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Archive for the ‘Celebrity’ Category

Marissa miller

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Marisa Miller (born August 6, 1978[1]) is an American supermodel. She is known for her many appearances in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issues and Victoria’s Secret catalogs. She is the cover model for the 2008 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.

Birth name     Marisa Bertetta
Date of birth     August 6, 1978 (1978-08-06) (age 29)
Place of birth     Flag of the United States Santa Cruz, California, U.S.
Height     5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Hair color     Blonde
Eye color     Hazel
Measurements     34D-23-35 (US)
86-58-88 (EU)
Weight     110 lb (50 kg/7.9 st)
Dress size     2 (US), 32 (EU), 5 (UK)
Shoe size     7 (US), 37½ (EU), 4½ (UK)
Agency     Elite Model Management
Spouse(s)     Jim Miller (ca. 2000–ca. 2002)
Griffin Guess (2006–present)

Biography

Early life and career start

Born Marisa Bertetta in Santa Cruz, California, she was first “discovered” at age 16 walking through a San Francisco café by two Italian modeling agents.[2] After talking to her mom Krista Bertetta, she was on a plane to Italy with her mom a few months later. Marisa says that the most valuable thing that her mom has ever told her was “You can always go back to school but you may not always be able to model.” Marisa took her mom’s advice and soon gained attention when she appeared in a 1997 issue of Perfect 10 magazine. Although she came in third behind Ashley Degenford and Monica Hansen in Perfect 10 magazine’s first annual model search, she was repeatedly showcased in following issues, including the covers of the Winter 1998, Aug/Sept 1999, and Fall 2004 editions. She has two sisters and attended Monte Vista Christian School[3] in Watsonville, California.

Career highlights

Atypically, Marisa was able to move from a start as an amateur magazine model to high profile mainstream work after she was spotted by fashion photographer Mario Testino in Manhattan Beach, California in 2001.[4] Noticing Marisa, Mario snapped pictures of her and approached her for a job offer. Soon after, Marisa worked with the likes of Victoria’s Secret and has appeared in every issue of the coveted Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue since 2002. In particular, she was featured in the 2004 and 2005 editions’ sections of body painting. Raphael Mazzucco’s photograph of Marisa wearing nothing but an iPod in the 2007 edition became one of the most famous photos ever published in that magazine. She’s also appeared in other magazines such as Fitness, Shape, and Vogue, as well as working on campaigns for Nordstrom, J.Crew, and Tommy Hilfiger. In 2004, she served as a modeling judge in the short-lived reality television series Manhunt: The Search for America’s Most Gorgeous Male Model.[5] In the same year she also appeared in Puddle of Mudd’s music video for “Spin You Around”.

In 2007, Marisa shot her first television commercial for Victoria’s Secret with fellow supermodel Heidi Klum, causing quite a stir unexpectedly drawing more attention than Klum, as well as appearing in a cameo on the HBO show Entourage. Marisa was also featured as a model on the pilot episode of the new VH1 reality show The Shot.

On November 26, 2007, Marisa made a special guest appearance on How I Met Your Mother (episode: “The Yips”) with her fellow Victoria’s Secret supermodels (Alessandra Ambrosio, Adriana Lima, Selita Ebanks, Miranda Kerr, and Heidi Klum).

On December 4, 2007, Marisa made her debut at the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show.[6]

On the February 11, 2008 episode of The Late Show with David Letterman it was announced that Marisa would grace the cover of the 2008 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition.

Personal life

Marisa married Jim Miller, a Los Angeles surfing contest promoter and lifeguard from California in 2000 and separated from him in 2002. They divorced soon after. She married Hollywood producer Griffin Guess on April 15, 2006.[7] Marisa enjoys football, muscle cars, cooking, and boxing. From an early age she loved surfing, was a standout volleyball player on her high school team, and has long been a big sports fan in general. She’s said that if she weren’t a model she would be a sportscaster.

Lennon murphy

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Lennon Anne Murphy, named after rock and roll legend John Lennon [1], is a singer/songwriter from Hendersonville, Tennessee, United States. Born in Ronkonkoma, Long Island, New York on March 31, 1982, Lennon and her mother moved to Hendersonville when she was four years old. Lennon began playing piano at a young age and performed her first gig in front of people when she was fifteen.

One day, Lennon came home after school to find her mother, her only parent, dead in her closet from an allergic reaction to some pills she had taken. This was just a few days after Lennon’s eighteenth birthday and just before she signed with Arista records.

Still Lennon prevailed, fighting for custody of her younger sister Mariella (which she eventually won) and releasing her debut album, 5:30 Saturday Morning, on the historic date of September 11, 2001. Her only single from that album was a song called “Brake of your Car”. Lennon ended up leaving Arista because, “I wanted a career as a rock act, and an album I could be proud of, and staying with Arista I really didn’t see that happening,”.

In 2004, Lennon released 2 albums and a DVD. One album is a strictly acoustic release entitled Career Suicide, released on September 24, 2004. It was just Lennon and her piano, which makes sense since Lennon has said, “I write on piano, which I’ve been playing all my life”. Most songs were remakes of songs from 5:30 Saturday Morning but the new ones were also well received. On December 27, 2004, she released another album entitled I Am. She also released a DVD entitled My Crazy Life. She released them all independently on John Galt Entertainment, a record label she founded with her manager.

On September 5, 2006, Lennon kicked off a tour opening for Aerosmith and Mötley Crüe to support the September 19, 2006 release of her album Damaged Goods. The lead single is the track Where Do I Fit In?, which is a revamp of the track My Beautiful from her Arista debut. While on tour, she is also headlining gigs at local clubs along the way. Often those who hold tickets for the Aerosmith/Mötley Crüe show in the area can get into the smaller venue to see Lennon for free.

Lennon has completed her new album with producer Jason Suecof (Trivium, DevilDriver, Chimaira). Lennon will reportedly be taking a more guitar-heavy approach with her newer material. [2] The album will be released in 2008.

Trivia

Lennon enjoys watching Law and Order, Wonton Soup, Disney’s Aladdin, and playing onstage.[3]

Lennon has, at times, driven her own tour bus. [4]

Lennon’s opinion on the music industry: “In an industry where you have four weeks to hit and then they move on to the next thing, a career is the last thing corporate America is considering. By putting the DVD, I Am and Damaged Goods out through my own company, I want to give myself the chance of still being around in 10 years.”

Background information
Birth name     Lennon Anne Murphy
Born     March 31, 1982 (1982-03-31) (age 25)
Origin     Hendersonville, Tennessee
Years active     2001 - present
Label(s)     John Galt Entertainment

The iceman cometh

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

The Iceman Cometh is a play written by Eugene O’Neill in 1939. First published in 1940 and first produced on Broadway in 1946, it is considered one of the author’s finest works. The play was later adapted into a TV movie in 1960 as well as a big screen motion picture in 1973, both by the same name.

