedly would have gone on to accomplish more.

But she always felt different, more mature than her age — and her ascent also felt more gradual and firm, and when she passed there was a sadness that resonated because she was set to soar.

"I'll be more than a lover, more than a woman," she sang. "I'm gonna be more. I don't think you're ready."

There truly was no way we could have been.

Fannie, Freddie Soar as Day - Traders Seek Profit

fnm stock

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Shares of U.S. government-controlled mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac soared for a second straight day on Tuesday after attracting the attention of day-traders looking to turn a quick profit with these low-priced household names.

Fannie Mae shares rose as much as 24 percent to $2.12 while Freddie Mac gained as much as 14 percent to a high of $2.34 in morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

Though both hard-hit companies were essentially nationalized by Uncle Sam to prevent them from going under last fall, Fannie Mae shares have more than doubled since starting the year at 76 cents. Freddie Mac shares have almost tripled in value from 73 cents.

"You can get these massive spikes in these low-dollar companies that are structurally in a lot of trouble," said Ryan Detrick, senior technical strategist at Schaeffer's Investment Research.

Shares of other financial companies such as Citigroup Inc and insurers American International Group and Hartford Financial Services Group also have risen dramatically in recent weeks.

The U.S. government seized Fannie and Freddie last September after they reported huge losses caused by plummeting U.S. house prices.

For better or for worse, then, some investors see the mortgage lenders following the rebound of the banking sector.

"If the recession has actually ended and the economy is bouncing back, these investors would hope and believe that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae will make a similar move as these others," said William Lefkowitz, option strategist at brokerage firm vFinance Investments.

In late morning trading, Fannie Mae shares were up 14 percent at $1.93 while Freddie Mac shares were up 6 percent at $2.18, despite any material news.

Joe Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist at Thinkorswim Group, a division of TD Ameritrade Holding Corp, said some investors may see an improving outlook for the mortgage giants thanks to an economic rebound and government intervention.

"The only rumor I have heard is that the government may extend or increase the time frame for the government's first-time home buyer tax credit, which is supposed to expire this fall. If that happens, that would be great for Fannie and Freddie," he said.

Options markets were also very active Tuesday. During the first 45 minutes of trade, about 61,000 call options changed hands in Fannie -- more than three times its average daily volume and nearly five times the number of puts, according to option analytics firm Trade Alert.

Heavy call demand shows that investors expect Fannie and Freddie stock to rise.

Peep Show at the Standard Hotel

high line standard hotel

high line standard hotel

Two female guests at the Standard Hotel near the newly opened High Line Park give viewers a show as they dance naked in front of their window. The Standard Hotel has become the center of controversy over the past several days as passersby can see guests engaging in sexual activity thanks to the hotel's ceiling-high windows.

Melanie Griffith back in rehab after strange color demands…

melanie griffith
melanie griffith

"Working Girl" star Melanie Griffith is in rehab again, her publicist confirmed to Star magazine.

Griffith, 52-year, checked into Utah's Cirque Lodge Rehab Facility, the previous temporary home of Lindsay Lohan and Kirsten Dunst.

While her publicist cited Griffith's "commitment to stay healthy" as the reason for her admission, FOXNews.com's Pop Tarts learned that she checked herself in part because husband Antonio Banderas, 49, would have no more of her erratic behavior.

One possible example? Someone who had recently worked with her told Pop Tarts that Griffith "had a multitude of crazy demands, including insisting everything around her, from the food to the flowers, be yellow."

So that would make her diet lemons, bananas, and ... what else, yellow squash?

We're not sure what the color scheme is at Cirque Lodge.

Heather Podesta: A Commentary on Lobbyists

heather podesta
heather podesta

Members of the Senate and House of Representatives should be like criminal juries: neutral and closed to the world. The only people they should listen to are their superiors and the American people. Any other influence could sway a particular iniative in the direction of a motivated individual with an agenda or axe to grind, otherwise known as a lobbyist.

Our elected officials are distracted enough as it is with what's on their plate and the inefficient manner in which the federal government does business. The last thing they need is hoardes of manipulative people hanging around asking for them to do something. In this case, the quote "Too many cooks in the kitchen make a bad cake" is apt.

I respect lobbying as a constitutionally approved practice and lobbyists for working hard at what they strongly believe in. Yet, I can't support a practice that has yet to sit well with me.

