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tMAXIMILLIEN DE LAFAYETTE's Editorial: Why American democracy will fail in Iraq and in any Muslim country!? tBlair: Going or staying?tEurovisiontCannes Festivalt
The third man who fooled Bush, CIA, FBI, The White House, the Pentagon and got paid $30 Millions!!
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3
TABLE OF CONTENTS: PART I
TABLE OF CONTENTS PARTS II, III, IV & V ARE ON THE FOLLOWING PAGES.
EDITORIAL: Why American democracy will fail in Iraq. What the Americans should know more about the Arab political psyche, by Maximillien de Lafayette, Esquire. The enormous differences between the Arab/Islamic and American "democratic" laws and ways of life will not allow the Bush's administration to create a democratic regime in Iraq or in any Arab country, not now and not in five hundred thousands years to come!! Many American Presidents before him and a considerable number of world's leaders tried to establish democracy in the Arab world and failed. But President Bush, strongly, honestly and stubbornly believes that he can change the world! Good luck, Mr President...........................................................................................................................................................................................4-8
1-USA/IRAQ
1-USA/IRAQ 9-23
Iraq Scandal: Iraq scandal reveals Red Cross pressures. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has been in the spotlight this week, following the revelations about the abuse of Iraqis held in Abu Ghraib prison by coalition forces. The ICRC is the body officially mandated by the Geneva Conventions to visit prisoners of war to ensure they are being humanely treated. And the Red Cross had visited Abu Ghraib many times, it knew of the abuses, but only went public with its knowledge when forced to. Critics now accuse the Red Cross - widely regarded as the guardian of the Geneva Conventions - of being the last to mention that the conventions are being violated. No comment : The ICRC can be a difficult assignment for journalists: Red Cross delegates are active in some of the most newsworthy parts of the world, but they have a policy of not talking about their work.........................................................................................................................................9-11
Trial: A fourth US soldier is to face court martial over the abuse of
Iraqi prisoners, the American army has said. Military Police Cpl Charles A
Graner will appear before a court on Thursday to enter a plea on charges
including cruelty and maltreatment of detainees. One abuse suspect, Jeremy
Sivits, has made detailed allegations about his colleagues, including Cpl
Graner. In Baghdad, the US military has begun releasing more than 300 inmates
from Abu Ghraib jail. Seven soldiers have so far been charged over abuse at
the jail - three are still waiting to hear if they will face
trial..................13


Abuse: IRAQ PRISON ABUSE AND AND SCANDAL: KEY PLAYERS from the highest military officials to the journalists who broke the story, BBC News Online looks at the figures in the Iraq prisoner abuse scandal. The hawkish Mr Rumsfeld, one of the chief architects of the Iraq war, faced calls for his resignation when the scandal at the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad first broke. An investigation into abuse at the prison was completed in early March, but even two months later, Mr Rumsfeld had still not read the report fully. He was forced to offer his deepest apologies for what had happened, saying he had not realised.......................... 14-17

Atrocities: IRAQ ATROCITIES AND ABUSE: US NORMAL POLICY OR ANOMALY? A key question which remains unresolved after the furore over the photos of alleged Iraqi prisoner abuse is to what extent the breaking of prisoner morale is still part of American policy. The man brought in to run the Abu Ghraib prison is Maj Gen Geoffrey Miller, the man who ran the US detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He told reporters who were shown the prison near Baghdad that sensory deprivation methods would now be used only after a general had "signed off" on them. "We will examine very closely the more aggressive techniques," he said. But he did not say they would be stopped. Yet he also said on Saturday that the Geneva Conventions would be applied in Iraq...............................................................................................................18-21
Rumsfeld: The US media believes that Donald Rumsfeld is safe in his job as the US defence secretary following a ringing endorsement by President Bush amid the Iraqi prisoner abuse scandal. But that has not stopped some commentators from questioning the president's decision, or pointing out that there could be a change of heart if the political fallout from the affair continues to worsen. As John King of CNN reported, the White House believes that the scandal will get much worse with the release of additional photos and video. And an editorial in the Washington Post said that by congratulating Mr Rumsfeld and describing the abuses as aberrations the president had not responded correctly to what it described as "the nation's worst disgraces". But President Bush is famous for his fierce loyalty to his inner circle and unlikely to force Mr Rumsfeld from office..............................................................................................................................22
Sovereignty: With a handover in Iraq to an interim but "sovereign" government due at the end of next month, some of the key issues which will determine whether that government has any real powers remain unresolved. The big problem is security. If the new government has no power to control the American and other troops which will stay on with its agreement, it will lack even the basic elements of sovereignty. It will in any case have no power to make or change laws during the six months or so it will hold office as a caretaker until elections in December or January. A senior British official said that the new Iraqi government had to have a major security role if ................................23
2-UNITED KINGDOM
2-UNITED KINGDOM 24-28
UK/IRAQ:
The Daily Mirror has said sorry to the regiment it accused of torture after
publishing fake pictures of UK troops abusing Iraqi prisoners.