Characters

The following is the list of characters as printed in the 1988 Library of America edition.

* Harry Hope, proprietor of a saloon and rooming house*
* Ed Mosher, Hope’s brother-in-law, one-time circus man*
* Pat McGloin, one-time Police Lieutenant*
* Willie Oban, a Harvard Law School alumnus*
* Joe Mott, a one-time proprietor of a Negro gambling house
* Piet Wetjoen, (”The General”), one-time leader of a Boer commando*
* Cecil Lewis, (”The Captain”), one-time Captain of British infantry*
* James Cameron (”Jimmy Tomorrow”), one-time Boer War correspondent*
* Hugo Kalmar, one-time editor of Anarchist periodicals
* Larry Slade, one-time Syndicalist-Anarchist
* Rocky Pioggi, night bartender*
* Don Parritt*
* Pearl, street walker*
* Margie, street walker*
* Cora, street walker
* Chuck Morello, day bartender*
* Theodore Hickman (Hickey), a hardware salesman
* Moran
* Lieb

(* Roomers at Harry Hope’s)

Plot

It is set in Harry Hope’s decidedly downmarket Greenwich Village saloon and rooming house, in 1912. The patrons, who are all men except for three women who are prostitutes, are all dead-end alcoholics who spend every possible moment seeking oblivion in each others’ company and trying to con or wheedle free drinks from Harry and the bartenders. They tend to focus much of their anticipation on the semi-regular visits of the salesman Theodore Hickman, known to them as Hickey. When Hickey finishes a tour of his business territory, which is apparently a wide expanse of the East Coast, he typically turns up at the saloon and starts the party. He buys drinks for everyone, regales them with jokes and stories, and goes on a bender of several days until his money runs out. As the play opens, the regulars are expecting Hickey to turn up soon and plan to throw Harry a surprise birthday party. The entire first act introduces the various characters and shows them bickering amongst each other, showing just how drunk and delusional they are, all the while waiting for the arrival of Hickey.

One of the focuses of this act is a dialogue between two of the characters, Larry Slade and Don Parrit. Don’s mother, a member of an anarchy movement, has recently been arrested, apparently as a result of an informant. Larry was dating Don’s mother for the majority of Don’s childhood and Don is preoccupied with getting Larry, who has resigned himself to a detached state, to admit his continued belief in the movement.

Joe Mott is the only African American member of the group and is the former owner of a black casino. He insists he will soon re-open the casino.

Cecil “The Captain” Lewis is a former infantryman of the British Army who fought with Piet “The General” Wetjoen, a Boer during the Boer War. The two are now good friends. The two insist they’ll soon go back to their nations of origin.

Willie Oban is a Harvard graduate who says he will soon get a job at the DA’s office.

Harry Hope is the proprietor of the bar and, though he is constantly saying otherwise, has a tendency to give out free drinks. He has not left the bar since his wife Bess’s death 20 years ago. He promises that he’ll take a walk around the block on his birthday, the next day.

Pat McGloin is a former police lieutenant who was convicted on criminal charges and kicked out of the force. He says he is hoping to appeal, but is waiting for the right moment.

Rocky Pioggi is the night bartender, but is paid little and makes his living mostly off of allowing Pearl and Margie stay at the bar in exchange for all the money they make. He despises being called a pimp.

Ed Mosher is Harry’s brother-in-law, Bess’s brother. He is a former circus box-office man and con-man who prides himself on his ability to give incorrect change. He kept to much of his illegitimate profits to himself and was fired, but says he will get his job back someday.

Hugo Kalmar is a former anarchist and often quotes the bible. He is drunk and passed out for a majority of the play and is constantly asking the other patrons to buy him a drink.

James “Jimmy Tomorrow” Cameron is a former British newspaper correspondent. He is constantly procrastinating getting a job, hence his nickname.

Chuck Morello is the day bartender and Cora’s boyfriend. He says that he will marry her tomorrow.

Pearl and Margie and two prostitutes that work for Rocky.

Cora is a third prostitute and is Chuck’s girlfriend.

Finally Hickey arrives and his behavior throws the other characters into turmoil. He insists, with as much charisma as ever, but now lumped together with the zeal of a recent convert, that he sees life clearly now as never before, because he is sober. He hectors his former drinking companions that they are meaninglessly clinging to “pipe dreams” of some kind of positive change in their lives, while continuing to drown their sorrows exactly as before. (This is true; the ex-cop and carny hustler tell each other they will ask for their old jobs back on the police force or with the circus, the bartender says he will marry his prostitute girlfriend, etc., with seemingly no chance of any of this coming to pass. One character is even nicknamed Jimmy Tomorrow for his constant protestations.) Hickey wants the characters to cast away their delusions and embrace the hopelessness of their fates. He takes on this task with a near-maniacal fervor. How he goes about his mission, how the other characters respond, and their efforts to find out what has wrought this change in Hickey take over four hours to resolve.

During and after Harry’s birthday party most seem to have been somewhat affected by Hickey’s ramblings. Harry, Lewis and Wetjoen all leave the bar, though Harry comes running back with the (untrue) excuse that he was almost run over by a passing car and they all come back later in the day. Larry pretends to be unaffected but when Don reveals he was the informant Larry rages at him and, Willie decides McGloin’s appeal will be his first case and Rocky admits he is a pimp.

Eventually, they all return and are jolted by a sudden revelation. Hickey, who had earlier told the other characters that his wife had died and that she was murdered, admits that he is the one who actually killed her. The police arrive, apparently called by Hickey himself, and Hickey justifies the murder in a dramatic monologue, saying that he did it out of love for her.

When Hickey was a child his father made a living as an evangelical, which led Hickey to become a salesman. He met his wife, Evelyn and Evelyn’s family forbade her to associate with Hickey, something she ignored. After Hickey left to become a salesman he promised he would marry Evelyn as soon as he was able. He became a successful salesman, then sent for her and the two were very happy until Hickey got tired of his wife always forgiving him for his whore-mongering and began to feel guilty. He contemplated both divorcing her and killing himself, but believed both would convince Evelyn he didn’t love her, so he looked for another way out. He thought it would be better if she just didn’t wake up while watching her sleep, so he shot her in the head with her revolver. He next recounts how he taunted her and, in realizing he said this, realizes that he went insane and that people need their empty dreams to keep them going. The others agree and decide to testify for insanity during Hickey’s trial despite Hickey begging them to let him get the death sentence.

The others all go back to their empty promises and pipe dreams except for Don who compares Evelyn’s murder with his selling the Movement out, but worse saying that his mother has to live with the knowledge that her son “killed” her. He runs up to his room with the intention of jumping off the fire escape. Larry grimaces and listens at the window with his eyes closed. Don jumps and Larry at first seems to be relieved.

