Los Angeles, June 30, 1919: Just before national prohibition went into effect, banning the sale of alcoholic beverages except for export, the patrons of the city's bars lived it up together one last time, The Los Angeles Times reported under the headline "Jolly End Is Demon's Farewell to Booze".
"Los Angeles went dry last night after the 'wettest' day in its history," the newspaper said. All over the city, people stocked up on liquor "and carried away arm-loads, trunk-loads, automobile-loads of 14 per cent. goods of every description."
Nowhere was the scene more dramatic than at Jack Doyle's, a bar in Vernon that billed itself as the world's biggest saloon. Sixty bartenders were on hand for the last night, when the business was "jammed inside with nearly a thousand men," the newspaper reported.
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Friday, June 30, 2006
LAS VEGAS — Four fabulous ghosts hang around the brilliantly cluttered set of "Love," Cirque du Soleil's new pop-theatrical extravaganza, officially opening tonight in the revamped Siegfried & Roy Theatre at the Mirage hotel. Those jovial phantoms are the Beatles, whose music and social influence provide a story for the troupe's latest redefinition of the circus' big top. Liverpool's legendary mop tops appear as towering shadow images, disembodied voices and flower-holding doppelgangers throughout the musically rich multisensory entertainment, which marks a new level of cultural specificity — and a surprising step away from flashy acrobatics — for the Quebec-born, Vegas-dominant troupe. The first visitation comes from Ringo, counting off a drum beat; the last thing the audience hears is John Lennon saying goodnight.
But wait: The Beatles aren't ghosts. True, two members, Lennon and George Harrison (whose friendship with Cirque founder Guy Laliberté set the plans for "Love" in motion nearly a decade ago), have departed this sphere, but the others are very much alive and may well be in attendance tonight. Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr played a direct role in bringing "Love" to life, working with their mates' widows, Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison, to connect the band's Apple Corp. with the ever-expanding Cirque. Enlisting Beatles producer George Martin and his son Giles (a respected studio whiz in his own right) to remix masters from the notoriously well-secured Beatles' vault, Apple's principals gave Cirque the first outsiders' crack ever at reimagining the band's legacy.
And so Laliberté and his team of artisan fabulists have taken on those phantoms, which, considering how vividly their songs and style still resonate, aren't phantoms at all. They've come up with an extravagant mash-up of history and hallucinations, studded with dazzling special effects, hot dance moves and tantalizing gestures toward the historical narrative the Beatles formed and informed, a rock 'n' roll origin story that's barely in the past.
In a recent interview, Olivia Harrison described "Love" as "a big sensory overload," and that is its weakness as well as its strength. Driven to match the vivid energy of the Beatles' songs, the Cirque team throws more into its mix than ever. Throngs of dancers, acrobats and jesters move about the multilevel stage enacting scenes from English history, beginning with the post-WWII world in which the Beatles grew up to the end of the 1960s; these scenarios collide more than intersect, and the effect can be jarring.
With several dozen Beatles songs raising memories on the soundtrack, it's easy to fall into a game of catch the references: Look, there are some miniskirted Beatlemaniacs! That woman in sequins must be Lucy in the Sky! Did those wig-wearing dancers escape from the cast of "Hair"? And what about the tattery kids wandering about; are they Oliver Twist substitutes or the younger Beatles themselves? (One heart-rending scene is an aerial dance performed by a woman who cares for, then is pulled away from, her son, an evocation of the early death of Lennon's mother.) All this detail is fun and well-realized, especially in the Peter Max-inspired set and costumes of the mid-show "psychedelic" sequences. But it offers a different kind of thrill than Cirque fans will be accustomed to — less sensual and seductive, more hyper. More, I suppose, rock 'n' roll.
Tackling a contemporary landscape is new for Cirque, whose other four Las Vegas shows (and many others touring worldwide) begin with far less contemporary sources: folklore and the circus arts. Productions like the acrobatically rich "Mystère" and the water-based "O" create an otherwordly aura by refusing history as aggressively as "Love" engages it. Their gymnasts, clowns and contortionists perform centuries-old feats within environments that borrow happily from every myth and fairy tale ever spun. The music for these epic journeys is similarly unbound — a crazy blend of light classical airs, world music beats and rock arrangements that, like most New Age music, buries its sources deep within the mix. English words almost never invade the singers' mouths.
Not so "Love." There's no burying those Cockney voices, nor the words they sang, so fixed within our consciousness. Cirque's feverishly imaginative visual directors respond to the words we know with images we'll easily grasp, from Carnaby Street mods to Indian mystics to sexy hippies to the queen of England herself. Sometimes it feels like they're borrowing beyond their areas of expertise. The dancing, more central to this show than aerial work, is admirably wide-ranging in style, and contraptions like a mechanical chorus line of rubber boots impress. But not every stylistic choice works.
It seems odd to feature South African gumbooting or 1980s-style jacking, and not historically relevant styles like go-go, the twist or the frug. The fresh athletic arena of a skateboarding half-pipe proves exciting, but the segment's shredders inexplicably employ in-line skates, not boards. A scene that makes slapstick comedy of "Blackbird," Paul McCartney's somber ballad about the African American civil rights movement, feels disrespectful. And given Cirque's long record of stunning mythic hybrids, it's striking that "Love's" most affecting sequences — the aerial dance set to "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," the underwater Eden of "Octopus' Garden" — are the most straightforward and obvious.
Maybe it would be more fair to call them direct. That's what the Beatles' music proves to be, even in the astonishingly deep settings the Martins provide. The theater's extraordinary sound makes the Fab Four's catalog sound genuinely new; each singer's individual character, each pluck of bass and pound of piano, breaks free of 40 years of baggage and becomes vital again.
But the reanimation project goes beyond simply cleaning up the sound of these great songs. By separating out some elements (wonderfully rich a cappella harmonies, for example) and melding others (the Martins blend the rhythm tracks from various songs to connect these tunes to newer dance music trends like techno and garage, they make the Beatles into what one of their first albums called them back in 1964: something new.
That's an astounding feat, as remarkable as any trapeze flip or trampoline bounce. It more than makes up for the sometimes mind-boggling blur the Cirque troupe has raised in trying to tackle pop's second-biggest legend. Rumor has it that these masters of cultural fusion will soon take on No. 1: Elvis himself. It will be interesting to see if they can make that ghost sing as well as their Beatles do.
FANTASTICAL: The “Octopus’s Garden” sequence, evoking an underwater Eden, is one of the show’s most affecting.
ACROBATICS: Performing “Here Comes the Sun.”
