Thursday 4 October 2012

Burned-out Conn. bell factory resumes production

EAST HAMPTON, Conn. (AP) — The 180-year-old New England company that made the little bell that rings every time an angel gets its wings in the Christmas classic "It's a Wonderful Life" has resumed production in time for the holidays, four months after its 19th-century factory burned down.

Over the past few weeks, employees working at a temporary factory set up in a rented warehouse across the street from Bevin Bros. Manufacturing Co. began filling customer orders, including the annual one from the Salvation Army for the steel and brass bells it uses during its kettle drives.

The resumption of bellmaking, announced with fanfare Wednesday by Matthew Bevin, the sixth-generation owner of Bevin Bros., was welcomed by many in Belltown USA, as this town of 13,000 people 20 miles from Hartford has long called itself. Bevin Bros. is the last bell manufacturer in a town that had more than 30 of them generations ago.

Eric Fuller, an assistant manager at a hardware store, said it would be difficult to imagine an end to the company in a town where even the public school mascot is the bell-ringer. Bells are pictured on the town seal and on street and welcome-to-East Hampton signs.

"It's the town's identity," he said. "It's important for the long-time residents."

Matthew Bevin, a 45-year-old businessman who fondly recalls putting "tongues" on bells as a child and now lives in Louisville, Ky., has vowed to build a new factory to replace the one destroyed by fire during a lightning storm May 27.

He said he is doing it for the employees and the town, and was inspired by his ancestors, who managed to keep the company afloat through technological change, the Depression and cheap oversees competition.

"We're fortunately wired not to quit," he said.

Some employees wiped away tears as they listened to Bevin's announcement.

Austin Gardner, 72, a tool-and-die maker who has worked at the factory for 20 years, said the employees are extremely loyal and happy to get called back. So far, 14 of the 27 employees are back on the job, he said.

"They're grateful to have a job, especially in this economy," Gardner said. He added: "I don't think anybody else would have done what Matt's doing. There's not a whole lot of money to be made in this business."

Bevin Bros. Manufacturing was started in 1832 by four brothers. It made sleigh bells, school bells, wedding bells, doorbells, ship's bells. Bevin Bros. also claims to have invented the bicycle bell. For many years, the New York Stock Exchange opened and closed with a Bevin bell. And the USS Maine, destroyed by an explosion in 1898 that triggered the Spanish-American War, had a bell made by Bevin.

The company also boasts of making the little bell in the beloved 1946 Jimmy Stewart movie "It's a Wonderful Life."

Workers at Bevin Bros. feed massive coils of brass and steel into presses, which stamp out the bells using heavy dies that were recovered from the ruins of the burned-down factory and refurbished.

Bevin said he has spent several hundred thousand dollars on getting the temporary factory running and has no estimate of how much the new one will cost or when it will be ready.

He said he had no fire insurance on the old building, which he had just finished renovating before the blaze, but has received some insurance proceeds against a work stoppage, as well as a state matching grant.

Since the fire, residents have brought bells that have been in their families for years to show Bevin, urging him to keep the company going.

"I've seen glimpses of what it means to them," he said. "And that matters to me."

Michael Maniscalco, town manager, said many people in East Hampton had forgotten why it was dubbed Belltown USA. Now, he said, everyone knows, and folks are inspired by Bevin and his efforts to resurrect the company.

"It's definitely renewing a spirit within our community," he said. "I can see that from this we're going to grow."

___

Associated Press writer Michael Melia in Hartford, Conn., contributed to this story.


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Urban relishes peacemaker role on 'Idol'

NEW YORK (AP) — "American Idol" season 12 tapings are just getting under way and Keith Urban has already become more than just a judge: He's also the pacifier on the newly minted panel.

"We're all passionate people and we're learning a new dance and we're all a work in progress," said Urban on Wednesday at the New York Film Festival gala honoring his wife, Nicole Kidman. He likened his role on "Idol" to that of the United Nations.

Rumors of drama between fellow judges Nicki Minaj and Mariah Carey began to swirl as soon as the new panel was announced. A blurry web video released Tuesday by TMZ.com shows what appears to be an argument between Minaj and Carey, spurring on gossip of discontent.

But Urban insisted the group, which also includes veteran judge Randy Jackson, is "getting along." The new season of the Fox singing competition premieres in January.

In the web video Urban is seen raising his hands in defeat next to a seemingly furious Minaj, who is shouting obscenities. A composed Carey is heard saying, "Why do I have a 3-year-old sitting around me?"

When asked what it feels like to be stationed between the dueling divas Urban cracked a wry smile.

"Best seat in the house," he said.

_____

Follow Nicole Evatt on Twitter at http://twitter.com/NicoleEvatt


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Jewelry stolen from Julianne Moore's NYC home

NEW YORK (AP) — Approximately $127,000 worth of jewelry has been stolen from actress Julianne Moore's New York City brownstone.

Police say a complaint was filed with the NYPD on Oct. 1. They said Thursday that a necklace, bracelets and watches, some by Cartier, were reported missing.

They say the robbery occurred at the home in Manhattan's West Village sometime between June 6 and Aug. 28.

Police say the brownstone was under renovation and about 15 to 25 construction workers had access to the house during that time.

There have been no arrests and the jewelry has not been recovered. Police are investigating it as a grand larceny.


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Debate thrusts Big Bird into presidential campaign

NEW YORK (AP) — Big Bird has never been so hot.


"Saturday Night Live," Jimmy Fallon, Piers Morgan, the "Today" show and "Good Morning America" all asked for appearances from the "Sesame Street" character on Thursday after he was unexpectedly thrust into the presidential campaign by Mitt Romney.


Sesame Workshop says the giant yellow Muppet is declining all appearances, but there was this tweet from Big Bird on the Sesame Street account: "My bed time is usually 7:45, but I was really tired yesterday and fell asleep at 7! Did I miss anything last night?"


Yes, Bird. During Wednesday's debate with President Barack Obama, Romney called for cutting federal funding to PBS, despite saying, "I love Big Bird." It renewed a long-running debate over subsidies to public broadcasting.


"I'm going to stop the subsidy to PBS," the former Massachusetts governor, a Republican, said during a deficit-cutting discussion. "I'm going to stop other things. I like PBS. I love Big Bird. I actually like you, too, Jim (Lehrer, PBS newsman and debate moderator). But I'm not going to ... keep on spending money on things to borrow money from China to pay for it."


Obama brought up his opponent's plans for Big Bird during a campaign stop Thursday in Madison, Wis.


"I just want to make sure I've got this straight: He'll get rid of regulations on Wall Street, but he's going to crack down on 'Sesame Street,'" Obama said of Romney. "Thank goodness somebody's finally cracking down on Big Bird! Who knew that he was responsible for all these deficits! Elmo's got to watch out!"


PBS chief Paula Kerger said she "just about fell off the sofa" when the issue suddenly came up during the debate. She said that if the subsidy goes, so will some PBS stations.


Federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting totals $450 million this year, accounting for about 15 percent of the CPB's budget, she said. Federal money supplements the budgets of PBS' 179 stations nationally. For some of the smaller stations in rural areas, this subsidy accounts for more than half of their yearly budget, so many can't operate without it.


Considering Romney stressed the importance of education, she said she hopes he realizes the extent of educational programming that PBS offers. Four out of five children under age 5 watch public television, where "Sesame Street" is a long-running hit, she said.


"To me, public television is like mom and apple pie," she said. "Maybe it's because I'm just too close to it. Maybe it's because I talk to so many people for whom public television is a lifeline."


But public broadcasting funding has been a frequent target of congressional Republicans, who believe PBS and National Public Radio favor liberal points of view.


"It is demoralizing to have our work put in the middle of this debate," Kerger said. "We don't belong here."


The issue quickly became a hot topic on social media, where Twitter reported a peak of 17,000 tweets per second about Big Bird. The hashtag (hash)SaveBigBird quickly sprouted up.


New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof tweeted: "Hey, I figured out how Romney will balance the budget: sale of TV rights to broadcast the decapitation of Big Bird."


For several years, "Sesame Street" has produced videos and other materials for the Pentagon to help children deal with parents' absences during tours of duty as well as other stresses suffered by the children of troops. Asked at a Pentagon briefing whether the Defense Department wants to see its relationship with the program continue, press secretary George Little sidestepped the question.


"I will say that we've had a long-lasting and effective partnership with 'Sesame Street' and they have supported military children," Little said. "But I'm not going to get into politics here — I wouldn't want to ruffle any feathers, so to speak."


Sesame Workshop, the producers who make "Sesame Street," noted that while it is not part of PBS, it depends on the stations to distribute its work.


"Sesame Workshop is a nonpartisan, nonprofit educational organization," said Sherrie Westin, Sesame Workshop spokeswoman. "We do not comment on campaigns, but we're happy we can all agree that everyone likes Big Bird."


___


Associated Press writer Pauline Jelinek in Washington contributed to this report.


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Kennedy unveils Picasso painting at JFK Library

BOSTON (AP) — A Picasso painting the famous artist created in denouncing war has come to the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Cuban missile crisis.


Caroline Kennedy unveiled the "Rape of the Sabine Women" on Thursday, on loan through Jan. 6 from the Museum of Fine Arts. She said it shows the fear and uncertainty of the time.


"The Cuban missile crisis was really the most dangerous time in my father's presidency, and there really was a risk that the United States and the Soviet Union might go to war," she said. "I think there's a lot that current leaders can learn from (it)."


She called the 1962 crisis over Soviet missiles in Cuba and subsequent ease of tensions her father's "greatest challenge."


The painting, a 6-foot-by-4-foot vertical oil on canvas, depicts in bold colors two armed men with spear and sword raised toward each other, standing over a woman and wailing child. Picasso started the work soon after the 13-day crisis, referencing a fabled abduction of Sabine women by ancient Romans.


