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IN-DEPTH ARTICLE OF THE WEEK

HISTORY OF AMERICAN MUSIC AND GOSPEL SPIRITUALS: THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN ENTERTAINMENT, MUSIC, SOUL, JAZZ, FOLK AND GOSPEL SPIRITUALS FROM THE 17th CENTURY TO PRESENT. INCLUDING: History and Early Origin of American Music, American Song, American Composers and American Singers from the Colonial Era to the 21st century. BY MAXIMILLIEN de LAFAYETTE...Read full article (A 70 page condensed edition)

 

NEWS

Sharon to seek final peace deal with Palestinians if re-elected: minister

JERUSALEM- A deal was emerging Tuesday for elder statesman Shimon Peres to leave the Labor party, his political home for 60 years, and join Ariel Sharon's government if the prime minister is re-elected in March. A Sharon associate and newspaper reports said Peres likely would be charged with developing the outlying Galilee and the Negev regions if Sharon retains power. The associate spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss policy with the media. Speaking in Barcelona, Spain, on Tuesday, Peres declined to confirm his move. "I shall decide tomorrow night," he said. But he had warm words for Sharon and none for Labor, whose members ousted him as party chairman earlier this month in favor of union firebrand Amir Peretz. "The real change is not in the Labor party. The real change is in the Likud party," he added. "Mr. Sharon took a different direction for a Palestinian state. He wants to continue the peace process." Sharon announced last week he was quitting the hardline Likud to establish a new centrist movement. Speculation has been rife since Peres lost the Labour leadership Nov. 10 that he would join forces with Sharon ahead of March 28 elections. That speculation intensified Tuesday after a Peres protégé, Dalia Itzik, left Labor for the Sharon camp. "It looks like a package deal," Labor's secretary general, Eitan Cabel, told Army Radio, saying it now appeared likely Peres would leave as well. Also Tuesday, a Sharon ally said the prime minister hopes to clinch a final peace deal with the Palestinians if re-elected - the clearest sign yet of Sharon's agenda for a possible third term. Sharon's new party, Kadima, "will strive in this term to reach a final status agreement with the Palestinians and to set Israel's permanent boundaries," cabinet minister Meir Sheetrit told Israel Radio. "We understand that to reach a final status agreement, there is no choice . . . but to create two states for two nations." Last week, Sharon quit the Likud party he helped to found because he was convinced that dissidents opposed to last summer's withdrawal from Gaza would try to stifle further concessions to the Palestinians and quash the eventual creation of a Palestinian state. Days later, parliament's term was cut short and early elections were called for March. Kadima, dominated by former Likud legislators, held its first formal meeting Monday. It sketched out broad policy goals, including peaceful coexistence with a future Palestinian state, but did not declare the creation of that state as a goal for the coming term. Recent polls show Sharon headed toward a third term and able to put together a moderate coalition government with Labour, which also supports a final peace deal. Palestinian Planning Minister Ghassan Khatib played down the significance of Sheetrit's remarks, saying Sharon and the Palestinians had different peace deals in mind. "He is pursuing a unilateral approach, which is not constructive, and he wants peace that is incompatible with our legitimate rights and with international legality," Khatib said. In practice, Sharon is building settlements and consolidating Israel's occupation of the West Bank, "moving in the opposite direction" of a final peace deal, Khatib said. "I think these statements are public-relations-and election-related kind of statements," he added. On the Palestinian side, primaries for the ruling Fatah party were in disarray less than two months before Jan. 25 parliamentary elections, roiled by violence and problems with party lists. Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas said he would honor the results of Fatah primaries held in the West Bank last week but has not decided whether voting should take place in other areas. The coming primaries are expected to solidify wins by younger members of the Fatah movement, who swept aside Fatah old-timers in primaries in five West Bank districts last week. "Elections have been done in some places, and we deal with that in a positive way," Abbas said after returning from a trip to Spain. "For places which have not held their primaries, we will find a suitable solution." Some Fatah officials said earlier Tuesday that Abbas ordered voting suspended, but his aides denied it. On Monday, primaries in Gaza were cancelled after gunmen attacked polling stations. The cancellations embarrassed Abbas, who has been unable to restore order in the coastal strip or in his own party before a stiff electoral challenge from the Islamic militant group Hamas.- By Emy Tenbel.

Iran's president says Bush administration should be tried for war crimes

Photo: Ahmadinejad at a rally of paramilitary forces to support Iran's nuclear program in Tehran, Iran, Saturday.

TEHRAN, Iran- Iran's hardline president said Saturday the Bush administration should be tried on war crimes charges, and he denounced the West for pressuring Iran to curb its controversial nuclear program. "You, who have used nuclear weapons against innocent people, who have used uranium ordnance in Iraq, should be tried as war criminals in courts," Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in an apparent reference to the United States. Ahmadinejad did not elaborate, but he apparently was referring to the U.S. military's reported use of artillery shells packed with depleted uranium, which is far less radioactive than natural uranium and is left over from the process of enriching uranium for use as nuclear fuel. Since the Iraq war started in 2003, American forces have fired at least 120 tonnes of shells packed with depleted uranium, an extremely dense material used by the U.S. and British militaries to penetrate tank armour. Once fired, the shells melt, vaporize and turn to dust. "Who in the world are you to accuse Iran of suspicious nuclear armed activity?" Ahmadinejad said during a nationally televised ceremony marking the 36th anniversary of the establishment of Iran's volunteer Basij paramilitary force. Iran has been under intense international pressure to curb its nuclear program, which the United States claims is part of an effort to produce nuclear weapons. Iran denies such claims and says its program is aimed at generating electricity. Iran insists that it has the right to fully develop the program, including enrichment of nuclear fuel - a process that can produce fuel for nuclear reactors or atomic bombs. On Thursday, the European Union accused Iran of having documents that show how to make nuclear warheads and joined the United States in warning Tehran it could be referred to the UN Security Council for possible sanctions. Iran has temporarily stopped its enrichment program, but negotiations with Britain, France and Germany broke off in August after Tehran restarted another part of its program: the conversion of raw uranium into the gas that is used as the feeder stock in enrichment. Iran also has rejected European calls to halt work at its uranium conversion facility near the central city of Isfahan. Ahmadinejad dismissed Western concerns over his country's nuclear program. "They say Iran has to stop its peaceful nuclear activity since there is a probability of diversion while we are sure that they are developing and testing (nuclear weapons) every day," Ahmadinejad said. "They speak as if they are the lords of the world." State-run TV said more than nine million Basij members formed human chains in different parts of the country to mark their militia's anniversary. Thousands linked hands to make a 20-kilometre chain along an expressway in northern Tehran. Some Basij members also formed chains around an enrichment plant in the central city of Natanz and a nuclear plant under construction in the southern city of Bushehr, symbolizing their readiness to defend the country's nuclear program, Iranian TV reported. It is estimated that the Basij comprise 15 per cent of Iran's population, or about 10 million people.- By Nasir Karimee.