But wait: The Beatles aren't ghosts. True, two members, Lennon and George Harrison (whose friendship with Cirque founder Guy Laliberté set the plans for "Love" in motion nearly a decade ago), have departed this sphere, but the others are very much alive and may well be in attendance tonight. Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr played a direct role in bringing "Love" to life, working with their mates' widows, Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison, to connect the band's Apple Corp. with the ever-expanding Cirque. Enlisting Beatles producer George Martin and his son Giles (a respected studio whiz in his own right) to remix masters from the notoriously well-secured Beatles' vault, Apple's principals gave Cirque the first outsiders' crack ever at reimagining the band's legacy.
And so Laliberté and his team of artisan fabulists have taken on those phantoms, which, considering how vividly their songs and style still resonate, aren't phantoms at all. They've come up with an extravagant mash-up of history and hallucinations, studded with dazzling special effects, hot dance moves and tantalizing gestures toward the historical narrative the Beatles formed and informed, a rock 'n' roll origin story that's barely in the past.
In a recent interview, Olivia Harrison described "Love" as "a big sensory overload," and that is its weakness as well as its strength. Driven to match the vivid energy of the Beatles' songs, the Cirque team throws more into its mix than ever. Throngs of dancers, acrobats and jesters move about the multilevel stage enacting scenes from English history, beginning with the post-WWII world in which the Beatles grew up to the end of the 1960s; these scenarios collide more than intersect, and the effect can be jarring.
With several dozen Beatles songs raising memories on the soundtrack, it's easy to fall into a game of catch the references: Look, there are some miniskirted Beatlemaniacs! That woman in sequins must be Lucy in the Sky! Did those wig-wearing dancers escape from the cast of "Hair"? And what about the tattery kids wandering about; are they Oliver Twist substitutes or the younger Beatles themselves? (One heart-rending scene is an aerial dance performed by a woman who cares for, then is pulled away from, her son, an evocation of the early death of Lennon's mother.) All this detail is fun and well-realized, especially in the Peter Max-inspired set and costumes of the mid-show "psychedelic" sequences. But it offers a different kind of thrill than Cirque fans will be accustomed to — less sensual and seductive, more hyper. More, I suppose, rock 'n' roll.
Tackling a contemporary landscape is new for Cirque, whose other four Las Vegas shows (and many others touring worldwide) begin with far less contemporary sources: folklore and the circus arts. Productions like the acrobatically rich "Mystère" and the water-based "O" create an otherwordly aura by refusing history as aggressively as "Love" engages it. Their gymnasts, clowns and contortionists perform centuries-old feats within environments that borrow happily from every myth and fairy tale ever spun. The music for these epic journeys is similarly unbound — a crazy blend of light classical airs, world music beats and rock arrangements that, like most New Age music, buries its sources deep within the mix. English words almost never invade the singers' mouths.
Not so "Love." There's no burying those Cockney voices, nor the words they sang, so fixed within our consciousness. Cirque's feverishly imaginative visual directors respond to the words we know with images we'll easily grasp, from Carnaby Street mods to Indian mystics to sexy hippies to the queen of England herself. Sometimes it feels like they're borrowing beyond their areas of expertise. The dancing, more central to this show than aerial work, is admirably wide-ranging in style, and contraptions like a mechanical chorus line of rubber boots impress. But not every stylistic choice works.
It seems odd to feature South African gumbooting or 1980s-style jacking, and not historically relevant styles like go-go, the twist or the frug. The fresh athletic arena of a skateboarding half-pipe proves exciting, but the segment's shredders inexplicably employ in-line skates, not boards. A scene that makes slapstick comedy of "Blackbird," Paul McCartney's somber ballad about the African American civil rights movement, feels disrespectful. And given Cirque's long record of stunning mythic hybrids, it's striking that "Love's" most affecting sequences — the aerial dance set to "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," the underwater Eden of "Octopus' Garden" — are the most straightforward and obvious.
Maybe it would be more fair to call them direct. That's what the Beatles' music proves to be, even in the astonishingly deep settings the Martins provide. The theater's extraordinary sound makes the Fab Four's catalog sound genuinely new; each singer's individual character, each pluck of bass and pound of piano, breaks free of 40 years of baggage and becomes vital again.
But the reanimation project goes beyond simply cleaning up the sound of these great songs. By separating out some elements (wonderfully rich a cappella harmonies, for example) and melding others (the Martins blend the rhythm tracks from various songs to connect these tunes to newer dance music trends like techno and garage, they make the Beatles into what one of their first albums called them back in 1964: something new.
That's an astounding feat, as remarkable as any trapeze flip or trampoline bounce. It more than makes up for the sometimes mind-boggling blur the Cirque troupe has raised in trying to tackle pop's second-biggest legend. Rumor has it that these masters of cultural fusion will soon take on No. 1: Elvis himself. It will be interesting to see if they can make that ghost sing as well as their Beatles do.
FANTASTICAL: The “Octopus’s Garden” sequence, evoking an underwater Eden, is one of the show’s most affecting.
ACROBATICS: Performing “Here Comes the Sun.”
Can you believe it ??
A former judge was convicted in Bristow, Oklahoma of exposing himself by using a sexual device while he presided over court cases. A Creek County jury found Donald Thompson, 59, guilty on four counts of indecent exposure and recommended one year in prison and a $10,000 fine on each count. Thompson, who served more than 20 years on the bench before retiring in 2004, denied using a penis pump in the courtroom and said it was a gag gift. Wouldn't you like to know the details of this case ?? Probably NOT. (Aug. 19, 2006 -- Thompson was sentenced to four years in prison.)
DAIMLER CHRYSLER TO BRING TEENY TWO-SEATER TO U. S.
The company's Smart car, available in Europe since 1998, is to go on sale here in early 2008. The tiny Smart car is only two-thirds the size of a Mini Cooper, but DaimlerChrysler has big plans for it. With a fuel-sipping three-cylinder engine that gets about 60 miles per gallon on European highways, the Smart could be a big hit here. But first Americans will have to be convinced that something so small can hold its own against pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles that could carry the 1,600-pound Smart in back.
Dieter Zetsche, DaimlerChrysler's chief executive and former head of its U.S.-based Chrysler Group unit, is betting that $3-a-gallon gasoline and crowded streets and highways will help overcome concerns about size. At just 8-feet, 2-inches in length, the Smart ForTwo, as the model is called, can be parked in half the space occupied by a full-size pickup.
DaimlerChrysler's Mercedes-Benz unit, which builds the Smart at a plant in France, designed it to stand up to much larger vehicles, Zetsche said. The passenger cabin is framed in high-strength steel that is designed to work like the safety cage of a modern race car, isolating passengers from the shock of a collision. The Smart car will be priced at under $15,000.