Legend has it, Rome faced a shortage of marriageable women after it was founded or perhaps sought an alliance with a nearby warlike tribe, the Sabines. Roman leaders invited the Sabines to a feast, only to capture dozens to hundreds of Sabine virgins. The Sabines later tried to rescue the women, who reminded them the Romans were now the men's relatives by marriage and brokered a truce.


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Rush, Public Enemy among Rock Hall of Fame noms

Rush, Deep Purple, Public Enemy and N.W.A. are among the group of first-time nominees for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

They join returnees Heart, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, Randy Newman, Donna Summer and Kraftwerk among the 15 artists vying for entry.

Even in the iPod age, the list of nominees up for induction in 2013 is as eclectic as they come. Nominees differ wildly in sound, origin and influence, ranging from the enduring prog rock of Canadian trio Rush and Procol Harum to German proto-electronica act Kraftwerk, the disco of Chic and Summer to the New Orleans funk of The Meters and the blues of Albert King and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band.

Motown also is represented by first-ballot entries The Marvelettes.

Joel Peresman, President and CEO of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation, acknowledged the extreme variety of this year's nominee class in a Thursday news release.

"The definition of 'rock and roll' means different things to different people, but as broad as the classifications may be, they all share a common love of the music," Peresman said. "This year we again proudly put forth a fantastic array of groups and artists that span the entire genre that is 'rock and roll.'"

A group of 600 artists, music historians and members of the industry will choose 2013's inductees. They will be honored April 18 in Los Angeles.

It's the sixth time on the ballot for Summer, but the first since her death in May at age 63. Chic is on the ballot for the seventh time since 2003.

___

Online:

http://rockhall.com

___

Follow AP Music Writer Chris Talbott: http://twitter.com/ Chris_Talbott.


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Ann Romney to guest-host 'Good Morning America'

NEW YORK (AP) — Ann Romney is guest-hosting "Good Morning America" next Wednesday.

ABC says the wife of Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney will be on hand at the morning news program for its 8 a.m. (Eastern time) hour. Joining George Stephanopoulos at the anchor desk, Mrs. Romney will be filling in for co-anchor Robin Roberts, who is on extended medical leave.

ABC says it is in discussions with first lady Michelle Obama for a similar guest appearance when her schedule allows.

Stephen Colbert, Oprah Winfrey and the cast of "Modern Family" have previously been announced to substitute for Roberts, who had a bone marrow transplant last month.

Roberts' absence came as "Good Morning America" has overtaken NBC's "Today" show in the ratings after years in second place.


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ABBA's Agnetha Faltskog prepares comeback

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Agnetha Faltskog, one of the former members of Swedish pop band ABBA, is preparing for a comeback and has returned to the recording studio after more than eight years of musical silence.

The singer's spokesman, Staffan Linde, told The Associated Press Thursday that the 62-year-old Faltskog is working alongside Swedish songwriter Jorgen Elofsson, who has previously penned and produced tunes for megastars including Britney Spears, Celine Dion and boy band Westlife. He could not say when the new album will be released.

After ABBA split in the early 1980s, Faltskog pursued a solo career for a few years, but then went into a music hiatus for most of the 1990s. Her last album, "My Colouring Book," contained cover songs and was released in 2004.


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Nurse Ratched actress can't stand 'Cuckoo's Nest'

SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Louise Fletcher says she can't bear to watch "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" because the Nurse Ratched character she won an Oscar for is so cruel.

"I find it too painful," said Fletcher, 78. "It comes with age. I can't watch movies that are inhumane."

Fletcher is returning this weekend to the institution where the movie was made in 1975, the Oregon State Hospital in Salem, the Statesman Journal reported (http://stjr.nl/WjMOTJ ).

The hospital, long under fire for inadequate programs and crumbling facilities, has been rebuilt in recent years. Fletcher is attending the opening of its Museum of Mental Health.

The movie is based on the novel by Oregon writer Ken Kesey. It centers on the struggle between the steely Nurse Ratched and Jack Nicholson's scheming character, Randall McMurphy, who eventually gets a lobotomy for leading a rebellion among the prisoners on his ward.

"I was really shocked in those scenes where I was actually so cruel," Fletcher said.

In 1975, Dr. Dean Brooks, then the superintendent, opened the campus to the cast and crew. Fletcher said she was in the city 11 weeks, filming six days a week. He and Fletcher have stayed in touch — they talk by phone each July 22, their common birthday.

Brooks recalls the actress as being nothing like the character: "I have found her to be angelic."

Fletcher, whose parents are deaf, took time out from filming to visit students at the Oregon School for the Deaf, he said. He said he's admired how she doted on her parents and cared for them as they aged, and how she dropped everything to spend time with a dying friend in London.

Fletcher said better known actresses turned down the role, and it wasn't until she saw the film for the first time with an audience, in Chicago, that she was convinced she pulled it off.

In scene where McMurphy throws Nurse Ratched against the wall and chokes her in a fit of rage, she said, "they all stood up and cheered in the theater and were stomping their feet. That got to me. I realized, 'Hey, I created a real villain here.'"

___

Information from: Statesman Journal, http://www.statesmanjournal.com


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Louis V, Miu Miu and Elie Saab give grand finale

PARIS (AP) — Marc Jacobs, more than anyone, knows that it's not what you say but how you say it. The Louis Vuitton showman thus capped an incredibly strong Paris fashion week — with help from artist Daniel Buren — by building a life-size shopping mall inside the Louvre.

Understatement is not a word in Jacobs' vocabulary, so a collaboration with the minimalist artist — who made the famed striped columns in Paris' Palais Royal — might have raised eyebrows. But Buren rose to the occasion.

"(The Louvre) was already big, all I did was make it bigger," said Buren, with trademark humor. "It was others that called me a minimalist, not me."

The sky's the limit when you're backed by Europe's richest man and LVMH-owner Bernard Arnault, with whom he mingled before the show.

Meanwhile, Miuccia Prada, who herself presides over a lucrative fashion empire, felled a small forest in aid of her presentation for Miu Miu, one of the final day's other big shows. Fashion insiders clutched wooden invitations as they walked down a wooden "red carpet" and into the auditorium with a 30-meter (yard) wooden runway, and the show's huge wooden-tiered seating.

There was some irony that the collection was held at Paris' grand Environmental Council.

Paris Fashion Week designers are often described as show-stopping, but none more than Elie Saab. The Lebanese designer threw huge graphic chunks of moon rock down the catwalk as set, to evoke his more geometric theme. Unfortunately, one attendee didn't pick up on the visual props and tripped head over heels — slightly delaying the show.

Trends on the ninth exhausting day of the season included prints — both graphic and colored — as well as sheer transparencies and cutouts.

LOUIS VUITTON

What do you get if you mix up the world's most famous checks and Paris' most famous stripes? The answer: Louis Vuitton, whose 1960s style spring-summer fashion show twinned the iconic checked Damier pattern with a set designed by artist Daniel Buren.

Buren created four full-scale escalators, featuring his signature 8.7cm stripes, which wowed spectators inside.

"It's exquisite, beautiful," said 29-year-old Christina Malaki. "What a spectacle."

In fashion terms it was strong, with most of the 64 retro looks delivered in Mary Quant-style checks that made a bold optical statement in black and white, as well as browns, gray and leaf green.

Slightly puffed rounded shoulders, miniskirts, beehives and a few exposed midriffs pointed to one thing: The swinging 60s are back.

The silhouettes — often flat and loose— prioritized the Damier above the female form, which rippled nicely in skirts as the models, who walked in pairs, filed by with handbags.

Louis Vuitton is a house that is proud of its tradition, but also likes to evolve. The collection saw the ubiquitous monogram banished for the first time.

Instead, one recurrent feature was, so say the program notes, "the smallest sequins ever produced."

Thousands of microscopic sequins brought a dazzling metallic shimmer to dresses and skirt suits, though when it was used on the blocked Damier pattern it was slightly too much.

"It's all about being graphic. (Buren's escalators) are a mathematical equation," Jacobs told journalists after the show.

Another math equation will come from the buoyant receipts from this, a highly saleable collection.

It's a fair bet that by next year this bold check will be everywhere.

MIU MIU

Miu Miu's spring-summer 2013 show in Paris had a wintery vibe.

Despite the slightly off-kilter season it was a slick display, with lashings of faux fur on coats and stoles with dyed patterning at the brand often seen as Miuccia Prada's baby sister offshoot.

It picked up nicely on this season's fascination with prints as contrasting explosions on loose skirt suits — sometimes resembling the negative of a photograph.

As ever, it remained demure, but interesting back features graced a few reversed boxy tops. Alongside looks in denim and the prints, it gave the clothes a distinctly cool edge which reached its peak in a few eclectic, asymmetrical pieces.

Only a master like Prada can make a tiny strapped cropped camisole work underneath a thick fur coat, accessorized with leather gloves and jeweled Roman sandals.

Uber-cool actress — and Miu Miu spokesperson — Chloe Sevigny watched from the front row.

ELIE SAAB

Elie Saab, master of the va-va-voom silhouette, broke out of his strict mold for his spring-summer 2013 show in Paris.

The Lebanese designer must have been feeling in an adventurous mood: He dabbled in graphic details and floral prints in Wednesday's show.

But never fear, his bread-and-butter traffic stopping dresses and sequins were still there — in cerulean blue and vermilion. After all, it's what his buyers and celebrity wearers such as singer Taylor Swift on the front row expect and love.

But the palette this season was updated to include a beautiful cobalt, which in turn exploded into fluorescent color prints on gowns, some full length, others above the knee, that fluttered by in silk muslin.

Saab included the odd peplum and some '90s looks with black-and-white geometric lines.

The catwalk set of graphic angular moon rocks signaled to fashion insiders even before the show started that Saab would move in this direction.