The Queen's Lancashire Regiment (QLR) accepted the apology but called for the
newspaper to help root out those responsible for the photos. Following the
sacking of editor Piers Morgan, the tabloid also apologised to readers and to
UK armed forces in Iraq. The QLR said the Mirror had endangered British troops
by running the pictures. ...................................24
Blair:
Will he stay or will he go? It
seems that wherever the prime minister goes these days, there are reporters
asking him how long he plans to keep his job.
This is a man with a thumping great parliamentary
majority, a strong record of economic growth, low inflation, low interest
rates and the lowest number of unemployed for years. So why is his situation
so precarious? The single-word answer is of course Iraq. No one has ever
doubted Tony Blair's conviction when it comes to his belief in the rightness
of the war. Indeed no one disputes the fact that ridding the world of Saddam
Hussein is a good thing. The problem is that having won the war, the coalition
is rapidly losing the peace. People may have thought the abiding image from
the conflict would be the toppling of Saddam's statue by the Iraqi
people............................................25
UK/IRAQ: The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) report on the treatment of Iraqi detainees by coalition troops has not been published officially but leaked copies of the document are available on the Wall Street Journal's website. The report does not generally distinguish between British and American forces but there are specific criticisms which appear to be aimed at areas under British command. Those are: The ICRC examined the arrest of nine men, one of whom died, by coalition forces in Basra on 13 September 2003. "Following their arrest, the nine men were made to kneel, face and hands against the ground, as if in a prayer position. "The soldiers stamped on the back of the neck of those raising their head. They confiscated their money without issuing a receipt." The report says the men were later "severely beaten" by coalition troops....................................................................................................26
Rich crooks: This is a rich list with a difference, a roll call of the UK's wealthiest criminals, among them drug barons, people smugglers and fraudsters. Crime does pay - for some. The richest villains in the UK are worth hundreds of millions of pounds, with the number one fraudster said to be as rich as the Queen. The BBC has delved into the criminal underworld to discover the elite of British crime to produce the Underworld Rich List (see below). The resulting three-part series of the same name follows the fortunes of these villains, among them Mickey Green, a London armed robber-turned-drug trafficker; Curtis Warren, a Toxteth street dealer who's made it big; and professional gambler Brian Wright, who is now a fugitive cocaine baron........................................................................................................................................27
Terror:
IS UK READY FOR A TERROR ATTACK? In light of the devastating bomb blasts in
Madrid, attention in the UK has focused the real possibility that Britain
could be next. More than at any time since the 11 September 2001 attacks,
the devastating attack on Madrid's rail network earlier this month have
brought into sharp focus the very real possibility that the UK will eventually
be the target for a similar atrocity. Police, security experts and government
officials are agreed that Britain, and the capital in particular, would be
obvious targets. Metropolitan Police commissioner Sir John Stevens called the
sceptre of an attack "inevitable"; Mayor of London Ken Livingstone said it
would be "miraculous" if the capital escaped attack; and cabinet minister
Peter Hain admitted the UK was a "frontline target".
...........................................................28
3-UNITED KINGDOM/USA
3- UNITED KINGDOM/UNITED STATES 29-32
UK/USA: Should Blair stand by Bush? Read world opinions. UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has pledged continued allegiance with US President George Bush. Mr Blair has dismissed calls, including some from within his own party, to distance himself from the president. In an interview with British newspaper the Independent, he said he would not end British support for its "main ally" and added that it was "in the interests of the world" that the UK continued to support the military coalition in Iraq. ........................................................................................29-32
4-WORLD NEWS
4-WORLD NEWS 33-35
World:
Pope John Paul is due to create six new saints at a ceremony in the Vatican.