Dieter Zetsche, DaimlerChrysler's chief executive and former head of its U.S.-based Chrysler Group unit, is betting that $3-a-gallon gasoline and crowded streets and highways will help overcome concerns about size. At just 8-feet, 2-inches in length, the Smart ForTwo, as the model is called, can be parked in half the space occupied by a full-size pickup.
DaimlerChrysler's Mercedes-Benz unit, which builds the Smart at a plant in France, designed it to stand up to much larger vehicles, Zetsche said. The passenger cabin is framed in high-strength steel that is designed to work like the safety cage of a modern race car, isolating passengers from the shock of a collision. The Smart car will be priced at under $15,000.
Thursday, June 29, 2006
Wednesday, June 28, 2006
Tuesday, June 27, 2006
THE MUSIC OF THIS AMAZING TALENT IS MYSTICAL, MAGICAL AND UNFORGETTABLE
This new all-original music CD is the 16th CD release by best-selling piano artist, Mike Strickland. This solo piano recording is like a combination between a stunning piano concert and a gorgeous movie soundtrack.
Born into a musical family in Jackson, Mississsippi, Mike has been creating music since he was a young child. Formal piano lessons were followed by music composition studies at Berklee School of Music in Boston and California State University Northridge. Mike's professional career started while he was at college with the discovery that instead of studying for his business degree, he was composing and playing music 5 to 6 hours a day.
In 1987, his recording studio and company, Mike Strickland Productions, Inc. was formed. That same year, he recorded his first album of original music entitled "Floating". This upbeat, creative recording soon attracted the attention of CBS Sports producer, Frank Chirkinian and was used for the PGA Golf telecasts for several seasons.
Since that time, Mike has produced 14 more CD releases entitled: "Time Remembered"-1990; "Christmas Time"-1991; "Traveling On"-1993; "My Favorite Things"-1994; "My Favorite Things, Vol. 2"-1995; "Starry Night"-1995; "Music Of The Night"-1996; "Moonlight"-1997; "On The Wind"-1998; "The Piano"-1999; "Jazz, Blues and Boogie"-2000; "Duo"-2001; "Touch The Sky"-2003; "All-Time Piano Favorites"-2003.
In the last 20 years, Mike has performed extensively all over the United States as a solo artist and with various groups. To date, he has recorded 15 CDs on his own label, MSP Records. His recordings have been broadcast nationally on several radio and television programs. His music is also broadcast through several foreground music companies via satellite to 40,000 businesses nationwide, and has been distributed commercially to gift and specialty store markets throughout the USA including DisneyWorld gift properties and The Sharper Image stores.
Check out the Mike Strickland website: http://www.mikestrickland.com/
Born into a musical family in Jackson, Mississsippi, Mike has been creating music since he was a young child. Formal piano lessons were followed by music composition studies at Berklee School of Music in Boston and California State University Northridge. Mike's professional career started while he was at college with the discovery that instead of studying for his business degree, he was composing and playing music 5 to 6 hours a day.
In 1987, his recording studio and company, Mike Strickland Productions, Inc. was formed. That same year, he recorded his first album of original music entitled "Floating". This upbeat, creative recording soon attracted the attention of CBS Sports producer, Frank Chirkinian and was used for the PGA Golf telecasts for several seasons.
Since that time, Mike has produced 14 more CD releases entitled: "Time Remembered"-1990; "Christmas Time"-1991; "Traveling On"-1993; "My Favorite Things"-1994; "My Favorite Things, Vol. 2"-1995; "Starry Night"-1995; "Music Of The Night"-1996; "Moonlight"-1997; "On The Wind"-1998; "The Piano"-1999; "Jazz, Blues and Boogie"-2000; "Duo"-2001; "Touch The Sky"-2003; "All-Time Piano Favorites"-2003.
In the last 20 years, Mike has performed extensively all over the United States as a solo artist and with various groups. To date, he has recorded 15 CDs on his own label, MSP Records. His recordings have been broadcast nationally on several radio and television programs. His music is also broadcast through several foreground music companies via satellite to 40,000 businesses nationwide, and has been distributed commercially to gift and specialty store markets throughout the USA including DisneyWorld gift properties and The Sharper Image stores.
Check out the Mike Strickland website: http://www.mikestrickland.com/
Monday, June 26, 2006
Did someone say the electric car was dead ??
Sunday, June 25, 2006
A spectacular shot of a simple scene . . .
Hi !! Do you know me ??
"LANDMARK" is a word perhaps too loosely applied in this day and age. Yet say, "Round building off the 405 at Sunset," and what L.A. local doesn't know the former Holiday Inn?
Passing motorists would be forgiven for not knowing that it is now the Hotel Angeleno, operated by San Francisco-based hospitality company Joie de Vivre. New paint and lights haven't exactly reinvented the cylindrical exterior, but the 209 rooms inside have gotten more notable updates. Why would Joie de Vivre buy an old Holiday Inn with freeway-adjacency issues? The 17th floor tells all. That's where West, a new Italian steakhouse and lounge, floats over a view that stretches from downtown to the Pacific. At night, guests and locals will surely sip cocktails and be mesmerized by the river of lights that is the freeway. But the sunlit happy-hour provides a far superior view — at least on a clear day.
Passing motorists would be forgiven for not knowing that it is now the Hotel Angeleno, operated by San Francisco-based hospitality company Joie de Vivre. New paint and lights haven't exactly reinvented the cylindrical exterior, but the 209 rooms inside have gotten more notable updates. Why would Joie de Vivre buy an old Holiday Inn with freeway-adjacency issues? The 17th floor tells all. That's where West, a new Italian steakhouse and lounge, floats over a view that stretches from downtown to the Pacific. At night, guests and locals will surely sip cocktails and be mesmerized by the river of lights that is the freeway. But the sunlit happy-hour provides a far superior view — at least on a clear day.
BUTTERFLYS ARE FREE
THE RAPIDLY DISSAPPEARING ICE CAP
The Greenland ice sheet — two miles thick and broad enough to blanket an area the size of Mexico — shapes the world's weather, matched in influence by only Antarctica in the Southern Hemisphere. It glows like milky mother-of-pearl. The sheen of ice blends with drifts of cloud as if snowbanks are taking flight.
In its heartland, snow that fell a quarter of a million years ago is still preserved. Temperatures dip as low as 86 degrees below zero. Ground winds can top 200 mph. Along the ice edge, meltwater rivers thread into fraying brown ropes of glacial outwash, where migrating herds of caribou and musk ox graze. The ice is so massive that its weight presses the bedrock of Greenland below sea level, so all-concealing that not until recently did scientists discover that Greenland actually might be three islands.