Claymont steelworker sent to hospital after fire breaks out

mark harris
mark harris

A blaze from a one-alarm fire at a Claymont steel company sent an employee to the hospital Monday night after he suffered smoke inhalation. The man, a worker at Evraz Claymont Steel Company, formerly known asCitiSteel, was taken to Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland, Pa.

Claymont Fire Company Chief Mark Harris said the fire started in a furnace refractory at 6:11 p.m. Molten steel from a container dripped onto an electrical panel and caused the blaze, Harris said. The employee was working on a crane above the container and was not able to escape without help. Firefighters had to use ropes to free him because there was no visibility inside the room, Harris said.

More than 20 employees were evacuated. Fire companies from Talleyville, Brandywine Hundred, Holloway Terrace, Five Points and Wilmington helped extinguish the blaze. The fire was under control at 7:26 p.m.

Harris said employees were not allowed back into the unit that caught fire because of smoldering metal inside.

Harris also said the unit had smoke damage but it was not extensive. The State Fire Marshal's Office is investigating.

Danyl Johnson 'X Factor' Audition Video Goes Viral

danyl johnson
danyl johnson video


The video of Danyl Johnson performing the Beatles' "With a Little Help From My Friends" on the British talent show "The X Factor" has gone viral. On Monday, the official clip on YouTube had registered about 600,000 views since the weekend. Twenty-four hours later, the count had doubled to almost 1.2 million.

On Saturday night's airing, judge Simon Cowell called Johnson's soulful cover "the best first audition I have ever heard." Johnson quickly shot to frontrunner status, raising questions about whether he'd become the next incarnation of Scottish chanteuse Susan Boyle, albeit one in cargo shorts who prefers classic rock to "Les Misérables."

In the days since his performance, the British press has been reporting exhaustively on Johnson's personal history, just as it did following Boyle's appearance on "Britain's Got Talent" in April. The 27-year-old is a schoolteacher from Reading, England, who has fallen short in other attempts to make it big as a singer. According to The Daily Mirror, he has been in two boy bands, Upfrunt and Streetlevel, but neither of them ever caught on. The paper also reported that Johnson performed on television with a rock band called Empty Spaces and has auditioned for "X Factor" three times.

The Daily Mail landed an interview with Johnson's estranged father, who said he had not spoken with his son for a year after a falling-out. Following the "X Factor" performance, though, Johnson's father sent Danyl a text message and received a response back.

"I was so proud when I saw Danyl on the television," he told the paper. "I did shed a tear as he was singing."

The audience and the judges were nearly as taken with his performance. "When we see a performance like that, it's the absolute perfect audition," judge Dannii Minogue said. "So exciting to be sitting here on this panel."

Avi Ben Stella car crash

avi ben stella car crash

The Avi Ben Stella car crash story appears to have finally gone properly viral.

Essentially, people are getting an email, or a Facebook request (and any other of the various forms of social media request) to simply change their status for one hour in order to ask for prayers for Avi Ben Stella, a 12 year old child who is now in a coma after being seriously injured in a car crash.

You can see the current status of this at Snopes, here.

No one is as yet quite sure: is there an Avi Ben Stella, was someone of that name in a car crash? Or is it simply a joke of some kind, although as yet the punchline is undelivered?

My supposition is that this is a joke, a game, of some sort. For one of the terms that has been replicating across the internet is "Avi Ben Stella Snopes".....and where would you go to try and find out the truth of an online rumor? Yes, Snopes.

But if the search engines are thoroughly polluted with that serach term, you're most unlikely to find the Snopes entry, are you? You can only get there by using the engine on Snopes' own site.

So I would write this off as a joke, a game: if anyone knows differently please do contact me in the comments.

Martha Raye

Martha Raye
Fergie at the Teen Choice Awards last night in Universal City, and vaudevillian/TV star/singer and USO trouper Martha Raye. So alike, and yet only one is “The Big Mouth.”

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Max Baer Jr. May Purchase Sparks Property

max baer
max baer

Former actor Max Baer Jr. is contemplating the purchase of the Silver Club in Sparks and transforming the property into Jethro's Beverly Hillbillies Hotel and Casino. Sparks Mayor Geno Martini tells the "Reno Gazette-Journal" that Baer has discussed the matter with City of Sparks staff and at least three city council members. Baer played the character of Jethro on the 1960's TV sitcom "The Beverly Hillbillies." The Silver Club is now closed and is one of six casinos in Nevada owned by Harold Holder that have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization.