The play ends with everyone singing in dissonance happily except for Larry who stares straight ahead in horror as the curtain falls.

Political content

The play contains many allusions to political topics, particularly anarchism and socialism. Hugo, Larry and Don are former members of an anarchist movement. Larry, who is now a bitter man who claims to be waiting for death, is approached by his ex-girlfriend’s son, Don, at the beginning of the play, and Don remains at the bar. Don admits that he informed the police of the illegal activities of his mother and other anarchists. He gives several reasons for this but later admits that they are not the real ones. He claims that he did it out of patriotism and then that he wanted the money, but finally admits that he did it because he hated his mother, who was so obsessed with her own freedom that she became too self-centered and often either ignored or dominated him. The conversations between Don and Larry, are among the most emotional in the play. Some of these conversations also often involve Hickey, whose actions somewhat parallel Don’s.

Two other characters are veterans of the Second Boer War. One is British and one is Dutch. They alternately defend and insult each other, and there are many allusions to events in South Africa. Both wish to return to South Africa, but their families do not want them there.

There is also an African-American character named Joe, who gives several speeches about racial differences.

Productions

The play is certainly O’Neill’s most ambitious work, and bears the impression of having been written from a perspective of profound despair. It expresses the playwright’s disillusionment with the American ideals of success and aspiration, and suggests that much of human behavior is driven by bitterness, envy and revenge. Despite the emotional difficulty of this play which may have decreased its popularity, fans of the play believe that all the characters are so well explored, with measured doses of wry humor, that the best productions are compelling. The suspense of discovering the true meaning and intentions of Hickey’s character usually maintains the audience’s interest.

This massive undertaking is seldom staged. Even when O’Neill was alive, he delayed its performance on Broadway for seven years, fearing American audiences would reject it. O’Neill was at the height of his fame when he relented in 1946, and the production was a commercial success, though it received mixed reviews. The realistic, seedy language of some of its ne’er-do-well characters was a departure for O’Neill, who was known for writing plays with high-flown and melodramatic dialogue. This play tends to preserve O’Neill’s typical passion and intensity while losing some of its aestheticism in the language, and risks a certain amount of redundancy as a result, so it is not surprising that some critics did not fully embrace it at first.

Another problem may have been the performance of James Barton as Hickey. Barton was reportedly not up to the massive emotional and physical demands of such a titanic part, sometimes forgetting his lines or wearing out his voice. Interestingly, the young Marlon Brando was offered the part of Don Parritt in the original Broadway production, but famously turned it down. Brando later claimed to have read only a few pages of the script the producers gave him, and to have started an argument at the audition about the worth of the play and O’Neill’s writing style – which ended with his rejecting the part, apparently in order just to seem consistent – rather than admit to his laziness.

The play was mounted again Off-Broadway in 1956, after O’Neill’s death. This production, starring Jason Robards as Hickey and directed by José Quintero, was massively acclaimed, and the play was accepted as a true masterpiece. Robards won multiple awards for his performance, and went on to distinguish himself throughout his life as the leading interpreter of O’Neill’s great male roles. He was most widely known for his film roles but repeatedly devoted his most serious energies to theatrical roles, and especially to O’Neill. Robards was in a 1960 live television version of the play, and returned to it in a 1985 Broadway production again directed by Quintero and featuring a cast that included Barnard Hughes as Harry Hope and Donald Moffat as Larry Slade.

Other noteworthy actors to play the role of Hickey include Lee Marvin, in a 1973 film version directed by John Frankenheimer; James Earl Jones, in a 1973 revival at the Circle in the Square Theatre that was edited for length and criticized for the weakness of its supporting cast; and Kevin Spacey, who was lauded for his 1998-1999 stage rendition of the part on London’s West End and then on Broadway. The play is now widely considered to have the dimensions of a true tragedy, whereas many of O’Neill’s earlier works would be more accurately characterized as melodrama.

The 1973 film version featured many notable character actors besides Lee Marvin, including Fredric March as Harry, Robert Ryan as Larry, Jeff Bridges as Don, and Moses Gunn as Joe.

Biography of Congressman Tom Lantos

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Biography of Congressman Tom LantosTom Lantos is serving his thirteenth term in the U.S. House of Representatives. He was first elected to Congress in November 1980 - the only Democrat to defeat an un-indicted incumbent Republican in the year of the Reagan landslide. He won his seat by the lowest plurality of any Member of Congress elected that year - 46% to his opponent’s 43%. Through excellent constituent service, careful attention to his district’s needs, and hard work in the Bay Area and in Washington, Tom has been reelected repeatedly by large margins.

An American by choice, Tom Lantos was born in Budapest, Hungary, on February 1, 1928. He was 16 years of age when Nazi Germany occupied his native country. As a teenager, he was placed in a Hungarian fascist forced labor camp. He succeeded in escaping and was able to survive in a safe house in Budapest set up by Swedish humanitarian Raoul Wallenberg. His story is one of the individual accounts which forms the basis of Steven Spielberg’s Academy Award winning documentary about the Holocaust in Hungary, The Last Days. An article about Tom’s background in World War II and the Spielberg film was published in the University of Washington alumni magazine. The San Francisco Examiner also published an article focusing on Tom’s background. The San Mateo Daily Journal published an article discussing how Tom’s experiences in the Holocaust during World War II shaped his outlook and his course in life.
tom_and_annette_circa_1950.jpgIn 1947, Tom was awarded an academic scholarship to study in the United States on the basis of an essay he wrote about U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In August of that year, he arrived in New York City after a week-long boat trip to America on a converted World War II troop ship. His only possession was a precious Hungarian salami, which U.S. customs officials promptly confiscated when he arrived. Just a few weeks after he left Hungary, the communist party seized control of the country.

Tom attended the University of Washington in Seattle, where he received a B.A. and M.A. in Economics. He moved to San Francisco in 1950 and began graduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley, where he later received his Ph.D. in economics. In the fall of 1950 he started teaching economics at San Francisco State University.

Biography of Congressman Tom LantosIn the summer of 1950, Tom Lantos married his childhood sweetheart, Annette Tillemann. Their first home was a tiny apartment in San Francisco. After a few years, they were able to purchase a modest home in San Bruno, and later they bought a home in Millbrae, where their two daughters attended public schools and where Tom served for several years as a member of the Millbrae School Board.
For three decades (1950-1980) Tom Lantos was a professor of economics, an international affairs analyst for public television, and an economic consultant to businesses. He also served in senior advisory roles to members of the United States Senate.

