POP Culture


220px-richiehavens.jpg Richie Haven 2006

Richie Havens first rose to fame in the Greenwich Village folk-music scene that also fostered Joan Baez and Bob Dylan. In 1967, Richie Havens became one of several Village-based artists signed to Verve Records, and released several albums to mostly local notice. In 1969, Richie Havens opened the Woodstock Festival, although he was initially scheduled to appear fifth on the bill. His performance received continuous ovations and he kept playing encores until he ran out of songs. Finally, he decided to improvise a version of “Motherless Child”, to which he added a verse with the word “freedom” repeated over and over; the song was featured in the Woodstock film, and became an international hit.

One can not think about Richie Havens and not think of these two songs…or is that just me???

Any way, for you, my Baby Boomers, who remember…here it is again…enjoy.

****************************************OPENING WOODSTOCK

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**********************************HOW CAN ONE FORGET THIS GEAT SONG!?!?!?

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Cover of NTLC

Folk Rock is my favorite genre and one can NOT think of it…with out thinking of Richie Havens!

The offical web page for Richie HAven is http://www.richiehavens.com/

I for one, am glad that you are still out there RICHIE HAVEN! You look and sound good to this 60’s chick!

PEACE!
~The Baby Boomer Queen~

From DRIGGS, Idaho, Dawn Wells, who played Mary Ann on “Gilligan’s Island,” is serving six months’ unsupervised probation after allegedly being caught with marijuana in her car.

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She was sentenced Feb. 29 to five days in jail, fined $410.50 and placed on probation after pleading guilty to one count of reckless driving.
Under a plea agreement, three misdemeanor counts, driving under the influence, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance, were dropped.

On Oct. 18, Teton County sheriff’s Deputy Joseph Gutierrez arrested Wells as she was driving home from a surprise birthday party that was held for her. According to the sheriff’s office report, Gutierrez pulled Wells over after noticing her swerve and repeatedly speed up and slow down. When Gutierrez asked about a marijuana smell, Wells said she’d just given a ride to three hitchhikers and had dropped them off when they began smoking something. Gutierrez found half-smoked joints and two small cases used to store marijuana.

The 69 year old Wells, founder of the Idaho Film and Television Institute and organizer of the region’s annual family movie festival called the Spud Fest, then failed a sobriety test.

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Wells’ lawyer, Ron Swafford, said that a friend of Wells’ testified that he’d left a small amount of marijuana in the vehicle after using it that day, and that Wells was unaware of it. Swafford also said several witnesses were prepared to testify that Wells had very little to drink at the party and was not intoxicated when she left. He said she was swerving on the road because she was trying to find the heater controls in her new car.

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Thank you Yahoo News

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Poor Mary Ann…busted…first Guiligan now Mary Ann busted for pot.

Hey, baby Boomers, I believe her! How about you???

I still think she looks great…and it does explain some of those looks that she did on “Guiligans Island.”

NOW, my question is how did they come up with 410 dollars and 10 cents for a fine…FAR OUT…NOW, that is too strange!

~The Baby Boomer Queen~

329207275_6a94284309_m.jpg Even Mrs. Howe looked great, did she not???

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For those of you who like dogs…here is a cute video…

http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/confidential/canine_video.html

~The Baby Boomer Queen~

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FAMOUS WOMEN in MOVIES…

I thought you might like this…

Some times the world is just messed up and I just like to look at beautiful things…NO ugliness or sorrow…today is one of those day!
~The Baby Boomer Queen~

Raul Castro Succeeds Fidel as President of Cuba

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From HAVANA, Cuba, Fidel Castro’s brother, Raúl, was named president of Cuba on Sunday, preserving a nearly half century socialist dynasty that brought free schools and health care to all Cubans as well as political repression.

The decision by Cuba’s national assembly formally ends the storied reign of Fidel Castro, 81, who has not appeared in public since stomach surgery 19 months ago and announced Tuesday that he would not seek the presidency. He steps down 49 years after leading a ragtag revolutionary army to victory, launching a career that spanned the Cuban missile crisis, the Bay of Pigs invasion, the fall of the Soviet Union, rhetorical battles with 10 U.S. presidents and a decades long U.S. trade embargo.