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Thomas Adamson can be followed at http:/ /Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP


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Slain TV anchor's mom can sue hospital, workers

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — The mother of a slain Little Rock TV anchor can proceed with a lawsuit claiming outrageous behavior by a hospital and three workers who illegally looked at her daughter's medical files, but an invasion of privacy claim must be dropped, the Arkansas Supreme Court ruled Thursday.

Patricia Cannady's lawyer said they plan to go forward with the suit against St. Vincent Infirmary Medical Center, where Cannady's daughter, Anne Pressly, spent the last days of her life.

"We expect to be able to present this to a jury so that they can decide whether this behavior is something that can be tolerated in a civilized society," said Gerry Schulze, adding that it's too early to say when that might happen.

Cannady's attorneys argued last month that a lower court judge was wrong to throw out her lawsuit against the hospital.

The justices ruled Thursday that Cannady can sue the hospital for outrageous behavior, because that claim is made on her own behalf, not Pressly's. But they upheld a lower court's ruling that Pressly's family cannot seek punitive damages for invasion of the slain woman's privacy.

"The crux of the (lower) court's order was that the outrage claim failed because it was based on the 'same conduct' as the privacy violation claim," Justice Jim Gunter wrote for the court.

However, neither the hospital nor the lower court cited any legal basis to show that two separate claims can't be based on the same conduct, Gunter wrote.

Justice Paul Danielson agreed with the rest of the court's conclusion, but he wrote that the lower court's order didn't find whether Cannady's claim met the requirements for outrage.

Cannady found 26-year-old Pressly unconscious from a severe beating at her home on the morning of Oct. 20, 2008. Pressly, an anchorwoman at KATV, was taken to St. Vincent Infirmary Medical Center, where she clung onto her life for five days before dying Oct. 25.

Curtis Vance, who police say was in Pressly's neighborhood to rob homes, was convicted of capital murder in her death and sentenced to life in prison.

Dr. Jay Holland, a family physician who did not treat Pressly, was accused of looking at Pressly's electronic file from home. In 2009, he, Candida Griffin and Sarah Elizabeth Miller pleaded guilty to wrongful disclosure of individually identifiable health information, a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in prison. In their plea agreements, all three said they viewed the file out of personal curiosity and didn't pass information to other people.

Griffin is a former emergency room unit coordinator at St. Vincent Health System and Miller is a former account representative at St. Vincent Medical Center in Sherwood.

Attorneys for the hospital and Holland argued that the Pulaski County judge correctly relied on case law going back to the 1880s that says intangible injury claims do not survive after someone's death.

Schulze said Thursday that they plan to take that issue up with lawmakers.

"We are all exposed to intrusions upon our private information and the law is going to have to change," he told reporters. "We're not in the 19th century anymore."

Attorneys for the hospital, Holland, Griffin and Miller didn't return phone messages left Thursday.

___

Follow Jeannie Nuss at http://twitter.com/jeannienuss and Andrew DeMillo at http://twitter.com/ademillo .


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Nurse Ratched actress can't stand 'Cukoo's Nest'

SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Louise Fletcher says she can't bear to watch "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" because the Nurse Ratched character she won an Oscar for is so cruel.

"I find it too painful," said Fletcher, 78. "It comes with age. I can't watch movies that are inhumane."

Fletcher is returning this weekend to the institution where the movie was made in 1975, the Oregon State Hospital in Salem, the Statesman Journal reported (http://stjr.nl/WjMOTJ ).

The hospital, long under fire for inadequate programs and crumbling facilities, has been rebuilt in recent years. Fletcher is attending the opening of its Museum of Mental Health.

The movie is based on the novel by Oregon writer Ken Kesey. It centers on the struggle between the steely Nurse Ratched and Jack Nicholson's scheming character, Randall McMurphy, who eventually gets a lobotomy for leading a rebellion among the prisoners on his ward.

"I was really shocked in those scenes where I was actually so cruel," Fletcher said.

In 1975, Dr. Dean Brooks, then the superintendent, opened the campus to the cast and crew. Fletcher said she was in the city 11 weeks, filming six days a week. He and Fletcher have stayed in touch — they talk by phone each July 22, their common birthday.

Brooks recalls the actress as being nothing like the character: "I have found her to be angelic."

Fletcher, whose parents are deaf, took time out from filming to visit students at the Oregon School for the Deaf, he said. He said he's admired how she doted on her parents and cared for them as they aged, and how she dropped everything to spend time with a dying friend in London.

Fletcher said better known actresses turned down the role, and it wasn't until she saw the film for the first time with an audience, in Chicago, that she was convinced she pulled it off.

In scene where McMurphy throws Nurse Ratched against the wall and chokes her in a fit of rage, she said, "they all stood up and cheered in the theater and were stomping their feet. That got to me. I realized, 'Hey, I created a real villain here.'"

___

Information from: Statesman Journal, http://www.statesmanjournal.com


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Smithsonian to lend Dorothy's ruby slippers to UK

WASHINGTON (AP) — Dorothy's ruby slippers from "The Wizard of Oz" are leaving Washington on their first international journey to London's Victoria and Albert Museum.

Judy Garland wore the shoes in the 1939 film in which she played a Kansas farm girl on a magical journey. The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History announced the rare loan of its popular slippers Thursday.

They will be shown with Dorothy's blue-and-white gingham dress in "Hollywood Costume," an exhibit opening Oct. 20 in London. Curators say it's the first time Dorothy's dress and shoes have been together since the movie was filmed. The dress is part of a private collection.

"Oz" was a movie milestone for its extensive color sequences. To make the slippers, a designer dyed the shoes red and attached netting to cover them with red sequins.

The Smithsonian plans to hold a departure ceremony Tuesday. The slippers will return Nov. 21.


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Tough reviews for Jim Lehrer as debate moderator

NEW YORK (AP) — Jim Lehrer may be regretting his decision to come out of semi-retirement and moderate his 12th presidential debate.

The veteran PBS anchor drew caustic social media reviews for his performance on Wednesday, with critics saying he failed to keep control of the campaign's first direct exchange between President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney. The candidates talked over Lehrer's attempts to keep them to time limitations, and his open-ended questions frequently lacked sharpness.

The tough assessments crossed party lines: Republican commentator Laura Ingraham wrote on Twitter that Lehrer seemed "a bit overwhelmed." Comic and Democratic activist Bill Maher bluntly tweeted that "Lehrer sucked."

It's not the night Lehrer would have expected. The 78-year-old moderated 11 presidential debates between 1988 and 2008, and after writing a book last year about his experiences, Lehrer said he was through. But he was persuaded to come back Wednesday to handle the long-awaited contest between Romney and Obama.

Romney, aggressive from the outset, beat back some of Lehrer's attempts to bring structure to the debate. At one point, when Lehrer tried to ask Romney a question, the Republican cut him off by saying of the president, "Everything he said about my tax plan was inaccurate." Then he continued to outline his argument.

Lehrer tried to end the first segment of the debate, hoping to move on to another topic, but Romney stopped him.

"I get the last word of this segment," Romney cut in.

Later, when Lehrer tried to cut off an Obama answer by saying the president's two minutes were up, Obama said he "had five seconds before you interrupted me." The president proceeded to speak for 30 more seconds.

Some of Lehrer's questions were open-ended, encouraging candidates to wander off and make their own points. He asked the candidates to explain the difference between them on ways to cut the federal deficit. He also asked Romney, "Would you have a question you'd like to ask the president about what he just said?"

Some of the commentary on Twitter compared Lehrer to a substitute teacher who had lost control of a classroom. "I'm waiting for one of them to throw a spitball at the teacher ... I mean Jim Lehrer," tweeted Sherri Shepherd of ABC's "The View."

"Regardless of who is winning this debate, Jim Lehrer is losing," tweeted Dan Abrams of ABC News, adding that Obama was "not honest" when he said that Lehrer had done a good job.

Veteran political writer Michael Tomasky of The Daily Best wrote: "Definitely Lehrer's last debate."

Conservative talk show host Dana Loesch tweeted at one point that "Romney just ran right over Lehrer."

Democrats weren't pleased about with Lehrer either. Stephanie Cutter, Obama's deputy campaign manager, told CNN that "I wondered if we needed a moderator since we had Mitt Romney." On MSNBC, commentator Rachel Maddow said that Romney "spent much of the night battling not just President Obama, but also the moderator of the debate, Jim Lehrer. And Mr. Romney won every exchange."

The Huffington Post also tweeted: "Mitt Romney and Barack Obama moderated this debate. Where was Jim Lehrer?"

To add insult to injury, Romney during the debate promised to cut off federal subsidies to PBS, even though he said, "I love PBS, I love Big Bird. I like you, too, Jim."


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Rapper Jim Jones admits guilt in US casino riot

NEW LONDON, Connecticut (AP) — Rapper Jim Jones has pleaded guilty to interfering with police in connection with a February brawl at a Connecticut casino.

The Day newspaper (http://bit.ly/PxbKCt ) reports Jones appeared in New London Superior Court on Tuesday and paid a $1,000 fine to resolve the criminal case.

Jones initially was charged with breach of peace, interfering with police and inciting to riot after the fight in the foyer of the MGM Grand at Foxwoods Resort Casino. The brawl followed a party hosted by Sean "Diddy" Combs in honor of the casino's 20th anniversary.

Jones is a hip-hop artist and actor whose "We Fly High" was one of 2007's top-selling rap tracks. He's one of the Diplomats, a New York-based rap crew. He's identified in court files as Joseph Jones of Newark, N.J.


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Lawyer: 'Melrose' actress chased before NJ crash

SOMERVILLE, N.J. (AP) — A former "Melrose Place" actress charged in a fatal auto accident two years ago was being chased by another driver, her attorney told jurors on the first day of her manslaughter trial Thursday.

A prosecutor countered that Amy Locane-Bovenizer was intoxicated at the time and that caused the crash that killed Helene Seeman and injured her husband, Fred.