RALPH LAUREN

Massive quake rattles central China

Photo: Accompanied by her husband, Gui Guijiao, a Ruichang resident who is injured in an earthquake, receives treatment in Ruichang People's Hospital in Ruichang City, east China's Jiangxi Province, Saturday, Nov. 26, 2005.

BEIJING, China- An earthquake with a magnitude of at least 5.5 shook part of central China on Saturday, killing at least 14 people and injuring nearly 400. The official Xinhua News Agency said the quake happened at about 9 a.m., with the epicenter in Ruichang, a city of 420,000 in Jiangxi province. Hundreds of homes collapsed and thousands were damaged, Xinhua said. "The earthquake this morning was quite scary," said a shopkeeper in Ruichang reached by telephone who would only give her surname, Zhou. Many people in Ruichang were staying outside for fear of aftershocks. Zhou said she felt a milder trembling at about 1 p.m. Chinese Central Television news showed rows of crumbled brick buildings and deep cracks in the walls of many still standing. The news showed a young boy with his head heavily bandaged and a man crying on a bench as he cradled an injured leg. An old man and his injured wife shared a cot at a makeshift medical center set up in the street. Tents were set up outside a hospital treating some of the 377 injured. Xinhua said 1,000 tents were being sent to the area. China's state Seismological Bureau said the quake was magnitude 5.7, while the     U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo., reported it was 5.5.

TEN MOST WATCHED AMERICAN TV SHOW HOSTS

Photos from L to R: #1. Opra Winfrey. #2. David Letterman. #3. Jay Leno.

Not difficult to guess. And as predicted, according to a poll by the International News Agency,  the 10 most watched  American TV show hosts are in no particular order: 1- Jay Leno, (Audience. Age: Between 20 and 56. Gender: 65% men. 35% women). 2-David Letterman, (Audience. Age: Between 20 and 55. Gender: 60% men. 40% women). 3-Oprah Winfrey, (Audience. Age: Between 25 and 60. Gender: 97% women. 3% men).  4-Larry King, (Audience. Age: Between 30 and 75. Gender: 60% men. 40% women). 5-Lou Dobbs,  (Audience. Age: Between 32 and 70. Gender: 70% men. 30% women).  6-Robert Osborne,  (Audience. Age: Between 32 and 75. Gender: 56% men. 44% women). 7-Howard Stern, (Audience. Age: Between 18 and 47. Gender: 91% men. 9% women). 8-Paula Zahn,  (Audience. Age: Between 35 and 65. Gender: 73% women. 27% men). 9-Bill O'Reily, (Audience. Age: Between 32 and 65. Gender: 74% men. 26% women). 10-Donald Trump's whatever, Apprentice, et al, ad infinitum... (Audience. Age: Between 21 and 40. Gender: 79% men. 21% women). Error margin: Between 2% and 5 %. Number of people who participated in the polls: 25,000 in all the United States, except Alaska.

Photos from L to R: #1. Paula Zahn. #2. Donald Trump. #3. Lou Dobbs. #4. Robert Osborne. #5. Larry King.

Car bombs kill 10 in Iraq; U.S. military says top al-Zarqawi aide killed

Photo: Iraqi children look at the burning wreckage of a car bomb that exploded near a two-car convoy carrying foreigners through central Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday.

BAGHDAD, Iraq- A suicide bomber drove his pickup truck into a crowded gas station in central Iraq on Saturday and detonated it, killing six people, while a car bomb targeting a convoy of foreigners in the capital killed four people, police said. The U.S. military also said it had received information confirming the death of a top aide to the leader of Al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Bilal Mahmud Awad Shebah, also known as Abu Ubaydah, was killed in an Oct. 14 raid in Ramadi, an insurgent stronghold 112 kilometres west of Baghdad, the U.S. command said in a statement. The confirmation came from "a close family member as well as coalition sources," the statement said. "Detained members of al-Qaida claim Abu Ubaydah served as an 'executive secretary' for Zarqawi; met with Zarqawi frequently; served as a messenger and gatekeeper for Zarqawi; screened all messages and requests for meetings with Zarqawi (and) was one of Zarqawi's most trusted associates," the statement said. A U.S. soldier was killed Friday when his vehicle was hit by a roadside bomb near Hit, 137 kilometres west of Baghdad. At least 2,105 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. The suicide bomber struck in Samarra, 97 kilometres north of Baghdad, said police Lt.-Col. Mahmoud Mohammed. Twelve people were injured and nine cars were destroyed. The burnt carcasses of two sheep were in the back of one destroyed truck, and burnt clothing - including a man's traditional Sunni Arab robe - was scattered around the station parking lot. In central Baghdad, a parked car bomb detonated when two armoured cars drove by, killing four people, Leut. Thaer Mahmoud said.

Rent or Buy ROBOTS - Available to buy for $29.95 in store at your local participating Video Ezy NOW! Stocks are limited!No one in the convoy was injured, but one of the armoured cars was damaged and removed by U.S. forces, Mahmoud said. In the first signs of trouble before the Dec. 15 parliamentary elections, four people have been shot in the last two days while trying to hang campaign posters, police said. Two of the incidents occurred in Mosul, 362 kilometres northwest of Baghdad, while two more were reported in the capital. In northwestern Baghdad on Friday, more than 200 members of the Batta tribe gathered at a mosque carrying banners and chanting slogans to demand the resignation of the defence minister after Wednesday's slaying of Khadim Sarhid al-Hemaiyem. One of the sheik's brothers said gunmen wearing Iraqi army uniforms and vehicles broke into the family home, killing al-Hemaiyem, three of his sons and his son-in-law. A spokesman for the Interior Ministry denied that government forces were involved. Another one of al-Hemaiyem's sons was killed by men in uniform last month, family members said. "We want the Arab League and the Sunni scholars to investigate," said Abdullah Jawad Khadim al-Battawi, a relative. A statement from the little-known Partisans of the Sunni claimed it carried out a Thursday car bombing, killing 11 and wounding 17, in the mostly Shiite city of Hillah in retaliation for al-Hemaiyem's slaying and other attacks against Sunni Arabs. "We have warned the (Shiites) to stop assassinations and detentions and torture," the statement posted Friday on an Islamist Web site said. "You should know, your blood is no more dear than ours. You kill our men, we kill yours. You kill our sheiks, we kill yours. You started this war." An Interior Ministry official said security forces were aware of the Partisans group, which has been active in the area south of Baghdad for months. More than 270 people have been killed since Nov. 18 in car bombings and suicide attacks against Shiite targets. The Saddam Hussein trial resumes Monday following a five-week recess granted by the court to give the defence time to study the evidence. The trial could raise sectarian tensions ahead of national elections. Saddam's regime was dominated by Sunnis, and the trial involves the deaths of Shiites. U.S. officials hope a big Sunni turnout will encourage members of the community to turn away from the insurgency, hastening the day when American and other international troops can go home. Sunnis form about 20 per cent of Iraq's estimated 27 million people but are the backbone of the insurgency. - By Hameed Ahmad.