Fidel, who remains a member of the national assembly, did not appear Sunday when delegates selected his brother as president and named Jose Ramon Machado, 77, a hard line communist who fought alongside the Castros during the revolution, as first vice president. The choice of Machado surprised some here who expected a new generation of younger leaders to rise.

Ricardo Alarcon, one of Cuba’s most ardent critics of the U.S. trade embargo, was reelected as president of the assembly.

Clouds of cigar smoke scented the lobby in Havana’s convention center as nearly 600 assembly members filed into a hallway to vote in white-curtained booths. Raúl Castro, who entered the 28,000 square foot assembly chamber to sustained applause, waved briefly and smiled before taking a front row seat. During nearly five decades as defense minister, Raúl Castro, 76, was almost always seen in military uniforms. But Sunday, as he prepared to formally rise to Cuba’s highest civilian post, he opted for a blue suit and gray tie.

“In my opinion, Raúúl is the only option,” Luis Felipe Simon Cabreza, an assembly member from the eastern city of Holguin, said in an interview before voting. “He will continue the Cuban revolution. The future of our country, of our revolution, is assured.”

At 10 a.m. Sunday, María Esther Reus González, Cuba’s justice minister, began a roll call of assembly members by calling out “Fidel Castro Ruz.” Lawmakers, including army officers with medals on their chests and rural representatives in white guayaberas, rose in unison and clapped rhythmically.

Even though Fidel Castro has decided to step down as president, he remains the head of the communist party and many here still consider him the country’s true leader. Before the vote, Reus González held aloft a sealed envelope that she said contained Fidel Castro’s vote for president. She reminded assembly members that “El Comandante” had urged them to make a unanimous selection.

2289534833_1e4f16ff34.jpg Caricature by Cox and Forkum.

In a statement before the vote Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged Cuba to “begin a process of peaceful, democratic change by releasing all political prisoners, respecting human rights, and creating a clear pathway towards free and fair elections.”

There was little doubt that Raúl Castro, his brother’s handpicked successor, would be named president by a national assembly that critics say is nothing more than a rubber stamp for them. Assembly members interviewed during breaks said they were free to vote for whomever they pleased, but some said Raúl Castro was the only candidate on the ballot.

“This is a historic day,” Ana Ramona Martin, 39, a first-time assembly member from Sancti Spiritus, said in an interview. “We are seeing evidence of our democracy today. I’m a simple campesina, and look what I am getting to do.”

Raúl Castro has long favored opening Cuba’s economy to more foreign investment, and some observers believe that he is likely to increase opportunities for Cubans to become independent businesspeople, rather than work for the state. Currently, between 100,000 and 150,000 have licenses to run private businesses, less than 3 percent of the working age population.

But the talk outside the legislative chamber Sunday was not about change, it was about preserving Fidel Castro’s policies.

“Our political project must stay the same,” said assembly member Nieves Lopez, who was 9 years old when Fidel took power at the head of a rebel army. “Our system is well defined, and it will not change.”

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Thank you Washington Post Foreign and Manuel Roig~Franzia
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Well, Baby Boomers…how long do you think we will have to wait to see if anythign is going to change or happen with the new regime?

~The Baby Boomer Queen~

FROM HAVANA, Cuba, the news that one of the longest serving leaders in the world was officially stepping down sent ripples around the globe, Fidel Castro’s resignation announcement barely registered in Cuba.

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Fidel Castro, shown in an undated file photo, took power in Cuba in 1959 and reigned with an iron hand.

Castro, 81, revealed his plans in a letter published in the middle of the night in the online version of Cuba’s state run newspaper, Granma.
“I will not aspire to, nor will I accept the position of president of the council of state and commander in chief,” Castro wrote. “I wish only to fight as a soldier of ideas. … Perhaps my voice will be heard.”

President Bush said Castro’s decision ought to spark “a democratic transition” for Cuba.

“The international community should work with the Cuban people to begin to build institutions that are necessary for democracy and eventually this transition ought to lead to free and fair elections,” Bush said Tuesday in Rwanda. “The United States will help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of liberty.”

