Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

'Celebrity Apprentice' crowns winner

'Celebrity Apprentice' crowns winner


The country singer was named the Celebrity Apprentice winner during Sunday night’s season finale, show kingpin Donald Trump citing Rich’s consistency as a leader as the reason for his triumph. Rich walked away with an additional $250,000 for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, bringing Rich’s fundraising total for the hospital to more than $1.25 million.

Rich spent the first 45 minutes of the finale episode raking in even more money for St. Jude. Although the episode wasn’t a fundraiser, executives from The Melting Pot donated $25,000 and Dollar General kicked in $250,000 to surpass Rich’s original goal of raising $1 million.

As the show progressed, both teams faced stumbles in their three-part challenges. Marlee Matlin’s group questioned whether the star of their commercial was going to show up, and Rich miscalculated the entrance of rock band Def Leppard, the star of his live event. The band was still en route when he introduced them and to fill the space, Rich served as their opening act.

Donald Trump and NBC also used the finale episode to reunite the cast — all of this season’s Apprentice hopefuls (save Survivor alum Richard Hatch, who has returned to jail for ongoing tax issues) were in attendance for Sunday’s episode, which also featured several highlight reels.

In the end, however, the biggest winners were the charities represented by the 16 celebrities on the show — over the course of the season, the cast members raised more than $3 million for their chosen organizations’ efforts.
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This entry was posted in News and tagged Celebrity Apprentice, donald trump, john rich, marlee matlin, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, tv. Bookmark the permalink.

Source:msn.com

More nuude Blake Lively photos leaked?

More Nuude Blake Lively Photos Leaked Online


Blake’s rep is adamant on claiming that ALL the photos that some hacker has leaked online are fake, so this unidentified hacker has decided to leak more to prove that it is in fact the Gossip Girl actress in the nude photos.

The hacker posted new pics with the following message:

"Oh, yes, Blake's rep. These are totally fake. We really, really believe you. Want moar? BTW, thanks for all the fats."



He posted that message with 17 additional pictures. In some of the pictures, the woman has two small star tattoos and according to TMZ, Blake’s character in The Town had the star tattoos on her upper chest area. And the plot thickens.


Yesterday there were nude photos of Blake that were released online. Her rep immediately claimed that the photos were doctored and were not in fact Blake. The only thing is that she happens to be holding an iPhone in the photos, which is VERY similar to the iPhone that Blake owns.

Also, the hacker released two photos of a fully clothed “Blake” and…well it looks just like Blake Lively. Not saying it’s her, but if it’s not that means she might have a twin out there somewhere.

What’s the big deal about these pictures? It’s only pathetic when celebrities release their own nude photos and it’s obvious that Blake hasn’t leaked these pics herself so just let it go. She’s sexy and has a bangin’ body so let’s just leave it at that. What would the difference be if she went nude for a film role?

Billy Bob Thornton's daughter found guilty of manslaughter

Amanda Brumfield, Billy Bob Thornton’s Daughter: Baby Manslaughter

The estranged daughter of Billy Bob Thornton, responsible for the death of a 1-year-old girl, was found guilty of manslaughter last Friday in Orlando.

Amanda Brumfield, 32, caused the death of Olivia Madison Garcia, while babysitting in October 2008. Brumfield claimed that the child had fallen from her playpen, but, as prosecutors pointed out, a three-and-a-half inch fracture was found on Olivia’s skull, and her brain was bleeding and swelling. The injuries were inconsistent with a simple fall. However, Amanda Brumfield was found not guilty of first-degree murder and also not guilty of aggravated child abuse.

Brumfield will be sentenced in July. Hopefully the judge will throw the book at her, she got off easy. Can someone explain to me how you are found guilty of manslaughter in a child’s death but not aggravated child abuse? I’m having a hard time with this one…

2011 hurricane names announced

2011 hurricane names announced

2011 hurricane names announced. National Hurricane Center Predicts Above Average 2011 Season. Atlantic hurricane season begins Wednesday and the National Hurricane Center predicts that it will be an above average summer with 12 to 18 named storms, six to 10 hurricanes and three to six major hurricanes, which are Category 3 and above.

Last year, despite an historically active hurricane season with 19 named storms, no hurricanes made landfall in the U.S. In fact, the last hurricane to make landfall in the U.S. was Ike in 2008.

National Hurricane Center spokesman Dennis Feltgen cautioned that the long-range predictions are missing an important piece of information.

"It's not telling you where they are going to make landfall -- that long-range science does not exist," Feltgen said. "It doesn't matter if there are 50 storms or one, if that one storm hits you it's a really bad year, and that's the one storm you need to be preparing for right now."

Feltgen said it is vital that anyone who could be affected by a hurricane have a personal plan in place.

"If you don't have one and you find yourself under a hurricane warning, odds are you are going to be making the wrong decisions at the wrong time," he said.

On average the month of June has one storm every two years. This year the first named storm will be called Arlene, the most used storm name of all-time.

There are six lists that continually rotate and names are only removed from them after it is determined that a hurricane was so devastating that it would be insensitive to reuse the name.

