Thứ Ba, 1 tháng 5, 2012

Historic Theater Reopens in Washington

Kinh Doanh | caribbean university |

The Howard Theater, a Washington DC landmark, is reborn.

Some of the greatest African-American entertainers - including Ella Fitzgerald and Duke Ellington - have performed at the Howard Theater. Some of them even launched their careers there.

However, by 1980, The Howard, which is located in a traditionally African-American neighborhood, had fallen into disrepair and was set to be torn down.

But the arts community joined forces to save the building and restore it to its previous grandeur.

Now, the sound of music once again fills the historic venue, which plays a big part in black history.

Built in 1910, it was the largest theater in the world for African-American entertainers and audiences.

In the 1930s, Washington born composer and big-band leader Duke Ellington made his mark at the Howard.

Black artists like Diane Ross and the Supremes also graced its stage. Grammy award winning singer Marvin Gaye was discovered here. Smokey Robinson was a teenager when he first performed at the Howard.

He and other black musicians came back to celebrate the theater's revival.

"I grew up in this theater and it was a mainstay," said Smokey Robinson. "We use to bring the Motown reviews here. So we had a great deal of fun in this theater, and I am very happy that they opened it again."

Broadway actress and singer Leslie Uggams also came to celebrate.

"In these kinds of theaters you really had to make your mark because the audiences took no prisoners [were very critical] so you better know your stuff," said Leslie Uggams. "Plus, for me what was great about it is that everything I do on Broadway right now  - and I do eight shows a week -  I learned from playing in theaters like this."

For decades the Howard Theater hosted vaudeville acts, plays, musicals and local talent shows. It was called "Black Broadway." In a time of racial segregation, African Americans could only perform in certain venues.

Leatha Blount lived two blocks away from The Howard. It was also a social destination for her.

"It was a ball," said Leatha Blount. "This was the black Harlem [like in New York]. We use to dance in the streets, dance in the show in the theater and have fun."

But during the 1968 race riots, the theater was looted.  It reopened in1975 as a national historic landmark but only for a short time. For the last 30 years, it has sat empty and in total disrepair.

Two years ago, a massive renovation was launched aimed at restoring the theater's glory. Now, the interior is state of the art with contemporary lighting, video screens and a cabaret feel.

At the ribbon cutting, the consensus was that the project was a huge success.

April and Edward Ellington came to see the theater where their father, Duke, thrilled audiences.

"They have done a magnificent job [in the renovation] and I know our dad is looking down smiling," said  Edward Ellington.

Steven Bensusan, president of Blue Note Entertainment, said the goal is to make the Howard Theater a DC companion of the Blue Note, the famous New York jazz club.

"This is something we're looking forward to doing, promoting new musicians and helping spread the word that we're making the Howard Theater for the 21st century," said Steven Bensusan.

Now that this grand theater has reopened for business, the people who run the Howard Theatre say it will continue to be a Mecca for African American entertainers for generations to come.

Theo www.voanews.com

Q A

Kinh Doanh | caribbean university |

...

110 in the Shade

By C. CLAIBORNE RAY
Published: April 9, 2012
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Q. Will climate change affect the incidence of diseases and medical conditions?

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A. Health experts say that global warming is already causing more deaths in many regions of the world.

There is increasing evidence of lives being lost both directly, to causes like heart and respiratory ills, and indirectly, as the animal vectors of disease spread to newly warmer areas, according to a review article in the journal Nature in 2005.

While no specific weather event can be directly linked to warming caused by greenhouse gases, the authors cited a two-week heat spell in Europe in the summer of 2003 that led to 22,000 to 45,000 heat-related deaths.

Diseases like malaria (spread by mosquitoes), plague (by fleas ) and Lyme disease (by ticks ) are predicted to surge as the carriers enjoy climate-related conquests of territory.

Famines related to drought weaken resistance to illnesses, and scarcity of clean water adds to the disease burden.

Disease patterns may alter in complicated and unpredictable ways because of climate change, other experts say .

A study last year in The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene suggested that early snowmelt in Western states had led to drier soil in rodent burrows and fewer fleas to spread plague.

But a new study predicted an increase in Lyme disease in the Northeast this year after a warm winter. C. CLAIBORNE RAY

Readers may submit questions by mail to Question, Science Times, The New York Times, 620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018, or by e-mail to question@nytimes.com.