Tom and Annette Lantos are the parents of two daughters - Annette and Katrina. Annette is married to Timber Dick, an independent businessman in Colorado, and they are the parents of ten children. Katrina is married to Richard N. Swett, former New Hampshire Congressman (1991-1995) and former U.S. Ambassador to Denmark (1998-2001). The Swetts are the parents of seven children.

The San Francisco Chronicle published a biographic article about Tom Lantos in January 2007 at the time he was designated Chair of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs: Lantos the master storyteller, communicator.

Biography of Congressman Tom Lantos

Tom Lantos

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Tom LantosDr. Thomas Peter “Tom” Lantos (February 1, 1928 – February 11, 2008)[1] was a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from 1981 until his death, representing California’s 12th congressional district (numbered as the 11th District from 1981-93). The district includes the northern two-thirds of San Mateo County and a small portion of southwest San Francisco.

Lantos had announced in early January that he would not run for reelection in 2008 because of cancer of the esophagus.

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from California’s 12th district
In office
January 5, 1981 – February 11, 2008
Preceded by William H. Royer
Succeeded by TBD

——————————————————————————–
 
Died February 11, 2008 (aged 80)
Bethesda Naval Medical Center
Born February 1, 1928(1928-02-01)
Budapest, Hungary
Political party Democratic
Spouse Annette Lantos
Residence San Mateo, California
Religion Jewish
Personal and family life
Born as Lantos Tamás Péter to a Jewish family in Budapest, Hungary, Lantos was part of a resistance movement against the Nazis during the German occupation of Hungary. In his floor speeches, he sometimes referred to himself as one of the few living members of Congress who fought against fascism.

He sought refuge in a safe house established by Raoul Wallenberg; in 1981 Lantos sponsored a bill making Wallenberg an Honorary Citizen of the United States. He moved to the United States in 1947, and spoke with a pronounced Hungarian accent.

Lantos considered himself a secular Jew. He was the only Holocaust survivor ever to serve in Congress.[4] Upon immigrating to the United States under the auspices of Hillel he attended the University of Washington and the University of California, Berkeley, receiving his Ph.D in 1953.

For three decades prior to his service in Congress (1950–1980), Lantos was a professor of economics, an international affairs analyst for public television, and a consultant to a number of businesses. He also served as a senior advisor to several U.S. Senators.

Lantos made his first run for office in 1980, when he defeated one-term Republican congressman Bill Royer by 5,700 votes. He never faced another contest nearly that close, and was reelected 13 times.

Lantos and his wife Annette have two daughters, Annette and Katrina, and 17 grandchildren. Lantos’ wife is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormon church). Annette Lantos is a first cousin of the sisters Zsa Zsa, Eva, and Magda Gabor.[5] Katrina, who married ambassador and former U.S. Representative from New Hampshire’s 2nd congressional district Richard Swett, was a candidate for Congress in New Hampshire, running for the House of Representative in 2002 against Charlie Bass and in 2008 for the U.S. Senate against John Sununu. His daughter Annette is married to Timber Dick, “an independent businessman in Colorado.” [6]

Lantos appeared in the Academy Award winning film The Last Days, a documentary of the Holocaust’s effect on Hungarian Jews, and “To Bear Witness”, another documentary.[7]

Lantos often brought a small white terrier named Mackó (little bear in Hungarian, pronounced mɒtskoː) to his Capitol Hill office. Lantos’ previous dog, a small poodle named Gigi, was also a fixture in Washington.

Tom Lantos was an Honorary Member of The International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation
Political positions
Lantos was a strong supporter of the Iraq War from the start, but from 2006 onward made increasingly critical statements about the war, and as the chairman of the United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs he held 20 oversight hearings on the war in 2007. See separate section below about the war in Iraq.

Lantos was a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus[8] and has repeatedly called for reforms to the nation’s health-care system, reduction of the national budget deficit and the national debt, repeal of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, and opposed Social Security privatization efforts. He supported same-sex marriage rights and marijuana for medical use, was a strong proponent of gun control[9] and was adamantly pro-choice.[10]

Lantos was a well-known advocate on behalf of the environment, receiving consistently high ratings from the League of Conservation Voters and other environmental organizations for his legislative record.[11] His long-standing efforts to protect open space brought thousands of acres under the protection of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, including Mori Point, Sweeney Ridge and — most recently — Rancho Corral de Tierra, which will keep its watersheds and delicate habitats free from development permanently.[12][13] In 2005 he opposed an effort to expand public use of the Farallon Islands, a protected wildlife haven.

Lantos consistently championed local transportation projects that need federal funds and, given his seniority in Congress, proved successful at delivering this support.
Foreign affairs issues
Lantos served as the chairman of the United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Through its more than 20 years of work, the Congressional Human Rights Caucus[14] — of which Lantos was co-chair with Representative Frank Wolf — has covered a wide range of human rights issues, speaking out for Christians who want to practice their faith in Saudi Arabia and Sudan, fighting for Tibetans to be able to retain their culture and religion in Tibet and advocating for other oppressed minorities worldwide. Lantos’ efforts to protect religious freedom in 2004 resulted in a bill to halt the global spread of antisemitism.[15]

Lantos was involved with his colleagues on the International Relations Committee on many decisions that affect other aspects of American foreign policy. Lantos spoke out strongly against waste, fraud and abuse in the multi-billion dollar U.S. reconstruction program in Iraq, and has warned that the U.S. may lose Afghanistan to the Taliban if the Bush Administration fails to take decisive action to halt the current decline in political stability there.

Lantos, then the ranking Democrat on the International Relations Committee, tried to disrupt U.S. military aid to Egypt. Lantos argued that the Egyptian military had made insufficient efforts to stop the flow of money and weapons across the Egyptian border to Hamas in Gaza, and had not contributed troops to internationally-supported peacekeeping efforts in Afghanistan and elsewhere. Lantos was a strong advocate of Israel, and has spoken at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.[16]
1991 Persian Gulf War
See also: Nurse Nayirah
Lantos was a strong supporter of the 1991 Persian Gulf War. During the run-up to the war, the Congressional Human Rights Caucus, of which Lantos was co-chairman, hosted a young Kuwaiti woman identified only as “Nurse Nayirah”, who told of horrific abuses by Iraqi soldiers, including the killing of Kuwaiti babies by taking them out of their incubators and leaving them to die on the cold floor of the hospital. These alleged atrocities figured prominently in the rhetoric at the time about Iraqi abuses in Kuwait.