They include an Italian woman
who has become a symbol of the anti-abortion movement. Gianna Beretta Molla
died of cancer in 1962 after refusing life-saving treatment that would have
involved the termination of her pregnancy. Other new saints include a
19th-century Lebanese priest, Nimatullah al-Hardini, who has been praised for
his tolerance towards other religions. Sunday's ceremony will raise to more
than 480 the number of saints created by John Paul II during his 25-year
papacy.........................................................................................................33
Israel: Israel's pull out: More than 100,000 Israelis have attended a rally calling for an Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. The rally in Tel Aviv was organised to show support for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's pullout plan. The controversial plan has been rejected by the ruling Likud party but polls show most Israelis support it. Meanwhile, Palestinians won a small victory when an Israeli Court imposed a temporary ban on the demolition of houses in the Gaza Strip. The ruling was announced after Israeli troops pulled out of the Palestinian refugee camp of Rafah, having bulldozed dozens of homes. And early on Sunday morning, Israeli helicopters fired more missiles at targets in Gaza City.............................................................................................33
World News. Secretary of State Colin Powell on Sunday blamed Yasser Arafat for blocking U.S. efforts to strengthen Palestinian security forces as a means of ending terror attacks on Israel. Winding up his latest effort to push peacemaking forward, without any apparent concrete results, Powell also criticized Arafat for a statement the Palestinian leader made Saturday to his people urging them to ``find whatever strength you have to terrorize your enemy.'' ``Mr. Arafat continues to take actions and make statements to make it exceptionally difficult to move forward'' on peacemaking, Powell said at a news conference before returning to Washington from the World Economic Forum held at an isolated Dead Sea resort. ........................................................................................................................................................................34
US AND THE GENEVA: US questions needs to comply with Geneva convention. The Iraq prisoner abuse scandal shifted Sunday to the question of whether the U.S. administration set up a legal foundation that opened the door for the mistreatment. Within months of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, White House counsel Alberto Gonzales reportedly wrote President George W. Bush a memo about the terrorism fight and prisoners' rights under the Geneva Convention. "In my judgment, this new paradigm renders obsolete Geneva's strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners and renders quaint some of its provisions,"....................................................................................................................35
3A
TABLE OF CONTENTS: PART II
5-WORLD ENTERTAINMENT
5- WORLD ENTERTAINMENT 36-51
EUROVISION:
The Eurovision: Full Coverage. The contestants, winners, awards, photos.
Istanbul's Abdi Ipecki stadium is usually a sweaty basketball stadium, but was
transformed into a stage fit for one of the biggest musical events in the
world. With an enthusiastic capacity crowd flying flags of many nations, the
atmosphere was electric - clearly this contest was shaping up as a night to
remember. Last year's Turkish victor Sertab Erener set the stadium ablaze
with a rousing rendition of her winning song, surrounded by a coterie of
gold-dusted nymphs and then the magical whirling
dervishes....................................................................................................................................................36-45
Moore: F
rench
protesters briefly brought the fourth day of the Cannes film festival to a
halt on Saturday with a loud march in front of the red carpet.
The demonstration by about 500 entertainment industry workers over government
cuts to their unemployment benefits paralysed the seafront area of the Riviera
town for about two hours. Although the day's main competition film, Shrek 2,
went on without a problem, several other screenings were interrupted or
cancelled. In one case, a dozen workers who had pushed their way into a
theatre were forcibly removed by
police.................................................................................41
Jackson:
A court order that bars anyone involved in the Michael Jackson child abuse
case from talking about it must stay, prosecutors have said. A letter sent
to the California Supreme Court said it was crucial in ensuring potential
jurors were left untainted. It also said the Jackson case, due to go to trial,
had sparked intense media interest and gossip. What was "reported as 'fact'
becomes the nucleus of intense speculation", it said. Mr Jackson denies the
charges. The letter was filed by District Attorney Thomas Sneddon and Deputy
District Attorney Gerald Franklin. "Unseemly enthusiasm": Mr Jackson has
pleaded not guilty to 10 child molestation charges, which include a charge of
conspiracy to abduct a
child..................................................................................................................................48
White House VS MOORE: The White House tried to halt the making and release of Michael Moore's new film Fahrenheit 9/11, the film-maker alleged in Cannes on Sunday. The director told a Cannes audience the Bush administration wanted to keep the film off screens in the run-up to November's US election. The film examines the Iraq war and alleges connections between the Bush and Bin Laden families. Fahrenheit 9/11 is to get its world premiere in Cannes on Monday. Film studio Disney had backed out of a deal to distribute the film in the US for political reasons, Moore says. He has given no evidence to substantiate his allegations, but said "someone connected to the White House" and a "top Republican" had put pressure on film companies not to release the film. Moore said the few who had seen the film had told him "the potential for this film to have an impact on the election was much larger than they thought". Undercover in Iraq: The film was originally scheduled to be released through Disney-backed independent studio Miramax, before Disney blocked it. It is now expected to be released through a third party. Disney accused Moore of engineering a dispute about the film's release to gain maximum publicity.................................................................................................49
CANNES:
Will CANNES Buzz Again? This year's Cannes film festival is combining
Hollywood glamour, art house excellence and industry dealings.