Should all of the ice sheet ever thaw, the meltwater could raise sea level 21 feet and swamp the world's coastal cities, home to a billion people. It would cause higher tides, generate more powerful storm surges and, by altering ocean currents, drastically disrupt the global climate. Climate experts have started to worry that the ice cap is disappearing in ways that computer models had not predicted.
By all accounts, the glaciers of Greenland are melting twice as fast as they were five years ago, even as the ice sheets of Antarctica — the world's largest reservoir of fresh water — also are shrinking, researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the University of Kansas reported in February.
In its heartland, snow that fell a quarter of a million years ago is still preserved. Temperatures dip as low as 86 degrees below zero. Ground winds can top 200 mph. Along the ice edge, meltwater rivers thread into fraying brown ropes of glacial outwash, where migrating herds of caribou and musk ox graze. The ice is so massive that its weight presses the bedrock of Greenland below sea level, so all-concealing that not until recently did scientists discover that Greenland actually might be three islands.
Should all of the ice sheet ever thaw, the meltwater could raise sea level 21 feet and swamp the world's coastal cities, home to a billion people. It would cause higher tides, generate more powerful storm surges and, by altering ocean currents, drastically disrupt the global climate. Climate experts have started to worry that the ice cap is disappearing in ways that computer models had not predicted.
By all accounts, the glaciers of Greenland are melting twice as fast as they were five years ago, even as the ice sheets of Antarctica — the world's largest reservoir of fresh water — also are shrinking, researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the University of Kansas reported in February.
ARIZONA FIGHTS WILDFIRE
Saturday, June 24, 2006
NEW "NOAH'S ARK" TO SAVE THE SEEDS OF THE WORLD
London: An ambitious project to safeguard future food supplies began on Monday with the launch of a ``Noah's ark'' for the world's most important plants. Above we see a vat being filled with seeds at the global seed bank in Longyearbyen, Norway, on Monday.
The new Svalbard International Seed Vault will serve as a repository for crucial seeds in the event of a global catastrophe, said Norway's Agriculture Minister Terje Riis-Johansen. Carved into the permafrost and rock of the remote Svalbard peninsula, it will eventually house 3 million seed samples from every country in the world. This facility will provide a practical means to re-establish crops obliterated by major disasters,'' said Cary Fowler, executive secretary of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, which will manage the seed bank. ``But crop diversity is imperilled not just by a cataclysmic event, such as a nuclear war, but also by natural disasters, accidents, mismanagement, and short-sighted budget cuts.''
Agriculture relies on collections of crop species and their wild relatives. Seed banks are vital to the development of new crop varieties and, without them, agriculture would grind to a halt. Samples of the world's agricultural biodiversity, including crops such as wheat, apple and potato, are scattered across 1,400 seed banks around the world. All these seed banks are at risk from local problems. Mr. Fowler cited the example of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the 1994 genocide in Rwanda as times when dozens of unique crops had been wiped out. The Norwegian government and the Global Crop Diversity Trust have worked on the idea of building a global seed bank of last resort in the Arctic ice since 2004.
On Monday, the Prime Ministers of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland launched the $4.8 million project at a ceremony near the town of Longyearbyen, in Norway's remote Svalbard Islands, roughly 990 km from the North Pole.
The new seed bank will store its samples in a reinforced concrete tunnel drilled 70 metres into a mountain, guarded by two steel doors and remote-controlled from Sweden. The seeds will be stored in foil packets at minus18C, and are expected to remain viable for thousands of years. If a crop is lost through natural disaster or war and a seed bank is destroyed, a government could request replacement seeds from the vault. The facility's remote location and permafrost will ensure that, even if the power fails, the temperature will never rise above freezing. The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates that 75 per cent of the genetic diversity of agricultural crops has been lost. The U.S. had 7,100 varieties of apple in the 19th century, 6,800 no longer exist. The seed bank will start accepting samples in 2007. Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said it would be of global importance. "It will be the only one of its kind. It is our final safety net." © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006
The new Svalbard International Seed Vault will serve as a repository for crucial seeds in the event of a global catastrophe, said Norway's Agriculture Minister Terje Riis-Johansen. Carved into the permafrost and rock of the remote Svalbard peninsula, it will eventually house 3 million seed samples from every country in the world. This facility will provide a practical means to re-establish crops obliterated by major disasters,'' said Cary Fowler, executive secretary of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, which will manage the seed bank. ``But crop diversity is imperilled not just by a cataclysmic event, such as a nuclear war, but also by natural disasters, accidents, mismanagement, and short-sighted budget cuts.''
Agriculture relies on collections of crop species and their wild relatives. Seed banks are vital to the development of new crop varieties and, without them, agriculture would grind to a halt. Samples of the world's agricultural biodiversity, including crops such as wheat, apple and potato, are scattered across 1,400 seed banks around the world. All these seed banks are at risk from local problems. Mr. Fowler cited the example of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the 1994 genocide in Rwanda as times when dozens of unique crops had been wiped out. The Norwegian government and the Global Crop Diversity Trust have worked on the idea of building a global seed bank of last resort in the Arctic ice since 2004.
On Monday, the Prime Ministers of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland launched the $4.8 million project at a ceremony near the town of Longyearbyen, in Norway's remote Svalbard Islands, roughly 990 km from the North Pole.
The new seed bank will store its samples in a reinforced concrete tunnel drilled 70 metres into a mountain, guarded by two steel doors and remote-controlled from Sweden. The seeds will be stored in foil packets at minus18C, and are expected to remain viable for thousands of years. If a crop is lost through natural disaster or war and a seed bank is destroyed, a government could request replacement seeds from the vault. The facility's remote location and permafrost will ensure that, even if the power fails, the temperature will never rise above freezing. The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates that 75 per cent of the genetic diversity of agricultural crops has been lost. The U.S. had 7,100 varieties of apple in the 19th century, 6,800 no longer exist. The seed bank will start accepting samples in 2007. Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said it would be of global importance. "It will be the only one of its kind. It is our final safety net." © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006
Friday, June 23, 2006
In TIMES PAST: 1910 Flanders Touring Car Soars Over Downtown L. A.
June 23, 1910: As an advertising stunt for the Lord Motor Co., balloonist Ed Unger tied a Flanders automobile to a large hot-air balloon and ascended 1,000 feet from a vacant lot at 8th Street and Broadway. Unger and Lord salesman Ed Adams were in the balloon's basket.
"Though the car swayed dangerously, Unger pluckily kept his seat," The Times said. "Near him was the trapeze rope, which he could have grasped if the voyage had become too tempestuous." A crowd gathered at the lot, waiting for hours before the ascent and staying to watch as the car hovered overhead for an hour while Unger threw down cards and pamphlets. The "stylish little car" took its trip skyward without its engine, which had been removed. (the photo above shows a 1910 Five Passenger Flanders Touring Car).