The girl’s account was later challenged by independent human rights monitors.[17] “Nurse Nayirah” later turned out to be the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States.[17] Asked about his having allowed the girl to give testimony without identifying herself, and without her story having been corroborated, Lantos replied, “The notion that any of the witnesses brought to the caucus through the Kuwaiti Embassy would not be credible did not cross my mind… I have no basis for assuming that her story is not true, but the point goes beyond that. If one hypothesizes that the woman’s story is fictitious from A to Z, that in no way diminishes the avalanche of human rights violations.”[17]

Lantos and John R. MacArthur, the foremost critic of the Nayirah issue, each had op-eds features in the New York Times, in which each accused the other of distortion.[18] MacArthur suggested that Lantos may have materially benefited from his having accommodated Nayirah.[19] Nayirah was later revealed to have connections to a lobbying firm in the employ of a Kuwaiti activist group, and her story has since come to be regarded as baseless propaganda.[19]
War in Iraq
By September 2002, Lantos had shown himself to be a supporter of the White House position on the war. On October 4, 2002, Mr. Lantos led a narrow majority of Democrats on the House International Relations Committee to a successful vote in support of the President’s path toward war, seeking the approval of the United Nations, but allowing the President to strike out on his own if necessary. The resolution later passed the House and the Senate with a total of 373 members of Congress supporting it. “The train is now on its way,” said Mr. Lantos after his — and the President’s — victory.[20] In later hearings on the war, Mr. Lantos continued his enthusiastic support. At one point he was confronted by witnesses who questioned the likelihood of enthusiastic Baghdadis welcoming the invading Americans; Mr. Lantos called this a kind of racism, to suggest the Iraqis might be so ungrateful.

Starting in early 2006, Mr. Lantos has distanced himself from the Bush Administration’s Iraq policy, making critical statements at hearings, on the House floor and in published media interviews about the conduct of the war. During hearings of the House International Relations Committee, where he was then the ranking member, Lantos repeatedly praised the investigative work of the office of the Special Inspector of Iraq Reconstruction General Stuart Bowen, which uncovered evidence of waste, fraud and abuse in the use of U.S. taxpayer dollars intended to help secure and rebuild Iraq.

Lantos was an immediate and consistent critic of the troop surge advocated by President Bush. On the night in January 2007 that Bush announced his plan, Lantos responded, “I oppose the so-called surge that constitutes the centerpiece of the President’s plan. Our efforts in Iraq are a mess, and throwing in more troops will not improve it.” And during a joint House hearing on September 10, 2007 featuring General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker, Lantos said, “The Administration’s myopic policies in Iraq have created a fiasco. Is it any wonder that on the subject of Iraq, more and more Americans have little confidence in this Administration? We can not take ANY of this Administration’s assertions on Iraq at face value anymore, and no amount of charts or statistics will improve its credibility. This is not a knock on you, General Petraeus, or on you, Ambassador Crocker. But the fact remains, gentlemen, that the Administration has sent you here today to convince the members of these two Committees and the Congress that victory is at hand. With all due respect to you, I must say … I don’t buy it.”
Darfur
On April 28, 2006, Lantos and four other Democratic U.S. Representatives (Sheila Jackson Lee, Jim McGovern, Jim Moran, and John Olver), along with six other activists, took part in a civil disobedience action in front of the Sudanese embassy in Washington, D.C. They were protesting the role of the Sudanese government in carrying out genocide in the Darfur conflict and were arrested for disorderly conduct.[21]
Lebanon
On August 27, 2006, at the Israeli Foreign Ministry building in Israel, Lantos said he would block a foreign aid package promised by President George W. Bush to Lebanon and free the funds only when Beirut agreed to the deployment of international troops on the border with Syria. Lantos was meeting at the time with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni after talks with Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.
Retirement
On January 2, 2008, Lantos announced he would not run for a 15th term in the House due to his cancer diagnosis. However, he had planned to complete his final term. Lantos was quoted as saying, “It is only in the United States that a penniless survivor of the Holocaust and a fighter in the anti-Nazi underground could have received an education, raised a family, and had the privilege of serving the last three decades of his life as a Member of Congress,” he said. “I will never be able to express fully my profoundly felt gratitude to this great country.” [22] [23]

Lantos had endorsed former State Senator Jackie Speier in the primary.[24]
Congressional scorecards
See also

Biography, voting record, and interest group ratings at Project Vote Smart
Project Vote Smart provides the following results from congressional scorecards.[25]

American Civil Liberties Union – 91% for 2005–2006
Americans for Democratic Action – 100% for 2006
American Land Rights Association – 9% for 2006
Americans for Tax Reform – 0% for 2006
AFL-CIO – 100% in 2006
Campaign for America’s Future – 100% for 2005-2006
Conservative Index-John Birch Society – 11% for Fall 2004
Children’s Defense Fund – 100% for 2006
Drug Policy Alliance – 83% for 2006
Drum Major Institute – 100% for 2005
Family Research Council – 0% for 2006
FreedomWorks – 0% for 2006
Gun Owners of America – 0% for 2006
Humane Society of the United States – 100% for 2005-2006
League of Conservation Voters – 92% for 2006
NARAL Pro-Choice America – 100% for 2006
National Association of Wheat Growers – 37% for 2005
National Education Association – 100% for 2005-2006
National Federation of Independent Business – 14% for 2005-2006
National Journal – Composite liberal score of 86.2% for 2006
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws – 20 for 2006
National Organization for Women – 95% for 2005-2006
National Rifle Association – F for 2006
National Right to Life Committee – 0% for 2005-2006
National Taxpayers Union – 10% for 2006
Population Connection – 100% for 2006
Republican Liberty Caucus – 16% for 2005
Secular Coalition for America – 70% on 2006 scorecards[26]
United States Chamber of Commerce – 33% for 2006

Controversies
During a 1996 Congressional inquiry into the “Filegate” scandal, Rep. Lantos told witness Craig Livingstone that “with an infinitely more distinguished public record than yours, Admiral Boorda committed suicide when he may have committed a minor mistake.” Boorda, the Chief of Naval Operations, had recently taken his own life after his right to wear Combat V decorations had been questioned. Lantos was criticized by some (including fellow Congressman Joe Scarborough) who interpreted the remark as a suggestion that Livingstone too should kill himself.[27]

On May 3, 2000, Lantos was involved in an automobile accident while driving on Capitol Hill. Lantos drove over a young boy’s foot and then failed to stop his vehicle. He was later fined over the incident for inattentive driving.[citation needed]

In 2002, Lantos, who was on the House Committee on International Affairs, took Colette Avital, a Labor Party member of the Israeli Knesset, by the hand, and, according to Ha’aretz, tried to reassure her with these words: “My dear Colette, don’t worry. You won’t have any problem with Saddam. We’ll be rid of the bastard soon enough. And in his place we’ll install a pro-Western dictator, who will be good for us and for you.” [28] He later denied saying this, but Avital confirmed it. [29]

In June 2007, Lantos called former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder a “political prostitute” at the dedication ceremony of the Victims of Communism Memorial, which caused a political backlash from the German government. Lantos was referring to Schröder’s ties to energy business in Russia, and remarked that this appellation would offend prostitutes.[30]

In October 2007, Dutch parliament members said Lantos insulted them while discussing the War on Terrorism by stating that the Netherlands had to help the United States, because they liberated them in the Second World War, while adding that the upheaval over Guantanamo in Europe was bigger than over Auschwitz at the time.

