Thursday, November 30, 2006

Brazilian Waxing For Men

Wizard of Oz returns to cinemas

 
Judy Garland, Jack Haley and Ray Bolger in The Wizard of Oz
Judy Garland (l) was 16 years old when she made the film
A digitally restored version of 1939 Hollywood classic The Wizard of Oz is to open in UK cinemas next month.

Working from the original three-strip Technicolor negatives, experts at the Warner Bros studio have removed dirt, dust, debris and scratches.

The result, according to the British Film Institute, boasts "amazing image clarity and breathtaking colour".

Based on L Frank Baum's 1900 novel, the film stars Judy Garland as a farm girl transported to a magical kingdom.

Winner of three Academy Awards, it opens in 40 cinemas across the country on 15 December.

Lavish costumes

The three-strip Technicolor process - which combined three strips of coloured film - yielded excellent colour quality but was expensive and difficult to handle.

That, combined with the lavish sets and costumes, swelled the budget to a then enormous $2.7m.

Judy Garland was 16 years old when she won the part of Dorothy - a role she won after MGM decided Shirley Temple's talents were not extensive enough to do it justice.

Wicked, a musical based on the witches in The Wizard of Oz, is currently running in London's West End.


Thursday, November 23, 2006

Gay Cruising Spots In Houston

E 'Philippe Noiret dead monument of art films - Entertainment & Culture - Repubblica.it



PARIS - It 'died today after a long illness, the great French actor Philippe Noiret. This was announced by his agent. He was 76 years. Among the many roles of his long career (130 film in fifty years), focusing on high quality, are particularly dear to the Italian public as the projectionist of Nuovo Cinema Paradiso director Giuseppe Tornatore, Pablo Neruda and the postman Massimo Troisi.

Born in Lille, France October 1, 1930, Noiret ecitazione studied with Roger Blin, then enter the Théatre National Populaire (TNP) by Jean Vilar, where worked for ten years, growing alongside the cabaret with Jean-Pierre Darras.

His film debut - in 1956, in La Pointe courte Agnes Varda - has an occasional taste of everything, but after another five years, his figure began to appear with gradually increasing frequency on the screens of French cinema, even if even in secondary roles. In 1960, uncle in Zazie Zazie in the metro of L. Malle, in 1961 states that all the gold in the world of René Clair, in 1965 in Paris Burning?
of Clément (to quote the most famous names).

In 1969 alongside Michel Piccoli in Alfred Hitchcock's Topaz. But the real popularity came in the 1970's, when interpreting one of four friends who want to commit suicide by dint of food and sex in La Grande Bouffe Marco Ferreri (1973), with which he tours the following year not touch the white woman. Also in 1974, successfully supports the dramatic role offered to him by Bertrand Tavernier in The Watchmaker of Saint-Paul, reconfirming her acting talents in the following year Judge and the murderess and Let the party begin, even Tavernier.

Since 1975, when he says My friends in Mario Monicelli, his career is divided between France and Italy. In our Pese, in fact, over three decades interprets several films, from the Desert of the Tartars Valerio Zurlini (1976) to get to Palermo Connection Francesco Rosi (1990), through the three brothers Rosi (1981), We hope that both female Mario Monicelli (1986), The family of Ettore Scola (1987) and Cinema Paradiso by Giuseppe Tornatore (1988).

At home he continued to work with a clean slate in Tavernier (1981) and life and nothing else (1989). And even the nineties onwards, his career continues non-stop, both at home and abroad. On the small and the big screen.

But enough already this long list of films to understand the scope of his contribution to cinema. Now, with his death, is in mourning. Among the most touching comments that the novantunenne Mario Monicelli: "It was a breed of actor in endangered, which, unfortunately, is disappearing all over the world - says the director - high quality, which came from the old school and the theater. He is also a great friend of Italy. In many Italian films, our characters played with aplomb and truth. "

Monicelli recalls having had with Noiret" relationships do not just work: we were friends. I still remember when my friends call for him to play a chief editor of the 'nation', a toscanaccio he managed to make it credible. "

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Flaky Scalp Smells Funny

Latin Stars Unite for Broadway Cares AIDS Benefit

The worlds of latin music and Broadway are united again Set to at BB Kings Blues Club and Grill on Monday November 20th for the latest edition of "An Evening of Latin Rhythms", a one night only event benefiting Broadway Cares / Equity Fights AIDS.