Locane-Bovenizer, 40, is charged with aggravated manslaughter and assault by auto and faces up to 30 years in prison if she is convicted.

Attorney Blair Zwillman told a Somerville jury that Locane-Bovenizer was pursued for 4 miles by a woman whose car she had rear-ended, The Star-Ledger reported (http://bit.ly/UiLgMB). He said the woman honked her horn and flashed her lights, causing Locane-Bovenizer to drive nearly 20 mph over the speed limit on narrow country roads.

"Why is she pursuing someone with the most horrendous of distractions possible?" Zwillman asked jurors.

The chase ended when the actress slammed into the Seemans' vehicle as it pulled into a driveway.

In his opening statement, Somerset County Assistant Prosecutor Matthew Murphy said Locane-Bovenizer had eight to 10 drinks at two gatherings before the accident and had a blood-alcohol level three times the legal limit.

"Death was probable, not merely possible," Murphy told jurors. "These circumstances were so extreme that death was probable."

Locane-Bovenizer appeared on 13 episodes of "Melrose Place" in 1992 in the role of Sandy Louise Harling. She also appeared in numerous movies including "Cry-Baby," ''School Ties" and "Secretary."

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Information from: The (Newark, N.J.) Star-Ledger, http://www.nj.com/starledger


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No Doubt settles lawsuit over 'Band Hero' vid game

LOS ANGELES (AP) — No Doubt has settled its lawsuit against gaming giant Activision over the use of band members' likenesses in the video game "Band Hero," court records state.

The settlement was reached Monday, a few weeks before trial was set to begin on the band's claims of fraud, violation of publicity rights, and breach of contract.

Terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

The band's attorney, Bert Deixler, declined comment. Michael Zeller, an attorney for Activision, did not immediately return a phone message.

The band sued Activision Publishing Inc. over a feature in the game that allows players to perform the songs of other artists using the likenesses of No Doubt front woman Gwen Stefani and other band members.

Activision had denied all wrongdoing and argued the idea of "unlocking" unadvertised features of a video game has been around since the early days of the industry.

The game debuted in November 2009 and was a spinoff of Activision's popular "Guitar Hero" game series.

No Doubt's lawsuit was filed after the release of "Band Hero" and claimed it turned the group into a "virtual karaoke circus act."

The case cited instances in which players could use Stefani's avatar to perform suggestive lyrics from the Rolling Stones' hit "Honky Tonk Women," or have a virtual version of bassist Tony Kanal sing his band's hit "Just a Girl" in Stefani's voice.


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Seacrest: No problem with feuding judges

NEW YORK (AP) — Feuding divas on "American Idol"? Ryan Seacrest says that's just great.

The show's host said Wednesday that things got intense between new judges Nicki Minaj and Mariah Carey during a tryout taping the previous day in Charlotte, N.C.

Amid a dispute over a contestant, Minaj announced that she was no longer putting up with "her ... Highness," in a reference to Carey and with a few expletives added in.

Another new judge, Keith Urban, was in the unenviable position of sitting between the two of them.

On his radio show, Seacrest said "Idol" needs some passionate debate.

"It did get intense," he said. "We want that. We want them to be on this panel together. This is a good team, a great team, to go out and look for the next American Idol ... the feedback that they give is very good."

"American Idol" is still the nation's most popular show despite a dramatic fall-off in ratings last season that led to three new judges joining Randy Jackson. The show's new season premieres in January.

A Fox representative said Wednesday the network has no comment on its feuding judges.


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Bosnia's National Museum closes after 124 years

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — It survived the breakup of the Austrian empire, two world wars, the longest city siege in modern history and a bloody war in the 1990s that killed 100,000 people. Yet after 124 years, Bosnia's National Museum closed its doors Thursday due to dwindling state funding and disputes among rival ethnic groups.

Having not received their salaries for a year, employees gathered at the fountain in the museum's botanical garden and threw a coin into it, making a wish that the institution will reopen soon. Then they left the building in downtown Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital, and nailed wooden boards that read "closed" across its front door.

Museum director Adnan Busuladzic says he has lost hope that politicians will solve the problem any time soon.

"There are two opposing ideas on how this country should be organized," Busuladzic explained. "This society is at war over those ideas and nobody cares about a museum."

This museum and six other institutions that are the custodians of Bosnia's national heritage — and care for precious medieval manuscripts, religious relicts and natural history artifacts, among other items — are victims of the 1995 peace agreement that ended Bosnia's war. The deal split the Balkan nation along ethnic lines into two semi-autonomous parts linked by a weak central government and guided by a constitution that did not envisaged a ministry of culture.

This left the seven cultural institutions without a guardian and without funding.

For years they have been surviving on donations or often-insufficient, ad-hoc grants from different layers of government and hoping that political leaders from the country's mostly Orthodox Serbs, Catholic Croats and Muslim Bosniaks will agree on what to do with Bosnia's shared historical and cultural heritage. The questions extend even to whether to preserve it.

Bosnian Serbs oppose giving the central government control over the cultural sites. Their leaders insist that Bosnia is an artificial state that should be dissolved and that each of the country's ethnic groups has its own heritage.

Bosniaks, meanwhile, say safeguarding the shared history of the Bosnian people is one way to keep the country unified and it was they who scrambled to beg for funds from several ministries. With Europe's debt crisis dragging into a third year, those ministries have no more reserves to tap into now.

To prevent the museum from closing, several students chained themselves to a pole in the lobby and remained inside, declaring they will stay there until the problem is solved and the museum reopens. Dozens of others held a sit-in in front of the building, many refusing to believe that it was truly closing.

"We want this museum to stay open. Tourists are coming to our city, they want to see our culture and history. How? How? All the institutions of culture are closed here," said protester Nihad Alickovic. "Is this a deeper game? To destroy the history of this country? They all should be ashamed because of this."

Bosnia's National Gallery and its Historical Museum closed down earlier this year. With the National Museum's closure, four other cultural institutions are still struggling: The Institute for Monument Protection, the Bosnian Art Gallery, the Bosnian National Theater and another small museum.

For an entire year, the National Museum's 65 employees still came to work every day without being paid. As she left the building Thursday, museum librarian Andrea Dautovic said the issue was not even about her not having a job any more — it was about what Bosnia has lost in the process.

"What will happen with future generations who now are losing this cultural jewel?" she said.


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Young Ecuadoreans stage musical sensation

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — Not long ago, most of the 80 young cast members of one of Ecuador's most successful musicals were barely seen or heard.

They are blind, autistic, have Down syndrome or other disabilities. But on stage, the actors, singers and dancers of "Suenos," or "Dreams," easily transcend their limitations.

"What I like about this project is that it dignifies the disabled. Above all, the intellectually challenged, who have faced a lot of prejudice," said Marisol Nunez, a young blind woman whose acting and singing has captivated crowds.

Nunez lost her eyesight as a child to a congenital disease and is among the most experienced actors and singers in the cast.

The musical, which premiered three years ago, is based in part on the dreams of young people with disabilities and is presented by the nonprofit foundation El Triangulo.

Those dreams have now been shared with thousands, and not just in Ecuador. Scenes from the musical have also been performed by cast members in the United States and Europe.


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Motown producer of Supremes, Temptations dies

DUARTE, Calif. (AP) — Motown record producer and songwriter Frank Wilson, who worked with the Supremes, the Temptations and Marvin Gaye, has died in Southern California at 71.

Daughter Tracey Stein tells the Los Angeles Times (lat.ms/Ubo82G) that Wilson died of lung infection complications on Sept. 27 in a hospital in Duarte.

Wilson, who later became a minister, wrote or co-wrote the hits "Love Child" for Diana Ross and the Supremes, "Chained" for Marvin Gaye and "All I Need" for the Temptations.

After Eddie Kendricks left the Temptations, Wilson produced his 1973 hit "Keep On Truckin' (Part 1)."

Wilson also helped write "You've Made Me So Very Happy," a 1967 Top 40 single for Motown's Brenda Holloway that soon became an even bigger hit for Blood, Sweat and Tears.

His "Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)," a 1965 single on which he performed but which was never released, became an underground hit in Britain in the 1970s. A rare copy of the song sold for $39,294 in 2009, making it the most expensive single ever auctioned, according to Guinness World Records.

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Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

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Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com


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Wyo. tribble-naming contest marks Archives Month

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — Anybody who doesn't think this is the cutest little news story of the day must be a Klingon.

The American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming is holding a "Name the Tribble" contest. The idea is to promote American Archives Month and show people that archives aren't just repositories of musty old documents — they can be home to cool stuff, too.

Such as a tribble, a small creature from the Star Trek television series. The American Heritage Center houses items donated by several celebrities including the late Forrest J. Ackerman, a science fiction publisher credited with inventing the term "sci-fi."

Ackerman had no ties to Wyoming but years ago donated many boxes of manuscripts, photographs, movie stills, correspondence, books, movie posters and artifacts including a tribble from the Star Trek set.

"A tribble is a little furball-type thing. It looks like a hairy softball that is very soft and cushy," said Lander journalist Ernie Over, who was Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry's personal assistant from 1985 to 1990.

Tribbles have no arms, legs, heads or even eyes. The idea was to mass-produce them as simply as possible, Over said.

In the famous 1967 Star Trek episode that first featured tribbles, the prolific creatures multiplied and overran the Enterprise until Montgomery "Scotty" Scott beamed them onto a Klingon ship.

Ha-ha: Klingons despise tribbles. And tribbles hiss when they encounter Star Trek's best-known bad guys.

Tribbles are sought-after Star Trek souvenirs nowadays. Archivist and Trekkie Keith Reynolds said he couldn't resist running around with the furball when he found it in the Ackerman collection.

"The people who had no idea what it was, they were completely grossed out. They thought it was a toupee," he said. "Or some dead animal."