Tom Lantos, key Congress voice on US foreign affairs dies

Monday, February 11th, 2008

WASHINGTON (AFP) — Tom Lantos, a Hungarian born-Holocaust survivor, outspoken global human rights advocate and veteran Democratic foreign affairs expert, died Monday, a month after announcing he had cancer.

California representative Lantos, who had just turned 80, was surrounded by his family when he died Monday morning in Bethesda naval hospital north of Washington, his spokeswoman Lynne Weil said.

He died from complications of cancer of the esophagus, which he said last month would force his retirement from the House of Representatives, where he had served since being elected in 1980 and latterly chaired the chamber’s Foreign Affairs committee.

When he announced his diagnosis, Lantos, expressed his “profoundly felt gratitude to this great country.”

“It is only in the United States that a penniless survivor of the Holocaust and a fighter in the anti-Nazi underground could have received an education, raised a family, and had the privilege of serving the last three decades of his life as a member of Congress,” he said.

Tributes quickly poured in for Lantos, from across the political aisle.

President George W. Bush hailed him as a “champion” of human rights.

“As the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress, Tom was a living reminder that we must never turn a blind eye to the suffering of the innocent at the hands of evil men,” Bush said in a statement issued from the White House, where flags were lowered to half-staff.

Hillary and Bill Clinton remembered the “courageous and improbable journey” of Lantos’s life.

“Tom bore witness to the worst of human cruelty and devoted his life to stopping it,” the Clintons said in a statement.

Clinton’s Democratic White House rival Barack Obama honored Lantos’s “truly extraordinary life” in which he “never wavered in his defense of freedom and opposition to tyranny.”

House speaker Nancy Pelosi said the veteran congressman’s passing was a “terrible loss” while the top Republican on the Foreign Affairs committee Ileana Ros-Lehtinen described Lantos as an “unfailingly gracious and courageous man.”

Born in Budapest to a Jewish family in February 1928, Lantos was 16 when Nazi Germany occupied Hungary. As a teenager, he was a member of the anti-Nazi resistance, and later of the anti-Communist student movement.

After the Soviets invaded Hungary, he discovered that most of his family had died in the Holocaust. By 1947, he was in the United States on an academic scholarship and became an economics professor in San Francisco.

Since the Democrats regained control of Congress in 2006 elections, Lantos has used his committee to launch strident appeals for greater US action on human rights in China, Darfur, Myanmar and Russia.

Under his stewardship, the committee voted in October to describe the mass slaughter of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as “genocide” — plunging US relations with Turkey into crisis.

Lantos had also emerged as a fierce critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, and warned last June “Russia’s tactics under the KGB colonel now in charge of the Kremlin threaten to send the country back to its authoritarian past.”

Tom lantos, annette lantos, electronic frontier foundation, rep. tom lantos, lantos, roy scheider

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Tom Lantos dies

Rep. Tom Lantos, a California Democrat who chaired the House Foreign Affairs Committee, died early Monday morning after a bout with esophageal cancer, according to a release by his office.  He was 80.

Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress, died at Bethesda Naval Medical Center, according to the release.

Lantos disclosed last month that he had been diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus and would not seek another term in the House.
Governor Dean issued the following statement:

Our nation has lost a great public servant with the passing of Representative Tom Lantos. In serving his constituents and his country, Tom never forgot the Democratic Party’s ideals of freedom, fairness, and opportunity for all. As Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, he was an authority on foreign policy issues and a voice for the oppressed. The only Holocaust survivor in Congress, he was a forceful and passionate advocate for civil liberties and human rights. Today, I join with countless others across the country in offering my thoughts and prayers to Rep. Lantos’ family and friends as we honor his life and legacy.
And from a statement on Lantos’ House website:

Throughout his adult life Lantos sought to be a voice for human rights and civil liberties. He and Annette Lantos, his childhood sweetheart and wife of nearly 58 years were, as Lantos put it, “full partners both in Congress and in life,” and they continued their work right up to his final days. Tom Lantos was the founding co-chairman of the 24-year-old Congressional Human Rights Caucus, which Annette directed as a volunteer since its inception. He also founded the Congressional Friends of Animals Caucus.
Annette said that her husband’s life was “defined by courage, optimism, and unwavering dedication to his principles and to his family.”

Roy scheider, roy schneider, jaws, brenda seimer, seaquest, roy sheider

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Roy Richard Scheider (November 10, 1932 – February 10, 2008)[1] was an Academy Award- and Golden Globe-nominated American actor. He had a long and outstanding resume of films. He was possibly best known for his role as police chief Martin Brody in the 1975 blockbuster Jaws.

was an auto mechanic.[2] Scheider’s mother was of Irish Catholic background and his father was German American and Protestant.[3][4] As a child, Scheider was an athlete, participating in organized baseball and boxing competitions. He attended Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, and was inducted into the school’s hall of fame in 1985. He traded his boxing gloves for the stage, studying drama at both Rutgers University and Franklin and Marshall College, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. After three years in the United States Air Force, he appeared with the New York Shakespeare Festival, and won an Obie Award in 1968.

Film career

Scheider’s first film role was in the 1963 horror film Curse of the Living Corpse. (He was billed as “Roy R. Sheider”). In 1971, he appeared in two highly popular movies, Klute and The French Connection, the latter garnering him an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Four years later, he portrayed Chief Martin Brody in the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws which also starred Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfus. Scheider’s famous movie line, “You’re gonna need a bigger boat”, was voted 35th on the American Film Institute’s list of best movie quotes. In 1976, he starred as Doc, a secret agent in Marathon Man with Dustin Hoffman and Laurence Olivier.

He was originally cast as Michael in The Deer Hunter, the second movie of a three-movie deal with Universal Studios. However, bound by a Universal contract to make a Jaws sequel, he was deprived of the role. In 1979, four years after he appeared in Jaws, he was nominated for his second Academy Award, this time as Best Actor in All That Jazz.

He was the original choice to play John Rambo in the 1982 film, First Blood, but the part eventually went to Sylvester Stallone.[citation needed] In 1983, he starred in Blue Thunder, a John Badham film about a fictitious technologically advanced prototype attack helicopter which was to be used as security over the city of Los Angeles during the 1984 Summer Olympic Games. This was followed by roles in Peter Hyams’ 2010: The Year We Make Contact, a 1984 sequel to Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 science fiction classic 2001: A Space Odyssey. One of his later parts was that of Dr. Benway in the long-in-production 1991 film adaptation of William S. Burroughs’ novel Naked Lunch.