Broadway legend and Kennedy Center Honoree Chita Rivera will be joined by two time Emmy Award winning actor / writer John Leguizamo and a host of Latin American stars of stage, screen, television and music. Scheduled to appear are Broadway's Tony Award winner Wilson Jermaine Heredia and Daphne Rubin Vega from the original cast of RENT, Natalie Toro, Allen Hidalgo, Wilson Cruz (LOGO TV's Noah's Ark), Justina Machado (HBO's Six Feet Under), John Herrera (The Times They Are A-Changin'), Saundra Santiago (The Sopranos), Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Nilo Cruz, the "Grand Dame of Telenovelas Lupita Ferrer and an ensemble of nineteen Broadway and award winning professional Latin ballroom dancers.

Grammy Award winning trombonist - Jimmy Bosch will be just one of the band of All Star Mambo and Salsa musicians. The evening's music will be orchestrated and conducted by four time Grammy Award winner and Academy Award nominee Ray Santos who will helm the evening's musical journey that will span the jazz and mambo hits of the "Palladium era" through the Cuban "Salsa invasion" of the 1950s and 60s that continues to influence today's biggest Latin recording stars.

"Latin Rhythms"' director and choreographer, Richard Amaro (last seen on Broadway in Chita Rivera: The Dancer's Life), conceived the series of "Latin Rhythms" events as a way to celebrate the modern roots of a multi-cultural and multi-racial That body of work spans five decades have passed and Continue to blend culture, music, and dance today.

The event is produced by and benefiting Broadway Cares / Equity Fights AIDS (BC / EFA) Who Distributes funds from year-round events like "Latin Rhythms" to AIDS Service Organizations across the country Combating AIDS in Hispanic Communities, Such as Hispanic AIDS Forum in Manhattan, La Familia Unida AIDS Outreach Project in the Bronx, Bed Bethsaida in Brooklyn, Project VIDA in Chicago, International AIDS Empowerment in El Paso, and Bill's Kitchen and Center Interrencion and Integration Step by Step in Puerto Rico, and Many Others .

"Latin Rhythms" will take place at BB Kings Blues Club and Grill on Monday November 20th.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Rash On Legs From Jcpenney Pants

Anglicans open euthanasia "Christian compassion to prevail" - Foreign - Repubblica.it

LONDON - Christian piety cover - in some cases - euthanasia. He says the Anglican Church, which for the first time opens the possibility if it is passive euthanasia of babies with very serious and irremediable handicap. He explains that it is possible that "there are situations where for a Christian compassion should prevail on the principle that life must be preserved at all costs."

The issue has again become highly topical in Britain a week ago, when a prestigious association of obstetricians and gynecologists British - the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists - proposed euthanasia (in some cases even active) for children who come to light with devastating disability and who are condemned to a life of great suffering and often vegetative.

gynecologists and obstetricians to the problem is not merely an abstract moral nature: the aggressive medical treatment to more or less desperate cases leads to a significant waste of valuable and limited resources that would be much more useful if diverted to the care of children healed. Then, surprisingly a prominent Anglican bishop, the Reverend Tom Butler, head of the diocese of Southwark, has done several of its concerns and recommendations of the Royal College, which has been accused by many to have a Nazi view of life and wish to delete your carrier disabilities.

In a letter to an independent commission on bioethics, which must act on this very delicate and controversial matters and to formulate new guidelines for doctors (the 'Nuffield Council on Bioethics'), the high priest says that "in some circumstances it may be right stop or remove a cure, knowing that it is possible, probable or certain that this will cause death. "

Bishop formula this approach does not personally, but on behalf of the Anglican church. Does not specify what the circumstances are 'exceptional' where you can practice passive euthanasia, but insists that the key decision to be taken "with reluctance" when all other avenues have been explored and discarded. What do babies with severe disabilities (usually it is premature) is a major concern in Britain because of a bitter court battle to keep alive a baby who is now three years, Charlotte Wyatt, born premature three months. At birth

Charlotte weighed just five hundred grams. Parents were able to keep it alive despite the negative opinion of doctors who would not do it at any price. Despite the great damage to the brain and lungs Charlotte has survived in a vegetative state and fed artificially. Meanwhile, the parents separated and left her daughter in the hospital for which you are now looking for a family willing to adoption. In the Netherlands, the European country where euthanasia is practiced more, children who are born with an advance of more than 25 weeks are left to die.

Friday, November 10, 2006

Best Brazilian Waxing In St Louis

London, discovered a new deposit in the Caravaggio abandoned as a copy - Entertainment & Culture - Repubblica.it



LONDON - For over a century had left a deposit in the Royal Collection. Now it turns out that the painting was not simply a copy of "Calling of St. Peter and St. Andrew," but an original painting by Caravaggio of the seventeenth century.