"Though the car swayed dangerously, Unger pluckily kept his seat," The Times said. "Near him was the trapeze rope, which he could have grasped if the voyage had become too tempestuous." A crowd gathered at the lot, waiting for hours before the ascent and staying to watch as the car hovered overhead for an hour while Unger threw down cards and pamphlets. The "stylish little car" took its trip skyward without its engine, which had been removed. (the photo above shows a 1910 Five Passenger Flanders Touring Car).
"ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER"
The trail overlooking the Great Western Divide near the Bearpaw High Sierra Camp provides one a spectacular view. Some worry the camps are disruptive, but Bill Tweed of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks says they are "a pleasant leftover from a world with much fewer human beings." (Brian Vander Brug / LAT)
OUR NEWEST NATIONAL PARK
LIFTOFF
Thursday, June 22, 2006
"WHY ASK FOR THE MOON WHEN WE HAVE THE STARS" and Bette Davis was a big one !!
It only takes a film clip to bring it all back — those eyes, that voice, the inevitable look of amused contempt cutting through a sorcerer's haze of cigarette smoke.
During her life, Bette Davis had few peers, and almost 20 years after her death, no actress has even attempted to follow in her footsteps. Probably because the walk alone is beyond the ken of most modern starlets. Two parts what-are-you-looking-at and one part scoot-forward-you'll-get-a-better-view, that elbow-levitating, hip-swinging sashay adored by drag queens for decades distilled the fascinating contradiction of the woman.
Not that there is any one Bette Davis image. Other stars of her era may be more easily summoned to mind — Katharine Hepburn, say, or even Joan Crawford. The Davis oeuvre is more varied than most of the other strong-minded gals of her time — she did Southern belle, she did British monarch, she did New York socialite and aging starlet. The accents may have been a bit perilous, but the stubborn New England fearlessness never was.
Here was someone who would pause mid-stride to light her cigarette off a burning orphanage and, still, you had to love her.
Two recent attempts have been made to explain why. Charlotte Chandler's recent biography, "The Girl Who Walked Home Alone," which was excerpted in a recent Vanity Fair, relies much on several years' worth of interviews with the star. It's a bit like a historic tour of Davis' life with Davis, in all her deadpan staccato splendor, as tour guide. "It was said in my family," the book opens, "that one of my ancestors was a witch. Well, I certainly hope so. It would explain everything." (Davis was one of those people who spoke habitually, and effectively, in italics.)
"Stardust: The Bette Davis Story," which premiered recently on Turner Classic Movies, took a longer view. The documentary obviously originates from a place of homage. Davis, the filmmakers believe, was not only a brilliant actress but also a feminist trailblazer.
Feminist may be a bit of a reach — one TV interview has Davis firmly announcing that it is the role of the "girl" to subsume her life to that of the man, otherwise the marriage won't work. With four failed marriages, she certainly would have known, but it didn't seem to occur to her to question these supposed requirements of marriage.
Beyond that, it is remarkably clear-eyed about its subject, who was a very complicated person, with as many obvious failings as talents. Unlike the recent TV biography of Eugene O'Neill, for instance, in which everything from the playwright's alcoholism to his abandonment of his own children was explained neatly away by his having been "haunted" by an imperfect early family life, "Stardust," like its dyed-in-the-wool Yankee subject, is much more matter-of-fact.
Davis too came from a broken home; her father, never too pleasant to begin with, abandoned his wife and two young daughters to live with his mistress. Bette's mother, Ruthie, quickly poured her considerable energy into her daughter's nascent dramatic career. When a very young Bette came down with measles after landing a plum role — Hedvig in "The Wild Duck" (the part that wakened in Bette the desire to be an actress) — Ruthie promised the director she'd have her daughter up on her feet in 10 days, and she did.
Their relationship would remain intense and symbiotic until Ruthie's death, but while Jones does lay some of Davis' subsequent trouble with men at the feet of her childhood, he is not a Davis apologist. That she was driven, ambitious, probably alcoholic, sometimes violent, always outspoken and ruthlessly certain of her own significance is not, mercifully, fodder for biopic psychoanalysis.
Instead we are shown the extraordinary career that sprung from such a personality — the woman made more than 90 films, many of them classics — as well as the life required to make that career possible. Because, as she said herself many, many times, the work was what really mattered to her.
Which is a good thing because Davis did not have a particularly happy life. Along with the four marriages, she had three children, two of them adopted. One daughter was mildly retarded and institutionalized; the other, B.D., was Davis' constant companion for years, until she wrote a tell-all book that severed their contact. Only her son, Michael Merrill, was interviewed for "Stardust," and though he speaks of his mother with a vague fondness, he is still clearly a bit shellshocked by the experience of being Bette Davis' son.
Part of this is due to the nature of the time. Davis was a movie star when being a movie star was a full-time occupation. She often made as many as three films a year; in the banner year of 1939, she made four. Her personal struggles with Jack Warner, to whom she was under contract for 18 years, were legendary — "She never had an unkind word for Jack," Frank Sinatra said at a banquet honoring Davis. "And the time she stabbed him, it was an accident. She was in his office and she reached for the revolver, the knife slipped out."
Even during the years when she was in hit after hit —she was nominated for 10 Oscars (five in consecutive years) and won two — the industry's devotion, then as now, lasted only a few minutes after the latest box office tally. When she hit her 40s, she learned, as so many actresses have, that age does matter. (It also doesn't help when you've earned a reputation for being almost impossible on the set.) Even after the sweeping success of "All About Eve," in which she played a fading star at the ripe old age of 42, leading film roles were scarce. The late '50s and early '60s were full of television work as Davis struggled to support herself, her children, her sister and her mother.
Beyond a collection of some of the best moments in American film and a mildly intimate look at a woman so well known she was almost her own caricature, what emerges from "Stardust" is the vacuum that Davis and some of her contemporaries left behind. Where is an actress alive today who could utter lines like "I'd kiss ya, but I just washed my hair" or "But you are, you are in that wheelchair, Blanche" or even the classic "What a dump." And where are the writers to write them?
Davis' list of successful films is low on romantic comedies, high on character dramas, and within them she created a series of women who may have wanted to be loved (who doesn't?) but who were also perfectly capable of letting their dream man go with a quip and a shrug if it looked as if he was going to get in the way of what she really wanted. The plot may have required Margo Channing to deliver a nice little soliloquy on the importance of being there for your man, but somehow the audience knew that Eve or no Eve, Margo wasn't going to change one whit.