Funk Fest today at LaSalle Park

ricky james
ricky james

Rick James lives. Buffalo Funk Fest 2009—the Rick James Memorial Concert—uncorks beginning at 1 p. m. today at LaSalle Park.

The concert, produced by WWWSAM 1400 Solid Gold Soul and the Buffalo Funk Fest Committee, features a lineup that includes the All Star Band, the Old-School B-Boys, Will Holton and the JWN Band.

Sponsors include Masten Councilman Demone Smith, University Councilwoman Bonnie Russell, State Sen. Antoine Thompson, D-Buffalo, Carmen Sims (Rick James’ brother) and LP Ciminelli.

TCM presents a day of Angela Lansbury movies

Angela Lansbury
all fall down

Angela Lansbury is the featured actress in the TCM Summer Under the Stars on Sunday, August 23, 2009. Lansbury is a versatile actress who has portrayed innocent girls, evil mothers, scheming maids, itches, free spirits sleuths and even a singing teapot. Lansbury became a household name with the television series “Murder She Wrote,” but before that series she had a long movie and stage career. Movies being featured on TCM include The Angela Lansbury in Gaslight Public Domain WikipediaHarvey Girls, Tenth Avenue Angel, A Lawless Street, All Fall Down, The Manchurian Candidate, The Reluctant Debutante, Bedknobs and Broomsticks, Gaslight, Kind Lady, Death on the Nile, The Picture of Dorian Gray and Season of Passion.

The Harvey Girls at 6:00 AM

The Harvey Girls, 1946, is set in the Southwest in the late 1800’s. The musical score was a tribute to the railroad that helped to win the west. “On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe.” Was a hit and won the Oscar® for Best Song. The cast of The Harvey Girls includes Judy Garland, John Hodiak, Ray Bolger, Angela Lansbury, Marjorie Main, Cyd Charisse and Ben Carter.

Tenth Avenue Angel at 8:00 AM

Tenth Avenue Angel, 1948, features Margaret O’Brien who was a child actress. The cast includes Margaret O’Brien, Angela Lansbury, George Murphy, Phyllis Thaxter, Warner Anderson, Rhys Williams and Barry Nelson.

A Lawless Street at 9:30 AM

A Lawless Street, 1955, is the story of a Marshal with a past that comes back to haunt him. The cast includes Randolph Scott, Angela Lansbury, Warner Anderson, Jean Parker, Wallace Ford, John Emery, James Bell, Ruth Donnelly, Michael Pate, Don Megowan and Jeanette Nolan.

All Fall Down at 11:00 AM

All Fall Down, 1961, is the story of Berry-Berry Willart (Warren Beatty), a irresponsible ladies man who causes a family crises when he visits his family in Cleveland. The cast includes Eva Marie Saint, Warren Beatty, Karl Malden, Angela Lansbury, Brandon De Wilde.

The Manchurian Candidate at 1:00 PM

The Manchurian Candidate, 1926, is a political satire and thriller that enjoys cult status. The cast includes Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Angela Lansbury, Janet Leigh, Leslie Parrish and James Gregory.

Private Screenings: Angela Lansbury at 3:15 PM

“The Summer Under the Stars” day with Angela Lansbury features a interview in which Lansbury speaks with TCM host Robert Osborne.

The Reluctant Debutante at 4:15 PM

The Reluctant Debutante, 1958, is the story of a young girl hwose parents prepare for her society debut. The cast includes Rex Harrison, Kay Kendall, John Saxon, Sandra Dee, Angela Lansbury, Peter Myers and Ambrosine.

Bedknobs and Broomsticks at 6:00 PM

Bedknobs and Broomsticks, 1978, is about the adventures of a witch apprentice and the three children she looks after during World War II. The cast includes Angela Lansbury, David Tomlinson, Roddy McDowall, Sam Jaffe and John Ericson.