The painting bought by Charles I in principle, was rendered unrecognizable by the dirt and the ravages of time and was taken to a simple copy. But Professor Maurizio Marini proposed restoration work and then the new truth about the painting.

The painting, oil on canvas, measuring 140 cm to 160 cm and will be exhibited next year at the Queen's Gallery at The Art of Italy in Buckingham Palace from March 30, 2007 until January 2008.

International Harvester 1466

Vocalist Audrey Silver Appearing At Sweet Rhythm Tuesday, December 5th sets at 8pm and 9:30 pm



Vocalist Audrey Silver Appearing At



Sweet Rhythm
88 Seventh Ave South
(bet. Bleecker & Grove)
212-255-3626
http://www.sweetrhythmny.com/

Tuesday, December 5th
sets at 8pm and 9:30pm

Jon Cowherd - Piano
John Hart - Guitar
Joe Fitzgerald - Bass
Anthony Pinciotti - Drums

link to website:
http://www.audreysilver.com



"... A sincere, multi-talented singer and an intelligent entertainer with class and vibrant originality.  You will love her lyrical style... and luxurious voice.  This woman is on her way to stardom."
New York Monthly Herald, May 2006

"Her voice rings true, with lovely tone and fine diction. She seems to pick the right tempo for each song she chooses. The ballads don't just die there— they move! And most of all, when there is a tempo, she swings!!! I dug it. You'll dig it too."
– Bob Dorough, Singer/Pianist

"Audrey Silver has that rare quality of light infectious swing that lights up her tall willowy persona."
– Mark Murphy, Vocalist







 


Saturday, November 4, 2006

How To Change A Diverter Valve

Patti Austin to Perform at Koger Center



COLUMBIA — She made her debut at the Apollo Theater at age four and had a contract with RCA Records when she was only five. Quincy Jones and Dinah Washington have proclaimed themselves as her godparents.

By the late 1960s Patti Austin (pictured) was a prolific session musician and commercial jingle singer. By the 1980s she was signed to Jones’ Qwest Records and she began having hits. She charted 20 R&B songs between 1969 and 1991 and had success on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart, where she hit number one in 1981 with “Do You Love Me?’

The album containing that hit, “Every Home Should Have One,” also produced her biggest mainstream hit. “Baby, Come To Me,” a duet with James Ingram, peaked at number 73 on the Hot 100 in early 1982. After being featured as the love theme in a prominent storyline on the soap opera “General Hospital,” the song re-entered the pop chart in October and went to number one in early 1983.

In 1991, she recorded the duet “You Brought Me Love” with openly gay music legend Johnny Mathis, which was received with critical acclaim. That same year she was invited to be a guest on a Johnny Mathis television special that was broadcast across North America.

Coming up in November at the Koger Center, the jazz, R&B and dance music diva will undoubtedly take Columbia by storm.

Long a friend of the LGBT community, Austin was endeared to queer fans with a number of dance music classics that kept gays and lesbians hoping on dance floors throughout the ’80s.

Thursday, November 2, 2006

Anyone Take Valium While Breastfeeding?

BBC NEWS - 'Only 50 years left' for sea fish

'Only 50 years left' for sea fish
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website


There will be virtually nothing left to fish from the seas by the middle of the century if current trends continue, according to a major scientific study.

Stocks have collapsed in nearly one-third of sea fisheries, and the rate of decline is accelerating.

Writing in the journal Science, the international team of researchers says fishery decline is closely tied to a broader loss of marine biodiversity.

But a greater use of protected areas could safeguard existing stocks.

"The way we use the oceans is that we hope and assume there will always be another species to exploit after we've completely gone through the last one," said research leader Boris Worm, from Dalhousie University in Canada.

"What we're highlighting is there is a finite number of stocks; we have gone through one-third, and we are going to get through the rest," he told the BBC News website.

Steve Palumbi, from Stanford University in California, one of the other scientists on the project, added: "Unless we fundamentally change the way we manage all the ocean species together, as working ecosystems, then this century is the last century of wild seafood."

Spanning the seas

This is a vast piece of research, incorporating scientists from many institutions in Europe and the Americas, and drawing on four distinctly different kinds of data.

Catch records from the open sea give a picture of declining fish stocks.

In 2003, 29% of open sea fisheries were in a state of collapse, defined as a decline to less than 10% of their original yield.

Bigger vessels, better nets, and new technology for spotting fish are not bringing the world's fleets bigger returns - in fact, the global catch fell by 13% between 1994 and 2003.