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Confusion and uncertainty surround resumption of Saddam trial

Photo: Saddam Hussein at an initial appearance for crimes against Shiite Faili Kurds, in this July 21, 2005 file photo in Baghdad, Iraq.

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Saddam Hussein's trial resumes Monday after a five-week break, with the defence planning to seek a lengthy adjournment in a proceeding threatened by Iraq's ongoing turmoil and tarnished by the assassination of two defence lawyers since the opening session last month. The first prosecution witnesses are expected to testify before the five-judge panel, offering accounts of the deaths of more than 140 Shiite villagers following an assassination attempt against Saddam in the town of Dujail in 1982. If convicted Saddam and his seven co-defendants could be sentenced to death by hanging. However, considerable uncertainty surrounds most details of the trial, including how many days the session will last, how many witnesses will testify and whether their identities will be made public. Many of the details have not been announced in advance due to security demands for a trial held in the midst of a raging insurgency - much of it led by Saddam supporters. For example, witnesses have the option of testifying from behind screens to preserve their anonymity. Court officials won't even say how many witnesses are on the prosecution list. One key witness, former intelligence officer Wadah Ismael al-Sheik, died of cancer after giving a videotaped deposition last month. Depositions are admissible under Iraqi law. Security concerns prompted the defence team to threaten a boycott of Monday's session after two members were slain in separate attacks after the trial opened Oct. 19. But the lawyers now say they will show up - if for no other reason than to prevent the Iraqi High Tribunal from appointing replacements. "All the lawyers will attend the trial and a decision has been taken not to leave the president alone," defence lawyer Issam Ghazawi said. "The lawyers are forced to attend the hearings, despite serious threats on their lives, but they want to do that to serve justice." U.S. and Iraqi officials said they expect the session to last until at least Thursday and then adjourn until after national parliamentary elections set for Dec. 15. However, lawyer Khamees al-Ubaidi told The Associated Press that the defence will ask for a postponement of at least three months to allow time to review the evidence and prepare their case.

 

Saddam Hussein

Photo: addam Hussein made a series of complaints to the judge

"It is not just a delay for delay's sake," al-Ubaidi said. "We need certain clarifications on documents we received, and we have not had enough time to study the case. Some of the documents we requested have not been delivered." Court officials have said they would be amenable to a reasonable adjournment. But officials have also indicated they want to wrap up the trial as soon as possible. Investigators are preparing up to a dozen other cases against Saddam, including his role in the crackdown on the Kurds in the 1980s and the brutal suppression of a Shiite uprising in the south in 1991. Al-Ubaidi also said an agreement had been reached "in principle" on security for the defence team and the boycott threat had been withdrawn. Some international legal and human rights organizations have warned that the very legitimacy of the proceedings depends on the government's ability to protect defence lawyers, as well as witnesses, prosecutors and judges. "The recent murder of two defence lawyers in the trial demonstrates the urgent need to protect those lawyers as well as witnesses," said Richard Dicker of Human Rights Watch. "However, all arrangements for witness protection must be consistent with fair trial guarantees." U.S. and Iraqi officials hope the trial will remind the world of the horrific crimes of the Saddam regime at a time when the American public is questioning the war as well as the Bush administration's strategy of building democracy in Iraq. The Shiite-led government has rejected suggestions that the trial be halted or moved to another country, as demanded by the defence. The United States resisted calls for establishing an international court - the formula used to prosecute war criminals in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia - insisting that Saddam should be judged by an Iraqi court on Iraqi soil. Nevertheless, Iraq's security crisis has forced U.S. and Iraqi authorities to employ measures that make this among the most unusual of trials. Proceedings are open to the world's media and will be streamed online by Court TV in the United States. Iraqis can watch the trial on the government's television station. But viewers will see the face of only one of the five trial judges. Identities of the others have been withheld to protect them and their families. The trial is taking place in the Green Zone - the heavily guarded international enclave in the heart of Baghdad where access is restricted to Iraqis and foreigners who have been carefully screened. Much of the security planning had focused on ways to protect judges, prosecutors and witnesses. That changed after a dozen masked gunmen abducted defence lawyer Saadoun al-Janabi from his Baghdad office the day after the opening session. His body was found the next day with two bullets in his skull. Nearly three weeks later, defence lawyer Adel al-Zubeidi was assassinated in a brazen daylight ambush in Baghdad. A colleague who was wounded fled the country. Government spokesman Laith Kubba said defence lawyers repeatedly turned down offers to move into the Green Zone; he accused them of using the security issue as a stalling tactic. The court said replacement lawyers would be appointed if the defence team refused to attend Monday's session so the trial could continue. - By R. Reed.

Now Playing: Saddam opens hearing with tirade

Saddam Hussein has made a defiant appearance as his trial on murder and torture charges resumed after a six-week break. The former Iraqi leader denies ordering the massacre of 148 Shias in Dujail in 1982. John Simpson reports from Baghdad.

 



WHAT'S NEW?