The 2011 list is the same as the incredibly active and destructive 2005 hurricane season with a few notable exceptions, five hurricanes names were retired from the 2005 list because of their fury. Dennis has been replaced by Don, Katrina by Katia, Rita by Rina, Stan by Sean and Wilma by Whitney.

Here is the list of names for 2011:

Arlene

Bret

Cindy

Don

Emily

Franklin

Gert

Harvey

Irene

Jose

Katia

Lee

Maria

Nate

Ophelia

Philippe

Rina

Sean

Tammy

Vince

Whitney

Source:abcnews

Shaq makes retirement announcement on Twitter

Shaq makes retirement announcement on Twitter. Shaquille O’Neal, after 19 years in the NBA, announced on Twitter today that he is retiring.

"We did it. Nineteen years, baby. I wanna thank you very much," O'Neal said in a video addressed to his fans. "That's why I'm telling you first -- I'm about to retire. Love ya. Talk to you soon."

O'Neal will retire with an historic resume -- he's a four-time NBA champion, 15-time All-Star and was named the league's MVP after the 1999-2000 season. For his career, which began with the Orlando Magic in 1992 and spanned stints with the Los Angeles Lakers, Miami Heat, Phoenix Suns, Cleveland Cavaliers and Boston Celtics, he averaged 23.7 points, 10.9 rebounds and 2.3 blocks.

Read more: sportingnews

Romney seeks 2nd chance with GOP presidential bid

Romney seeks 2nd chance with GOP presidential bid


What are the odds of this? A guy gets into a head-on collision, has a police officer write "He is dead" at the scene, and lives to tell.

Mitt Romney knows a thing or two about second chances.

After that long-ago highway collision when he was a young missionary serving in France, Romney earned an outsized reputation and millions of dollars as a corporate turnaround artist, fixing bottom lines, cleaning up the scandal-tarred Salt Lake City Olympics and giving various other endeavors a second wind.

Now he is determined to do that for himself.

"I've never seen an enterprise in more desperate need of a turnaround than the U.S. government," Romney says.


An also-ran to John McCain in the 2008 Republican nomination fight, Romney is the closest thing to a front-runner that the still-jelling GOP presidential field for 2012 has to offer. On Thursday, the former Massachusetts governor makes his candidacy official during an appearance at a farm in Stratham, N.H.

With his good looks, able fundraising, strong political organization, solid family and business acumen, Romney sounds like a candidate ordered from central casting to run in a time of economic stress.

But to succeed where he failed four years ago, Romney, 64, will need to convince voters that behind the picture-perfect presentation lurks a human being with a passion to lead and an unshakeable set of convictions.

The rap against Romney in 2008 was that he'd conveniently reinvented himself to fit the political environment of the day. The man who'd governed Massachusetts as a pro-abortion rights moderate and delivered a bold statewide plan for universal health care coverage offered himself to Republicans as an anti-abortion social conservative who advocated limited government.

And that set off authenticity alarm bells with voters around the country. Pundits who thought his Mormon faith might be a problem for him concluded his changing political convictions probably caused him more grief.

This time around, Romney hopes the campaign for the GOP nomination will roll down his "power alley" — the economy and his business background — and away from social issues that bogged him down. He's coming across as a little looser in the process. After he got into a tiff with a rapper onboard an aircraft last year, the well-gelled Romney joked that the singer "broke my hair."

Over the past four years, he wrote a book, "No Apology: The Case for American Greatness," built a political machine and cultivated diverse friends.

The dust had hardly settled on the bruising nomination struggle of 2008 when Romney threw himself behind the candidate who had defeated him, began raising money for Republicans across the country and started pushing all the right buttons in the party.

Watching this unfold, Republican strategist Mary Matalin was struck by how Romney, in seeking common cause with the party's religious, intellectual and economic forces, may have "the greatest potential to pull all those factions together" even though other candidates may stir more passion in their core followers.

If only he could get "Romneycare" off his back.

The health care law he signed as governor has gone on to extend coverage to more than 98 percent of Massachusetts residents, unparalleled in the nation. But he's not bragging.

The package's stiff insurance mandate, its protections against losing coverage, penalties for noncompliance and subsidies for those needing help were largely embraced and adapted in President Barack Obama's national overhaul. That risks causing Romney no end of grief from Republican rivals as the field plays to anti-government sentiment and goes after "Obamacare" in the primaries.

At the moment, it's hard to tell if Romney is proud of what he accomplished. "Some things worked, some didn't, and some things I'd change," he remarks now, somewhat defensively. He says his measures were not a federal mandate on all states, a fundamental difference that still does not erase the fact that government made the rules and diverted the tax dollars to make the changes happen.

He tackled this conundrum head on in a half-hour talk and slide show in Michigan last month. He had called his book "No Apology" as a dig at President Barack Obama, whom he accuses of selling American exceptionalism short. But this time the label applied to him. There would be no apology for Romneycare; instead, a somewhat tortured explanation of it.