He said the tribble isn't much to look at, just a tuft of fake fur.

A good tribble name should sum up "tribble-esque qualities," said his co-worker, Rachael Dreyer, organizer of the naming contest.

Entries can be emailed to ahc(at)uwyo.edu, with "Tribble Contest" and your name in the subject line. They also can be posted at the center's Facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/UWAHC

The deadline for entries is Oct. 22.

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Contact Mead Gruver at http://twitter.com.meadgruver


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NY ballet star Yvonne Mounsey dies in LA

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Yvonne Mounsey, who danced major roles for George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins with the New York City Ballet in the 1950s and went on to found an influential West Coast ballet school, has died. She was 93.

Mounsey died of cancer on Saturday at her Los Angeles home, said her daughter, Allegra Clegg of Los Angeles.

Mounsey danced with the City Ballet from 1948 to 1958, rising from soloist to principal dancer.

She was the Dark Angel in Balanchine's "Serenade" and Siren in his 1950 revival of "Prodigal Son," which were among her favorite roles, her daughter said.

For Robbins, she originated the roles of the Queen in "The Cage," the Harp in "Fanfare" and the Wife in "The Concert."

Mounsey was born Yvonne Louise Leibbrandt in 1919 on a South African dairy farm outside of Pretoria. She began taking ballet lessons at 7 with a former member of Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova's company.

She later studied and danced in England and performed around the world with various companies, including the famed Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo.

She was with another company, the Original Ballet Russe, when Balanchine saw her in New York in 1940. He created a part for her in his 1941 "Balustrade."

She became stranded in Cuba in 1941 when the other dancers on tour went on strike and the company disbanded. She survived by becoming a successful nightclub dancer.

"She walked into one of the fanciest nightclubs ... and got a job and stayed there for a year," her daughter said. "She was so resourceful. She came from a farm, a very poor upbringing and it was like, 'OK, I'm here in Cuba and I have no resources. What do I do?' "

Mounsey also taught herself Spanish, she said.

After her New York City Ballet years, she helped co-found a ballet company in her native South Africa.

In 1966, Mounsey moved to Los Angeles and opened the Westside School of Ballet, teaching the neoclassical Balanchine technique, which has become a signature style of ballet in America. The Santa Monica school became influential and its students have included former City Ballet star Jock Soto and current company principal dancers Andrew Veyette and Tiler Peck. The school also counts Joy Womack, the first American woman to dance with the Bolshoi Ballet, among the world-class dancers it has trained.

Mounsey never turned away a student, her daughter said.

"She just had this love and passion for ballet that exuded from her," she said. "She just wanted you to enjoy dancing and enjoy that art form, because 98 percent of her students would never become professional ballet dancers."

Mounsey stressed passion and discipline in art and life, her daughter said.

"'Whatever you do,' she would say to you, 'Do it 110 percent, whether you're the housekeeper or the bus driver or a doctor.'"

Mounsey was married three times, to Duncan Mounsey, Albert Hall Hughey and Kelvin Clegg. In addition to her daughter, she is survived by two stepsons, a grandson and a sister.


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Legal fight waged for right to Bill Monroe's name

There's a sour note in the legacy of bluegrass music legend Bill Monroe, as the man who runs an annual festival in Monroe's honor is locked in a legal battle with the county over who gets to use Monroe's name.

Campbell "Doc" Mercer can't use Monroe's likeness or name to promote The Jerusalem Ridge Bluegrass Music Festival, which he puts on annually to honor the "Father of Bluegrass."

Ohio County and the county industrial foundation lay legal claim to Monroe's name and image, having bought the usage rights from the musician's son 13 years ago.

The dispute over whether the county ever gave Mercer's organization, The Jerusalem Ridge Foundation, the right to use Monroe's name also prompted Mercer to move the event from Monroe's home site to a neighboring farm — once the homestead of Monroe's grandparents.

"Of course we were given the right," Mercer told The Associated Press. "It's a silly case and we think we can win."

Mercer, an accomplished bluegrass musician, and the county are set to make their arguments Nov. 19 before the Kentucky Court of Appeals when it meets in Hardinsburg. Messages left for the Ohio County Industrial Foundation were not returned Wednesday and Thursday.

Monroe, born Sept. 13, 1911, at Jerusalem Ridge, near Rosine in Ohio County, is credited by music historians with creating the sound that became known as bluegrass music — a combination of fiddle, five-string banjo, mandolin, upright bass and guitar. Since Monroe's death in 1996, Ohio County has tried to capitalize on his legacy. County officials and the Industrial Foundation purchased commercial rights to Monroe's name and likeness in 1999 from the musician's son, James Monroe of Gallatin, Tenn.

Two years later, they hired Mercer, who lives in Hartford, to run the Bill Monroe Bluegrass Music Foundation, with the aim of restoring Monroe's home site near Rosine and developing a memorial park.

Ohio County Circuit Judge Ronnie Dortch concluded last year that the informal actions and comments of industrial foundation officials indicated the foundation "would eventually assign the Monroe Name Agreement" to the Jerusalem Ridge Foundation.

However, Dortch also said the Industrial Foundation never put in writing or deed permission for Mercer to use the name.

The Industrial Foundation severed ties with Mercer in 2003 after their relationship soured. The Industrial Foundation declined to give usage rights to Monroe's name and image to Mercer's organization.

James Monroe won a 2005 injunction in Tennessee stopping Mercer from using his father's name. Then Mercer sued the county in 2007, saying officials broke a promise. The Industrial Foundation contends Mercer never had a claim to the Bill Monroe brand.

"It was never any intent of anyone associated with the industrial foundation to make a formal, legal assignment to those rights," the Industrial Foundation's long-time general counsel, Frank Martin, testified at the 2011 trial in the dispute.

Mercer's attorney, Steve Pitt of Louisville, contends all of the actions by the county and foundation lead to the conclusion that Mercer should have right to Monroe's name.

"They set up the corporation and gave it the name. What more can you ask for?" Pitt said.

Ohio County barred Mercer from holding the festival at Bill Monroe's home place this year. Mercer moved the festivities to the adjacent property, which he owns. Regardless of what happens in the lawsuit, Mercer believes the county will eventually put Monroe's name to good use in promoting the festival.

It started Thursday and runs through the weekend and is expected to draw 15,000 to 20,000 people.

"It's a beautiful place. I own it, so I'm not going to evict myself," Mercer said. "I think it will eventually all come together."


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'Idol' divas Carey, Minaj take their feud public

NEW YORK (AP) — Is this "Idol" threat an idle threat?

Mariah Carey told Barbara Walters her fellow "American Idol" judge Nicki Minaj threatened to shoot her, Walters reported on ABC's "The View" Thursday morning.

Consulting her notes, Walters recounted a phone conversation with Carey just before the ABC talk show went on the air, with new details of Tuesday's blowup between Carey and Minaj that was partly captured on video made public on the TMZ website.

Walters said Carey told her that "when Nicki walked off the set, multiple people heard Nicki say, 'If I had a gun I would shoot the (adjective unspoken by Walters) bitch.'"

After a meeting on Wednesday attended by the pair, Minaj said to Carey, "I love you, but we might fight again," according to Walters. "Mariah responded, 'No, we will not.'"

Walters said Carey told her that the singer had hired extra security.

"Mariah said she doesn't feel comfortable emotionally," Walters reported. "But she will continue with the show because she loves the show. And she loves mentoring the contestants."

Walters issued an invitation to Minaj, a past guest of "The View," asking her to return to the show to give her side of the story.

But Minaj wasted no time responding with a string of Twitter postings.

One read: "Hey yAll. Lets just say nicki said smthn about a gun. Ppl will believe it cuz she's a black rapper. Lmao. I'll then hit up Barbara n milk it"

She continued: "Ironically no camera or mic heard the gun comment tho. Lol (at) the struggle. Not even the producers believed u. Say no to violence barbz."

A bit later, she tweeted: "I don't call tmz n Barbara Walters cuz I stand on my own two feet. Never needed an army. God is good. Insecurity is as cruel as the grave."

Rumors of drama between Minaj and Carey began to swirl as soon as the new panel was officially announced on Sept. 16.

Then the blurry web video released Tuesday by TMZ.com displayed what appeared to be an argument between Minaj and Carey during the tryout taping in Charlotte, N.C. On the video, Minaj announces that she is no longer putting up with "her ... Highness," in an expletive-enhanced reference to Carey.

Fox's "American Idol" is still the nation's most popular show despite a dramatic fall-off in ratings last season that led to Randy Jackson being joined by three new judges, who also include country singer Keith Urban.

The show's new season premieres in January.


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Nielsen: 67M viewers for 1st presidential debate

NEW YORK (AP) — The Nielsen ratings company says an estimated 67.2 million people watched the first debate between President Barack Obama and challenger Mitt Romney, the largest TV audience for a presidential debate since 1992.

Eleven TV networks carried Wednesday night's debate live. Telemundo showed it on tape delay.

Nielsen says you have to go back to the second debate involving Bill Clinton, George Bush and Ross Perot in 1992 for a more popular presidential debate.

Four years ago the vice presidential debate between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin attracted 69.9 million viewers.


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B is for Burglar? Author Sue Grafton's home hit

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — "B'' is for burglar. Mystery writer Sue Grafton, whose best sellers are titled with a letter of the alphabet, tells WHAS-TV (http://bit.ly/QJzjMj ) that her Louisville home is one of several in her neighborhood that was broken into.

Grafton is a Louisville native. She says she went to put away some pieces of silver recently and noticed her set of forks, knives and miscellaneous serving pieces was missing.

Police say there's been a string of burglaries in the area in the past several weeks. They say the burglars are cutting glass to get into houses through the windows.

"B is for Burglar" is the title of the second novel in the "ABC" series, also known as the Kinsey Millhone Alphabet Mysteries.


