Sunday, July 21, 2013

Katherine Jackson: My son 'was not a freak'

Celebs

21 hours ago

For 12 weeks, Katherine Jackson has sat patiently in the Los Angeles courtroom where she is suing her late son's concert promoters and listened to other people describe Michael Jackson, his last weeks alive and his sudden death.

Finally given the turn to speak on Friday, Jackson told the court, "My son is not a freak."

"The most difficult thing is to sit here in this court and listen to all the bad things they say about my son," the soft-spoken 83-year-old mother and grandmother said as she began her long-anticipated testimony in her case against AEG Live.

Wearing a purple floral blazer and purple shirt, the self-proclaimed "private" grandmother had to reveal things about her family she would have preferred to keep to herself. Among them: that Michael's 15-year-old daughter Paris recently tried to kill herself because "she wanted to go where daddy was."

Katherine Jackson wept often during her testimony, including when she saw footage of her son singing, dancing, and introducing his famous moonwalk during 1983's "Motown 25" special. Even as a baby, her son was "dancing around," pretending his bottle was a microphone, she said. "He was born that way, dancing around. He wouldn't be still."

Katherine also spoke of all the things Michael Jackson had done for her over the years, including remodeling her house and plastering a room in her house with wall-to-wall family photos. A video of Neverland, his enormous California home, was shown, and Katherine described the property. She said her grandchildren "loved Neverland."

Katherine then admitted Michael suffered pain from "bad burns," back injuries, and had the skin condition vitiligo. She said she knew Michael took pain pills, and she heard from her other children that Michael was abusing prescription medication, but she didn't know what to believe. She said she visited him in Las Vegas a few years ago to ask him about it.

"He promised, he kept saying, 'I'm OK,'" she told the jury. "Sometimes the mother is the last to know."

She said no one could ask for "a better son than Michael," and that she was financially dependent on him, adding, "he gave me everything."

Jackson said the first time she met Conrad Murray, the physician who administered Jackson's lethal dose of propofol, was at the hospital the day her son died.

"My son needed another doctor," she testified. "Not Dr. Murray."

"They told me, 'he didn?t make it, he didn?t make it," Jackson recalled. "I just started screaming," she said, crying and clutching a tissue in one of her hands. Jackson was then put in a room with two of Michael's children, Paris and Prince Michael ("Blanket"), 11. She said granddaughter Paris kept looking skyward saying, "I can't live without you. I'm going with you."

Wiping her face with a tissue, Katherine said the adjustment has been hard for Paris, who dotted her room with photos of her father. "I thought she was the bravest. She had a very hard time at first."

On cross-examination, Katherine admitted it was her choice alone to bring this lawsuit against AEG. She said it was hard sitting in court "listening to people call her son a freak ... it hurts to sit in court and hear all these things. It?s hard for me listening to how sick my son was and nobody was helping him."

"He was not a freak," she added.

Jackson and her grandchildren's suit alleges that AEG Live, the entertainment company that promoted Michael Jackson?s last concerts, failed to pick up on warning signs that could have saved his life. The suit also alleges that AEG didn?t properly investigate Murray, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the singer's death in 2011 and sentenced to four years in prison.

AEG denies hiring Murray; the company says Jackson hired the physician, and says it wasn?t responsible in any way for his death.

The King of Pop died while rehearsing for "This is It," a 50-show series in London, three weeks before the tour was to start. He had last toured in 1997. Katherine testified that she had called AEG Live to express her view that her son could have done 50 shows, but not if they were spaced so closely together.

"He couldn't do every other night like AEG wanted him to do at first," she said.

Other family members have also taken the witness stand. Michael?s son, 16-year-old Michael Jackson, Jr., known as "Prince," recalled that while preparing for the 2009 tour, his father would sometimes come down the stairs and be "freezing cold" and "not strong enough." Jackson looked "malnourished," his son said.