"A lot of pundits around the nation are saying that I should just stand up and say this whole thing was a mistake, that it was just a boneheaded idea and I should just admit it," Romney said then. "There's only one problem with that: It wouldn't be honest. I, in fact, did what I believe was right for the people of my state."

The speech was largely a bust with conservatives, although it appears not to have knocked him down many pegs. In any event, his book lays out different, safely Republican ideas about how to fix the system. He calls it "free-market health care." Expect to hear a lot about that in the GOP debates to come.

Son of George Romney, who was chairman of the old American Motors, a Michigan governor and failed Republican presidential hopeful in the 1960s, Willard Mitt Romney earned simultaneous law and business degrees at Harvard on his way to a high-flying corporate career that would take a turn to politics.

He worked for Boston Consulting Group, helping companies fatten their bottom lines. Then he moved to rival Bain & Co., where he led a new spinoff, Bain Capital, which combined management consulting with investments in promising companies. He helped start or reinvigorate hundreds of companies, Staples and Domino's Pizza among them, on his way to amassing a personal fortune.

It's just the resume the country needs, says Romney, who calls Obama "one of the most ineffective presidents" he's ever seen.

"What I know and what I've spent my life doing is particularly relevant right now," he said last weekend in Iowa.

Romney took on Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in 1994, a hopeless quest. "He took me to school," Romney said afterward. Years later Kennedy would stand with Romney at the signing of the landmark health care law.

Romney cemented his reputation as a turnaround artist when he stepped in to clean up the 2002 Winter Olympics in Utah, reeling with accusations of bribery and resignations from the organizing committee. He cut costs, boosted revenues and oversaw a successful event despite the dark shadow over the nation from the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

That made it a ripe time to reawaken his political ambition. Republicans recruited him to run for governor in deeply Democratic Massachusetts. Backed by $6 million of his own money, he won.

The combination of fiscally conservative and socially moderate policies he brought to that race proved a winning formula in the state, but complicated the 2008 primaries, which are dominated by conservative voters. His challenge then remains his challenge now on the road to 2012.
Source:yahoo.com

kardashian katy perry

Kardashian's Katy Perry Video Hits The Web

Kim Kardashian, sister Khloe and mother Kris are among the Kardashian family members who appear in a cover music video to Katy Perry's 'Et'. Sisters Kylie and Kendall spearheaded the lip-synched project, which was shot during a recent family vacation, reports OK Magazine.


Khloe Kardashian was first to post the video on her personal blog yesterday (31st May 2011), telling fans, "Hi dolls! Happy Tuesday!!!!! I hope you all had a fab Memorial Day weekend. I'm so excited to finally present you to Kardashian/Jenner/Odom/Disick Humphries family music video" Khloe described sisters Kendall and Kyle as being "so creative", revealing that the entire family were forced to learn the words to Katy Perry's hit song. 30-year-old Kim also took to her blog to discuss the project, saying, "The whole family went on vacation recently and Kendall and Kylie thought it would be fun to make a family music video to Katy Perry's 'Et.' Even Mason took part, LOL. I loveeee this video!! Kendall and Kylie both directed and edited it! I can't believe how great it turned out. They truly are geniuses!" The video features Kim's future husband Kris Humphries, who reportedly popped the question to the reality star last week.


The new series of 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians' is set to premiere on 12th June 2011. Season five of the show finished with Khloe celebrating her birthday in New York City with family and friends while Kim was spotted partying with the football player MILES AUSTIN, causing her ex Reggie Bush to become jealous.

Source

Arab Spring unrest: 49 dead in Yemen, Syria

Arab Spring unrest: 49 dead in Yemen, Syria .

Shelling by Yemen's Republican Guard and pre-dawn street battles between government forces and rival tribal fighters killed at least 41 people in the capital Wednesday.

Meanwhile in Syria, at least eight people, including an 11-year-old girl, were killed over two days when Syrian troops shelled a town in the country's south, a human rights activist said.

Fighting in Yemen raged until 5 a.m. local time Wednesday (10 p.m. ET Tuesday). Witnesses said Presidential Guard units shelled the headquarters of an army brigade responsible for guarding sensitive government institutions.

There were growing signs of disarray in beleaguered President Ali Abdullah Saleh's military. Army officers who have defected to the opposition say the government suspected the brigade commander, Brigadier-General Mohammed Khalil, was about to join forces with the movement to oust Saleh.

Video: Yemen faces 'all-out civil war'



Opposition army officers, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with army rules, said Khalil was neutral and without political affiliation but had apparently angered Saleh.

The 41 dead included combatants from both sides of the conflict, said the medical officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

The fighting engulfed the Hassaba neighborhood that contains the family compound of influential opposition tribal leader Sheik Sadeq al-Ahmar, and to the north of that district where Republican Guard units protect Saleh's former residence.

The units, led by one of Saleh's sons, and special forces wearing uniforms of government security troops attacked but failed to recapture the Hassaba administrative building from tribal gunmen.

Water, electricity cut off
On Tuesday, Saleh imposed collective punishment on the Hassaba neighborhood by cutting water supplies and electricity.