Adapting Nazi era opera calls for light touch

Tony Kushner doesn't mind when critics call him a ``political" playwright, a polemicist who mines humour, hypocrisy and human truths from the rougher chapters in world history. But when he decided to translate a 1938 Czech opera about a greedy town bully who meets his match in a pair of poor children, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Angels in America knew the project called for restraint. As an allegory on Hitler's rise to power and a story once performed by Jewish children who would eventually be killed by the Nazis, the last thing Brundibar needed was a heavy rhetorical hand. "What great political art does is marry the personal and the political in a way that one isn't clobbering the other," Kushner says between rehearsals at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre, where Brundibar and another Nazi-era theatre piece he adapted, Comedy on the Bridge, opened Nov. 16. "You don't want people saying, 'Oh, this is a play about Hitler.' " Brundibar is based on the 2003 picture book of the same name on which Kushner collaborated with his friend and literary hero, children's author-illustrator Maurice Sendak. It tells the story of a brother and sister who need to raise money to buy milk for their ailing mother and are hindered by a hostile organ grinder named Brundibar. Czech composer Hans Krasa created the opera for children in a Jewish orphanage in the years leading up to the Second World War. It was eventually performed 55 times at the Terezin concentration camp and was featured in a 1944 Nazi propaganda film, The Fuehrer Presents the Jews With a City. Krasa, and most of the children who performed in Brundibar, died at Auschwitz or other concentration camps. Sendak designed the sets for the Berkeley Rep production, which moves on to the Yale Repertory Theatre in February and New York's New Victory Theater in April. Euan Morton, who starred as Boy George in the Broadway production of Taboo, plays the title role. School-age children from the San Francisco Bay area make up the 29-member chorus. Kushner had done theatrical adaptations before (he is currently at work on a production of Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage for Meryl Streep), but never one from an opera libretto. It posed special challenges, including the fact that he didn't speak Czech. And since Krasa's estate still owned the copyright, he could not take many artistic liberties. "My problem was to make it sound like it was written from an English text for modern American stage actors," Kushner says. Even if there hadn't been that limitation, however, the playwright saw little room to improve on the original by Krasa and librettist Alan Hoffmeister. For a simple, 30-minute fable on the triumph of good over evil, it packs a surprisingly profound punch that becomes almost unbearable with the knowledge of the genocide that would darken the world after it was written, Kushner says. One of those moments comes during a lullaby the two siblings, Aninku and Pepicek, sing with their friends: "Now you are very old, your hair is soft and grey. Mommy, the cradle's cold. Blackbird has flown away." In the Berkeley Rep production, the group performs against a backdrop drawn by Sendak that shows children happily flying through a forest on the backs of oversize blackbirds. The timeless song of loss and love offers an unsentimental view of how bereft parents can feel after their children grow up and leave home, but its historical context colours it for modern audiences. "We can't imagine what listening to that song would be like without thinking about the kids in Terezin singing it," Kushner says. "You listen to that and you can't get it out of your head, and you shouldn't get it out of your head." Director Tony Taccone, who co-directed the world premiere of Angels in America and oversaw three Berkeley Rep productions of other Kushner plays, set the production in an unnamed ghetto instead of Terezin, the setting for the Chicago Opera Theater's 2003 version of the Kushner-Sendak collaboration. Taccone made a similarly unsentimental decision when Devynn Pedell, the third-grader who plays Aninku, asked if she could wear the yellow Jewish star her grandfather had worn in a concentration camp. "I was the one who had to say 'no,'" Taccone says. "I don't want this to be a story only one community has access to." Morton, who earned a Tony Award nomination for his portrayal of gender-bending 1980s pop star Boy George, was drawn to the Brundibar role partly because of the chance to play a character of over-the-top evil. At Taccone's urging, however, he tempered his temptation to play Brundibar as a caricature of Adolf Hitler by imagining him as a pathetic, selfish boy. Still, the 28-year-old actor debated Taccone for hours about how much darkness to bring to the role. Although he wears the same moustache as Hitler, Morton ditched a German accent for his native Scottish brogue. But he won the argument to include a subtle Nazi salute in his movements. "I do think it's important not to patronize children," Morton says. "It's something I've been fighting for throughout this production." Kushner hired a Columbia University graduate student to translate Hoffmeister's libretto from the Czech and spent hours listening to a recording of Krasa's score while he crafted English rhymes to fit the music. "It's like being in deep conversation with an interesting writer. You get to discover more and more how they made choices and why they make sense," he says. -By Lisa Deff.
 

I'd love to direct, says Madonna

Madonna and Lourdes

Photo: Madonna attended the Harry Potter premiere with daughter Lourdes.

Madonna has revealed that the shooting of the latest documentary about her has made her want to follow film director husband Guy Ritchie behind the camera. I would love to direct," she said. "I felt very inspired by making this movie and I learned a lot about film-making. "I would like to do it on my own next time," continued the singer, whose film I'm Going to Tell You a Secret will be shown on Channel 4 on 1 December. Her latest album, Confessions on a Dance Floor, is top of the UK charts. Madonna's comments are part of an interview due to be screened on Channel 4.

'Incredible ballerina': In the program, conducted by TV presenter Dermot O'Leary, the mother of two speaks proudly about her nine-year-old daughter Lourdes and five-year-old son, Rocco. Viewers will see her describe Lourdes as "very musical".  "She sings quite well and she's an incredible ballerina," she says. Earlier this month Madonna attended the London premiere of the new Harry Potter film with Lourdes, also known as Lola. There, she revealed, her daughter was left speechless after a chance encounter with one of its stars, Emma Watson. "In the middle of the movie she had to go to the bathroom," she told O'Leary. "Hermione was in there washing her hands and Lola's jaw hit the ground." But Madonna refused to discuss her recent riding accident, which left her with a broken collarbone and three cracked ribs. "I don't want to go there - I get flashbacks," she said. "I'm just starting to feel better."

JAZZ PIANIST, GEORGE KAHN HOLDS HOLIDAY FUNDRAISER
FOR PATH (PEOPLE ASSISTING THE HOMELESS)
NEW CATALINA BAR & GRILL, PERFORMANCE SET FOR TUESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 20th, 2005


Photo: Jazz Pianist, George Kahn

George Kahn, returns to the new CATALINA BAR & GRILL with a holiday performance benefiting PATH: People Assisting The Homeless, Tuesday evening, DECEMBER 20TH, at 8:00 PM – 10 PM. George Kahn brings his “Make It Real Tour 2005” back to Hollywood, appearing with an all-star ensemble.  The dynamic Justo Almario, will perform on Saxophone; with session maven Karl Vincent on Bass, master trumpeter Ramon Flores and the fabulous M.B. Gordy on drums. Special Guest Vocalists, The Wright Combination will add their talents to this wonderful event. The Wright Combination has performed on stage and in studios with Liza Minelli, Vikki Carr, Patti LaBelle, Henry Mancini, Frank Sinatra, George Carlin, Carl Anderson, Dolly Parton and Telma Hopkins. “COMPARED TO WHAT”, George’s most recent CD release, hit #28 on the Jazz Charts, and is getting LOTS of airplay on local jazz station KKJZ as well as on radio stations across the country. The set will also include songs from George’s earlier releases “Midnight Brew”, “Freedom Vessel” and “Out of Time”. Come see for yourself why Alfredo Cruz calls George Kahn “…creative, entertaining, intelligent, sophisticated and stimulating.” The Catalina Bar and Grill is located at 6725 Sunset Blvd.  (just east of Highland Avenue - parking on N. McCadden Place). Dinner reservations suggested.  (323) 466-2210. There is a $15.00 cover, students with ID, $10.00.  Please bring a donation to give to PATH when you arrive.   Donations include NEW clothing, (including socks and underwear for men and women), blankets, toys, etc.  All profits will go directly to PATH  to help LA’s homeless.

 

Kate Moss is subject of four paintings by Stella Vine at London exhibit

Kate Moss is the subject of four paintings by Stella Vine now on show at a London exhibit, including one based on a tabloid photo that allegedly shows her preparing a line of cocaine. A portrait titled Must Be the Season of the Witch is based on a photo of the 31-year-old supermodel that was published in a London tabloid in September. Vine said Friday she usually bases her work on press photos. Moss entered the Meadows rehab clinic outside Phoenix, Ariz., after the photo was published. She left the clinic in late October and has resumed her modelling career. Two of Vine's other paintings of Moss are also portraits. One shows a wide-eyed Moss holding a champagne glass. Another, titled Holy Water Cannot Help You Now, shows her holding a cigarette in her hand as paint drips from her face. The fourth shows Moss waving from a window in the Priory clinic where she was treated for alcohol and drug problems in 1998. It also features her boyfriend Pete Doherty, ex-boyfriend Johnny Depp and other celebrities. Vine said she became interested in painting Moss because of the spirit she saw in her eyes. "She's like Mona Lisa; she may not be the most beautiful woman in the world, but something comes through her eyes. ... There's a bravery in Kate's eyes," the 36-year-old British artist said. Vine gained attention last year with her painting of Diana, Princess of Wales, with blood dripping from her mouth. It was sold to Charles Saatchi, one of Britain's most influential collectors of modern art. The paintings of Moss are on display until Jan. 1 at Hiscox Art Projects, an exhibition space located in the office of a fine art insurer in East London.