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Largest statue of Buddha erected in Vinh Phuc

download dvd film for free | caribbean university |

The 31 tonne statue is 3.45 metres high and is the largest Buddha statue in the country to date, and underlines the Vietnamese people's soul, spirit and love for peace.





Work on a 49 metre statue of Buddha, "Peaceful nation, happy people" made of granite was also started to mark the occasion.-VNA
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Details Contradicted in Episode of Chinese Privilege

Phan mem diet virus pro | caribbean university |

BEIJING — The tale has taken on mythic proportions in China , tainting one of the country's most ambitious leaders and adding fuel to a scandal that is still unfolding in the halls of power here.

Reuters

Bo Guagua, the younger son of Bo Xilai, in 2007.

By DAVID BARBOZA and EDWARD WONG
Published: April 30, 2012

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Jon M. Huntsman Jr. with his eldest daughter Mary Anne at his residence in Beijing in 2009.

It goes like this: Bo Guagua, the younger son of the leader, Bo Xilai , arrived one evening last spring at the home of the United States ambassador to pick up one of the ambassador's daughters for a dinner date. He was supposedly wearing a tuxedo and driving a red Ferrari, an emblem of the privileged lives led by the children of "princelings," members of elite Communist Party families.

At the time, the elder Mr. Bo, party chief of the western metropolis of Chongqing, was preaching a return to the socialist values of the Mao era.

The account gained prominence when it appeared on the front page of The Wall Street Journal in November. It has since circulated widely in China and become a political weapon wielded against the elder Mr. Bo, who was purged from his party posts in April and put under investigation as a suspect in "serious disciplinary violations" after the flight of his former police chief to an American Consulate. Gu Kailai, his wife and the mother of Bo Guagua, is a suspect in the murder last fall of a British businessman .

In March, as Mr. Bo felt the pressure from his political rivals building, he gave a news conference at the annual National People's Congress in Beijing, saying "a few people have been pouring filth on Chongqing and me and my family" and called the Ferrari story "sheer rubbish."

Though his son, 24, is known to lead a lavish lifestyle, many of the details in the public account of that evening turned out to be incorrect, according to interviews with the son; Abby Huntsman Livingston, a daughter of the ambassador, Jon M. Huntsman Jr. ; and three others present at the dinner.

The interviews help reveal how what began as gossip made the rounds in expatriate circles in Beijing until it became an accepted truth about the Bo family. One person who told the version of the story that eventually surfaced was Mr. Huntsman. At least two diplomats in Beijing said they heard it from him before he left Beijing in late April 2011. (The New York Times reported this April that American officials had said Bo Guagua came to the ambassador's residence in a Ferrari. )

Ms. Livingston, one of two Huntsman daughters at the dinner, said in her role as family spokeswoman, "My dad's version of the story has always been a reflection of what we told him."

The way the story caught fire so quickly shows the kind of fascination that the lifestyles of China's elite can evoke in a nation where the upper echelons of the party exist in a world apart from those they govern.

"I did not drive at all that evening, and certainly did not sit in a red sports car," Bo Guagua said by telephone on Friday, in his first interview since his father was deposed and both parents were put under investigation. "I'm not sure where this story comes from."

Even Mr. Bo's appearance was wrong in the account: he did not wear a tuxedo, people at the dinner said.

The scrutiny of Mr. Bo's lifestyle has intensified during the scandal. A graduate of the elite Harrow School and Oxford, Mr. Bo is now a student at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard and an aspiring Internet entrepreneur. He has driven a Porsche in Cambridge, Mass., has lived in an expensive apartment and has a penchant for polo.

In two telephone conversations, he declined to discuss the scandal surrounding his family, but did discuss the one evening in Beijing, in early April 2011, that he spent with Ms. Livingston and Mary Anne Huntsman, 27, Mr. Huntsman's eldest daughter.

In e-mail exchanges over the past week, Ms. Livingston also gave statements that refute the public account of the event. She said the woman who had organized the dinner picked up her and her sister at the ambassador's residence and drove them to Nobu, an upscale Japanese restaurant. There, they met Mr. Bo for the first time, along with several other strangers. The organizer, a member of the expatriate community in Beijing who spoke only on the condition of anonymity, gave her account of the dinner in an interview, and it matched Ms. Livingston's.

Mr. Huntsman had met the younger Mr. Bo and his father before in Chongqing and had been so impressed that he wanted the children to get together, said one person who had been at the dinner. Mr. Bo said he had arrived at the dinner in a black Audi sedan driven by a chauffeur, a common car among families of senior officials.