A resident who lives close to the fighting and would only give his first name, Zaher, said columns of smoke and fire billowed from Khalil's brigade headquarters and explosions could be heard.

Yemen is on the brink of financial ruin, with about a third of its 23 million people facing chronic hunger.
Source

Snooki taken into custody in Italy

Jersey Shore’s Snooki taken into police custody in Italy after car smash!

Jersey Shore star Nicole ‘Snooki’ Polizzi has been “taken into custody” in Florence, Italy after crashing into a police car.

Witnesses at the scene and show insiders have told TMZ that there’s no question Snooki had been drinking, and nobody was injured in the crash.

One eye witness told TMZ that Snooki ran into the back of the police car, and wedged her car between the police vehicle and a wall.


However, she had to be assisted to exit her car via a window as the driver’s and passenger’s doors were both blocked.
E! Online also reported on the incident, and they add that the police car was in fact a “safety escort” for the Jersey Shore stars.

Deena Nicole Cortese was in the passenger seat of the car Snooki was driving, and though both were unhurt, both were taken into custody while the details of the incident were sorted out.

E! adds, “The officers were treated for whiplash and minor cuts and bruises” while both Snooki and Deena refused any medical attention.
Source:unrealityshout.com/

Cheryl cole break

Stars line up to help Cheryl Cole break US

Grammy award winner John Legend is the latest US star to volunteer to help Cheryl Cole make it big in the States.

Grammy award winner John Legend is the latest US star to volunteer to help Cheryl Cole make it big in the States.

Legend told a tabloid a newspaper that he believes that the Girls Aloud singer could go on to become a big star in the States.

He told the Daily Star: "Whatever Cheryl needs, I'm glad to help. But I'm sure she will be fine.
"It's big her getting the job on the X Factor USA. A lot of people don't know her in the States, but they will now."

However, he admitted he won't actually be watching his pal Cheryl on the TV talent show.

He explained: "I'm not much of a talent show watcher so I won't be tuning in personally.

"When you do it professionally, it's hard to watch talent shows, but I know it's good for everybody else so I'll just be a little snob in my corner while the rest of the world is tuning in."

Speaking of how he would like more gigs in the UK, he added: "I've done a festival everywhere but in the UK.

"I heard the track I did with a Magnetic Man song went down well in the UK which I'm happy about.

"I was there in November with The Roots, and that was fabulous. We played Jools Holland which was a lot of fun."
Source:

Osama raid avenged CIA deaths, a secret until now

Osama raid avenged CIA deaths, a secret until now

For a small cadre of CIA veterans, the death of Osama bin Laden was more than just a national moment of relief and closure. It was also a measure of payback, a settling of a score for a pair of deaths, the details of which have remained a secret for 13 years.

Tom Shah and Molly Huckaby Hardy were among the 44 U.S. Embassy employees killed when a truck bomb exploded outside the embassy compound in Kenya in 1998.

Though it has never been publicly acknowledged, the two were working undercover for the CIA. In al-Qaida's war on the United States, they are believed to be the first CIA casualties.

Their names probably will not be among those read at Memorial Day celebrations around the country this weekend. Like many CIA officers, their service remained a secret in both life and death, marked only by anonymous stars on the wall at CIA headquarters and blank entries in its book of honor.

Their CIA ties were described to The Associated Press by a half-dozen current and former U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because Shaw's and Hardy's jobs are still secret, even now.

The deaths weighed heavily on many at the CIA, particularly the two senior officers who were running operations in Africa during the attack. Over the past decade, as the CIA waged war against al-Qaida, those officers have taken on central roles in counterterrorism. Both were deeply involved in hunting down bin Laden and planning the raid on the terrorist who killed their colleagues.

"History has shown that tyrants who threaten global peace and freedom must eventually face their natural enemies: America's war fighters, and the silent warriors of our Intelligence Community," CIA Director Leon Panetta wrote in a Memorial Day message to agency employees.

These silent warriors took very different paths to Nairobi.

Hardy was a divorced mom from Valdosta, Ga., who raised a daughter as she travelled to Asia, South America and Africa over a lengthy career. At the CIA station in Kenya, she handled the office finances, including the CIA's stash of money used to pay sources and carry out spying operations. She was a new grandmother and was eager to get back home when al-Qaida struck.

Shah took an unpredictable route to the nation's clandestine service. He was not a solider or a Marine, a linguist or an Ivy Leaguer. He was a musician from the Midwest. But his story, and the secret mission that brought him to Africa, was straight out of a Hollywood spy movie.

"He was a vivacious, upbeat guy who had a very poignant, self-deprecating sense of humor," said Dan McDevitt, a classmate and close friend from St. Xavier High School in Cincinnati, where Shah was a standout trumpet player.

Shah — his given name was Uttamlal — was the only child of an Indian immigrant father and an American mother, McDevitt said. He had a fascination with international affairs. He participated in the school's model United Nations and, in the midst of the Cold War, was one of the school's first students to learn Russian. From time to time, he went to India with his father, giving him a rare world perspective.