Shania talks about everything but perfume

For a girl who had to cook for herself at the age of five and sang with aspirations of one day being a backup singer for Stevie Wonder, being awarded the Order of Canada was not even part of Shania Twain's wildest dreams. "Yeah, (the honor) is overwhelming and I don't even believe it," Twain said, letting out a loud guffaw Thursday towards the end of a daylong media blitz in Toronto. "So, I'm pretty excited." Twain was in town to promote her new fragrance, Shania by Stetson. But when a reporter has less than 10 minutes with one of Canada's biggest stars, questions must be chosen carefully and quickly. Fragrance didn't make the cut. "We ran out of time, I don't know what happened, but I gotta catch a plane," she said, apologizing for ending an interview to get to the airport. She was flying to Ottawa where she'll receive the Order of Canada today alongside others who have made a difference to the country, including former B.C. premier David Barrett and athlete Catriona Le May Doan. Despite her international success as a country singer, pop star and spokesmodel for Revlon, Twain has not forgotten her less-than-humble beginnings. While she admits to having had a rough childhood in Timmins, Ont., where she basically raised herself, she won't get specific other than admitting sometimes going to bed with an empty stomach. "Hunger is one I can share comfortably . . . there are a whole host of problems that come with poverty," said Twain. Like almost any mom, she wants to protect her four-year-old son from just about everything bad. But she absolutely never wants her son to go through what she knew too well: wondering where the next meal is coming from. "I don't have any regrets," she said of her childhood, adding that a lot of times she simply couldn't depend on her parents -- not because they didn't want to be there, they just weren't always able to be there.

ODDITIES OF THE WEEK

$65.4-million US Powerball winner found dead in Kentucky home

Click to learn more...NEWPORT, Kentucky-- A Kentucky woman who won a $65.4-million US Powerball jackpot with her husband five years ago was found dead at her home overlooking the Ohio River, where she had apparently been for days before anyone found her, police said. Virginia Metcalf Merida's son discovered her body Wednesday. Police were awaiting autopsy and toxicology results before announcing a cause of death. When the woman and her husband, Mack Wayne Metcalf, won the jackpot, they told lottery officials they were going their separate ways to fulfill their dreams. Merida planned to quit her job making corrugated boxes and buy a home. Metcalf, a forklift operator, wanted to start fresh in Australia. He never did. Metcalf died in 2003 at age 45 while living in a replica of George Washington's Mount Vernon estate built in Corbin, Ky. His death followed multiple run-ins with the law, including a child-support dispute from a previous marriage and a drunken driving charge filed before he hit the jackpot. Neighbors said Merida stayed out of public view until last December, when a body was found in her 465-square-metre, custom-built geodesic dome house. Campbell County deputy coroner Al Garnick confirmed the man died of a drug overdose. Official records of the case were unavailable because of the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. Merida used part of her winnings to buy a second home but when she tried to evict the resident, the renter sued. A hearing was scheduled Wednesday. Carol Terrell Lawson, who is still renting the home, said she never met Merida in person and only learned of the death after reporters began calling her.

Norwegian falls asleep on airline flight and ends up landing at starting point

OSLO, Norway  - It's not uncommon for airline passengers to doze off during their flight. But for 21-year-old Tor Martin Johansen, the snooze lasted through an entire round trip. Johansen fell asleep on a short flight from central Norway city of Trondheim via Roervik to his hometown of Namsos on Thursday. When he woke up, he was back in Trondheim. "I was really taken aback when I heard the cabin attendant say 'welcome to Trondheim' when I opened my eyes and thought I had arrived in Namsos," he was quoted as saying in Friday's edition of the Oslo newspaper Verdens Gang. When the commuter plane landed in Namsos, no one noticed the sleeping passenger, or reacted to the extra person on board compared to the passenger count. So the plane returned to Trondheim with Johansen still on board. "It is completely correct, unfortunately. It has never happened before," Richard Kongsteien, spokesman for the Wideroe airline, said by telephone. "Seen on its own, it's an amusing incident, but it is also a very serious matter." He said that the plane was on a commuter route with several stops and so was never emptied. However, he said ground personnel violated security regulations by failing to notice a mismatch between the passenger list, with 33 people, and the count of 34 people on board. "This will not happen again," he vowed. "Our passengers can rest assured that they can sleep soundly on our flights and be woken up at their destination." The airline gave Johansen a free ticket to his original destination.

Peanut-allergic Canadian teen dies after kissing her boyfriend

A Chicoutimi, Que., high school is in mourning after a 15-year-old girl with a food allergy died suddenly after kissing her boyfriend who had eaten peanut butter. Christina Desforges died earlier this week, after receiving the kiss during the weekend. A shot of adrenaline failed to revive her. She died in hospital Wednesday. "It's a very sad event. (Classmates) are feeling emotional and we had them meet with a psychologist," said school official Michel Cloutier. Health Canada estimates 600,000 Canadians have potentially deadly allergies. Approximately one to two per cent of Canadians -- perhaps eight per cent of children -- are allergic to peanuts and/or tree nuts. Nuts, milk, eggs and shellfish top the list, but peanut is the main cause of fatal food allergy reactions (anaphylaxis), said Ernest Seidman, immunology and food allergies researcher at Ste. Justine Hospital in Montreal. When someone comes in contact with an allergen, the symptoms of a reaction may develop quickly and rapidly progress from mild to severe to fatal, according to Health Canada. The most dangerous symptoms include breathing difficulties, a drop in blood pressure or shock, which may result in loss of consciousness and even death. Severe allergic reactions can occur quickly and without warning. Even trace amounts can be fatal, which is why food labelling is so crucial and why most schools have banned peanuts, Seidman said. People with a nut allergy can have an immediate anaphylactic reaction if they kiss someone who has recently eaten the offending substance, he added. Antibodies to the allergen provoke facial swelling, respiratory distress, bronchial spasms, a drop in blood pressure and hives. Just smelling "peanut vapours" in a poorly ventilated area can send someone into an asthma crisis, Seidman said. About 100 people in the United States die of food allergies every year, most from exposure to nuts. Canadian statistics are not available. "We presume that 10 people die of food allergies on a yearly basis in Canada," said Seidman. An autopsy is expected to reveal Desforges's cause of death .- By C. Feldman.

 

If you want to look sharp, wear a "chapeau"!