Gaslight at 8:00 PM

Gaslight, 1944, is the classic movie about a wife who is being driven insane by her sinister husband. Gaslight won Oscars for Best Actress (Ingrid Bergman), Best Picture, Best Actor (Boyer), Best Supporting Actress (Angela Lansbury), Best Screenplay and Best Black and White Cinematography. Gaslight was directed by George Cukor, The cast includes Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman, Joseph Cotton, Dame May Whitty and Angela Lansbury.

Kind Lady at 10:00 PM

Kind Lady, 1951, is a tale about the dangers of allowing strangers into you home and life and includes blackmail, murder and extortion as part of the plot. The cast includes Ethel Barrymore, Maurice Evans, Angela Lansbury, Keenan Wynn and Betsy Blair.

Death on the Nile at 11:30 PM

Death on the Nile, 1978, is a star studded Agatha Christie adaptation about a pleasure cruise that turns into a crime scene. The cast includes Peter Ustinov, Jane Birkin, Lois Chiles, Bette Davis, Mia Farrow, George Kennedy, Angela Lansbury, David Niven, Maggie Smith, Jack Warden, Olivia Hussey and Jon Finch.

The Picture of Dorian Gray at 2:00 AM

The Picture of Dorian Gray, 1945, is the creepy story of a man who doesn’t age. The cast includes Hurd Harfield, George Sanders, Angela Lansbury, Donna Reed, Peter Lawford, Lowell Gilmore, Reginald Owen and Miles Mander.

Season of Passion at 4:00 AM

Season of Passion, 1961, has a cast that includes Ernest Borgnine, Anne Baxter, John Mills, Angela Lansbury, Vincent Ball, Janette Craig and Ethel Gabriel.

All times are Eastern Time.

A happy medium


wilco tour

Jeff Tweedy? Isn’t he that miserable cut of a curmudgeon from Wilco? JIM CARROLL is surprised to find otherwise. The longtime Wilco frontman is all good cheer as he describes getting out of Chicago to record, touring little-known baseball stadiums – and jamming with his rocker son

AFTER ABOUT 10 minutes of friendly banter, you begin to wonder if it’s really Jeff Tweedy on the other end of the phone. This guy is laughing and wisecracking like he’s trying out for a comedy festival. Perhaps the newfangled phone system in his management office has accidentally connected you with someone else called Jeff Tweedy in the greater Chicago area?

It doesn’t add up. Isn’t Tweedy supposed to be a dour, unhappy, miserable cut of a curmudgeon? Isn’t this the dude who tried to cure his demons with pills and ended up in rehab? Isn’t he the band leader who kept chopping and changing the line-up like some sort of indie-rock James Brown?

Tweedy snorts with laughter once again.

“Well, it depends on who you ask,” he says about his grumpy rep. “I did an interview with someone in Spain a while ago and they said that they knew I was very, very, very sad and that they liked that.”

There’s another giggle from the Windy City before he continues. “To be honest, I think a song like Heavy Metal Drummer is pretty funny, not ha-ha-ha, laugh-out-loud funny, but it’s funny. Casino Queen , too, from A.M . is humorous.

“Actually, every record has had its funny track and it’s been a part of the band, but it’s not a part of the band that people have focused on before because of the perceived seriousness of a lot of the other material. I think this time we’re definitely laughing more. It might have something to do with the first song you put on a record, and the first song here has definitely got some humour.”

Tweedy is talking about Wilco (The Song) , the opening salvo on their seventh album, Wilco (The Album) . It’s an optimstic, tongue-in-cheek battle cry, with Tweedy nodding and winking as he provides a shoulder for the masses to cry on. “Wilco,” he croons to the listener, “Wilco will love you baby.”

The rest of the album is just as cheery and upbeat, as befits this year’s only record with artwork of a camel on a roof standing next to a table with a cake on it. What we get here is a perfect match of the band’s mellow mood swings ( One Wing could well have been plucked from their last album, Sky Blue Sky ) cosying up to their more experimental side (the powerful, uneasy Bull Black Nova has some of that Yankee Hotel Foxtrot hooch running through its veins).

It is also, remarkably, their first record to feature the same line-up as the album before it. Given the band’s previous form in turning a simple album release into a bit of a soap opera, are we now dealing with a drama-free Wilco?