"At the time, that was unheard of. You might as well have gone to Mars," said McDevitt, who lost touch with his high school friend long before he joined the agency.

Shah graduated from Berklee College of Music in Boston and Ball State University's music school. He taught music classes and occasionally played in backup bands for entertainers Red Skelton, Perry Como and Jim Nabors. His doctoral thesis at Indiana's Ball State offered no hints about the career he would pursue: "The Solo Songs of Edward MacDowell: An Examination of Style and Literary Influence."

"He was one of our outstanding people," said Kirby Koriath, the graduate student adviser at Ball State.

Shah and his wife, Linda, were married in 1983, the year he received his master's degree. In 1987, after earning his doctorate, Shah joined the U.S. government. On paper, he had become a diplomat. In reality, he was shipped to the Farm, the CIA's spy school in Virginia.

He received the usual battery of training in surveillance, counterespionage and the art of building sources. The latter is particularly hard to teach, but it came naturally to Shah, former officials said. Shah was regarded as one of the top members of his class and was assigned to the Near East Division, which covers the Middle East.

He spoke fluent Hindi and decent Russian when he arrived and quickly showed a knack for languages by learning Arabic. He worked in Cairo and Damascus and, though he was young, former colleagues said he was quickly proving himself one of the agency's most promising stars.

In 1997, he was dispatched to headquarters as part of the Iraq Operations Group, the CIA team that ran spying campaigns against Saddam Hussein's regime. Around that time, the CIA became convinced that a senior Iraqi official was willing to provide intelligence in exchange for a new life in America. Before the U.S. could make that deal, it had to be sure the information was credible and the would-be defector wasn't really a double agent. But even talking to him was a risky move. If a meeting with the CIA was discovered, the Iraqi would be killed for sure.

Somebody had to meet with the informant, somebody who knew the Middle East and could be trusted with such a sensitive mission. A senior officer recommended Shah.

The meetings were set up in Kenya, former officials said, because it was considered relatively safe from Middle East intelligence services. It was perhaps the most important operation being run under the Africa Division at the time, current and former officials said. Among the agency managers overseeing it was John Bennett, the deputy chief of the division. He and his operations chief, who remains undercover, were seasoned Africa hands and veterans of countless spying operations.

Because of the mission's sensitivity, Shah bottled up his normally outgoing and friendly personality while at the embassy.

"This is the glory and the tragedy of discreet work," said Prudence Bushnell, the former ambassador to Kenya. "You keep a very low profile and you don't do things that make you memorable."

Officials say Shah was among those who went to the window when shooting began outside the embassy gates. Most who did were killed when the massive bomb exploded. He was 38. Hardy was also killed in the blast. She was 51.

The U.S. government said both victims were State Department employees. But like all fallen officers, they received private memorial services at CIA headquarters. Every year, their names are among those read at a ceremony for family members and colleagues.

Hardy's daughter, Brandi Plants, said she did not want to discuss her mother's employment. Shah's widow, Linda, sent word through a neighbor that the topic was still too painful to discuss.

Shah's death did not stall his mission. The Africa Division pressed on and confirmed that the Iraqi source was legitimate, his information extremely valuable. He defected and was re-located to the United States with a new identity.

Bennett later went on to be the station chief in Islamabad, where he ran the agency's effort to kill al-Qaida members by using unmanned aircraft. He now sits in one of the most important seats in the agency, overseeing clandestine operations worldwide. His former Africa operations chief now runs the agency's counterterrorism center. Both have been hunting for bin Laden for years. Both were directly involved in the raid.

Shah and Hardy are among the names etched into stone at a memorial at the embassy in Nairobi, with no mention of their CIA service. Shah is also commemorated with a plaque in a CIA conference room at its headquarters. Both were among those whose names Panetta read last week at the annual ceremony for fallen officers.

"Throughout the effort to disrupt, dismantle and defeat al-Qaida, our fallen colleagues have been with us in memory and in spirit," Panetta said. "With their strength and determination as our guide, we achieved a great victory three weeks ago."

Bin Laden said the embassy in Nairobi was targeted because it was a major CIA station. He died never knowing that he had killed two CIA officers there.
Sourcwe:yahoo.com

Gil Scott-Heron Dies

Gil Scott-Heron


"Godfather of Rap" Gil Scott-Heron, who in 1970 mixed poetry and music for his militant song "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised," died Friday afternoon in a New York hospital, his publicist told CNN.

He was 62, and the cause of death was not immediately stated. Scott-Heron was known to be HIV positive and had struggled with drug addiction throughout a large part of his life.

"You will not be able to stay home, brother/You will not be able to plug in, turn on and cop out/You will not be able to lose yourself on skag and skip/Skip out for beer during commercials/Because the revolution will not be televised," went one stanza of the work.

Chicago-born, the iconoclast was named after his father, Gilbert Heron, a Jamaican football (soccer) player who had settled in America and was signed by Glasgow's Celtic FC, earning the nickname "The Black Arrow."