On the day of his father's death, Prince Jackson testified that he found his father "hanging halfway off the bed and his eyes were rolling back in his head. "Murray was doing CPR. My sister was screaming the whole time saying she wants her daddy. I was waiting at the bottom of the stairs crying." When they got to the hospital, he told his sister, "Angels were watching over us," and tried to remain optimistic, but then Murray delivered the news that their father had suffered a heart attack.

Videotaped testimony of Paris Jackson, who is recovering from her suicide attempt at a residential treatment facility. was also shown to the jury of six men and women will decide the case. Katherine Jackson is expected to be the final plaintiff's witness in the case and conclude her testimony on Monday.

Asked by her lawyer if she missed Michael, Katherine Jackson replied: "Words can't explain" and began to cry.

This report contains additional reporting from NBC News staff writer Elizabeth Chuck and E! Newsproducer Claudia Rosenbaum.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/entertainment/katherine-jackson-breaks-down-court-tells-jury-her-son-was-6C10687011

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China ?secretly? launch three satellites via Long March 4C

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In what was one of the most secretive Chinese missions in recent years, a Long March 4C launched three military satellites. The launch, which occurred at 23:37 UTC from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center on Friday, was the subject of a state media blackout, with news leaking via social media just hours before lift-off.

Chinese Launch:

Chinese media refer to the new mission as launching three technological satellites: namely the Chuang Xin-3, the Shiyan Weixing-7 and the Shijian-15.

The first Chung Xin (?Innovation?) sats were experimental telecommunications microsatellites designed and built by the China Academy of Sciences.

Shiyan Weixing satellites are usually used to test new technologies as well as the Shijian (?Practice?) satellites used for technological demonstration. Shijian-15 probably will test a Chinese robotic arm, a mission that has been planned and announced for some time, while Shiyan-7 will scan for orbital debris.

This was the 179th successful launch of a Chang Zheng (Long March) launch vehicle, the 42nd successful orbital launch from Taiyuan and the first from Taiyuan this year. It was also the fifth successful orbital Chinese launch in 2012.

Launch Vehicle and Launch Site:

With its main commonality matched to the Long March 4B, the first stage has a 24.65 meter length with a 3.35 meter diameter, consuming 183,340 kg of N2O4/UDMH (gross mass of first stage is 193.330 kg).

The vehicle is equipped with a YF-21B engine capable of a ground thrust of 2,971 kN and a ground specific impulse of 2,550 Ns/kg. The second stage has a 10.40 meter length with a 3.35 meter diameter and 38,326 kg, consuming 35,374 kg of N2O4/UDMH.

It includes a YF-22B main engine capable of a vacuum thrust of 742 kN and four YF-23B vernier engines with a vacuum thrust of 47.1 kN (specific impulses of 2,922 Ns/kg and 2,834 Ns/kg, respectively).

The third stage has a 4.93 meter length with a 2.9 meter diameter, consuming 12,814 kg of N2O4/UDMH. Having a gross mass of 14,560 kg, it is equipped with a YF-40 engine capable of a vacuum thrust of 100.8 kN and a specific impulse in vacuum of 2,971 Ns/kg.

The Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, in Ejin-Banner ? a county in Alashan League of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region ? was the first Chinese satellite launch center and is also known as the Shuang Cheng Tze launch center.

The site includes a Technical Centre, two Launch Complexes, Mission Command and Control Centre, Launch Control Centre, propellant fuelling systems, tracking and communication systems, gas supply systems, weather forecast systems, and logistic support systems.

Jiuquan was originally used to launch scientific and recoverable satellites into medium or low earth orbits at high inclinations. It is also the place from where all the Chinese manned missions are launched.

Presently, only the LC-43 launch complex, also known by South Launch Site (SLS) is in use. This launch complex is equipped with two launch pads: 921 and 603. Launch pad 921 is used for the manned program for the launch of the Chang Zheng-2F launch vehicle (Shenzhou and Tiangong). The 603 launch pad is used for unmanned orbital launches by the Chang Zheng-2C, Chang Zheng-2D and Chang Zheng-2C launch vehicles.