Old-fashioned hats are experiencing a remarkable boom as 30-somethings copy the look of both modern rappers and jazz stars from the 1950s. Decades after a bare-headed President Kennedy sounded the death knell for traditional hats, sales of homburgs, pork pie hats and bowlers, otherwise known as derbys, have doubled in two years. "The trend began a few years ago with homburgs, when people wanted to dress like rappers such as Biggy Smalls and Tupac Shakur," says Marc Williamson, 36, manager of the JJ Hat Centre on New York's Fifth Avenue. The store, founded in 1911, is the city's oldest hat shop and its panelled walls are lined with fedoras that have teardrop, diamond and round crowns, some with a centre crease, others a pinch front. "The rappers were borrowing from the blaxploitation films of the 1970s, such as Shaft, with that whole big hat, suit, cape and walking-stick pimp look taking off," says Williamson. Last month's edition of Vanity Fair, devoted to rap fashion, pictured singers in a variety of trilbys and Burberry flat caps. Among those photographed in antique British-style clothes designed by Ralph Lauren were Adam Yauch and Mike Diamond of the Beastie Boys, both in pork pie hats. Snoop Doggy Dogg was shown playing croquet in a ribboned boater plus cravat, blazer, cricket sweater and trainers. Another hip hop star, Andre 3000, has in recent months bought a straw hat, a newsboy hat, a captain's cap and a Tyrol hat from JJ's. "The hat-and-cane look harks back to the era of the classic gangster, with a smart and sharp look, portraying an image of success and power," says Damon Dash, the rap producer who has his own Savile Row suit line, the Damon Dash collection. "So when you've really made it, that look sums it all up, showing style, class and supremacy." There is still a demand for hats among elderly men, who have never stopped wearing them. But the boom market is the 30 to 45 age range. Where older customers buy a hat once a year or every two years, younger ones buy up to seven a year. The biggest seller is the stingy-brim hat worn by the jazz pianist Thelonius Monk in the 50s, a pork pie hat noted for its narrow brim. The singers Usher and Justin Timberlake, and the actor Jamie Foxx, who played Ray Charles in last year's film Ray, all wear stingy-brim hats,  and sales have tripled in the last year. The other strong seller is the newsboy hat, or the eight-quarter hat, the squashy, round hat divided into eight cake-slice-shaped pieces. Both the newsboy and the flat cap, or ivy cap as it's more commonly known, are also popular among women.- By Harry Mont.

DID YOU READ THE FEATURE ARTICLE OF THE WEEK?

WHY MOVIES STARS, CELEBRITIES AND ORDINARY WOMEN POSE NAKED? By Maximillien de Lafayette. Brigitte Bardot: "Animals walk around naked and they have more loyalty than men. I have never been betrayed by my pets. But I have been cheated so many times by men and women who were fully clothed..."Josephine Baker: " I will strip by the name of God, if I have to feed those orphans...". WHY SOME WOMEN STRIP IN PUBLIC AND WHY STARS POSE NAKED? For  one million reasons. And it has nothing to do with money, as many ingenious minds and rednecks believe or imagine. Kate Moss does not need to pose naked to make money. She appeared in full armored clothes on major glossy magazines covers. And she earns zillions, just by holding a product or looking at the camera. She does it because it is part of the fabric of the business. Almost 88% of stars and celebrities, including university professors, anchorwomen, women-wrestlers, top executives and moms posed in the nude at one time in their lives and careers for pragmatic, incomprehensible reasons, fantasy, celebrity quest, notoriety exposure... Read full article and see photos

 

 

Chez Ricou : Le monde de la poésie ...

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GLORIA LORING: HER LIFE, BOOKS, MUSIC AND STARDOM.

READ THE ARTICLE AND EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW

She did it all with class, beauty, intelligence, style, talent, unique creativity, guts  and warmth. And she excelled in everything she accomplished. Grande Dame Loring is a published author, a national speaker, a world-class actress, an international celebrity, a star of the American cinema and television, a leading figure of the American theater and concert halls, a singer, a composer, a lyricist, a songwriter, a producer,  a certified yoga teacher, a member of Who's Who in America and The World Who's Who of Women and a  humanitarian.  This woman is almost 99.99% perfect. This is the kind of people who create and shape the greatness of a nation. This is the vintage of noble souls, warm hearts  and bright minds who  make the sun rise and  shine over the hills, the prairies and the faces of people we love...And this is the kind of human beings who  at every dawn, make the wild roses bloom in the valley and on the landscape of the human psyche.

 

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IN MEMORIAM

Remembering John P. Davis: The Forgotten Civil-Rights Leader


“The older I grow, the more certain I become that Candide was wrong: Ours is not best of all possible worlds.” -John P. Davis

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo: The late John P. Davis.

Civil-rights leaders, even those renowned in their lifetimes, are destined; it seems, to be forgotten by fickle publics. So it has proved with John P. Davis a Harvard-trained lawyer and activist intellectual. John P. Davis along with A. Philip Randolph was quite clearly the most important black leader and civil-rights leader in the thirties and the forties.  Despite the upsurge in Black Studies in the sixties, seventies and into eighties, there seems to be a tremendous gap between the era of Booker T. Washington, W.E. Dubois and the Harlem Renaissance and the 1954 Brown versus the Board of Education decision and Martin Luther King.  Well what happened during that gap was - John P. Davis and the National Negro Congress. On a whim, Davis attended President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s first National Recovery Administration hearing and noticed, in disbelief, that no one represented the interests of African-Americans. He contacted his friend Robert C. Weaver, another Harvard University graduates, and formed the two-man Joint Committee on National Recovery in 1933, challenging Roosevelt’s New Deal programs.  The two were determined to become the first full-time lobbyists for civil-rights in American history. They traveled the back roads of the deep and dangerous - for a black man - south investigating lynchings, voting rights violations of black Americans, and the squalid working conditions of black agricultural, textile and factory workers.

They generated national front-page headlines in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and the Washington Post, when testifying before Congressional hearings that price supports are ruining black farmers and that the pending Social Security Act does not cover millions of black and white domestic and farm workers. Davis and Weaver also charged the Roosevelt Administration with refusing to forcibly back anti-lynching, anti-poll tax legislation and laws assuring black factory workers will be paid the same wages as white workers for the same or similar work.  “Roosevelt’s National Recovery Act - NRA- stands for Negroes Robbed Again,” Davis testified. The Roosevelt Administration offered them both high-level, high-paying government jobs. They refused the offers, continuing their civil-rights work. In 1935 John P. Davis, of the Joint Committee on National Recovery, called upon African-American organizations to unite forces and to work for the solutions of basic problems facing the Negro. The National Negro Congress (NNC) was the idea of Davis and his preocupative interest of the Negro problem was set forth in the pamphlet "Let Us Build a National Negro Congress." On February 14-16, 1936 in Chicago, 817 delegates representing 585 organizations and 5,000 observers responded affirmatively to Davis’ call: "Let Us Build a National Negro Congress." A diverse group, whose sponsors included Nobel Peace Prize winner Ralph J. Bunche , and  philosopher Alain Locke of Howard University, A. Philip Randolph of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, James Ford of the Communist Party, Lester Granger and Elmer Carter of the Urban League, Charles Houston of the NAACP and poet-activist Langston Hughes signed the National Negro Congress's call.