Returning to the Windy City, Senior met Gil’s mother, Bobbie, a librarian who had once sung with the New York Oratorial Society. It was she, along with his grandmother, who raised the young Scott-Heron in Jackson, Tenn. While in college, he was heavily influence by the poet Langston Hughes.

"The Revolution" was released when he was only 18, and within five years he had also recorded three albums and published two novels and a book of poetry. Among his other nicknames was "The People's Poet."

Scott-Heron's influence was immense. As Usher Tweeted on Friday night: "I just learned of the lost of a very important poet...R.I.P. Gil Scott Heron. The revolution will be live!!"
Source:www.people.com

Blackbeard's anchor recovered?

Blackbeard's anchor recovered off NC coast

An anchor from what's believed to be the wreck of the pirate Blackbeard's flagship has been raised from the ocean floor off the North Carolina coast.

Archaeologists believe the anchor recovered Friday is from the Queen Anne's Revenge, which sank in 1718. That was five months before Blackbeard was killed in a battle.


The artifact is the third-largest item at the shipwreck, outsized only by two other anchors.

Researchers retrieved the anchor from the shipwreck about 20 feet under water and were bringing it to shore. The work to retrieve it began last week. The anchor is about 11 feet long.

The recovery coincides with the release this month of "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides." The movie features both Blackbeard and the Queen Anne's Revenge.
Source:news.yahoo.com

Jose canseco lady gaga

Jose Canseco Proposes to Lady Gaga!

What do men feel about Lady Gaga? Do they find her attractive or are they just scared? Well, Jose Canseco seems to be willing to marry the 25-year-old singer.

"I wish I could meet her. I would marry her in a second", the 46-year-old former baseball player wrote on Twitter on Monday.
"I am at Cocoa Casino in Yuma, Arizona", the Celebrity Apprentice star said in his weird proposal to Gaga. "I am the biggest Lady Gaga fan ever. I just think she tells it how it is, she says she's born that way, you have to accept it, and that's all there is to it. It's very simple", he explained.
So far, Lady Gaga hasn't responded to Canseco's proposal, but we expect something brilliant from her.

In the past, Canseco dated Madonna for a short while.
Source:gossip.whyfame.com

Death toll in Joplin twister rises by 6 to 132

Death toll in Joplin twister rises by 6 to 132

The death toll from the tornado that hit Joplin, Mo., on Sunday rose to 132 following the discovery of six more bodies, the city said in a statement Friday.

Joplin Mayor Mike Woolston earlier told NBC News that he expected the number to continue to rise slowly as debris is removed.

State officials also reported that 156 people still remain unaccounted for. A list released Thursday showed 232 missing, but that was quickly reduced as some people were found to be alive and others already reported as having died.

More than 900 people were injured in the deadliest twister to hit the U.S. since 1947.

State officials who were criticized for problems with information made available to the public brought in new resources.

“We will keep a relentless focus on the search, rescue and identification” of the missing and “we will not rest until everyone has been accounted for,” Gov. Jay Nixon said.

Getting accurate information out of the six-mile-long scar left by the tornado has been a struggle. Cell phone service was spotty, landlines dropped and electric power remained cut for thousands across the city.

There was joy for some as people feared dead were found alive, and heartbreak for others as the worst was confirmed.

On the wall of the Red Cross shelter in Joplin was taped a poster with a picture of Emma Marie Hamp-Haines, on which someone had scrawled “FOUND.” Hamp-Haines was reunited with her daughter at the center on Wednesday.

“That made it worth it, to see a family brought together,” said Amie Houston, a Missouri State University student, who watched the reunion.

The meeting of mother and daughter was a welcome happy ending in a town where too many other stories have ended in shock and tears.

Story: Joplin receipt turns up 525 miles away

Reports late Thursday indicated that Mike Hare’s search for his 16-year-old son Lantz ended in heartbreak.

Online social networking and community news site Gather News reported that the teen had been found dead.

Hare had been scouring the ravaged neighborhood where his son was seen last. He had called hospitals from Dallas to Kansas City and taken dozens of calls offering advice, prayers and hopeful tips.

Hunting friends and family
Local radio filled with callers hunting for friends and family. A Safe and Well list maintained by the Red Cross had more than 1,800 names registered and more than 79,000 searches by Thursday morning, spokesman Jim Rettew said.

Searchers hung five posters, including that of Emma Marie Hamp-Haines, on a glass case behind the Red Cross workers.

“One of the first questions we’re asking is ‘Have you notified your family? Do they know you’re safe?’” Rettew said.

Nixon said Thursday the number of missing had fallen as stories like Hamp-Haines’s came to light.

He acknowledged the frustration and confusion over initial estimates of a staggering 1,500 missing reported for two days following the tornado.

As briefings continued for the media, the number of missing did not decline. Then on Wednesday, officials abruptly stopped giving out a figure at all.

State officials directed 60 investigators starting on Wednesday to work around the clock to deliver Thursday’s more accurate number, Nixon said.

We have absolutely no reason to hide anything from anybody,” Nixon said.

Some of the remains recovered so far have been in very poor condition, Nixon told reporters. Morgue workers, including a federal team, were working to ensure there were no incorrect identifications, he said.