But the streets of Cuba’s capital, Havana, reflected the normal comings and goings of residents. No gatherings or rallies erupted at Castro’s news.

Despite the story later consuming the entire front page of the print version of Granma, complete with a banner headline, many Cubans said they hadn’t heard the news when asked by CNN.

Those who had were wary of offering their opinions.
“He’s leaving the position because his age and illness don’t let him work,” one man said. “Let’s see what comes.”

“He’s aware of his place in history, and he’s going to keep on occupying that place in one way or another,” a retiree said.

Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said the U.S. embargo on Cuba will not be lifted in the near term.

Cuba’s leaders plan to elect a president within days. Castro’s brother Raúl, 76, the country’s defense minister, has been named publicly as his successor.

1728517010_48dff7bff7_m.jpg Fidel with his brother Raul.

“There’s a lot of difficulty in day to day living,” said CNN senior international correspondent Christiane Amanpour, who has visited Cuba several times.

“The question is: Will there be enough change?” she said. “If it is Raúl [as president], will he show there’s a progress towards the kind of thing that the Cuban people want, which is openness, freedom, the ability to have enough wherewithal [to find jobs], the same kind of bread and butter issues that everybody all around the world wants?”

Oswaldo Paya, a Cuban dissident, said that no matter who the next leader of the country will be, the Cuban people “have more hope.”

“Not because we trust his successor more than we trusted Fidel Castro but because there’s a buzz among the people, and we want everything to go smoothly, peacefully, but the government cannot keep denying the people their space,” Paya said.

Castro received treatment for intestinal problems two years ago and cited his “critical health condition” in the letter published Tuesday. He said “it would be a betrayal to my conscience to accept a responsibility requiring more mobility and dedication than I am physically able to offer.”

He also said he realized that he had a duty to prepare Cubans for his absence.

“My wishes have always been to discharge my duties to my last breath,” he said. “That’s all I can offer.”

At age 32, Castro led a band of guerrillas who overthrew a corrupt dictatorship in 1959. He went on to become a thorn in Washington’s side by embracing communism and cozying up to the Soviet Union.

Castro reigned in Havana with an iron hand, defying a U.S. economic embargo intended to dislodge him.

In Miami, Florida, the news came as no surprise to Janisset Rivero, the executive director of the Cuban Democratic Directorate, a group that works with dissidents in Cuba.

“I think there have been preparations taking place for quite a while to assure the crowning of Raúl Castro,” she said Tuesday morning. “It doesn’t mean any change to the system. It doesn’t mean there will be freedom for the Cubans. One big dictator is replacing the other.

“It will be a big deal when political prisoners are released, when political parties are allowed to organize, when the country stops being ruled by a single party.”

Polarizing figure
To leftist revolutionaries around the world, Castro, with his ubiquitous military fatigues and fiery oratory, became a hero and patron. But for hundreds of thousands of his countrymen who fled into exile, he became an object of intense hatred.

Castro clung to a socialist economic model and one-party Communist rule, even after the Soviet Union disintegrated and most of the rest of the world concluded that state socialism was a bankrupt idea whose time had come and gone.

“The most vulnerable part of his persona as a politician is precisely his continued defense of a totalitarian model that is the main cause of the hardships, the misery and the unhappiness of the Cuban people,” said Elizardo Sanchez, a human rights advocate and critic of the Castro regime.

And yet, his defenders in Cuba point to what they see as social progress made under Castro’s revolution, including racial integration and universal education and health care. They blame the U.S. embargo for the country’s economic woes.

“What Fidel achieved in the social order of this country has not been achieved by any poor nation, and even by many rich countries, despite being submitted to enormous pressures,” said Jose Ramon Fernandez, a Cuban vice president.

Castro’s staying power was a source of irritation to Cuban exiles.

The center of the exile community is Miami, where the Cuban American National Foundation became a powerful lobbying group courted by U.S. politicians.

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Road to revolution

Castro was born August 13, 1926, in Oriente Province in eastern Cuba. His father, Angel, was a wealthy landowner originally from Spain; his mother, Lina, had been a maid to Angel’s first wife.