Today, Davis has faded from the memory of most. This unjustly forgotten civil-rights leader deserves recognition more than anyone else for the one of the first sincere efforts of the 20th century to bring together under one umbrella black secular leaders, preachers, labor organizers, workers, businessmen, radicals, and professional politicians, with the assumption that the common denominator of race was enough to weld together such divergent segments of black society.  His initial vision was to have a congress of black America with representatives coming from every state and county. The hope was to build a representative assembly of black America, put issues before them and vote.  The NNC wanted to take these issues to the U.S. Congress with the support of 15 to 20 million African-Americans. During its first four years, with A. Philip Randolph as president, the NNC was extraordinarily successful. Within five months Davis reported that local councils had been established in twenty-six cities. Seventy locals were eventually formed across the country. The local councils initiated campaigns on a number of issues, including the depiction of blacks in school text books, police brutality, housing conditions and employment. They mounted mass petition drives, picketed retail stores, organized rent strikes, and secured grants for neighborhood improvement. From 1938 to 1940 the NNC worked more closely with progressive interracial organizations and individuals. Specifically, the NNC joined the industrial organizing struggles, supported progressive politicians, and cooperated with Communist Party. The NNC organized several mass demonstrations in support of progressive candidates and legislation such as the Wagner-Nuys anti-lynching bill, the Fair Labor Standards Act, and for inclusion of domestic and agricultural workers in the Social Security Act. By 1940 the NNC had become very influential and was ready to take center stage as the leading civil-rights organization. At that time, the communist party had taken a greater role in the NNC.  In 1940, about a third of the 1,285 delegates were white representatives from CIO labor unions and the CPUSA. Many moderates took exception of the NNC’s aggressive turn to the left. The Urban League's Granger fretted that the NNC had become a "subsidiary" of the CIO. A. Philip Randolph contended the NNC had abdicated its independence to New Deal democrats on the one hand and to the Soviet Union, via the CPUSA, on the other hand. Ralph Bunche became disillusioned and Davis was charged with holding all the disparate groups together. Davis countered red-baiting, by contrasting Randolph's allegiance with the blatantly racist American Federation of Labor (AFL) to the NNC's alliance with the CIO. At the 1940 convention these issues came to a head and Randolph resigned from the NNC.

 

Davis lost Randolph as president and was at odds with the communist party.  He was very unhappy in 1942 and decided to leave the NNC at the beginning of 1943.  The NNC continued for another four years as a communist front organization without Davis and his connections.  When people read the history of the NNC, the read the way in which it ended. By the time it goes out of existence, the NNC is on the Attorney General’s list for subversive organizations.  Historians look back on the NNC as just another communist front organization. This may have been the case from 1943 to 1947, and may have been true for some of the NNC’s local councils from 1941 to 1947. However, the NNC was the most radical democratic civil-rights organization black America had seen in this century. As a result of cold-war scholarship and anti-communist scholarship in the fifties and the sixties, history was written such that the NNC was dismissed and as a result John P. Davis’ legacy was dismissed. Historian, Hilmar Jensen notes, there could not have been a Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), a Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), a Robert Moses or a Martin Luther King organizing in the south if there had not been a John P. Davis training a whole generation of young people in the NNC and its youth arm, the Southern Negro Youth Council in the 1930’s and the 1940’s. 

A lot of those young people became activist in the 1950’s and the 1960’s and marched with Martin Luther King and organized in Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia. Many went to Washington, D.C and lobbied in the great tradition of John P. Davis.  Although they may not have known his name, his spirit is very much apart of what the civil-rights movement accomplished. John P. Davis’ career was marked by breadth of vision. He fought for African-American rights, seeing them as universal human rights. He firmly believed that what he did for his race served America, and that his service to America was good for his race. Recalling his dangerous trip to the Republican front lines during the Spanish Civil War, he affirmed his solidarity with the struggle for democracy everywhere, and at the same time, implicitly warned that democracy’s triumph is never inevitable. He was always proudly an American who dreamed the American dream of democracy. “The older I grow”, he concluded, “the more certain I become that Candide was wrong: Ours is not best of all possible worlds.”

Vatican publishes gay priest paper, affirms ban for men with gay tendencies

VATICAN CITY- The Vatican defended its latest attempt to keep men with ''deep-seated'' homosexual tendencies from becoming priests, but said there would be no crackdown on gays already ordained. The long-awaited Vatican document, the first major policy statement of Pope Benedict's seven-month papacy, was officially released Tuesday after earlier leaks had drawn predictable mixed reaction. Conservatives have said it may help reverse the ''gay culture'' that has grown in many U.S. seminaries. Liberal critics have complained that the restrictions will create morale problems among existing priests and lead to an even greater priest shortage in the United States. Italy's leading gay rights group Arcigay said Tuesday the document further doused hopes that the Vatican would ''open itself to modern society.'' The official Instruction from the Congregation for Catholic Education was released a week after an Italian Catholic news agency posted a leaked copy on its website. In a separate matter, the Vatican decried a pansexual culture it says is fuelling the AIDS crisis, and said that keeping sex within marriage was the best way to prevent the HIV virus from spreading. The Vatican's Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral Care issued a message Tuesday for World AIDS Day, which is marked every Dec. 1. The Instruction document has been in the works for years, but its existence came to light in 2002 at the height of the clergy sex-abuse scandal in the United States. A study commissioned by U.S. bishops found that most abuse victims since 1950 were adolescent boys. Experts on sex offenders say homosexuals are no more likely than heterosexuals to molest young people, but that did not stifle questions about gay seminarians.  The Instruction said men ''who practise homosexuality, present deep-seated homosexual tendencies or support the so-called gay culture'' cannot be admitted to seminaries. The only exception would be for those with a ''transitory problem'' that had been overcome for at least three years. The head of the education congregation defended the document as a clear reflection of long-standing church teaching, saying that ''in this field, in today's world, there is some confusion.'' ''Many defend the position according to which the homosexual condition is a normal condition for the human being, as if it were nearly a third gender,'' Zenon Cardinal Grocholewski told Vatican Radio. He also made clear the Instruction was intended for candidates for the priesthood and not someone who ''discovers his homosexuality after having been ordained.'' The cardinal said such a priest ''has to try to live in chastity.... Maybe he will need more spiritual support than others, but I think he should be a priest in the best way possible.'' The cardinal also elaborated on the meaning of ''transitory'' problems. ''For example, during an adolescence not yet completed, some curiosity; or, under accidental circumstances, when drunk, or other particular conditions such as a person who has been in prison for many years. In these cases, the possible homosexual acts do not come from a deeply seated tendency, but are determined by the circumstances.... These cases are not an obstacle to the admission to the seminary or to holy order. In this case though, they have to end at least three years before the diaconal ordainment.''  In Britain, a gay vicar said Tuesday the Vatican document could steer clerics away from the priesthood and force others into silence, adding that the statement implied homosexuality was linked to pedophilia. ''This is a recipe for lack of integrity,'' said Rev. David Page of St. Barnabas in south London, which falls under the Church of England. ''The (Catholic) church seems to be saying these people are dysfunctional and should not be trusted with certain responsibilities.'' Candidates for the priesthood who have slight homosexual tendencies could be ''very talented, very able and very valuable'' to the church, said Bishop Klaus Kueng, an Austrian appointed by the late Pope John Paul II last year to investigate a child pornography scandal at a seminary outside Vienna. But Kueng conceded the difficulties that such candidates would encounter in seminary and later in the priesthood. ''It would undermine the celibacy requirement if a homosexual subculture were to exist in a seminary or a monastery,'' he said Tuesday in a statement. Rev. Timothy Radcliff, former superior of the Dominican order, wrote in the British Catholic weekly The Tablet that the phrase ''deep-seated homosexual tendencies'' could be interpreted as concerning men with a ''permanent homosexual orientation.'' ''But this cannot be correct since, as I have said, there are many excellent priests who are gay and who clearly have a vocation from God.'' ''Having worked with bishops and priests, diocesan and religious, all over the world, I have no doubt that God does call homosexuals to the priesthood, and they are among the most dedicated and impressive priests I have met,'' he wrote.- By Victor Sampson.