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Acclaimed session guitarist Big Jim Sullivan dies

LONDON (AP) — Acclaimed session guitarist Big Jim Sullivan, who played on dozens of hits in the 1960s and 1970s, has died, his wife said Thursday. He was 71.

Norma Sullivan said that Sullivan had died at their home in West Sussex, England, on Tuesday. He suffered from heart disease and diabetes and had stopped performing live recently because of his health problems.

Sullivan learned guitar as a teenager and turned professional when he was just 16. He played with many of the biggest names in British pop at the height of the "Swinging London" era.

Along with Jimmy Page, who would later star in Led Zeppelin, Sullivan was one of the most in-demand session guitarists of his era. His website lists sessions with the Tom Jones, Marianne Faithfull, David Bowie, Gerry and the Pacemakers and many others. He claimed to have played on more than 1,000 singles that entered the British charts.

Sullivan's website said he joined his first band, the Wildcats, at age 17, in 1958, which he described as "the early days of rock and roll in this country."

He said he and his friends were too busy learning music to do normal teenage things.

He was known for his mastery of a wide variety of styles, from hard rock to country to blues.

"I am a very lucky man," he said on his website. "I am living my life with my hobby as my profession."

Sullivan also toured with Tom Jones's band, playing in Las Vegas casino hotels and on television shows.

He is survived by his wife, children and grandchildren.


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Lehrer's philosophy on moderator's role tested

NEW YORK (AP) — Former PBS anchor Jim Lehrer says a debate moderator should be like a baseball umpire — get out of the way and let the candidates play. That philosophy may have compounded his troubles during the first presidential debate between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney as he tried and failed to stay out of the spotlight, an increasingly impossible dream for a moderator in the age of social media.

Even before Wednesday night's debate ended, Twitter was ablaze with criticism of Lehrer for losing control of it and not being sharp in his questions. The candidates frequently bulled past Lehrer's efforts to hold them to time limits.

Lehrer was traveling on Thursday and was unavailable for comment, a spokeswoman said. His defenders said he was trying to make a new format work and there's no shame in letting candidates try to engage each other directly.

"It's a very, very, very difficult job," said Frank Sesno, a former CNN Washington bureau chief and professor at George Washington University.

Moderators can be criticized for not doing enough or doing too much by being forceful in interrupting candidates and showy in their questions, he said.

Moderators are selected by the Commission on Presidential Debates, which has sponsored the forums since 1988. Candy Crowley, of CNN, and Bob Schieffer, of CBS News, will moderate the next two Obama-Romney debates, with Martha Raddatz, of ABC News, handling the vice presidential debate between Joe Biden and Paul Ryan.

Commission Co-chairman Paul Fahrenkopf told the Poynter think tank recently that the commission looks primarily toward experienced TV journalists for the moderator role. He said it seeks a moderator who is comfortable having someone shout instructions in an earpiece, is fair and balanced and "does not have an ego."

Lehrer had moderated 11 presidential debates before Wednesday. Last year he wrote a book about his debate experiences and said he had no interest in doing any more. But he agreed when asked this time, comparing the request to a civic responsibility or a draft notice.

But Lehrer, 78, has been semi-retired and off TV since last winter. Some in the business believe that layoff can cost even an experienced broadcaster a few feet off his fastball.

Lehrer came back to a hyper-partisan environment with millions of TV critics sitting with laptops in their living rooms, eager to let their opinions be known.

There was a political dimension Thursday to critics of Lehrer's critics. Fox News Channel's Greta Van Susteren wrote on her blog that Lehrer was being attacked because Democrats "expected the moderator to run interference for their candidate and the moderator didn't bail out their bored, fumbling and unprepared candidate."

"Instead," she said, "moderator Jim Lehrer did the unthinkable — he let the candidates debate."

Lehrer said last year that he felt his best job as a moderator came during a 2004 debate between President George W. Bush and John Kerry because nobody talked about what he did. He said his advice to future moderators was "get out of the way whenever you possibly can. Facilitate the debate. That's what you're there to do."

What may have struck viewers as a hands-off approach may have something to do with a new format that called for Lehrer to introduce subject areas and give each candidate two minutes to speak, then several more minutes of back-and-forth, said Alan Schroeder, a Northeastern University journalism professor and author of "Presidential Debates: 50 Years of High-Risk TV."

"It seems to me the job of a moderator is to set up the issues and get out of the way, and I think he did that," Schroeder said.

Some who watch debates prefer sharper, more challenging questions. But there are dangers to that approach, too, as illustrated last winter when Newt Gingrich attacked CNN's John King for bringing up his ex-wife's accusation that he had asked for an open marriage.

While acknowledging that moderating is a difficult job, New York University journalism professor Jay Rosen said Lehrer lost control of the time and the topics during the debate.

"He didn't really ask questions," Rosen said. "I don't know where he got the idea that saying 'talk about the differences between you' is a question. It's not a question. It's just an invitation to talk."

Candidates often are coached to ignore the questions being asked, anyway, just to get across points that they want to emphasize, Sesno said.

After a rough night Wednesday, Lehrer may have gotten a rueful laugh from David Letterman. The "Late Show" comic's Top Ten list, taped before the debate, was "signs you have a bad debate moderator."

Among the signs: "Barely stops clipping his fingernails to ask a question" and "Performs Sade song parody, 'Smooth Moderator.'"


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NYC seeks footage for Central Park jogger lawsuit

NEW YORK (AP) — Lawyers for the city are seeking access to footage gathered by documentary filmmaker Ken Burns in research for his movie about the five men exonerated in the Central Park jogger rape case.

The city has issued a subpoena for the outtakes and other materials from the film "The Central Park Five," its Law Department confirmed Wednesday.

The request is connected to a $250 million federal lawsuit filed by the men against the city nine years ago, after their sentences were vacated. They were exonerated after a man already jailed for other crimes confessed to the attack, and DNA evidence supported his claim.

In April 1989, a 28-year-old investment banker was found in the park after being beaten and raped while jogging. She was in a coma for 12 days and was left with permanent damage. In 2003, Trisha Meili disclosed her identity and published her memoir.

At the time of their arrest, the five suspects, then teens, were held for more than 24 hours before they confessed. All later recanted, and they claim the confessions were coerced. City lawyer Celeste Koeleveld has said the city stands by the decisions made by the detectives and prosecutors in bringing the case against the five men.

For years, the city has refused requests by Burns and his team to interview officials about the case, said Burns, who has said he hopes the film will help push the city to settle the case.

Attorney John Siegal, who represents Burns and others who worked on the project, argued the city won't be able to prove the film and notes are necessary to its defense and unavailable elsewhere. The city must do so to get access to the material, he said.

Koeleveld says the city should receive access to the recordings.

"The plaintiffs' interviews go to the heart of the case and cannot be obtained elsewhere," Koeleveld said. "If the plaintiffs truly want an open airing of the facts, they should encourage the filmmakers not to hide anything."


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The Public Theater unveils a sleek new NYC home

NEW YORK (AP) — The Public Theater unveiled its four-year, $40 million face-lift on Thursday with a celebration that had some Shakespeare, some singing hippies and some veteran stage stars including Vanessa Redgrave, Liev Schreiber and Mandy Patinkin.

The speakers, which included Mayor Michael Bloomberg, took turns reading snippets of Shakespeare verse and the 45-minute event ended when the recent cast of "Hair" serenaded the crowd with a rendition of "Let the Sun Shine In." The musical "Hair" was the first show produced in the building when the Public took it over in 1967.

The nonprofit's 158-year-old headquarters in Astor Place now has a new exterior, refurbished lobby, ramps, a new lounge, staircases, upgraded dressing rooms and expanded restrooms, which received the biggest applause from the guests at the ceremony.

"Have you gone to the bathroom here in the last 50 years? Then you know why it got a cheer," joked Patrick Willingham, the Public's executive director.

He said the new lobby will allow better artistic movement and hopes it becomes a town square: "This is a piazza, a gathering place in the center of downtown, a place where everyone can mingle."

Other celebrities in attendance included the playwrights Suzan Lori Parks and David Henry Hwang, the actors Jay O. Sanders and Colman Domingo, and designer David Rockwell, whose firm helped create the lounge and a restaurant.

All read inspirational lines from Shakespeare, including "You shall find a benefit in this change" from "Antony and Cleopatra" and "Merrily, merrily shall I live now" from "The Tempest."

The sleek new interior with a bar in the lobby's center and muted lighting is a welcome change from the four years of dust and hammering that engulfed the building. The Public insisted on presenting a full slate of shows over the four despite the ongoing renovations led by Ennead Architects.

Of the $40 million price tag, more than half — $28.5 million — was kicked in by the city. Bloomberg, who noted that he will be looking for a job in 453 days, suggested that he might become a Shakespearian actor next. "The Public is a place built on the stuff that dreams are made of," he said.

Schreiber, a Public board member who quoted a line from "Hamlet," said he was moved by the outpouring of love for the Public. "The fact that we value that so much in this city, still makes me want to cry," he said.

Patinkin has very personal ties to the building: In addition to meeting his wife at the Public, his grandfather arrived in New York from Poland and found help there when the space housed an aid society.

"I can't believe where I began my theater career was the first place that my grandfather, who brought the Patinkin family to America, came to have a meal," he actor said. "For me, it's a home and a temple."

The rededication kicks off eight weeks of events — including an open house and a block party — and comes as the Public is also celebrating the 50th anniversary of its free Shakespeare in the Park program at the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park.

The event capped a busy week for off-Broadway theaters. Earlier, the Pearl Theatre had a ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate moving into its new home near Times Square, while the Atlantic Theater Company reopened its main stage in Chelsea after an $8.3 million renovation.

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Online:

http://www.publictheater.org


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Books on India, Everest up for nonfiction prize

LONDON (AP) — Books about an Indian slum, an Everest expedition and the history of violence are among the six finalists for Britain's most lucrative nonfiction book award, the Samuel Johnson Prize.