Imagine an actress today building a successful career with a persona like that. Imagine a series of female-driven films in which the women were allowed to be smart and mouthy and not play second banana, or calculating and vulnerable but not punished for either? A film in which a happy ending was marked by a rueful smile and the admission that the star-crossed couple would just have to remain star-crossed?
Davis was perhaps one of the last of her kind — a Movie Star Who Wanted to Be a Movie Star, who made no apology for grabbing the roles she wanted, who worked pretty much nonstop all her life even when it meant doing "Gunsmoke" and playing creepy nannies, who didn't pretend that she was just like her fans, that she also wanted a "normal" life.
And so she remained, to the end of her life and mostly by the force of her own will, a Big Star, with the cigarette going and the false eyelashes fluttering while she uttered scathing one-liners in that perpetually heartbreaking, heartbroken voice.
Bette Davis, undiluted.
During her life, Bette Davis had few peers, and almost 20 years after her death, no actress has even attempted to follow in her footsteps. Probably because the walk alone is beyond the ken of most modern starlets. Two parts what-are-you-looking-at and one part scoot-forward-you'll-get-a-better-view, that elbow-levitating, hip-swinging sashay adored by drag queens for decades distilled the fascinating contradiction of the woman.
Not that there is any one Bette Davis image. Other stars of her era may be more easily summoned to mind — Katharine Hepburn, say, or even Joan Crawford. The Davis oeuvre is more varied than most of the other strong-minded gals of her time — she did Southern belle, she did British monarch, she did New York socialite and aging starlet. The accents may have been a bit perilous, but the stubborn New England fearlessness never was.
Here was someone who would pause mid-stride to light her cigarette off a burning orphanage and, still, you had to love her.
Two recent attempts have been made to explain why. Charlotte Chandler's recent biography, "The Girl Who Walked Home Alone," which was excerpted in a recent Vanity Fair, relies much on several years' worth of interviews with the star. It's a bit like a historic tour of Davis' life with Davis, in all her deadpan staccato splendor, as tour guide. "It was said in my family," the book opens, "that one of my ancestors was a witch. Well, I certainly hope so. It would explain everything." (Davis was one of those people who spoke habitually, and effectively, in italics.)
"Stardust: The Bette Davis Story," which premiered recently on Turner Classic Movies, took a longer view. The documentary obviously originates from a place of homage. Davis, the filmmakers believe, was not only a brilliant actress but also a feminist trailblazer.
Feminist may be a bit of a reach — one TV interview has Davis firmly announcing that it is the role of the "girl" to subsume her life to that of the man, otherwise the marriage won't work. With four failed marriages, she certainly would have known, but it didn't seem to occur to her to question these supposed requirements of marriage.
Beyond that, it is remarkably clear-eyed about its subject, who was a very complicated person, with as many obvious failings as talents. Unlike the recent TV biography of Eugene O'Neill, for instance, in which everything from the playwright's alcoholism to his abandonment of his own children was explained neatly away by his having been "haunted" by an imperfect early family life, "Stardust," like its dyed-in-the-wool Yankee subject, is much more matter-of-fact.
Davis too came from a broken home; her father, never too pleasant to begin with, abandoned his wife and two young daughters to live with his mistress. Bette's mother, Ruthie, quickly poured her considerable energy into her daughter's nascent dramatic career. When a very young Bette came down with measles after landing a plum role — Hedvig in "The Wild Duck" (the part that wakened in Bette the desire to be an actress) — Ruthie promised the director she'd have her daughter up on her feet in 10 days, and she did.
Their relationship would remain intense and symbiotic until Ruthie's death, but while Jones does lay some of Davis' subsequent trouble with men at the feet of her childhood, he is not a Davis apologist. That she was driven, ambitious, probably alcoholic, sometimes violent, always outspoken and ruthlessly certain of her own significance is not, mercifully, fodder for biopic psychoanalysis.
Instead we are shown the extraordinary career that sprung from such a personality — the woman made more than 90 films, many of them classics — as well as the life required to make that career possible. Because, as she said herself many, many times, the work was what really mattered to her.
Which is a good thing because Davis did not have a particularly happy life. Along with the four marriages, she had three children, two of them adopted. One daughter was mildly retarded and institutionalized; the other, B.D., was Davis' constant companion for years, until she wrote a tell-all book that severed their contact. Only her son, Michael Merrill, was interviewed for "Stardust," and though he speaks of his mother with a vague fondness, he is still clearly a bit shellshocked by the experience of being Bette Davis' son.
Part of this is due to the nature of the time. Davis was a movie star when being a movie star was a full-time occupation. She often made as many as three films a year; in the banner year of 1939, she made four. Her personal struggles with Jack Warner, to whom she was under contract for 18 years, were legendary — "She never had an unkind word for Jack," Frank Sinatra said at a banquet honoring Davis. "And the time she stabbed him, it was an accident. She was in his office and she reached for the revolver, the knife slipped out."
Even during the years when she was in hit after hit —she was nominated for 10 Oscars (five in consecutive years) and won two — the industry's devotion, then as now, lasted only a few minutes after the latest box office tally. When she hit her 40s, she learned, as so many actresses have, that age does matter. (It also doesn't help when you've earned a reputation for being almost impossible on the set.) Even after the sweeping success of "All About Eve," in which she played a fading star at the ripe old age of 42, leading film roles were scarce. The late '50s and early '60s were full of television work as Davis struggled to support herself, her children, her sister and her mother.
Beyond a collection of some of the best moments in American film and a mildly intimate look at a woman so well known she was almost her own caricature, what emerges from "Stardust" is the vacuum that Davis and some of her contemporaries left behind. Where is an actress alive today who could utter lines like "I'd kiss ya, but I just washed my hair" or "But you are, you are in that wheelchair, Blanche" or even the classic "What a dump." And where are the writers to write them?
Davis' list of successful films is low on romantic comedies, high on character dramas, and within them she created a series of women who may have wanted to be loved (who doesn't?) but who were also perfectly capable of letting their dream man go with a quip and a shrug if it looked as if he was going to get in the way of what she really wanted. The plot may have required Margo Channing to deliver a nice little soliloquy on the importance of being there for your man, but somehow the audience knew that Eve or no Eve, Margo wasn't going to change one whit.
Imagine an actress today building a successful career with a persona like that. Imagine a series of female-driven films in which the women were allowed to be smart and mouthy and not play second banana, or calculating and vulnerable but not punished for either? A film in which a happy ending was marked by a rueful smile and the admission that the star-crossed couple would just have to remain star-crossed?