The first orbital launch took place on April 24, 1970 when the CZ-1 Chang Zheng-1 (CZ1-1) rocket launched the first Chinese satellite, the Dongfanghong-1 (04382 1970-034A).

(Images via Chinanews.cn).

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Source: http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2013/07/china-secretly-long-march-4c-three-sats/

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Kerry Washington Speechless After Historic Emmys Nomination

Kerry Washington

Kerry Washington

Newlywed Kerry Washington celebrated her historic Emmy nomination at the airport minutes after arriving in Los Angeles for her hit show Scandal's first table read of the new season.

The actress, who plays a Washington, D.C. fixer who falls for the president, picked up her first Emmy nod on Thursday morning (18Jul13), and, in doing so, became the first African-American to be nominated for Best Drama Actress in 18 years.

It's wonderful when the stories we engage in with the audience in such an intimate way are inclusive and diverse on a lot of levels

Washington, who quietly wed American football star Nnamdi Asomugha last month (Jun13), tells The Hollywood Reporter, "I'm grateful to be in the company of the actresses I'm in the company of - including Alfre Woodard and Debbie Allen.

"I feel really proud to live in a world where a show like Scandal people can see, survive and succeed, not just in the U.S. but overseas. I had someone from a Japanese network tell me how excited they are to have a woman of colour from the U.S. in Japanese homes...

It's wonderful when the stories we engage in with the audience in such an intimate way are inclusive and diverse on a lot of levels.

"Our show is inclusive not only with race but also age, sexual orientation and with gender. It's really exciting".

And she admits the nomination, although expected by the experts, left her speechless "People who know me well know how rare it is when I'm without words, and that's how I felt - speechless and truly humbled and grateful".

Source: http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/entertainment/kerry-washington-305243.html?utm_source=ff&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=siteFeed

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Friday, July 19, 2013

?I?m Like, God, You Know, Is He, Am I Not, Is That, He?s Not Gonna Pick Me?

Brooks gets his second individual date with Desiree and they drive to the top of a mountain, passing through the clouds. Brooks and Des on cloud nine

Photo by Angus Muir/ABC

One difference between me and Desiree Hartsock, this season?s bachelorette, is that I'm cursed with the inability to fall in love with someone who mistakes verbs for adjectives. Des, to her credit, is more forgiving. And maybe if I were being courted by Brooks, I'd forgive him too. Sweet, gentle, pretty Brooks, Brooks of the prominent cheekbones and shampoo-commercial hair. What I wouldn't give for hair like Brooks'. Thick, shiny, luscious, undulant?adjectives don't come close to doing hair like his justice. Brooks has hair you want to make a home in.

He and Des were cruising in a Smart car convertible through the subtropical forests of Madeira Island (?a hidden pearl in the Atlantic,? as Zak W., another contestant, put it), just laughing, having fun, being themselves, and living in the moment. This was Brooks? second one-on-one, so he knew Des was into him?but how into him? Back at the villa, there were four other dudes doing chin-ups, drinking smoothies, and hoping to end up Des' husband. They all had prominent cheekbones, too, and Michael and Drew both had hair almost as beautiful. Brooks needed to know where he stood with Des. He knew she liked him, but did she love him? ?We need more adjectives,? he said, meaning verbs.

It was a moment that reminded me why I continue to watch The Bachelor(ette), even its weaker seasons?and this season is one of the weakest in recent memory. Des is a lousy bachelorette. She's too reserved, too unsure of herself; her speech is too effortful. In conversation her reactions are weirdly delayed, as if she has to tell herself, ?Someone said something: React!? Her response to anything tender or flattering or sincere is to say, ?Ohhhh! That's so cute!??not because she's patronizing, it seems, but because she doesn't know what else to say. You get the sense she doesn't feel she really deserves to be the bachelorette, which is fatal: Every bachelor and bachelorette should feel, deep down, that their whole lives have been merely a preparation for these few awful and wonderful weeks during which they are privileged to choose their wives or husbands from a pool of 25 eager candidates. Des doesn't project the requisite pathological self-confidence.