Educated in Jesuit schools, Castro earned a law degree and offered free legal services to the poor. In 1952, at the age of 25, he ran for the Cuban parliament. But just before the election, the government was overthrown by Fulgencio Batista, whose dictatorship put Castro on the road to revolution.

In 1953, Castro took part in an unsuccessful coup attempt that made him famous but sent him to prison.

He was released in 1955 and lived in exile in the United States and Mexico, where he organized a guerrilla group with Raúl Castro and Ernesto “Che” Guevara, an Argentine doctor turned revolutionary.

The next year, 81 fighters landed in Cuba. Most were killed; the Castros, Guevara and other survivors fled into the Sierra Maestra Mountains along the southeastern coast, where they waged a guerrilla campaign against the Batista government that finally brought it down in 1959.

Although the United States quickly recognized the new Cuban government, tensions arose after Castro began nationalizing American owned factories and plantations. In January 1961, Washington broke off diplomatic ties.

Less than four months later, a group of CIA trained Cuban exiles, armed with U.S. weapons, landed at the Bay of Pigs in Cuba in a disastrous attempt to overthrow Castro.

Two weeks after the Bay of Pigs, Castro formally declared Cuba a socialist state.

In October 1962, Cuba became the focus of a tense world crisis after the Soviet Union installed nuclear weapons in the country. President Kennedy demanded that the Soviets remove them and quarantined the island, bringing the world to the brink of nuclear war.

The Soviet Union backed down and removed the weapons.

Castro is believed to have fathered eight children with four women. His longtime companion, Dalia Soto del Valle, is the mother of five of his sons.

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Thank you CNN News

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I hope that the Cubans finally get freedom..but I sincerely think that is possible with Fidel’s replacement.

But my biggest wish is that the U.S. stay out of it…let them take care U.S. citizens who are hungry and the senior citizens who are eating dog food and going to bed hungry, cold or dying from the heat in summer.

Let them give moneys to the schools and universities to educate, instead of making war with other countries.

Let them give money to a health program where “U.S.citzens” can get proper heath, dental and vision care.

Make education and heath a primary responsibility for it’s own citizens instead of making war and then having to rebuild what it has destroyed.

If that doesn’t get some of you going…nothing will!

Wake up AMERICA!

“I will not aspire to, nor will I accept the position of president of the council of state and commander in chief,” “I wish only to fight as a soldier of ideas. … Perhaps my voice will be heard.”

After talking it over with a friend of mine…I decided to nominate Britney Shears for the next Presidente, of Cuba…it will keep her out of trouble. The girl definately needs something constructive in her life.

~The Baby Boomer Queen~
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Web site for women who love shoes…

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From Somerville, Massachusetts, a Massachusetts company has fired up a Web site
dedicated to women who are obsessed with shoes called, naturally enough,
Shoetube.tv

The Web site, operated by Powderhouse Productions, based in Somerville, Mass.,
features instructional videos and fashion tips, The Washington Times reported.

460851557_fcde20d515_m.jpg Wear them this way annd you get an extra pair!

“Shoes are universal, women love them. They connect like nobody’s business,
” Powderhouse Productions Creative Director Bill Lattanzi said.

The Web site, with a reported core staff of four people and multiple freelancers, will
offer weekly videos, daily clips and blogs. The site also encourages users to post
videos, the newspaper said.

633696485_a6d46eca51_m.jpg Don’t you just LOVE these!?!?

“Alternate your shoe choice and height from one day to the next, or from day to night.
Wear a pretty ballet flat one day and romp around in your beloved platforms the next,
” a blogger wrote on the site.

Powderhouse, which also produces for PBS and the Discovery Channel, was looking for
a fun project for the company when it got the concept from the Hello Stiletto Shoe club
in Boston, Lattanzi said.

512688986_3a9bc1e881_m.jpg Now THIS…is a shoe closet!!!

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Thank you United Press International
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I am afraid that I am a shoe lover, myself.

Can one ever have enough shoes…?

There are so many adorable, sexy shoes out there it makes my heart go weak.

“After all it is the ability to accessorize, that separates us from the primates”…and you can quote me on that!