Davis was perhaps one of the last of her kind — a Movie Star Who Wanted to Be a Movie Star, who made no apology for grabbing the roles she wanted, who worked pretty much nonstop all her life even when it meant doing "Gunsmoke" and playing creepy nannies, who didn't pretend that she was just like her fans, that she also wanted a "normal" life.
And so she remained, to the end of her life and mostly by the force of her own will, a Big Star, with the cigarette going and the false eyelashes fluttering while she uttered scathing one-liners in that perpetually heartbreaking, heartbroken voice.
Bette Davis, undiluted.
Monday, June 19, 2006
TURNING TO A KINDER CUT
This is 21st century surgery — with little blood loss, rapid healing and minimal scarring — and it's quickly replacing surgery in which scalpels (in, hopefully, steady hands) slice long, bloody incisions through the body. In this dynamic movement, doctors aim to fix the body without hurting it.
"People will soon look back at any large incision as barbaric and archaic," says Dr. Paul A. Wetter, chairman of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons and a professor emeritus of gynecology at the University of Miami. In only the last few years, minimally invasive surgery has evolved from a popular technique used for the simplest of abdominal surgeries — such as a gallbladder removal or hernia repair — to a method that can treat even life-threatening diseases such as cancer, heart problems and emphysema.
An increasing number of these surgeries are augmented with sophisticated computer and imaging technology — such as robots. Such techniques elevate ordinary doctor skills to the super-human level by providing magnified, high-definition images and by preventing mistakes, such as cutting into the wrong tissue. Some doctors are even taking the first tentative steps toward operating without incisions, using the body's natural openings — the nose, mouth and anus — to gain access to its inner workings.
Think of it as surgery without scars.
"People will soon look back at any large incision as barbaric and archaic," says Dr. Paul A. Wetter, chairman of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons and a professor emeritus of gynecology at the University of Miami. In only the last few years, minimally invasive surgery has evolved from a popular technique used for the simplest of abdominal surgeries — such as a gallbladder removal or hernia repair — to a method that can treat even life-threatening diseases such as cancer, heart problems and emphysema.
An increasing number of these surgeries are augmented with sophisticated computer and imaging technology — such as robots. Such techniques elevate ordinary doctor skills to the super-human level by providing magnified, high-definition images and by preventing mistakes, such as cutting into the wrong tissue. Some doctors are even taking the first tentative steps toward operating without incisions, using the body's natural openings — the nose, mouth and anus — to gain access to its inner workings.
Think of it as surgery without scars.
Sunday, June 18, 2006
Saturday, June 17, 2006
THE PRESIDENT ACTS TO PROTECT MARINE LIFE
Spinner dolphins frolic near Midway Atoll, in a region rich in marine life that includes green turtles, monk seals and millions of nesting seabirds. President Bush this week created the world's largest marine protected area, 140,000 square miles of the Pacific Ocean, including the area around the atoll. (Photo by Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times)
OLD LADY OF THE FREEWAY
DEFYING GRAVITY
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
PLANNED HIGH-RISE: An architectural rendering of the hotel and residential tower at the Los Angeles Convention Center.
The remaking of downtown Los Angeles will gain a crucial missing piece today when developers unveil plans for a 1,000-room hotel complex — including a five-star Ritz-Carlton and a four-star Marriott Marquis — for the Convention Center. Rising 54 stories, the $750-million project would be one of the largest buildings in Los Angeles at 2 million square feet.
The proposed 124-room Ritz-Carlton would be the first five-star hotel downtown and, with the largest ballroom in the city, the planned 876-room Marriott Marquis would fill a void as a business meeting hub at the Convention Center. The hotels are to be topped by 216 luxury condominiums.
The project, scheduled to open in 2010, would anchor L.A. Live, the 27-acre sports-entertainment complex considered the linchpin of downtown's redevelopment.
The proposed 124-room Ritz-Carlton would be the first five-star hotel downtown and, with the largest ballroom in the city, the planned 876-room Marriott Marquis would fill a void as a business meeting hub at the Convention Center. The hotels are to be topped by 216 luxury condominiums.
The project, scheduled to open in 2010, would anchor L.A. Live, the 27-acre sports-entertainment complex considered the linchpin of downtown's redevelopment.
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Monday, June 12, 2006
IN A FEW YEARS YOU MIGHT BECOME A CLEVER DRIVER
British engineers have unveiled a three-wheeled car that, at a metre wide, is designed to squeeze into the tiniest of parking spaces. Funded by the European Union and backed by BMW, it is trumpeted as more environmentally friendly than the average vehicle because it runs on compressed natural gas.
The car, called Clever (for compact low emission vehicle for urban transport, and a possible swipe at the Smart car brand) was launched at Bath University in south-west England, one of the centres behind the three-year project. Its developers hope to see it on European streets within five years at a cost of as little as £5000 the equivalent of 12,000 American dollars.
The car, called Clever (for compact low emission vehicle for urban transport, and a possible swipe at the Smart car brand) was launched at Bath University in south-west England, one of the centres behind the three-year project. Its developers hope to see it on European streets within five years at a cost of as little as £5000 the equivalent of 12,000 American dollars.
Sunday, June 11, 2006
"PHANTOM -- THE LAS VEGAS SPECTACULAR" SET TO OPEN AT THE VENETIAN
On June 12 "Phantom" begins haunting the Venetian in a 95-minute version of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical "The Phantom of the Opera." The Strip's version, dubbed "Phantom — The Las Vegas Spectacular," features new special effects and although abridged, it includes every song from the Broadway production. Tony-winner Anthony Crivello and "Chicago" veteran Brent Barrett share duties as the phantom. Venetian's Phantom Theatre, 3355 S. Las Vegas Blvd. $107-$132. Preview shows June 12-23 (dark Tuesdays). (866) 641-7469, http://www.venetian.com/phantom .
Saturday, June 10, 2006
JUDY GARLAND TO BE COMMEMORATED ON U. S. POSTAGE STAMP
Stage and screen legend Judy Garland will be commemorated on a postage stamp as part of the Postal Service's Legends of Hollywood series. The new stamp is to be unveiled today in New York on what would have been Judy's 84th birthday.
The actress known across the globe for her movie musical turn as Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz" will become the 12th inductee into the collection issued by the U.S. Postal Service. Born Frances Ethel Gumm on June 10, 1922 in Grand Rapids, MN, the actress grew to become an all-around performer, acting in comedy or drama, singing and dancing.