Katherine Boo's "Behind The Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death and Hope in a Mumbai Slum," Wade Davis' "Into The Silence: The Great War, Mallory and the Conquest of Everest" and Steven Pinker's "The Better Angels Of Our Nature: A History Of Violence and Humanity" are shortlisted for the 20,000 pound ($32,000) prize.

The other finalists announced Friday are Robert Macfarlane's travelogue "The Old Ways: A Journey On Foot;" Sue Prideaux's theatrical biography "Strindberg: A Life;" and Paul Preston's civil war study "The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain."

The winner will be announced Nov. 12.

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Online: www.thesamueljohnsonprize.co.uk


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Daryl Hannah arrested in Texas protesting pipeline

HOUSTON (AP) — Actress Daryl Hannah of "Splash" fame was arrested in northeast Texas on Thursday, along with a 78-year-old landowner as the pair protested an oil pipeline designed to bring crude from Canada to the Gulf Coast.

"They've arrested Daryl Hannah and a rural Texas great-grandmother," said Paul Bassis, Hannah's manager.

Hannah and landowner Eleanor Fairchild were standing in front of heavy equipment in an attempt to halt construction of the Keystone XL pipeline on Fairchild's farm in Winnsboro, a town about 100 miles east of Dallas. They were arrested for criminal trespassing and taken to the Wood County Jail, Bassis said.

Hannah has long opposed TransCanada's construction of the $7 billion pipeline, which is designed to transport heavy tar-sands crude oil from Alberta, Canada, to Texas' Gulf Coast refineries.

"It is unfortunate Ms. Hannah and other out-of-state activists have chosen to break the law by illegally trespassing on private property," David Dodson, a spokesman for TransCanada, said in an email. He also said protesters were "putting their own safety and the safety of others at risk."

Bassis said he spoke to the actress Thursday evening and that there was "a strong indication" that both women would be kept overnight at the local jail.

"The streets of Winnsboro will be much safer tonight now that they've gotten that 78-year-old great grandmother off the streets," Bassis said.

Hannah — who has starred in dozens of movies, including "Kill Bill" and "Splash" — also was arrested in August 2011 while protesting the pipeline in Washington. She was one of several hundred prominent scientists and activists arrested that month.

They argue the pipeline would be unsafe because it would be carrying heavy, acidic crude oil that could more easily corrode a metal pipe, which would lead to a spill. They also say refining the oil would further contaminate the air in a region that has long struggled with pollution.

TransCanada says its pipeline would be the safest ever built, and that the crude is no dirtier than oil currently arriving from Venezuela or parts of California.

The issue became politically charged when congressional Republicans gave President Barack Obama 60 days to decide whether TransCanada should be granted the necessary permit for the pipeline to cross an international border before snaking its way 1,700 miles south to the Texas coast.

Obama, saying his administration did not have enough time to study the potential environmental impacts, denied the permit in January.

However, he encouraged TransCanada to reroute the northern portion of the pipeline to avoid an environmentally sensitive area of Nebraska. He also promised to expedite permitting of a southern portion of the pipeline from Cushing, Okla., to the Gulf Coast to relieve a bottleneck at the Cushing refinery.

TransCanada began construction of that portion of the pipeline this summer after receiving the necessary permits. Some Texas landowners, joined by activists from outside the state, have tried through various protests to stop or slow down construction.

___

Plushnick-Masti can be followed on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP


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Fisker to Romney: We're not "a loser"



It must depend on what your definition of “loser” is.


Plug-in hybrid car maker Fisker has responded to a jab that Mitt Romney’s took at President Obama during Wednesday night’s debate when he said “you put $90 billion, like 50 years' worth of breaks, into -- into solar and wind, to Solyndra and Fisker and Tesla and Ener1. I mean, I had a friend who said you don't just pick the winners and losers, you pick the losers, all right?” The Republican candidate adding “and these businesses, many of them have gone out of business, I think about half of them, of the ones have been invested in have gone out of business.”


Fisker Spokesperson Roger Ormisher told GreenCarReports.com that “we don’t consider ourselves a loser, having sold 1,500 cars already and raised over $1.2 billion of private equity." The California-based company has sold about 1,500 of its $109,000 Karma luxury sedans this year.


Along with the other companies mentioned, Fisker was granted a low interest loan from the Department of Energy to the tune of $529 million. The money was intended to be used to help develop its lineup of plug-in hybrid cars and retool a former GM factory in Delaware to build them in. However, after drawing down $193 million the company was cut off from the program for failing to meet several milestones spelled out in the loan agreement.


But Fisker is still in business and attracting private investment, having recently closed a $100 million round of funding. The automaker says it will outline production plans for a new high volume model later this year. It is also up to date on its payments toward the Department of Energy loan and says it has created 1,000 new jobs in the United States.


After the debate, Time magazine reporter Mike Grunwald Tweeted that the Romney campaign clarified to him that the candidate didn’t "didn't mean to say that half the stimulus-funded green firms failed.” Mother Jones has calculated that the figure is closer to 9 percent.


Tesla has stayed out of the debate so far and has not commented on Romney’s statement.


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Car prices soar, incentives plummet

The good news is, car sales are soaring. Most automakers have already released figures for September, leaving analysts' expectations in the dust.

The bad news is, that means demand for cars is high. And when demand is high, so are car prices, making good deals hard to find.

Transaction prices are up

According to TrueCar, transaction prices for most auto brands crept up between September 2011 and September 2012. The rise was steepest at Hyundai/Kia, where last month's average sale price was $22,245 -- a very impressive 5.8% above last year. Chrysler, Toyota, and Nissan also edged north, with price gains of 2.4%, 1.9%, and 1.5%, respectively.

In fact, the only automaker that saw transaction prices decline was General Motors, which fell a modest 0.7%. 

Across the board, the average transaction price last month was $30,282, up 0.9% from September 2011.

Transaction prices represent a complex mix of factors, including base vehicle prices, trim packages and add-ons, as well as rebates and other incentives. For example, Chrysler's average transaction price rose, in part, because it's recently released a number of new and updated models. The prices for those vehicles -- and the various bells and whistles that come with them -- have risen, lifting the final price.

Incentive spending is down

There are any number of reasons to explain the surging demand for autos in the U.S., including economic optimism, low borrowing rates, looser credit restrictions, and pent-up demand following the Great Recession. But however we choose to rationalize it, one thing's for sure: today's automakers don't need to offer many incentives to lure customers into showrooms.

Not surprisingly, Hyundai/Kia has been offering the fewest incentives for shoppers (which helps to explain why the company's average transaction price has remained so high). Last month, the company spent $1,294 on rebates and other incentives, or about 5.8% of transaction value.

At the other end of the scale, we find Chrysler, which spent $3,256, or 11% of its average sale price, on customer incentives. That may seem logically contradictory -- after all, why would a company whose sales are up 12% year-over-year need to offer such high incentives?

Part of the reason is that Chrysler has been offering incentives for some time now, and customers have come to expect them. Eliminating them would've dented the company's sales stats.

But a bigger reason might be that Chrysler has been introducing some highly anticipated vehicles over the past year, including the Dodge Dart and variants of the Fiat 500. Incentives bring curious customers onto the lots to see those vehicles. Once sales of those vehicles stabilize and consumer awareness levels off, we'd expect to see incentives slide. (In fact, we're already seeing that: Chrysler's incentives have dropped 0.6% from this time last year.)

Bottom line

For shoppers, the data is pretty clear: new cars are going to remain expensive, thanks to high sticker prices, with plenty of add-ons to lift those prices further and few incentives to bring them down. As the U.S. economy continues to recover -- and as automakers develop new, high-tech safety and infotainment options -- transaction prices may continue to climb.

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New York Asian restaurants score big with Michelin

Published October 03, 2012

FoxNews.com

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With 66 of its restaurants winning stars in Michelin’s 2013 guide, New York was again earned its places as one of the country's best cities to dine.

Michelin awarded its coveted stars to a several restaurants that feature Chinese, Korean or Japanese inspired dishes. In the past Asian restaurants in New York had been given relatively few stars by Michelin.

Masa, the city's only Asian restaurant with three stars, retained its top ranking. Awarded two stars was Soto and David Chang's Momofuku Ko restaurant.  A one star rating went to Cafe China, Hakkasan, Lan Sheng, 15 East and Jungkin this year, along with 11 other Asian restaurants that kept their one-star ratings.

"We have a lot of Asian restaurants which upped their ante. They are becoming more adventurous and creative. They are able to deliver new versions on old dishes that have really caught our attention," said Michael Ellis, international director of the Michelin Guides.

The 2013 guide reviewed 2,120 restaurants in the city by a team of anonymous inspectors, who undergo strict training and sign confidentiality agreements.

Several perennial favorites were awarded the highest distinction. They included Jean Georges, Le Bernardin, Masa, Per Se, Daniel, Eleven Madison Park and Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare.

Here's how the restaurants stacked up:

Three Michelin stars 
Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare
Daniel
Eleven Madison Park
Jean Georges
Le Bernardin
Masa
Per Se

Two Michelin stars 
atera
Corton
Gilt
Gordon Ramsay at The London
Marea
Momofuku Ko
Soto

One Michelin star 
Adour
Ai Fiori
Aldea
annisa
Aquavit
Aureole
A Voce Columbus
A Voce Madison
Blanca
Blue Hill
Bouley
Breslin (The)
Brushstroke
Café Boulud
Café China
Casa Mono
Danji
Danny Brown Wine Bar & Kitchen
Del Posto
Dovetail
Dressler
15 East
Gotham Bar and Grill
Gramercy Tavern
Hakkasan
Jewel Bako
Jungsik
Junoon
Kajitsu
Kyo Ya
Lan Sheng
Minetta Tavern
Modern (The)
NoMad
Oceana
Peter Luger
Picholine (currently closed)
Public
River Café (The)
Rosanjin
Rouge Tomate
Saul
Seäsonal
Spotted Pig
Sushi Azabu
Sushi of Gar
Tamarind Tribeca
Tori Shin
Torrisi Italian Specialties
Tulsi
Wallsé
wd~50


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Top 10 immune system boosters

They lurk in elevators, airplanes, shopping malls and schools. They threaten to attack you at work and even at home. Yes, they're the common cold and flu, and no matter where you are these days, they seem to be "going around." This season, instead of turning to your stash of Sudafed, Tylenol, Robitussin, NyQuil and TheraFlu, try a few alternative solutions that get to the root of the problem.