“I don’t know what you say to someone who was sitting at home eating dinner and heard the sirens and haven’t seen their loved ones since,” Nixon said.

Deadliest days

Below are the deadliest single tornadoes in U.S. history. The Joplin tornado is not listed as the number is still in flux.

1. Mar 18, 1925: Missouri/Illinois/Indiana; 695 dead

2. May 6, 1840: Natchez, Mississippi; 317 dead

3. May 27, 1896: St. Louis, Missouri; 255 dead

4. April 5, 1936: Tupelo, Mississippi; 216 dead

5. April 6, 1936: Gainesville, Georgia; 203 dead

6. April 9, 1947: Woodward, Oklahoma; 181 dead

7. April 24, 1908: Amite, La./Purvis, Miss.; 143 dead

8. June 12, 1899: New Richmond, Wisconsin; 117 dead

9. June 3, 1953: Flint, Michigan; 115 dead

10. May 11, 1953: Waco, Texas; 114 dead

10. May 18, 1902: Goliad, Texas; 114 dead
Source:workvolunteerabroad.com

kendall jenner birth control

Why Is Kendall Jenner on Birth Control?

The Kardash-ling. Craig Barritt/WireImage Sound the alarms, 15-year-old Kendall Jenner is on birth control! That's a dramatic plot twist from the upcoming season of "Keeping Up With the Kardashians," wherein Bruce Jenner freaks out when he discovers his daughter's pills.
"No comment, no comment," Kris Jenner teases to E! News about the situation, keeping fans in suspense (as a true reality-show mom would). "You'll have to wait and see."

To this, Khloe Kardashian -- this family loves to get interviewed, especially together -- weighs in to set the record straight (and keep her little sister's reputation intact). "But I don't want it to be bad," she says. "Because it's not that reason why she's on birth control."
Perhaps, as E! suggests, the teen model is taking the pills for acne or menstrual cramps. Either way, kids grow up -- and fast, in Hollywood.
Source:omg.yahoo.com

President Obama extends Patriot Act

President Obama extends Patriot Act
President Obama extends Patriot Act. Obama signs temporary extension of Patriot Act.
President Barack Obama has signed a three-month extension of key surveillance provisions of the Patriot Act.

The law extends two areas of the 2001 act. One provision allows law enforcement officials to set roving wiretaps to monitor multiple communication devices. The other allows them to ask a special court for access to business and library records that could be relevant to a terrorist threat.A third provision gives the FBI court-approved rights for surveillance of non-American "lone wolf" suspects — those not known to be tied to specific terrorist groups.

Obama signed the three-month extension of the provisions Friday. They were to expire Monday.

Lawmakers will soon start debating a multiple-year extension of the provisions, which have drawn fire from defenders of privacy rights.

Source:yahoo

Final moments of Air France 447 revealed

Final moments of Air France 447 revealed
Final moments of Air France 447 revealed. The pilots of Air France flight AF447, which plunged into the Atlantic killing 228 people, saw conflicting speeds on their instruments as the Airbus A330 stalled.

That is one of the findings of France's BEA aviation safety agency which has analysed the black box flight recorder for the 2009 accident .

"We have no valid indications," one pilot of the Rio to Paris flight was quoted as saying as the aircraft dropped towards the sea, three minutes before it hit the water.

The 58-year-old captain, who had left the cockpit to take a routine rest, returned but did not retake control of the plane.

"There was an inconsistency between the speeds displayed on the left side and the integrated standby instrument system," BEA said in a statement following its study of the recovered flight data recorders.

"This lasted for less than one minute."
According to the chronology of the flight provided by BEA, the two co-pilots decided at two hours and eight minutes into the flight to turn slightly to the left to avoid an area of turbulence.

Two minutes later the autopilot disengaged, the instruments began showing that the speed had slowed dramatically and the engine stall warning began to sound.

"During the following seconds, all of the recorded speeds became invalid and the stall warning stopped," said the BAE preliminary report.

"So, we've lost the speeds," it quoted the second of the two co-pilots as saying. The responses by the co-pilot flying the aircraft "were mainly nose-up" and "the airplane climbed to 38,000ft".

BEA said: "The descent lasted 3 min 30, during which the airplane remained stalled. The engines were operating and always responded to crew commands."

The last data on the recorder showed that plane's nose was up at a sharp angle as it plunged at 10,912ft (3,300m) per minute.

BEA director Jean-Paul Troadec said: "These are so far just observations, not an understanding of the events."

A fuller report into the cause of the tragedy is expected to be released in a few months time.

Read More:yahoo

Hackers broke into Lockheed Martin networks

Hackers broke into Lockheed Martin networks
Other U.S. military contractors' networks also may have been hacked

Unknown hackers have broken into the security networks of Lockheed Martin Corp and several other U.S. military contractors, a source with direct knowledge of the attacks told Reuters.

They breached security systems designed to keep out intruders by creating duplicates to "SecurID" electronic keys from EMC Corp's RSA security division, said the person who was not authorized to publicly discuss the matter.