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I can think a bunch of shoe references! Here are just a few.
a. Dorthy in the Wizzard of OZ…her RED SLIPPERS
b. Cinderella…GLASS SLIPPERS
c. Drinking Champagne out of shoes…many movies
d. The old woman who lived in a SHOE…the fairy tale
e. Swan Lake
f. The Red Shoe Diary…HBO series
h. The Red Shoe…the movie

~The Baby Boomer Queen~

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It’s a good old Mexican Stand OFF…

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Guadalajara. Mexico’s city of churches. A wonder of colonial architecture and a must see for tourists. But for Canadian Brenda Martin, it’s a personal hell. She’s spent two years in jail here without ever having been convicted of a crime. There’s little evidence to suggest she’s guilty. Yet her pleas have been virtually ignored by Canadian officials.

W~FIVE negotiated with Mexican authorities and was able to obtain an exclusive on-camera interview in the prison where Brenda is being held.

Moving to Puerto Vallarta in 1999, Brenda says she was very happy hanging out at the beach, picking up odd jobs to survive. Then she got her perfect job offer, a chance to cook for a fabulously wealthy Canadian by the name of Alyn Waage.

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Originally from Edmonton, Waage told Brenda that he had an investment business and needed Brenda to cook for the staff. For 10 months life was simple. But drinking too much and a fast temper, eventually led Brenda to be fired. She says she was given a severance package of $26,000, the equivalent of one year’s pay.

Then opening her own catering business, life in paradise was still on track. That is, until she heard a rumor that Waage had been arrested and was accused of running one of the biggest Internet pyramid schemes in history. Using a company called TriWest Investments, he bilked clients in the United States and Canada for more than $60 million. Waage was arrested in Mexico, tried in the U.S. and sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Brenda thought nothing more of it until she was taken in by a sting operation in February of 2006 and brought to the prison in Guadalajara. The Mexican authorities thought the money Brenda had been given as a severance package was in fact money she’d been given to launder. With only a smattering of Spanish, Brenda had difficulty understanding the charges against her.

During the next 22 months, Brenda reports she has been living in a three metre by four metre cell with 11 other women, some of whom are convicted murderers and drug dealers. This is in direct contravention of international human rights treaties to which both Canada and Mexico have agreed to.

Despite numerous pleas to Foreign Affairs by Brenda, friends like Debra Tieleman and family members, there has only been the minimum of contact with Canadian officials.

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The only glimmer of hope was a sworn affidavit by Alyn Waage saying that Brenda had nothing to do with TriWest. But even though this evidence was admitted into a Mexican court it has had little or no impact, because according to Brenda, she has had a series of ineffective or incompetent lawyers.

Desperately in need of some solid legal advice, Brenda’s childhood friend, Tieleman, did some research and found the name of Guillermo Cruz Rico. Cruz is a high powered Mexican lawyer living in Canada. Visiting Brenda in Guadalajara, Cruz realized there was only one shot left to get Brenda out of prison. He filed a constitutional challenge called an Amparo.

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Guillermo Cruz Rico, a high-powered Mexican lawyer living in Canada, has filed a constitutional challenge called an Amparo.

The case was simple. Brenda’s rights to a timely trial and humane living conditions had been so violated that the charges should be dropped. In addition, without translators, Brenda never understood the case against her. The Amparo seemed to spark an interest in Canadian authorities. Out of the blue, the Canadian Consulate in Guadalajara called Brenda. But Brenda was outraged at the length of time they had taken to respond to her plight and told them so.

Surprisingly, a recent ally of Brenda’s is the Mexican Ambassador to Canada, Emilio Giococchea. Not only has he met with Tieleman, but he’s also visited Brenda in jail and intervened with Mexico’s Attorney General. Brenda feels this is more than Canadian officials have done for her.

W~FIVE wanted to ask the minister responsible for consular services, Helena Guergis, about Brenda’s case. But she repeatedly declined requests for an interview. So our producer tried to talk with her at a public appearance. Guergis did not want to talk prior to the announcement about a children’s sports program, so we tried to negotiate with her press secretary. But to no avail. The Minister didn’t speak with us and she didn’t even make her announcement.

Debra Tieleman, a childhood friend, sought help when she found out Brenda was imprisoned in a Mexican jail.
Guergis did rise in the House of Commons recently to insist she has been pressuring the Mexicans to act on Brenda’s behalf.