Among his most recent films is the crusty father of hero Frank Castle in The Punisher (2004). In 2007, he starred in The Poet and If I Didn’t Care. When Scheider died in February 2008, he had two movies upcoming: Dark Honeymoon, which had been completed, and Iron Cross, which is in post-production.

Other work

In 1993, Scheider signed on to be the lead star in the Steven Spielberg-produced television series SeaQuest DSV. During the second season, Scheider voiced disdain for the direction in which the series was heading. His comments were highly publicized and the media criticized him for panning his own show. NBC made additional casting and writing changes in the third season, and Scheider decided to exit the show. His contract however, required that he make several guest appearances that season. He has also repeatedly guest starred on the NBC television series Third Watch.

Scheider hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live in the tenth (1984-1985) season (musical guest: Billy Ocean) and appeared on the Family Guy episode Bill and Peter’s Bogus Journey, voicing himself as the host of a toilet-training video. In 2007, Scheider received one of two annually-presented Lifetime Achievement Awards at the SunDeis Film Festival in Waltham, Massachusetts. (Academy Award winner Patricia Neal was the recipient of the other.) Scheider guest-starred in an episode Law & Order: Criminal Intent as a death row inmate on May 14, 2007.

Personal life

Scheider’s first marriage was to Cynthia Bebout on November 8, 1962. The couple had one daughter, Maximillia, before divorcing in 1989. On February 11, 1989, he married actress Brenda Siemer Scheider, with whom he had a son, Christian, and a daughter, Molly. They remained married until his death.

Death

In 2004, Scheider was diagnosed with myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cells. In June 2005, he underwent a bone marrow transplant to successfully treat the cancer which was classified as being in partial remission. Scheider died on February 10, 2008, in Little Rock, Arkansas, at the University of Arkansas Medical Sciences Hospital. Though a cause of death was not immediately released,[5] Scheider’s wife attributed her husband’s death to a staph infection.[6]

Filmography

* The Curse of the Living Corpse (1964)
* Paper Lion (1968)
* Stiletto (1969)
* Puzzle of a Downfall Child (1969)
* Loving (1970)
* Klute (1971)
* The French Connection (1971)
* The Seven-Ups (1973)
* Jaws (1975)
* Marathon Man (1976)
* Sorcerer (1977)
* Jaws 2 (1978)
* Last Embrace (1979)
* All That Jazz (1979)
* Still of the Night (1982)
* Blue Thunder (1983)
* Tiger Town (1983)
* 2010: The Year We Make Contact (1984)
* The Men’s Club (1986)
* The Egg’s Sunset on the Upside Down Turned Ramp (1986)
* 52 Pick-Up (1986)
* Cohen and Tate (1988)
* Listen to Me (1989)
* Night Game (1989)
* The Fourth War (1989)
* The Russia House (1990)
* Somebody has to Shoot the Picture (1990)
* Naked Lunch (1991)
* Wild Justice (1993)
* seaQuest DSV (1993) (television series)
* Romeo is Bleeding (1994)
* The Peacekeeper (1996)
* Executive Target (1997)
* The Myth of Fingerprints (1997)
* The Rainmaker (1997)
* The Rage (1997)
* Plato’s Run (1997)
* Evasive Action (1998)
* RKO 281 (1999)
* Falling Through (2000)
* Daybreak (2000)
* The Doorway (2000)
* Texas 46 (2002) aka The Good War (USA)
* Dracula II: Ascension (2003)
* The Punisher (2004)
* The Poet (2007)
* If I Didn’t Care (2007)
* Dark Honeymoon (2008) (completed)
* Iron Cross (2008) (in post-production)

Keely smith, keeley smith, kellie smith, keelie smith, louis prima, old black magic

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Respect your elders!  Appreciate from where you come!  And know that everything is going to be just fine.  This seemed the theme for the 50th Grammy presentation…..and it worked!

This evening I spent a little time doing something I have avoided for years; sat through The Grammy Award Presentation.

For years I have avoided watching any entertainment award presentation.  There seems so many of them these days, no particular award really pops out to say “great.”  Plus, I watched this year because you can always get a good grip on how the music industry is doing by watching certain award presentations.  So, while the Grammy’s are an annual affair, there will only be one fiftieth awards show presentation.  I watched to see how the academy would deal with this one time event in music’s history.

I was impressed!

Most, if not all, award shows are rarely seamless.  And lately, before the writers strike gave us a unwitting reprieve from them, award shows have been a bore.   It seemed television, movies, and music talent have been out to stroke their unbridled egos.  As you know, there is always one entertainer, lyricist, producer, or “has been” star(let) trying to do too much with their few minutes of worldwide attention.

Admit it or not, good or bad, awards shows always have moments you can remember from the night.  For most of the last ten or so Grammy’s (or those like them)  the moments have been somewhat embarrassing.  Brit Spears appearance on the MTV’s this year is one such experience.

The 50th Grammy’s did deliver on the moments.  While others might have had seperate ones from myself, there are three (if not four) special moments that brought me to my feet (sorta) to clap.

Vince Gill Wins the Country Album of the Year.

If there is one phrase that best describes country music these days it could very well be cookie cut country.  This symptom is not the artists fault.  Its the programers who are TOLD what to play, when to play it, and who NOT to play.  Vince Gill is one of those artists they have been told NOT to play….at least not the new stuff.  So, it was incredibly refreshing to see Gill push aside all the country rockers and King George ( said with respect) to win the country album of the year.

Even Gills remark to Kanye about his never having had been given a Grammy from a Beatle (Ringo Starr) was taken in good stride.  It was nice to see comedy exists among artists of different genre.

Kid Rock Croons with Keely Smith

Did you know Keely Smith before she took stage to sing with Kid Rock?  If you did, great!  I had no clue.  When she says she is going to sing the moment seems awkward and unrehearsed.  Then out walks Kid Rock.  Now, I am thinking what a strange pairing.

BUT, let’s see what happens.

A few would complain that Kid Rock at an award show is becoming somewhat repetitious.  However, I would beg to differ.  THIS moment was much much much different.  The Kid accepted on this night a standard bearers position for the future of the music industry.

Over the last few months I have come to truly appreciate the heart and talent of Kid Rock.  He spent an enormous amount of time with Robin Williams entertaining our troops at war in Afghanistan.  After having spent time seeing a new slice of life at war, now, here he was on stage with Keely Smith, the first Grammy Award recipient expanding his presence in an almost spiritual way.   Yesss…..spiritual!

At the start of the song,  Ms Smith seemed somewhat nervous.  Her body language is saying would my voice mix well with a new and younger generation.  Ms Smith had cover songs by Sinatra.  But, this moment seemed scary for her.  BUT, The Kid’s change of singing styles seemed to quickly make her feel accepted; her music and her place in music history was affirmed.  As such,  Kid helped her to relax and they blended in a marvelous bluesy moment.