Here's why her season?and any bad season of The Bachelor(ette)?is nevertheless worth watching: No other cultural product today so consistently and entertainingly dramatizes the inadequacy of the English language in the face of love, or whatever it is that without fail seems to actually develop, despite our skepticism, between the show's star and one or more of its contestants. Brooks, while grammatically confused, is right: We do need more words to talk about how we feel. There should be nameable gradations on the spectrum between like and love. ?I lurve you,? says Woody Allen's character to Annie Hall. ?I loave you, I luff you.? He's got the right idea.

Bachelor(ette) viewers are liable to experience multiple sensations of d?j? vu over the course of a season?not only because every season is structurally and aesthetically identical, but because most of us have acted out some version of these scenes ourselves.

Which is to say, when it comes to love talk, we mostly resort to stammering nonsense and clich?s. ?I just, you're so, I don't know, it's just that, never mind, I just think, I just think you're really great,? is the kind of dumb thing I sometimes hear myself saying to my lovely girlfriend. (My girlfriend, I should say, doesn't regularly watch The Bachelor(ette), in part out of fear of it ruining our romance, in part because she wrongly believes she has better things to do.) And here's a quote from a recent contestant on The Bachelor: ?I'm like, god, you know, is he, am I not, is that, he's not gonna pick me, because he feels like maybe I'm not emotionally weak enough to be able to, you know, be so needy, you know, and om, it scares me because I'm feeling like, I'm feeling for you, really and really strongly, and I want you to make me feel comfortable enough so that I can fall in love with you, and I'm just, I'm, I don't know, I'm not used to feeling like this, I didn't expect to come in and feel this way.?

The more we see the bachelors and bachelorettes in ourselves, the more we see ourselves in them. They are more attractive and better socialized and cheerier than we are, but we're comrades in romantic ineptitude. They, like us, have no idea how to talk about love. The only difference is that they're on a TV show on which they're called upon every episode to do little else besides talk about love.

Who cares that Brooks doesn't know adjectives from verbs? We all know what he means. Later in the date, after he and Des have ascended in their Smart car to a mountain ridge overlooking vast pastures of cumulonimbus clouds, after they've raised their held hands to the sky and shouted, ?We're on cloud nine!?, they settle in for an intimate dinner in front of the cameras on a torch-lit Madeira balcony. Red wine, flickering shadows, untouched food. Brooks dutifully explains how he's all about family, then brings up his ?adjectives? suggestion from earlier in the day. ?Oh, I have some!? Des exclaims. These are the ?adjectives? Des has come up with to signify levels of affection between ?like? and ?love?: ?stepping,? ?skipping,? ?running,? and ?finish line.? Des thinks she and Brooks are ?running.?

Traditionally, our culture has turned to poetry to express the inexpressible, transcend outmoded forms of speech, and, in the words of Mallarm? as restated by Eliot, ?purify the dialect of the tribe.? Des, a bridal stylist by trade, is also an amateur poet?as is Chris, a mortgage broker and former professional baseball player, and another of the three finalists in the quest for Des' heart. On their Madeira one-on-one, they co-wrote a poem, three quatrains in loosely metered rhyme and slant rhyme:

Experiences we share together
keep the memories close to heart,
so that with time
our love never parts.

No matter the distance
or the hours away,
know that I'm somewhere
thinking of you.

Just as the waves
crash into the shore,
I long for the day
that I will be with you forevermore.

Better, in my judgment, are Des' impromptu free-verse poems (so they seem to me), like this one from last season's Bachelor, on which she was a contestant (line breaks mine):

No, you know what I do have,
I do have a deeper side, though, like,
I'm very like, you know, I'm very spiritual,
I'm very emotional, I'm very like?
I think differently, I think, than a lot of people?
So I don't just think like on the surface,
I kind of like, I enjoy life,
and I enjoy the beauty of life,
and that's why I'm happy every day.
And I can know that what I have
may be what you want,
and I don't worry about anybody else.
You know what I mean?