Historical records from coastal zones in North America, Europe and Australia also show declining yields, in step with declining species diversity; these are yields not just of fish, but of other kinds of seafood too.

Zones of biodiversity loss also tended to see more beach closures, more blooms of potentially harmful algae, and more coastal flooding.

Experiments performed in small, relatively contained ecosystems show that reductions in diversity tend to bring reductions in the size and robustness of local fish stocks. This implies that loss of biodiversity is driving the declines in fish stocks seen in the large-scale studies.

The final part of the jigsaw is data from areas where fishing has been banned or heavily restricted.


These show that protection brings back biodiversity within the zone, and restores populations of fish just outside.

"The image I use to explain why biodiversity is so important is that marine life is a bit like a house of cards," said Dr Worm.

"All parts of it are integral to the structure; if you remove parts, particularly at the bottom, it's detrimental to everything on top and threatens the whole structure.

"And we're learning that in the oceans, species are very strongly linked to each other - probably more so than on land."

Protected interest

What the study does not do is attribute damage to individual activities such as over-fishing, pollution or habitat loss; instead it paints a picture of the cumulative harm done across the board.

Even so, a key implication of the research is that more of the oceans should be protected.

But the extent of protection is not the only issue, according to Carl Gustaf Lundin, head of the global marine programme at IUCN, the World Conservation Union.

"The benefits of marine-protected areas are quite clear in a few cases; there's no doubt that protecting areas leads to a lot more fish and larger fish, and less vulnerability," he said.

"But you also have to have good management of marine parks and good management of fisheries. Clearly, fishing should not wreck the ecosystem, bottom trawling being a good example of something which does wreck the ecosystem."

But, he said, the concept of protecting fish stocks by protecting biodiversity does make sense.

"This is a good compelling case; we should protect biodiversity, and it does pay off even in simple monetary terms through fisheries yield."

Protecting stocks demands the political will to act on scientific advice - something which Boris Worm finds lacking in Europe, where politicians have ignored recommendations to halt the iconic North Sea cod fishery year after year.

Without a ban, scientists fear the North Sea stocks could follow the Grand Banks cod of eastern Canada into apparently terminal decline.

"I'm just amazed, it's very irrational," he said.


"You have scientific consensus and nothing moves. It's a sad example; and what happened in Canada should be such a warning, because now it's collapsed it's not coming back."

Wednesday, November 1, 2006

Elevator Shoes In Las Vegas

toll to enter the center by car Milan will start in February - news - Repubblica.it

MILANO - Partirà dal prossimo 19 febbraio la prima sperimentazione italiana di "pollution charge", la tassa antinquinamento imposta a chi entra in automobile in un centro urbano. A fare da apripista Milan will be, including where to access the inside of the railway line will need to pay a toll of between two and ten euro. The measure, also announced and widely disputed by several categories, was officially introduced into the "mobility plan" delivered to the 2006-2011 city assessors with a lot of rates and regulation.

If Italy is the first, is not so abroad, where similar experiences have been successfully adopted in Oslo, London and Stockholm. Unlike other northern European cities, Milan has decided to introduce a rate proportional to the level of pollution of the vehicles that will be divided into five different classes.

One that will take them away on February 19 will be an initial pilot phase. The area on which town will be worth the ticket covers about 60 square kilometers, equivalent to 33% of the municipal area, and covers a population of 774 000 inhabitants, 59% of the total residents in the municipality of Milan. In this same area, so "limited" in the resident population, enter the other hand about 65% of the vehicles of non-residents.

As for the resident and domiciled in Milan, will have the option to purchase an annual pass, a discounted rate of respectively 40, 100 and 200 € for vehicles in Class 3, 4 and 5. The time slot is envisaged between 7 and 18 of every weekday. From October 15 the "pollution charge" will apply to the scheme and increased, both in terms of the price categories of cars.

According to the municipality, the access control will be provided by "electronic portals with video systems approved for the license plate." Then "there will be no obstacles" to the traffic flow, "since there are no physical barriers" to the inputs. Initially it will buy the ticket in a manner similar to those currently used for parking. Then from October 15, 2007 you can use maps to scale, credit cards via the Internet, call center or ATM, or SMS (with direct debit amount on the calling card) or cash at the point of sale such as tobacco.

The introduction of the tax, the commissioner said Edoardo Croci, "is a great opportunity to reduce traffic and reduce pollution by generating significant resources to be devoted to strengthening the financing of public transport and other measures of environmental policy" .