Whatever seams were loose between the old and the new in the music industry (at this point in the show) The Kid made them a bit tighter after their performance.

THAT is spiritual!

Tina Turner Moves On The Grammys

Beyonce is not Tina….and Tina is not Beyonce!  In other words, no one could ever bring to the stage the energy and effervences of a Tina Turner.  Her moves were powerful, forceful, purposeful, and passionate.  But, the years have slowed Tina and she is not the young pup Beyonce is today.  BUT, this celebration of the old and new, on this program at least, could have cared less.

Tina may have lost a few steps.  BUT, her presence and sense of what sounds good far outweighed whatever steps she might have missed on stage.  Besides, unlike Britney’s walk through performance…Tina was Tina havin’ fun!   This moment proved to me…Beyonce, with her great sound,  has a while to go before she can move those sensually powerful thighs of hers like Tina.

Josh Groban and Andrea Boccelli Close Grammys on a High Note

Every awards presentation has a “memorium” for those in the industry who’ve died.  Most of these moments are placed in the middle of the show with a “fade to black” moment of silence.  This year’s Grammy’s left me feeling the power of the lives whose affect on music were truly great.

The list, as usual, is a who’s who of major and minor contributors to the music industry.  The final name, photo, and pwerful voice  you hear is that of Pavorotti.  Josh Groban is introduced by the always dapperly dressed Andrea Bocelli.  Groban begins the shortened version of “The Prayer,” made famous by Celine Deon and Bocelli.  This tender duet is carried well for the first few lines.  BUT, when Groban stands singing the Italian verses along side of Bocelli all thoughts of Celine pleasantly evaporate.  One could only hope these two would take THIS show on the road.

The end result:  all loose seams between the old and the new are tighter than ever on the creative side of the music industry.

I, at least, am left with one thought.  Despite the sad state of corporately run local music radio, the state of music is going to be just fine.  Because, last night a few people who care about musics future have stepped forward to be the standard bearers for what quality and excellence there remains in the heart of the songwriters, producers, and singers.

Richard zednik, richard zednik cut, richard zednik neck cut, richard zednik video, richard zednik neck, richard zednik youtube

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Richard Zedník (Born January 6, 1976) is a Slovak professional hockey player who plays right wing for the National Hockey League’s Florida Panthers. He was drafted in the 1994 NHL Entry Draft by the Washington Capitals, in the tenth round, two-hundred forty-ninth overall, after playing junior hockey for the Portland Winter Hawks of the Western Hockey League.

Playing career

On October 31st, 2000, a local Washington, DC radio station DC101 had a promotion in which they offered fans a free ticket and Zednik jersey if they dyed their hair blond as Zednik had in the offseason. Over two hundred people showed up as “Zed Heads” and Zednik scored his first career hat trick against the Detroit Red Wings. [1].

On April 26, 2002, during a playoff game in Montreal against the Boston Bruins, Zednik was elbowed in the face by Bruin defender Kyle McLaren. Zednik, who had scored both goals for Montreal in the 5-2 loss, suffered a fractured cheekbone, broken nose, and a concussion. The injuries forced Zednik to miss the remainder of the playoffs.

Neck injury

On February 10, 2008, in a game between the Florida Panthers and the Buffalo Sabres, teammate Olli Jokinen’s skate blade cut the side of Zednik’s neck. Both players were skating towards a corner: Jokinen was skating down the wing for a body check and Zednik was skating behind the net. Jokinen completed his check and fell forward with his feet flying up. His skate struck Zednik’s neck, and Zednik immediately skated to the Florida bench, leaving a significant trail of blood on the ice.(TSN video) He was immediately attended to by Florida trainer Dave Zenobi and sent to hospital. Zednik underwent surgery that night, and is currently listed as stable.[1] The game was delayed for more than 15 minutes as the zamboni was needed to help clean the blood from the ice. Zenobi and assistant general manager Randy Sexton are remaining with Zednik; the Panthers have arranged for his wife Jessica Welch to be flown in.[1]

Transactions

Richard Zednik was traded by the Washington Capitals on March 13, 2001, along with Jan Bulis and a first round draft pick (Alexander Perezhogin), to Montreal in exchange for Trevor Linden, Dainius Zubrus, and a second round draft pick (later traded to the Tampa Bay Lightning).

After playing the next 3 years in Montreal, Zednik was traded back to the Capitals on July 12th, 2006 for a third round draft-pick.

On February 26, 2007, Zednik was traded by Washington to the New York Islanders for a 2nd round draft pick.

While being an unrestricted free agent, “Zed” signed a 2-year contract with the Florida Panthers on July 1st , 2007.

Personal life

Zednik is married to Canadian actress Jessica Welch. They have a daughter name Ella born on December 6, 2003.

Career statistics
Regular Season           Playoffs
Season     Team     League     GP     G     A     Pts     PIM     GP     G     A     Pts     PIM
1994-95     Portland     WHL     65     35     51     86     89     9     5     5     10     20
1995-96     Portland     WHL     61     44     37     81     154     7     8     4     12     23
1995-96     Portland     AHL     1     1     1     2     0     21     4     5     9     26
1995-96     Washington     NHL     1     0     0     0     0     –     –     –     –     –
1996-97     Portland     AHL     56     15     20     35     70     5     1     0     1     6
1996-97     Washington     NHL     11     2     1     3     4     –     –     –     –     –
1997-98     Washington     NHL     65     17     9     26     28     17     7     3     10     16
1998-99     Washington     NHL     49     9     8     17     50     –     –     –     –     –
1999-00     Washington     NHL     69     19     16     35     54     5     0     0     0     0
2000-01     Washington     NHL     62     16     19     35     61     –     –     –     –     –
2000-01     Montreal     NHL     12     3     6     9     10     –     –     –     –     –
2001-02     Montreal     NHL     82     22     22     44     59     4     4     4     8     6
2002-03     Montreal     NHL     80     31     19     50     79     –     –     –     –     –
2003-04     Montreal     NHL     81     26     24     50     63     11     3     3     6     2
2004-05     Zvolen     Slovakia     36     15     19     34     56     17     9     10     19     12
2005-06     Montreal     NHL     67     16     14     30     48     6     2     0     2     4
2006-07     Washington     NHL     32     6     12     18     16     –     –     –     –     –
2006-07     New York Islanders     NHL     10     1     2     3     2     5     0     0     0     8
NHL Totals     621     168     152     320     474     48     16     10     26     41

International play

Played for Slovakia in:

* 2006 Winter Olympic Games
* World Championships - 2001, 2003 (bronze medal), 2005
* World Cup of Hockey - 1996, 2004
* Team Slovakia - 45 caps / 10 goals