And just hours before our broadcast W~FIVE received a letter from the Minister. In it she states consular officials have been helping Brenda.

But when reached in jail, Brenda denied the claims made by Guergis that consular officials in Mexico had phoned her or visited her more than 75 times. Reacting to those claims, Brenda said, “I just can’t believe that…Helena Guergis has the gall to say what she’s said in that letter.”

Two years after her arrest, Brenda Martin remains in jail and still has not been convicted of any crime.
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Thank you W~five
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Baby Boomers…do you remember back in the 70’s when alot of now Baby Boomers were locked and Mexican jails and how bad they were??? I don’t think it has changed much!

I bet you still have to pay your way out of there.

NOT where I would want to be.

This article was sent to me via my dear friend, Marlena in Canada…hope it helps in some way! Preferably in a LARGE way…

~The Baby Boomer Queen~

NEW YORK has a new super star and America has a new Snoop doggie.

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Uno the beagle wins best in show at the Westminster Kennel Club.

Barking and baying up a storm, Uno lived up to his name Tuesday night by becoming the first beagle to win best in show at the Westminster Kennel Club.

The nation’s new top dog was clearly the fan favorite and drew a standing ovation from the sold-out crowd at Madison Square Garden when he was picked.

Uno got right into the act, jumping up on handler Aaron Wilkerson and confirming his other title: noisiest in show. Years from now, he’ll be known for the “ah~roo” heard ’round the ring.

The only dog consistently listed among America’s most popular breeds for nearly 100 years, a beagle had never won in the 100 times Westminster picked a winner. That changed when judge J. Donald Jones pointed to this nearly 3 year old package of personality.

Good ol’ Snoopy, a champion at last.

Uno was numero uno, beating out two perfect poodles, a top Sealyham terrier, a sleek Weimaraner, a lively Australian shepherd and a sprightly Akita.

Uno celebrated his win by chewing on the microphones of reporters who tried to interview his winning crew.

More than 169 breeds and varieties were represented at the 132nd Westminster Kennel Club event, and the competition brought 2,627 entries.

Barks echoed around Madison Square Garden as the crowd cheered its favorites, among them a Neapolitan mastiff that lumbered around the ring, a Chihuahua that spun in circles and a miniature pinscher that plucked a piece of food off the green carpet without missing a beat.

Formally known as K~Run’s Park Me in First, Uno came into this competition with 32 best in show ribbons overall. Yet he was surely an underdog, make that an Underdog, because no beagle had even won the hound group since 1939.

But Uno fixed that, breezing in the 15~inch breed judging Monday morning and taking his group several hours later. So while other dogs tried to reach the final ring Tuesday, Uno spent the day going on a brisk walk around Manhattan and taking a nap underneath his warm, fuzzy blanket.

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But when it came time to show, Uno was as precocious and precious as ever.

With fans calling out his name and clapping, he soaked in the cheers as he walked around the ring. And when he made his final stop in front of Jones, Uno went to town, baying over and over.

Even when he returned to the sidelines as other dogs were judged, Uno kept going. Quite a win it was for Eddie Dziuk of Columbia, Missouri, and the other three co-owners.

“My sister called me today and said she’s always turned off the dog show on TV because she’s tired of all those poodles winning,” Jon Woodring, one of the other co~owners, said earlier in the day. “But she watched last night. I think Uno winning would show that an everyday dog can do it.”

Longtime dog expert David Frei, the paw~by~paw announcer for USA Network’s coverage of the Westminster Kennel Club show, went even further.

“If he wins best in show, I’ll rent him an apartment in New York City because I’ll be traveling with him all year, so many people will want to see him,” he said. “If he won, it would be the greatest thing for our show.”

Better get that first rent check ready, Uno is here to stay.
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Thank you AP News
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What an adorable dog…I used to raise Beagles…I would suggest them for anyone and they are good with kids…city apartments…I don’t know as they love to run!

~The Baby Boomer Queen~

Roy Scheider, of ‘Jaws’ fame, dies at 75

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LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Roy Scheider, a one time boxer whose broken nose and pugnacious acting style made him a star in “The French Connection” and who later uttered one of cinematic history’s most memorable roles in “Jaws,” has died.