The dinner lasted more than an hour. Then Mr. Bo, Mary Anne Huntsman and a European friend of Mr. Bo's left for a bar. Ms. Huntsman stayed there for an hour or two before taking a taxi home, Ms. Livingston said.

It is unclear why Mr. Huntsman passed on a different account or why his daughters did not seek earlier to correct it. Ms. Livingston declined to address those questions.

The article in The Journal said the reporter had heard the story from "several people familiar with it." Ashley Huston, a spokeswoman for Dow Jones & Company, The Journal's publisher, said in an e-mail: "The Wall Street Journal stands behind its story. We never discuss sourcing."

Though everyone agrees on how the daughters were picked up for dinner, there are competing accounts among Mr. Bo and the daughters of some details later that night.

Ms. Livingston said Ms. Huntsman had told her that she left Nobu with Mr. Bo and his European friend and got into a red sports car, which Mr. Bo drove to a bar "at a very fast speed."

"Mary Anne described it as a Ferrari, but she is not completely knowledgeable about cars and doesn't want to mistake the actual car type," Ms. Livingston wrote in an e-mail on Saturday. In an e-mail four days earlier, she said her sister had ridden in a car with Mr. Bo after dinner but "didn't take notice of the car type." Ms. Livingston declined to explain the contradictions in her statements.

In an interview, Mr. Bo's European friend said Mr. Bo and his driver had picked him up for dinner in the black Audi, and then they had gone in that same car with Ms. Huntsman to the bar. He said, "In no way was there a red car."

Theo www.nytimes.com

Corrections April 26

phan mem ban quyen | caribbean university |

An article on Tuesday about health insurance companies' switching to a new method of reimbursing out-of-network medical costs misstated part of the name of a patients' group. It is Advocacy for Patients With Chronic Illness (not Advocates). The error was repeated in some editions in a picture caption with the continuation of the article.

Published: April 26, 2012

FRONT PAGE

INTERNATIONAL

Because of an editing error, an article on Monday about Egypt's cancellation of deliveries of natural gas to Israel in a payment dispute referred imprecisely to Israel's relationship to Gaza, which is one of the causes of popular Egyptian anger at Israel. While Gaza's borders are controlled by Israel, and the territory is subject to an embargo Israel imposed in 2007, Gaza is no longer occupied by Israel, which unilaterally withdrew its military forces in 2005. (As the article correctly noted, there is continued occupation of the West Bank by Israel.)

Because of an editing error , an article on Monday about a rally in Moscow in response to Patriarch Kirill I's call for the Russian Orthodox Church to defend itself against what he has called a campaign of blasphemy misstated the number of times Vladimir V. Putin has been elected Russia's president. It is three, not two.

NEW YORK

The About New York column on Friday , about Peter Bulow, a psychiatrist and sculptor who copies the heads of fellow passengers in clay while he rides the subway, misspelled part of the name of the University of Illinois campus where he earned a medical degree and a master of fine arts. It is the campus at Urbana-Champaign (not Champagne).

BUSINESS DAY

An article on April 14 about Wal-Mart Stores' tapping of expertise from environmental groups to further its sustainability efforts referred incompletely to the relationship of one such group, the Environmental Defense Fund, to the company, which is controlled by the Walton family. While the Environmental Defense Fund receives no direct corporate funding from Wal-Mart, it has received grants from the Walton Family Foundation and a member of the Walton family serves on its board of trustees.

An article on Wednesday about the identification of a case of so-called mad cow disease in a California dairy cow paraphrased erroneously from comments by the United States Department of Agriculture's chief veterinary officer, Dr. John Clifford. It has not been disclosed what prompted a rendering plant to test the animal for the disease, bovine spongiform encephalopathy; Dr. Clifford did not say that the plant noticed symptoms of B.S.E.

An article on April 18 about Coursera, a start-up that seeks to distribute interactive online courses, erroneously included one university on a list of its academic partners. While Princeton, Stanford, the University of Michigan and the University of Pennsylvania are partners with Coursera, the University of California, Berkeley, is not. (It has been experimenting with Coursera's platform but has no formal partnership.)

OBITUARIES

An obituary on Monday and in some editions on Sunday about Charles W. Colson, the aide to President Richard M. Nixon who later became an evangelical leader, misstated the date that the former C.I.A. officer E. Howard Hunt, who had been hired by Mr. Colson to spy on the president's opponents, was arrested in connection with the break-in at the Watergate office complex in Washington. Mr. Hunt was arrested in September 1972 — not in June 1972, shortly after the break-in, when five other suspects were arrested.