“I don’t know where people get the idea that every Wilco record is supposed to have drama,” says Tweedy – with a laugh. “Okay, I guess, historically speaking, we’ve had our fair share of ups and downs. I’m not the master of the universe, so the next record might be completely different in that regard, though I’m not planning it that way. Let’s just say that there’s a noticable lack of drama in the eyes of people paying attention to us.”

Whatever about the lack of drama, the ambition that has driven Tweedy for more than a quarter-century – since his days as a member of The Plebes back in Belleville, Illinois – is still very much present and correct.

“Yeah, I’m ambitious, I don’t want to make the best Wilco record, I want to make the best record full stop. I know that’s impossible, but that’s part of the reason why it’s fun to keep trying.

“I’m aware, too, that I’m always competing with Wilco in the eyes of the listener and our earlier records. That’s been the way for a long time. When Wilco started, we were competing against Uncle Tupelo. It’s never changed anything about what I do when I go into a recording studio. You can only do the best you can do, and that’s what I strive for.”

One reason for the stress-free gestation of Wilco (The Album) could be that it wasn’t put together in Chicago. The band found themselves in New Zealand working on a charity record in Neil Finn’s studio and decided to stay on. It proved to be a good idea.

“We’d a great time in New Zealand and gotten really comfortable in Neil’s studio, and so it seemed really natural to stay down there and get some of the basic tracks down. We stayed an extra week or so and we got a lot done. It was way more efficient to do that because, strangely, we worked a lot faster than we’d ever work in Chicago.

“When you’re only responsible for feeding yourself, it makes it a lot easier to focus on just making rock music. When you’re in your hometown, though, as much as everyone around us understands that this is our job, it’s hard to stop normal life from interfering with the recording process.

“I think it’s really good and healthy to get away from all your stuff once in a while, because rock’n’roll is built on kicking against your limitations. One of the things we’ve done over the years is build this loft space in Chicago and fill it up with all the coolest gear we can find. But it’s also good to take yourself out of that environment and force yourself to work with what’s to hand, and that’s what made New Zealand such an enjoyable trip.

“It was also about the longest I’ve been able to stay anywhere away from home – other than Ireland, oddly enough. We were in Ireland for about a month working on the Mermaid Avenue album a few years ago. I have to say that New Zealand’s weather beats your weather hands down.”

In early 2008, Wilco took over the Riviera venue in Chicago for a couple of nights to perform their entire recorded repetoire over a few shows.

“After years of touring with this line-up,” says Tweedy, “I’ve noticed that people would request songs which we didn’t know or hadn’t played. It got me thinking, and I said to the others, why don’t we just play all these songs at the one time? If we’re going to call ourselves Wilco, let’s go and play all the Wilco songs and lay claim to all of these past records and do something that no other line-up of the band had ever done. I think this line-up plays some of those older songs a whole lot better than the line-up which created them.”

Some former members might disagree. The best known ex-Wilco player is the late Jay Bennett, the multi-instrumentalist who was publicly fired in 2001. Bennett died from a drug overdose in May, a few weeks after issuing a legal suit against Wilco alleging breach of contract and unpaid royalties.

While Tweedy contests Bennett’s claims (“he was suing me for a contract we didn’t have and over a movie I did not produce”), there is a note of sadness about the death. “Jay was a really amazing musician and he really helped Wilco to grow as a band during the years he was with us. It was a tragic, sad end.”

The disintegration in their relationship was vividly captured in the documentary I Am Trying to Break Your Heart , a riveting insight into how a band deal with all manner of problems, from getting dropped by their label to inner-band strife and creative conflict.

You’d imagine, then, that Wilco would be reluctant to have any cameramen in their faces for an extended period ever again. Nonetheless, the band invited film-makers Brendan Canty and Christoph Green to shoot Ashes of American Dreams , which documents the band on a tour of some colourful US venues.

“Fortunately, or unfortunately, for the film-makers, nothing extraordinary happened other than the music,” says Tweedy. “Sam Jones was just in the right place at the right time with I Am Trying to Break Your Heart . The worse things got for us, the better they got for him.

“I’m not opposed to people coming round to document things. I still have a pretty laissez-faire attitude to the whole thing. I don’t think we have an image worth spending that much time and energy trying to control.”

As the new documentary follows Wilco to Nashville, Tulsa, Mobile and New Orleans, there is a strong sense of a disappearing country, where places with strong regional identities are slowly becoming more and more homogenised.