We're generally concerned with masking and suppressing the symptoms of the cold and flu — a practice that allows us to continue our daily lives without missing a beat. But masking these symptoms often comes with uncomfortable side effects from drowsiness to upset stomach, dehydration and foggy heads. Chasing only the symptoms on the surface, we ignore the imbalances within and end up prolonging our illnesses or experiencing lingering afflictions. Here is a list of nature's finest remedies to improve your general well-being and give your immune system its needed boost. 

Astragalus
For thousands of years, astragalus (Huang-Qi) has been used in China to restore life force. As an immune system booster, it strengthens general vitality, improves digestion and builds up the body's defense against viruses. Popularly found in tea and tablet form, we recommend selecting a product that contains an extract of the root, with 0.5 percent glucosides and 70 percemt polysaccharides. For general well-being, this is a good tonic to keep in your routine, but alternate the use of astragalus with another immune-boosting herb such as echinacea, so as not to build up a tolerance to its healing effects.

Cold Snap
Cold Snap, a mega-mixture consisting of twenty herbs employed in traditional Chinese medicine, works to restore your "righteous chi," or inner strength and balance. The ingredients in Cold Snap, such as forsythia, Japanese honeysuckle, burdock and soybean, work as catalysts to help your body do its exquisite healing work. Instead of stimulating the system or eliminating toxins, these natural healers instead nourish and build your chi, which in turn helps fight off "unwanted guests" such as stress, contagious sickness, chills and heat.

Echinacea
Echinacea has recently found its way into the American vernacular after a long tradition of medicinal use by North American Plains Indians and homeopathic doctors in Europe. Also known as the purple coneflower, it has been used to treat general infections and wounds, the cold and flu, strep throat and allergies. The potent herb encourages white blood cells and lymphocytes to attack invading organisms, thus increasing the number and activity of immune system cells. While you can find echinacea in power bars, teas and capsules, researchers recommend the standardized extract above all other forms.

Esberitox
Hailing from Germany, Esberitox is an all-natural herbal supplement that has been used in Europe for decades as an immune system booster. Combining two powerful immune-enhancing herbs, Thuja and Baptisia, with two different types of echinacea, this potent little pill strengthens the body's own natural defenses and can help prevent against the flu and common cold. While Esberitox is best taken for several weeks at a time as a preemptive measure, it can also be taken at the onset of symptoms to stimulate the production and activity of infection-fighting cells.

Olive Leaf
Olive leaf extract has received a lot of attention from alternative health care advocates in recent decades; however, this immune system booster has been used medicinally for centuries in the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern regions, where olive trees grow in abundance. Aside from fighting the common cold and flu, this powerful little leaf can also help increase energy levels, lower blood pressure, stabilize blood sugar levels, and aid in fighting autoimmune disorders. Rich in disease-fighting phytochemicals, olive leaf is especially potent when used in combination with other antioxidants.

Sambucus
Sambucus (elderberry) is a shrub whose blue-black berries have traditionally been used to help fight colds and flu viruses. Sambucus is high in a type of antioxidant called anthocyanins, which can help alleviate bothersome symptoms. It also contains a property that stimulates the body's own defenses by producing anti-inflammatory molecules called cytokines. The leaves, twigs, branches and seeds of Sambucus are toxic if ingested, as are the berries if unripe, so we don't recommend going out to gather your own plant. Instead, try an over-the-counter supplement such as Sambucol, which contains elderberry extract. As with all herbal remedies, consult with your physician before embarking on a treatment regimen.

Vitamin C
Long known for its myriad health benefits, vitamin C is one of the most popular nutrients taken in supplement form—and for good reason. This potent antioxidant has been shown to protect against immune system deficiencies, cardiovascular disease, prenatal health problems, eye disease and even wrinkly skin. While many multivitamins and energy drinks, such as Emergen-C, include "superdosages" of vitamin C, the ubiquitous immune system booster can be found in many of our favorite fruits and vegetables, including red peppers, strawberries, broccoli, dark leafy greens, and of course, oranges.

Umcka
Native to South Africa, Umcka (short for "Umckaloabo") is an herbal extract known for its antibacterial and immune-boosting properties. It is derived from the plant Pelargonium sidoides, whose medicinal qualities have been utilized by African cultures for centuries. Studies have shown that Umckaloabo works similarly to other immune-boosters found in nature such as elderberry (Sambucus or Sambucol) but what makes this over-the-counter extract uniquely effective is its ability to combat infections brought on by either viruses or bacteria. Aside from Umcka's dual antibacterial/antiviral qualities, it also serves as a natural expectorant, helping to remove excess mucus from the sinuses and respiratory tract. For fighting a cold, it's best to use Umcka within 48 hours of showing symptoms. While Umcka has been proven effective in short-term trials, discontinue use and consult a doctor if you remain feeling under-the-weather for longer than seven days. We've had great success with it for fighting colds as well as bronchitis, even in kids!

Wellness Formula
Wellness Formula has been a leading cold weather herbal supplement for over 20 years thanks to its powerful combination of herbs, vitamins, antioxidants and minerals designed to get to the root cause of bodily imbalances. Containing potent doses of vitamins A and C alongside herbs long-used in Eastern medicine, such as astragalus, garlic, and isatis, this carefully-crafted concoction provides support for the multiple body systems that impact immune and upper respiratory health. Together, these proven immune system boosters work to strengthen the body's natural protective barriers and cleanse the mucous membranes

Zinc
Zinc, an essential trace element with antioxidant properties, plays a vital role in maintaining a healthy immune system. Individuals who suffer from mild to severe zinc deficiency are more prone to a variety of illnesses, but even those without a deficiency have been found to benefit from the administration of zinc, either in lozenge or spray form, at the early onset of a cold or flu. In order to maintain proper zinc levels in your diet, be sure to eat foods rich in the element, such as red meat, seafood, nuts and eggs.

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Fatalities drop after Michigan allows motorcycle riders to not wear helmets

FoxNews.com

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Seatbelts save lives, but what about helmets?


A biker group in Michigan says fatalities in the state decreased after a law was enacted this year allowing people to ride motorcycles without protection for their heads, according to The Detroit News.


American Bikers Aiming Toward Education cite Michigan State Police data comparing the first eight months of 2011, to the first half of 2012 and found that the number of fatalities dropped from 89 to 85, despite an increase in motorcycle registrations over the same period.


The group did not provide any information on what percentage of riders are not wearing helmets.


The new law went into effect on April 12, 2012 and requires those who wish to not wear a helmet to be over 21 years old and either have had their license for two years or complete a rider safety course.


Responding to the group’s claim, a AAA of Michigan spokeswoman told the Detroit News that it was based on “very preliminary data,” and that it is too early to reach any conclusions.


“We know by looking at data from every other state that has repealed its helmet law that fatalities and injuries went up,” the spokesperson said.


A study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that only 12 percent of fatal motorcycle accidents nationwide happened in the 20 states that require helmets for all riders.


AAA has forecasted an additional 30 fatalities per year in Michigan as a result of the new law.


Read more at The Detroit News


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Marchesi Antinori pop-up restaurant showcases best of Tuscany

By Tracy Byrnes

Wine with Me

Published October 04, 2012

FoxNews.com

After 26 generations, it’s amazing that any family can keep reinventing itself.

But that’s exactly what the world-renowned, family-owned wine company Marchesi Antinori  is doing – constantly recreating itself, while still staying true to its history.

I recently I had the great pleasure of spending some time with two of the three members of the 26th Antinori generation: Allegra Antinori, who is in charge of hospitality and public relations for Marchesi Antinori, and sister Alessia, the family ambassador and winemaker. Their sister Alberia was out traveling the world.

I so enjoy speaking to these women because their eyes sparkle with excitement – even 26 generations later– when they talk about their family, their wines and their future. 

While the family is known for its award-winning wines, like the Tignanello and Solaia, they were in New York City to talk about their most recent evolvement, a pop-up restaurant in Manhattan. Yes, they are in the restaurant business too.

The Cantinetta Antinori will be at the Mondrian Soho Hotel for only five nights. They've created a special wine tasting menu to showcase their wines and their love of Tuscany and are are willing to share all that from Oct. 2 through Oct. 6. 

Dishes include bruschetta made with Jansal Valley heirloom tomatoes, spinach and ricotta dumplings with tomato cream and beef tenderloin with mashed potatoes and Urbani truffle. Check here for ticket information.

The original Cantinetta Antinori opened in 1957 and is located just inside the Antinori Palace in Tuscany. Visitors can go and taste their wines, by the glass or the bottle, and sample authentic Tuscan foods, many made with ingredients grown on Antinori’s estates, including their olive oil and goat cheeses. 

The family wanted to bring that same experience here – to downtown Manhattan.  And even though the pop-up is around for a short time, it’s a very creative, intimate way to showcase their wines.

And speaking of wine, they are again reinventing themselves in the wine world by returning to the Chianti Classico. While they have been making it for centuries, they completing their latest version, the Cantina del Chianti Classico, which will be available by the end of the year. 

So the family, the wines, the properties – keep evolving -- and as a result, they keep enduring.

Cent ‘Anni.


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