That put me in mind of one of my favorite love poems, Robert Creeley's ?For Love.? My girlfriend gave me a copy of it not long after we started dating; these days, I'm happy to report, we're ?at the finish line.? Des should try reciting it on one of this season's remaining episodes to Chris or Brooks or Drew. ?Yesterday,? I imagine her beginning,

I wanted to
speak of it, that sense above
the others to me
important because all

that I know derives
from what it teaches me.
Today, what is it that
is finally so helpless,

different, despairs of its own
statement, wants to
turn away, endlessly
to turn away. ...

And after Des recites the rest of the poem, Chris or Brooks or Drew will nod or smile or embrace her or say, ?That was lovely,??or maybe just be silent for a little while.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2013/07/abc_s_the_bachelorette_des_hartsock_knows_there_aren_t_enough_words_for.html

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PA Adds 19K Jobs in June, Jobless Rate Stays Flat

PA state flagAs has been the case for several years now, there was good news and bad news in the latest job report numbers for the state. The good news is that the state added 19,000 jobs in June. The bad news is that the unemployment rate remained steady at 7.5%, breaking a four-month streak of decreasing rates.

Pennsylvania?s employment situation largely mirrors that of the country?s. In the last federal report, the U.S. economy added 195,000 jobs and the rate stayed at 7.6%. This was the second straight month that Pennsylvania?s unemployment rate was lower than the federal rate.

It?s unclear what effect, if any, this report will have on the public?s perception of Governor Corbett. It?s quite possible that his recent difficulties with the legislature will overshadow this recent positive trend in employment.

The 19,000 net new jobs gain was the second-largest amount among the states in June. Only California, which saw an increase of 30,200, recorded a higher gain in employment.

Source: http://www.politicspa.com/pa-adds-19k-jobs-in-june-jobless-rate-stays-flat/49600/

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Zach Johnson handles the brown links of Muirfield

GULLANE, Scotland (AP) ? A blue sky and a gentle breeze usually means ripe scoring conditions at the British Open. Just not on the brown links of Muirfield.

Zach Johnson handled it better than anyone Thursday. Helped along by a 45-foot eagle putt and only one bogey despite trouble lurking around every pot bunker, Johnson had a 5-under 66 for a one-shot lead, the first time he's been atop the leaderboard at any major since he rallied to win the Masters six years ago.

Tiger Woods more than survived the late end of the draw, after the sun had thoroughly baked out the crispy greens and allowed only eight of the 20 rounds under par. He knocked one putt clear off the green, but 10 one-putts ? most of them for pars ? carried him to a 69, a good start in his bid to end his five-year drought in the majors.

"The golf course progressively got more dried out and more difficult as we played," Woods said. "And I'm very pleased to shoot anything even par or better."

And for all the talk about Muirfield's men-only membership, at least the club doesn't discriminate against age.

Mark O'Meara, the 56-year-old who won his claret jug in 1998 at Royal Birkdale, shot a 67 and nearly tied Johnson for the lead until his 25-foot birdie putt on the 18th took a hard spin out of the cup. Another former champion, 54-year-old Tom Lehman, opened with a 68.

It was an eclectic group who broke par, from major champions to players making their British Open debut. What they all had in common was finding a way to get through a firm, fast and frightening test at Muirfield that figures to get even harder if the Royal & Ancient doesn't put some water on the links course.

Phil Mickelson opened with a 69 and felt like he got off easy by playing in the morning. Mickelson was concerned about some hole locations being too close to the edge of slopes, and he pleaded with the R&A to let go of its ego and "just set the course up the way the best players can win."

Some of the best did just fine.

"Anytime you shoot under par in an Open ? or a major, for that matter ? you have to be putting at least somewhat decent," Johnson said. "And I putted great. I made some nice birdie putts and obviously that one for eagle. But I struck some really nice, solid par putts. That's what you've got to do to stay in it."