Tweedy says the film and the band’s recent tour of minor-league baseball parks are “not part of some broader band philosophy on America”, but more an attempt to show different environments to the world.

“I have an ambivalence about America, which is hard for people outside of America to grasp. People outside America see a lot of chest-thumping, and it’s very much a love or hate thing. I think most Americans are somewhere in the middle, where there are some things which feel very communal and feel like home, and other things we are deeply ashamed of.

“The whole slant of the Ashes of American Dreams movie and us playing these baseball parks earlier in the summer has much to do with the band’s desire not to play in sterile, corporate environments if we can avoid them.They’re just the kind of places we gravitate towards because they feel good to play music in.

“They’re places we see, in some romantic way maybe, as the best parts of America and they’re places which don’t really tend to exist anymore.”

These days, the Wilco frontman isn’t the only Tweedy in the music business. Spencer, his 13-year-old son, is playing drums and raising teenage hell with his own band, The Blisters.

When Tweedy talks about his relationship with his son, parental pride is very much to the fore. But there is also the sort of philosophy about making music that has served Tweedy and Wilco so well since they started out in 1994.

“We hang out and play music together all the time. I think he’s got a lot of advice from myself and my wife, who ran a rock club for many years, and he’s learned from other musicians and the guys in the band.

“I think the main thing we’ve tried to instil in Spencer is that music is something to be enjoyed. I feel I’ve tried to live my life in a way which shows that to him as much as say it to him. Music is part of your life, and it enriches your perspective and appreciation for being alive.

“Anything which interferes with that is to be shunned and avoided if you chose to make your living from music. It’s too high a price to pay if you’re going to sacrifice your enjoyment of music to get ahead.”

Wilco (The Album) is out now on Nonesuch. Wilco play Vicar Street in Dublin on August 27th and 28th.

Actor Antwon Tanner pleads guilty in scheme in NYC

antwon tanner
antwon tanner

NEW YORK – "One Tree Hill" actor Antwon Tanner has pleaded guilty to selling more than a dozen Social Security numbers for $10,000. Tanner told a federal judge in Brooklyn on Friday that he was a middleman, selling numbers someone else provided. He and his lawyer didn't comment on how he got involved in the scheme.

Tanner is expected to get as much as a year in prison at his sentencing, set for Nov. 20.

The 34-year-old actor was charged in April with selling 16 Social Security numbers and three bogus Social Security cards.

Tanner plays the character Skills in the CW series. Representatives for the network didn't immediately return a telephone call Saturday.

Tanner also appeared in the 2005 movie "Coach Carter," starring Samuel L. Jackson.

Patti Davis Playboy

nancy reagan
nancy reagan

Patti Davis (perhaps better known to you as Patti Reagan) did indeed pose for Playboy back in 1994. You can see the cover of the magazine here (SFW). She was also inside the magazine wearing less than just those dark hands and as they're not safe for work we'll not be linking to them.

It has to be said that there's always been an element of epater les bourgeois to Patti Davis' public actions. Daughter of the famously conservative Ronnie and Nancy Reagan her opinions on such things as abortion are a great deal more liberal than theirs are/were. But that's not all.

In the parlance of the day she was "shacked up" with one member of the Eagles (Bernie Leadon) while her father was Governor of California. These days the idea of a couple living together without marriage is quite unsurprising, even if there are areas of the country where people would prefer their daughters didn't do so. But back in the early 1970s it was still quite unusual: and doubly so for the daughter of a prominent conservative politician.

In fact, while she was with Leadon she co-wrote with him a song which appeared on the Eagle's album, "One of These Nights": "I Wish You Peace", a song for which she still gets royalties.

The only slightly puzzling thing is why everyone seems to be searching for the Patti Davis Playboy pictures today.

She has also, to some extent, followed in her mother's footsteps, as an actress in various shows, including Love Boat and Fantasy Island.

Metal guy movie has footage

venom movie
venom movie

As previously reported everywhere in cyberspace besides here, Jon Favreau and several of his actors debuted a big chunk of Iron Man 2 footage at Comic-Con in San Diego in July. Finally, the roughly five minutes of footage has debuted online in gratifying Bootleg-o-Vision right here. What took so long?