U.N. official, Angelina Jolie appeal for urgent aid to Pakistan quake victims

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Fresh from a tour of Pakistan's devastated earthquake zone, actress and U.N. goodwill ambassador Angelina Jolie pleaded for swift aid to avoid a new disaster in the country with the onset of the brutal Himalayan cold. Her appeal was echoed by the top U.N. official coordinating the relief effort, who stressed the importance of immediate relief as winter descends and expressed concern that the focus of support may be shifting to long-term reconstruction and rehabilitation following the Oct. 8 quake. "It is important to start building new hospitals and schools as soon as possible, but it's most urgent to save the lives of thousands of children who could then make use of these schools," Jan Vandemoortele said in a statement Friday. He said the United Nations and other agencies had received less than half of the $550 million US they sought in a recent appeal. "We urgently need extra millions of dollars to reach the earthquake survivors and other vulnerable victims, especially before the winter sets in," he said. Jolie, a goodwill ambassador for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, appealed for donors to make good quickly on promised quake aid to Pakistan, which reached $5.8 billion at a conference a week ago. "The pledges need to materialize soon," she said. "Because from what I'm understanding, there are so many wonderful pledges of money that could come in the next few years - but this winter is in the next few weeks, and so many people are in danger of possibly freezing to death." Accompanied by actor Brad Pitt, Jolie visited a mostly destroyed town and a camp for survivors of the 7.6-magnitude quake, which killed an estimated 86,000 people and destroyed the homes of more than three million in Pakistan-held Kashmir and neighboring regions. A further 1,350 died in Indian-held Kashmir. "You watch TV and you see the pictures, but nobody sitting at home has any idea what this really looks like," she told a news conference in Islamabad. "It's just unbelievable. You fly in a helicopter and you see . . . one house after another - just rubble, nothing standing." Jolie said she had met with residents of a high mountain valley who had received little aid and were concerned about how they would survive the winter. Some people whose mountain homes were destroyed by the quake have sought refuge at lower altitudes, but others are expected to remain. Pakistan's top relief official, Maj. Gen. Farooq Ahmed Khan, said hundreds of troops, volunteers and aid groups were helping quake victims in high mountain villages build at least one room from the rubble of their homes and pitch tents nearby. On Saturday, the top agricultural official in Pakistan's portion of Kashmir, Chaudhri Abdul Shaoor, said authorities had begun distributing some 850 tons of seeds and fertilizer from international agencies. He said efforts to repair damaged farmland would begin after winter crops are harvested early next year. U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres, who praised Jolie's work on behalf of refugees at the news conference, also toured the quake zone Thursday. He took reporters with him - unlike Jolie and Pitt, whose trip was not announced in advance. -By S. Gullerman.

U2's Bono says Martin mystifies him

Irish rock star Bono attends a news conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa Friday, Nov. 25, 2005 prior to U2's sold-out show at the Corel Centre. While in Ottawa Bono met with political leaders and addressed world poverty.

Irish rock star Bono says Prime Minister Paul Martin's inability to further increase foreign aid mystifies him. The U2 lead singer says Martin and his Liberal party will feel it at the ballot box should he continue to resist meeting aid targets supported by most Canadians. Bono, speaking in support of the Make Poverty History project, says Canada could easily increase Third World aid as it's the only major industrialized country in a surplus position. He's in Ottawa for a U2 concert but spent the day meeting with party leaders, saying he wants to appeal to the better nature of people in what he calls a better country. Bono and Martin have been friends for some time - he spoke to the Liberal party convention two years ago -- and has long campaigned for Canada to give 0.7 per cent of its GDP to world relief.

Everybody wanted a piece of J.D. the rock star

Photo: J..D. Fortune, the rocker who grew up in Nova Scotia, won the reality TV show, Rock Star: INXS. He has boosted fan interest in the Australian band, particularly among women.

 

The newspaper, radio and television media certainly did; so did the common-folk scurrying around Toronto's Sony BMG offices, catering to the needs of the newest comeback band: INXS. "Hi J.D." the women, young and old called out. "Hey (insert name/term of endearment)," he'd call back. J.D. Fortune, new Canadian frontman to popular Aussie rock band INXS was so much in demand during a recent promotional stop that it was tough getting him for a promised interview. "I'll try to get you a few minutes with J.D.," a man in charge of the media told a reporter. Those coveted minutes turned out to be in between other engagements, and while Fortune smoked a cigarette outside. "Wait till the record comes out," he said, looking off into the distance. "Wait till it's No. 1." There are a few reasons for all of this fuss. INXS is indeed set to release it's new record -- the first since original lead singer Michael Hutchence hanged himself in 1997 -- today. Switch will be the band's 11th studio album and it's already generating buzz. A lot of that is due to the clever way the band built on the momentum of its hit reality TV show, Rock Star: INXS. Fortune, at least a dozen years younger than the five other band members, was chosen from among 15 contestants as INXS's new lead singer. The fact that he's Canadian adds to the local hype, of course. "J.D. has been telling us to expect a wild response (in Canada)," said Kirk Pengilly, guitarist and saxophone player with INXS. "Getting a Canadian singer has kind of made us honorary Canadians," said bandmate Garry Beers. The two reflected on the intense months leading up to and after the show. The band had started working on what would become Switch's songs before and during the TV show, a challenge since it wasn't clear who would be singing the lyrics. "The first day after (the show ended), apart from a barrage of press requests and everything like that we went straight to the studio and had five weeks to make a mixed album," said Pengilly. "We realized by the end of the mixing, just before we all went home, we hadn't even really been out