Scheider died Sunday at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences hospital in Little Rock, hospital spokesman David Robinson said. He was 75.

The hospital did not release a cause of death, but Scheider had been treated for multiple myeloma at the hospital’s Myeloma Institute for Research and Therapy for the past two years.

Scheider earned two Academy Award nominations, a best-supporting nod for 1971’s “The French Connection” in which he played the police partner of Oscar winner Gene Hackman, and a best-actor nomination for 1979’s “All That Jazz,” the semi~autobiographical Bob Fosse film.

But he was perhaps best known for his role as a small-town police chief in Steven Spielberg’s 1975 film “Jaws,” about a killer shark terrorizing beachgoers, as well as millions of moviegoers.

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In 2005, one of Scheider’s most famous lines in the movie , “You’re gonna need a bigger boat” was voted No. 35 on the American Film Institute’s list of best quotes from U.S. movies.

Widely hailed as the film that launched the era of the Hollywood blockbuster, “Jaws” was the first movie to earn $100 million at the box office.

“I’ve been fortunate to do what I consider three landmark films,” he told The Associated Press in 1986. “‘The French Connection’ spawned a whole era of the relationship between two policemen, based on an enormous amount of truth about working on the job.”

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‘”Jaws’ was the first big, blockbuster outdoor adventure film. And certainly ‘All That Jazz’ is not like any old MGM musical. Each one of these films is unique, and I consider myself fortunate to be associated with them.”

Born into a working class family in Orange, N.J., he was stricken with rheumatic fever at 6. He spent long periods in bed, becoming a voracious reader. Except for a slight heart murmur, he was pronounced cured at 17. He acquired the distinctive shape of his nose in an amateur boxing match.

After three years in the Air Force, Scheider sought a New York theater career in 1960. His debut came a year later as Mercutio in the New York Shakespeare Festival’s production of “Romeo and Juliet.” He also played minor roles in such films as “Paper Lion” and “Stiletto.” Then he made a breakthrough in 1971 as Jane Fonda’s pimp in “Klute.”

“He was a wonderful guy. He was what I call ‘a knockaround actor,'” Richard Dreyfuss, who co-starred with Scheider and Robert Shaw in “Jaws,” told The Associated Press on Sunday.

“A ‘knockaround actor’ to me is a compliment that means a professional that lives the life of a professional actor and doesn’t’ yell and scream at the fates and does his job and does it as well as he can,” Dreyfuss said.

He also appeared in the films “Marathon Man,” as Dustin Hoffman’s brother, “Klute,” with Jane Fonda, and “Naked Lunch,” David Cronenberg’s adaptation of William S. Burroughs’s novel. He starred in “Jaws 2,” which turned out not to be as successful as the original.

TV roles included “SeaQuest DSV” and “Third Watch.”

More recently, he played the slick CEO of an insurance company that denies coverage to a young man dying of leukemia in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Rainmaker,” and appeared in the direct to video “Dracula II: Ascension” and “Dracula III: Legacy.”

Scheider was also politically active. He participated in rallies protesting U.S. military action in Iraq, including a massive New York demonstration in March 2003 that police said drew 125,000 chanting activists.

Scheider had a home built for him and his family in 1994 in Sagaponack in the Hamptons on New York’s Long Island, where he was active in community issues. Last summer, Scheider announced that he was selling the home for about $18.75 million and moving to the nearby village of Sag Harbor.

Although “Jaws” frightened some moviegoers out of the water for years, Scheider told the AP in 1986 that he considered his role somewhat comedic.

“If you go back and look at the way it’s developed and built, that is really a funny character,” he said. “He’s a fumbler with all kinds of inhibitions and fears, that’s the way we built that character.”

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Thank you AP News, JILL ZEMAN, Associated Press Writer and AP Press writer Jacob Adelman in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
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Beach goers were never the same after “JAWS.” Even the music stayed in your head…

In the “Rainmaker,” Roy Scheider was very believeable…I know…he made me hate him in that movie!

Rest in Peace Roy, you will be missed. But, not by the sharks!

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~The Baby Boomer Queen~

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