STYLE

Scouting column last Thursday referred incorrectly to the Dolce Vita store at 255 Elizabeth Street in SoHo. It is the company's newest New York store, not its first. The column also misidentified the department store that sells Dolce Vita shoes. It is Bloomingdale's, not Barneys. And because of an editing error, the column gave an incomplete address for the Treasure & Bond store. It is at 350 West Broadway, not at 350 Broadway.

An article last Thursday about Trudie Styler misstated the year in which she and her husband, Sting, were ordered to pay damages for having fired their pregnant chef. It was 2007, not 2011.

An article on April 12 about clothing rescued from the Titantic wreckage referred incorrectly to an honor received by Deborah Nadoolman Landis, the curator of an exhibition on the role of costume design in cinema history. She was an Oscar nominee for best costume design; she did not win the award.

HOME & GARDEN

A picture caption last Thursday with the On Location column, about a house in High Falls, N.Y., owned by Zoe Bissell and Bryan Buryk, misstated the source and cost for a wool and jute ottoman. It is from High Falls Mercantile and cost $375; it was not custom made for $1,500.

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Ukraine Calls Boycotts of Euro Football Tournament Cold War Tactic

may tro tinh | caribbean university |

Ukraine has characterized as "Cold War tactics" a move by top European Union officials to boycott events in Ukraine in protest of the imprisonment and treatment of former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko.
Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko shows what she says is an injury in the Kachanivska prison in Kharkiv, Ukraine, in this undated handout picture received April 27, 2012.
Photo: Reuters
Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko shows what she says is an injury in the Kachanivska prison in Kharkiv, Ukraine, in this undated handout picture received April 27, 2012.



Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Oleh Voloshin says he hopes reports that German Chancellor Angela Merkel will skip the Euro 2012 football (soccer) matches hosted by Ukraine were no more than press speculation. He urged Germany not to revert to Cold War methods of holding sports hostage to politics. Voloshin also called news of a possible boycott "artificial manipulation."

EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso says he will follow the example of EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding, who said she will skip the ceremonial kick-offs.

Ukraine and Poland are co-hosting Europe's most important football championship for national teams, from June 8 until July 1.

Also Monday, Czech President Vaclav Klaus canceled his visit to the summit of Central European heads of state scheduled for May 11 and 12 in Yalta. He is the second president to refuse to go to Ukraine for the summit, after German President Joachim Gauck.

Yulia Tymoshenko was sentenced to seven years in prison last year on charges of abuse of office in a 2009 gas deal with Russia. She is now standing trial on tax evasion charges that could extend her prison time to 12 years. Tymoshenko denies the charges and says they are part of a campaign by President Viktor Yanukovich to remove his strongest political rival.

She has been on a hunger strike for more than a week, after she said she was beaten by prison guards. German doctors diagnosed Tymoshenko last week with back problems that they say cannot be treated in Ukraine, but the Kyiv government has refused appeals to allow her to leave.

Tymoshenko's daughter, Yulia, told reporters in Prague Monday that her mother's health is deteriorating and called for European governments to keep up the pressure. She said she hopes the Ukraine government will take action so her mother will stop her hunger strike. The government has threatened to force-feed Tymoshenko if necessary.

Some information for this report was provided by AFP and Reuters.

Theo www.voanews.com

Thứ Hai, 30 tháng 4, 2012

USA hosts musical evenings commemorating Trinh Cong Son

Cong Nghe | caribbean university |

Musician Trinh Cong Son. Source: yume

Four musical evenings will take place in April in commemoration of late musician Trinh Cong Son in California, the USA, as revealed by the musician's family.

Tickets for these shows have been nearly sold out so far.

Organizers in the USA confirmed that from 2012 they will host periodic musical evenings to commemorate the reputed Vietnamese musician on the day of his death, April 1 st .

In Vietnam, besides a musical program in remembrance of musician Trinh to be held at Phu My Hung, Trinh Cong Son Memorial House at 47C Pham Ngoc Thach, Ho Chi Minh City, will be opened for the public, so that the musician's fans and friends could offer incenses to him and see some documents and images of the late musician.

Moreover, some community activities will be held at musician Trinh's grave at Go Dua Cemetery, Thu Duc District, Ho Chi Minh City.

Other small-scale musical events will also take place in some cities in Vietnam on April 1 st to celebrate reputed musician Trinh's death.

Source: TN

Translated by Mai Huong

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