Just as promised, you'll see Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury bantering with Robert Downey Jr.'s Tony Stark as he lounges in a giant fake donut in his Iron Man suit, with sunglasses replacing the helmet, eating an actual donut. Marvel at the triumphant return of Garry Shandling as a United States senator butting heads with RDJ's meticulously goateed Stark in some sort of televised hearing. Bask in the indecipherable narration of Mickey Rourke's Ivan Vanko as he builds stuff in a room adorned with the fake periodicals from Iron Man the first, with sudden cuts to both ScarJo's Black Widow jumping around a white room and a very Rocky 4-esque scene of dancers against a giant American flag, Hopefully you'll enjoy Rourke on the racetrack whipping around his electronic Whiplash tendril things like an elderly post-apocalyptic Jump Rope For Heart participant as much as I do.

Close the window after the Black Sabbath-accompanied title screen and you'll miss Sam Rockwell being characteristically slimy as gloved arms dealer Justin Hammer talking to dour and suddenly not-very-Terrence-Howard James Rhodes in a hanger. For the final shot you lucky people get the screen debut of yet another dark-suited and truly awesome 90s-tastic Marvel comics character. With Ghost Rider, Gambit and Venom already making the jump, we're only a Darkhawk and a Carnage away from having the whole awful decade committed to screen.

Sunday Word: Vineyard Vacation

martha s vineyard

Wind and rain usher the First Family to Martha’s Vineyard this afternoon for a weeklong vacation.

But even the vineyard, a popular getaway for Democratic politicians, is no safe haven for President Obama. During his stay Conservatives for Patients’ Rights, a group trying to force the public option out of the health care proposal, plans to run a spot titled “Surf’s Up” on television stations in Martha’s Vineyard and the Boston area.

The anti-war protester Cindy Sheehan also plans to take her case to the traveling president. “I think the new titular head of the empire needs to know that his policies are devastating people as much as the same policies did when Bush was president,” she wrote on her blog Thursday.

Obama’s Vietnam: Earlier this summer a group of historians dined at the White House with Mr. Obama in the very same room where Lyndon B. Johnson made some of his most fateful decisions about the war in Vietnam, reports The Times’s Peter Baker in a Week in Review piece today. In that setting, the comparison between the two presidents, both of whom won elections while committed to a grand domestic agenda and a seemingly vital war, was inevitable.

“He said he has a problem,” said one person who attended that dinner at the end of June, insisting on anonymity to share private discussions. “This is not just something he can turn his back on and walk away from. But it’s an issue he understands could be a danger to his administration.”

Daschle’s in the House: In November President Obama tapped former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle to be the administration’s leading voice on health care. Months later, questions over his taxes derailed his nomination, yet he remains a major influence in the White House and on Capitol Hill while serving as a highly paid adviser to health care industry clients.

“With unrivaled ties on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue, he talks constantly with top White House advisers, many of whom previously worked for him,” The Times’s David Kirkpatrick reports. “He still speaks frequently to the president, who met with him as recently as Friday morning in the Oval Office.”

Mr. Daschle’s clients are poised to benefit from the plan to establish health insurance cooperatives, the plan he has advocated for the last two months as a politically feasible alternative to the government-run insurance plan, Mr. Kirkpatrick reports.

Red Cross Tracking Militants: For the first time, the Red Cross will be able to track dozens of the most dangerous militants held in secret United States prisons in Iraq and Afghanistan, The Times’s Eric Schmitt reports. The reversal of Pentagon policy sheds light on the American detention system overseas and advances the Red Cross’s long fight for more information about the detainees.

Edwards in Retail: In less than a month Elizabeth Edwards, the wife of former North Carolina senator, John Edwards, has gone from bestselling author to furniture saleswoman. In downtown Chapel Hill Saturday she opened a new furniture store called Red Window. Yes, Mr. Edwards was present on the first day of business.

Celebrating Ganesh Chaturthi

vinayaka chavithi katha

Ganesha Chaturthi, the great Ganesha festival, also known as 'Vinayak Chaturthi' or 'Vinayaka Chavithi' is celebrated by Hindus around the world as the birthday of Lord Ganesha. It is observed during the Hindu month of Bhadra (mid-August to mid-September) and the grandest and most elaborate of them, especially in the western India state of Maharashtra, lasts for 10 days, ending on the day of 'Ananta Chaturdashi'.