Rafael Cabrera-Bello of Spain joined O'Meara at 67, while the group at 68 included Dustin Johnson and Brandt Snedeker, who each have contended on Sunday over the last two years in the Open. Two-time major champion Angel Cabrera, who lost in a playoff at the Masters in April, and 19-year-old Jordan Spieth were in the group at 69.

It was a beautiful day along the Firth of Forth. And it was hard work.

No one felt safe until the ball stopped bouncing along the crusty fairways, and no one was sure when that would happen.

"I haven't seen anything like this," said Snedeker, who tied the 36-hole Open record a year ago at Lytham. "I've played in, I think, five Opens. This is completely new to me ? foreign to see a 2-iron going 300 yards. You have got to be wary of how you're shaping your golf ball, and what shot selections you're using on the greens."

O'Meara thought he hit a reasonable bunker shot on the 15th until it kept rolling ? and rolling ? off the green and into another bunker.

"They get so glassy and crispy around the holes," Graeme McDowell, who played with Woods, said after a 75. "You literally can see 300 footprints around the hole from all the players and caddies that have been out there today. They just get really shiny, and really glassy. I couldn't single out a pin that I thought was unfair. But if you got on the wrong side of them, they could make you look very, very silly."

Yes, there was plenty of that.

Rory McIlroy never looked comfortable, and it caught up with him. After missing left of the 12th green, he chipped it up the slope and watched it roll back down to his feet. His next chip was long and he wound up with double bogey. On the 15th hole, his putt to the back pin rolled well past the hole and into a bunker for another double bogey. A bogey-bogey finish gave him a 79, his highest score at the Open since that 80 in the vicious wind of St. Andrews in 2010.

At least he had some company.

Luke Donald, another former No. 1 player in the world, had a double bogey and a triple bogey two holes apart on the back nine. He shot 80. Nick Faldo celebrated his 56th birthday with a return to the links where he won two of his three claret jugs. He shot a 79, but still enjoyed the nerves and the emotions of seeing the gallery lining both sides of the fairway in his first Open in three years.

Lloyd Saltman got the 142nd Open off to a dubious start when it took him three tee shots to get his ball in play. He made a quadruple-bogey eight. Some eight hours later, Woods hooked his opening tee shot so far left, and into grass so deep, that he took a penalty shot for an unplayable lie. Woods hit into a bunker, but blasted out to 4 feet to escape with bogey. He made four birdies in his round, including a 25-foot bender behind the 13th hole. But it was the clutch putting that kept him going.

Dustin Johnson played the three par 5s in 4-under, yet what made him smile was a par. From left of the par-3 seventh green, he chipped between two bunkers and watched the ball ride the rounded face of one, roll precariously near the top of another and settled 4 feet away.

"That," he said, "was sweet."

Mickelson, coming off a win at the Scottish Open on a links-styled course at Castle Stuart, rolled in three big putts early in his round and kept it together with great lag putts for par when he ran into what he called "technical difficulties."

He rallied with a pair of late birdies, only for his last attempt from 15 feet above the hole on the 18th to slide some 6 feet by for a three-putt bogey. Even so, Lefty was pleased to be done as the greens turned brown.

"I got very lucky to play early today because as the day wore on and we got to the back nine, about a third of every green started to die and become brown," he said. "And the pins were very edgy, on the slopes. The guys that played early had a huge, huge break. Because even without any wind, it's beyond difficult."

It was tough all day.

Ninety-eight players in the 156-man field had at least a double bogey on their scorecards. Former U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover might have summed it up best when he took to Twitter after opening with an 80.

"Muirfield 1, Me 0."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zach-johnson-handles-brown-links-muirfield-220159883.html

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Apple Joins Coalition of Technology Companies Formed to Demand More NSA Transparency

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Source: http://www.iclarified.com/32015/apple-joins-coalition-of-technology-companies-formed-to-demand-more-nsa-transparency

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