In 1940, Garland won a special Academy Award "for her outstanding performance as a screen juvenile during the past year" — having appeared in "The Wizard of Oz" and "Babes in Arms." Other films include "For Me and My Gal," "Meet Me in St. Louis," and Academy Award nominated roles in "A Star Is Born" and "Judgment at Nuremberg." Following her acclaimed, self-titled performance run at Broadway's Palace Theater in 1951, she was honored with a special Tony Award. Garland has also appeared as a pivotal character in Broadway's "The Boy From Oz" and Off-Broadway's current "The Property Known as Garland." Art director Ethel Kessler designed the stamp using a portrait of Garland by Brooklyn artist Tim O'Brien based on a publicity photo for "A Star Is Born." A reproduction of Garland's signature appears across the bottom of the stamp. (shown above)
The actress known across the globe for her movie musical turn as Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz" will become the 12th inductee into the collection issued by the U.S. Postal Service. Born Frances Ethel Gumm on June 10, 1922 in Grand Rapids, MN, the actress grew to become an all-around performer, acting in comedy or drama, singing and dancing.
In 1940, Garland won a special Academy Award "for her outstanding performance as a screen juvenile during the past year" — having appeared in "The Wizard of Oz" and "Babes in Arms." Other films include "For Me and My Gal," "Meet Me in St. Louis," and Academy Award nominated roles in "A Star Is Born" and "Judgment at Nuremberg." Following her acclaimed, self-titled performance run at Broadway's Palace Theater in 1951, she was honored with a special Tony Award. Garland has also appeared as a pivotal character in Broadway's "The Boy From Oz" and Off-Broadway's current "The Property Known as Garland." Art director Ethel Kessler designed the stamp using a portrait of Garland by Brooklyn artist Tim O'Brien based on a publicity photo for "A Star Is Born." A reproduction of Garland's signature appears across the bottom of the stamp. (shown above)
WORLD CUP CRAZE IN GERMANY
Friday, June 09, 2006
IN LAS VEGAS THEY'RE PLAYING WITH A STACKED DECK
In the photo above a sheriff's deputy looks out on the Las Vegas Strip from the new $185-million Clark County courthouse. One Southern California lawyer said "I don't think what goes on in Nevada bears any resemblance to a justice system," referring to reports that some judges routinely rule in cases involving friends, former clients and business associates -- and these judges rule in favor of lawyers who fill their campaign coffers. Coincidentally, state casinos raked in $989.8 million in winnings from gamblers in April, a 12.7% increase over the previous year and the highest amount ever for the month, state regulators said in Carson City. Of the April total, the state collected $52.9 million in fees. For the fiscal year that began July 1, statewide casino winnings total $10.1 billion, 12.5% over the same time last year, regulators said.
CLOUD GATE REFLECTS THE WORLD WE LIVE IN
Cloud Gate is British artist Anish Kapoor's first public outdoor work installed in the United States. The 110-ton elliptical sculpture is forged of a seamless series of highly polished stainless steel plates, which reflect the city's famous skyline and the clouds above. A 12-foot-high arch provides a "gate" to the concave chamber beneath the sculpture, inviting visitors to touch its mirror-like surface and see their image reflected back from a variety of perspectives.
Inspired by liquid mercury, the sculpture is among the largest of its kind in the world, measuring 66-feet long by 33-feet high. Cloud Gate sits upon the AT&T Plaza in Chicago, Illinois.
"What I wanted to do in Millennium Park is make something that would engage the Chicago skyline…so that one will see the clouds kind of floating in, with those very tall buildings reflected in the work. And then, since it is in the form of a gate, the participant, the viewer, will be able to enter into this very deep chamber that does, in a way, the same thing to one's reflection as the exterior of the piece is doing to the reflection of the city around."
-Anish Kapoor
Inspired by liquid mercury, the sculpture is among the largest of its kind in the world, measuring 66-feet long by 33-feet high. Cloud Gate sits upon the AT&T Plaza in Chicago, Illinois.
"What I wanted to do in Millennium Park is make something that would engage the Chicago skyline…so that one will see the clouds kind of floating in, with those very tall buildings reflected in the work. And then, since it is in the form of a gate, the participant, the viewer, will be able to enter into this very deep chamber that does, in a way, the same thing to one's reflection as the exterior of the piece is doing to the reflection of the city around."
-Anish Kapoor
Wednesday, June 07, 2006
Tuesday, June 06, 2006
BARRY MANILOW: CRIME FIGHTER UNAWARES
A local council in Sydney, Australia, is taking radical measures against car-revving youths — the calming tones of singer Barry Manilow. Beginning in July, Manilow's greatest hits will be piped into one car park in a bid to drive the youths away. Bill Saravinovski, deputy mayor of Rockdale, a suburb of Sydney, said the decision was taken because the youths were intimidating local people.
Saravinovski said the Manilow songs should not annoy residents, but would be loud enough for the youths to hear it. "Daggy music is one way to make the hoons leave an area, because they can't stand the music," he told the Australian newspaper the Daily Telegraph. "Daggy" is Australian slang for unfashionable or uncool. (from BBC.com)
Saravinovski said the Manilow songs should not annoy residents, but would be loud enough for the youths to hear it. "Daggy music is one way to make the hoons leave an area, because they can't stand the music," he told the Australian newspaper the Daily Telegraph. "Daggy" is Australian slang for unfashionable or uncool. (from BBC.com)
Sunday, June 04, 2006
Do you feel like pampering yourself ??
The ever-growing St. Regis chain is set to open another of its luxury accommodations, this time in French Polynesia. The St. Regis Bora-Bora, set on 44 acres, has 91 villas (including five over water that have swimming pools that also are over water). The one-bedroom units are 1,550 square feet and start at $950 a night. Guests have their choice of three restaurants, a spa and two pools (one with swim-up bar). And each villa comes with a butler, of course.
COUNTDOWN TO MADNESS
HAPPY MEALS ??? NOT FOR EVERYONE
FAST-FOOD industry, stand in the corner. When it comes to kids' meals, you've been very naughty. Once upon a time, it seemed OK to push fatty burgers, nuggets and fries onto little kids, but that's so yesterday. You're older now and ought to know better. Some of you claim to have healthful options, but it doesn't count if all you've done is replace the fatty fries with something super-sugary. Do apple slices really need to be dipped in caramel sauce? Instead of toys, those meals should come with insulin.
SOME PEOPLE CALL THIS ART . . . BUT I CALL IT HUMOR
When L.A. County supervisors laid eyes on Kienholz's sculpture of a drunken couple making out in a car — a week before the opening of a 1966 exhibition at LACMA — they labeled the artwork "revolting" and "blasphemous," urged museum officials to remove it and threatened to cut their salaries when they refused. The show opened on time, with a long line of viewers and the door of the car closed. But guards stationed at "Back Seat Dodge '38" opened the door periodically, allowing patient visitors to peek inside.