The Grand Celebration
A life-like clay model of Lord Ganesha is made 2-3 months prior to the day of Ganesh Chaturthi. The size of this idol may vary from 3/4th of an inch to over 25 feet.

On the day of the festival, it is placed on raised platforms in homes or in elaborately decorated outdoor tents for people to view and pay their homage. The priest, usually clad in red silk dhoti and shawl, then invokes life into the idol amidst the chanting of mantras. This ritual is called 'pranapratishhtha'. After this the 'shhodashopachara' (16 ways of paying tribute) follows. Coconut, jaggery, 21 'modakas' (rice flour preparation), 21 'durva' (trefoil) blades and red flowers are offered. The idol is anointed with red unguent or sandal paste (rakta chandan). Throughout the ceremony, Vedic hymns from the Rig Veda and Ganapati Atharva Shirsha Upanishad, and Ganesha stotra from the Narada Purana are chanted.

For 10 days, from Bhadrapad Shudh Chaturthi to the Ananta Chaturdashi, Ganesha is worshipped. On the 11th day, the image is taken through the streets in a procession accompanied with dancing, singing, to be immersed in a river or the sea symbolizing a ritual see-off of the Lord in his journey towards his abode in Kailash while taking away with him the misfortunes of all man. All join in this final procession shouting "Ganapathi Bappa Morya, Purchya Varshi Laukariya" (O father Ganesha, come again early next year). After the final offering of coconuts, flowers and camphor is made, people carry the idol to the river to immerse it.

The whole community comes to worship Ganesha in beautifully done tents. These also serve as the venue for free medical checkup, blood donation camps, charity for the poor, dramatic performances, films, devotional songs, etc. during the days of the festival.

Swami Sivananda Recommends
On the Ganesh Chaturthi day, meditate on the stories connected with Lord Ganesha early in the morning, during the Brahmamuhurta period. Then, after taking a bath, go to the temple and do the prayers of Lord Ganesha. Offer Him some coconut and sweet pudding. Pray with faith and devotion that He may remove all the obstacles that you experience on the spiritual path. Worship Him at home, too. You can get the assistance of a pundit. Have an image of Lord Ganesha in your
house. Feel His Presence in it.

Don't forget not to look at the moon on that day; remember that it behaved unbecomingly towards the Lord. This really means avoid the company of all those who have no faith in God, and who deride God, your Guru and religion, from this very day.

Take fresh spiritual resolves and pray to Lord Ganesha for inner spiritual strength to attain success in all your undertakings.

May the blessings of Sri Ganesha be upon you all! May He remove all the obstacles that stand in your spiritual path! May He bestow on you all material prosperity as well as liberation!

Solheim Cup Sunday pairings

solheim cup sunday pairings

New Delhi, Aug 23, 2009: Solheim Cup Sunday pairings. The Solheim Cup is a biennial golf tournament for professional women golfers contested by teams representing Europe and the United States. It is named for the Norwegian-American golf club manufacturer Karsten Solheim, who was a driving force behind its creation.

The US team is selected by a points system, with American players on the LPGA Tour receiving points for each top-twenty finish on tour. For the European team, up to 2005, only seven players were selected on a points system based on results on the Ladies European Tour (LET).

This allows top European players who compete mainly on the LPGA Tour to be selected to ensure that the European team is competitive. From 2007, only the top five players from the LET will qualify and another four will be selected on the basis of the Women's World Golf Rankings.

This reflects the increasing dominance of the LPGA Tour, where almost all top European players spend most of their time. In addition, each team has a number of "captain's picks", players chosen at the discretion of the team captains, regardless of their point standings, though in practice the captain's picks are often the next ranking players.

Solheim Cup pairings

Suzann Pettersen
Paula Creamer

Becky Brewerton
Angela Stanford

Helen Alfredsson
Michelle Wie

Laura Davies
Brittany Lang

Gwladys Nocera
Juli Inkster

Catriona Matthew
Kristy McPherson

Sophie Gustafson
Brittany Lincicome

Diana Luna
Nicole Castrale

Tania Elosegui
Christina Kim

Maria Hjorth
Cristie Kerr

Anna Nordqvist
Morgan Pressel

Janice Moodie
Natalie Gulbis