It was not immediately clear what kind of data, if any, was stolen by the hackers. But the networks of Lockheed and other military contractors contain sensitive data on future weapons systems as well as military technology currently used in battles in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Weapons makers are the latest companies to be breached through sophisticated attacks that have pierced the defenses of huge corporations including Sony, Google Inc and EMC Corp. Security experts say that it is virtually impossible for any company or government agency to build a security network that hackers will be unable to penetrate.

The Pentagon, which has about 85,000 military personnel and civilians working on cybersecurity issues worldwide, said it also uses a limited number of the RSA electronic security keys, but declined to say how many for security reasons.

The hackers learned how to copy the security keys with data stolen from RSA during a sophisticated attack that EMC disclosed in March, according to the source.

EMC declined to comment on the matter, as did executives at major defense contractors.

Rick Moy, president of NSS Labs, an information security company, said the original attack on RSA was likely targeted at its customers, including military, financial, governmental and other organizations with critical intellectual property.

He said the initial RSA attack was followed by malware and phishing campaigns seeking specific data that would link tokens to end-users, which meant the current attacks may have been carried out by the same hackers.

"Given the military targets, and that millions of compromised keys are in circulation, this is not over," he said.

Lockheed, which employs 126,000 people worldwide and had $45.8 billion in revenue last year, said it does not discuss specific threats or responses as a matter of principle, but regularly took actions to counter threats and ensure security.

"We have policies and procedures in place to mitigate the cyber threats to our business, and we remain confident in the integrity of our robust, multi-layered information systems security," said Lockheed spokesman Jeffery Adams.

Executives at General Dynamics Corp ,, Boeing Co , Northrop Grumman Corp, Raytheon Co and other defense companies declined to comment on any security breaches linked to the RSA products.

"We do not comment on whether or not Northrop Grumman is or has been a target for cyber intrusions," said Northrop spokesman Randy Belote.

Actions prevented widespread disruption
Raytheon spokesman Jonathan Kasle said his company took immediate companywide actions in March when incident information was initially provided to RSA customers.

"As a result of these actions, we prevented a widespread disruption of our network," he said.

Boeing spokesman Todd Kelley said his company had a "wide range" of systems in place to detect and prevent intrusions of its networks. "We have a robust computing security team that constantly monitors our network," he said.

Defense contractors' networks contain sensitive data on sophisticated weapons systems, but all classified information is kept on separate, closed networks managed by the U.S. government, said a former senior defense official, who was not authorized to speak on the record.

SecurIDs are widely used electronic keys to computer systems that work using a two-pronged approach to confirming the identity of the person trying to access a computer system. They are designed to thwart hackers who might use key-logging viruses to capture passwords by constantly generating new passwords to enter the system.

The SecurID generates new strings of digits on a minute-by-minute basis that the user must enter along with a secret PIN (personal identification number) before they can access the network. If the user fails to enter the string before it expires, then access is denied.

RSA and other companies have produced a total of about 250 million security tokens, although it is not clear how many are in use worldwide at present, said the former defense official.

The devices provided additional security at a lower cost than biometrics such as fingerprint readers or iris scanning machines, said the official, noting that the RSA incident could increase demand for greater use of biometric devices.

The RSA breach did raise concerns about any security tokens that had been compromised, and EMC now faced tough questions about whether "they can repair that product line or whether they need to ditch it and start over again," he said.

EMC disclosed in March that hackers had broken into its network and stolen some information related to its SecurIDs. It said the information could potentially be used to reduce the effectiveness of those devices in securing customer networks.

EMC said it worked with the Department of Homeland Security to publish a note on the March attack, providing Web addresses to help firms identify where the attack might have come from.

It briefed individual customers on how to secure their systems. In a bid to ensure secrecy, the company required them to sign nondisclosure agreements promising not to discuss the advice that it provided in those sessions, according to two people familiar with the briefings.
Source:www.msnbc.msn.com

Laura Ingraham and apology

Laura Ingraham: "I Never Called Meghan McCain Fat!"

While filling in for Bill O'Reilly on Fox News Wednesday night, conservative commenter Laura Ingraham denied having insulted Meghan McCain's weight.

"Let the record show: I never called Meghan McCain fat! She isn't!" Ingraham said. "And as I have repeatedly said on my radio show and on Fox, she is an attractive young woman. If that throwaway comic line highlighted anything, it was Hollywood's obsession with stick-figure women!" Later, she added, "This diversion about -- 'Oh, it's about her weight' -- my point was that she has no real world political experience to make the case for moderation."

On her radio show last Thursday, Ingraham mocked McCain, saying she didn't get a "role in the Real World" because "they don't like plus-sized models."


"Ok, I was really hoping that I was going to get that role in the Real World, but then I realized that, well, they don't like plus-sized models," Ingraham imagined McCain saying. "They only like the women who look a certain way. And on this 50th anniversary of Barbie, I really have something to say."

Meghan McCain called the comment "terrible" on "The View" Monday and invited Ingraham to "Kiss my fat ass!"
Source