Last year's Cannes was widely proclaimed as
one of the dullest in festival history, with a paucity of stars, controversy
and films to set the movie world alight. But this year, there are signs the
annual bonanza on the French Riviera could return to form. A-list stars should
be in abundance, with Brad Pitt, Cameron Diaz and Tom Hanks among those with
films in the official selection. Cannes will be a launch pad for Greek epic
Troy, in which Pitt plays Achilles, while Shrek 2 - using the voice of Diaz -
and The Ladykillers, starring Hanks, are both in the running for the
festival's top prize, the Palme d'Or. But the most attention could be given
not to a screen idol but to the outspoken documentary-maker Michael Moore,
whose new film, Fahrenheit 911, is also among the 18 movies in competition.
"Already, the entire world is going to be watching Cannes because of Michael
Moore," according .........................................49
Pitt:
Pitt, who plays Achilles in the ancient Greek story, said at the film's
opening in Cannes: "The themes that Homer had still resonate today."
Burrows described a "terrible sense of deja vu about what the Trojans faced
and what we're facing at the moment". The film, which opens in the US on
Friday, has so far had mixed reviews. Troy, which cost $200m (£115m) to make,
is based on Homer's Iliad and also stars Lord of the Rings' Orlando Bloom,
Hulk star Eric Bana and British stars Julie Christie, Brian Cox and Peter
O'Toole. The film was famously forced to move locations from Morocco to Mexico
when film studio Warners decided Morocco was too
dangerous............................................................................50
6-CINEMA AND FILMS REVIEWS
Press
Reviews: TROY Film critics
in the US and the UK have given mixed reviews about Wolfgang Petersen's latest
movie Troy. Los Angeles Times:
It should be said that Troy is only half silly. It is also half serious, not
to mention half bloody and half talky, half well-acted and half walked
through, half faithful to its venerable sources and half wildly invented. Yes,
that's an awful lot of halves, but this is a movie that's nearly two and
three-quarter hours in length. Washington Post: Just don't go into Troy
expecting adherence to the subtler details of The Iliad. (This movie is to
Homer's original what Charlton Heston's The Ten Commandments was to the Old
Testament.) For starters, the gods are pretty much gone. No Zeus or Hera. No
Aphrodite and the golden apple she offers to Paris. There's frequent mention
of the sun god, whose temple Achilles desecrates at one
point...........................................................................................................................................52-55
Reviews: Shattered Glass. Truth may be stranger than fiction, but fiction's often more entertaining. Could that be the motto of Stephen Glass, staff writer on American current affairs magazine The New Republic? In the 1990s, Glass was exposed as a conman who filed umpteen wild stories about teenage hackers and young Republican exploits without anyone rumbling that they were completely fabricated. In this nicely understated docu-drama, Hayden Christensen stars as the man who taught American journalism to read between the lies. Set in the middle of Bill Clinton's second term, when sex scandals dominated the headlines and the president infamously lied to the nation, Shattered Glass is as much about an era as a man. Getting a job at the snootiest current affairs magazine in the country - "the in-flight magazine of Air Force One".......57
Meg
Ryan:
Against the Ropes: Meg Ryan doesn't deliver the knockout
performance you'd hope for in Against The Ropes. Indeed her turn as feisty
boxing manager Jackie Kallen is in keeping with a film that's fun for a while,
but irredeemably lightweight. Making his big screen directorial debut, Charles
S Dutton may be aiming for hard-hitting exposé, but he only scrapes the
surface of this intriguing true-life tale. Boxing is in her blood, yet by her
mid-30s Jackie Kallen finds herself in a corner, playing PA to Irving Abel
(Joe Cortese), the director of the Cleveland Coliseum. The job affords her
proximity to the action but she's undervalued, and endures daily insults.
Egged on by friend and sportscaster Gavin Reese (Tim Daly), she finally makes
a stand and exchanges verbal blows with bigwig boxing promoter Sam LaRocca
(Tony Shalhoub).........................................................................................................................................................57
Bon
Voyage: "Old Fashioned mix of espionage and romance": Luckily for
Frédéric, the authorities empty the jails before his life sentence can begin.
Teaming up with conman Raoul (Yvan Attal) he sets off after Viviane, only to
find her in the arms of a minister (Gérard Depardieu) who's in the process of
establishing a collaborationist government. Throw in a Nazi spy (Peter
Coyote), a pretty student (Virginie Ledoyen), and a vital supply of hard
water, and you have an old-fashioned cocktail of espionage and romance that
makes up for what it lacks in coherence with oodles of
style.....................................................................................................................................59
Radio: Ed Harris makes Radio. Cuba Gooding Jr. has the showy title role of a mentally handicapped youth - so called because of his love for the wireless - but Harris provides heart and soul as the high school American Football coach who befriends him. Normally a stalwart supporting player, the crinkle-eyed character actor carries the movie, his still, sure presence providing emotional truth to a based-on-fact story that could have suffocated in schmaltz. Cynics should still skip it - and its racial politics seem too good to be true - but its innocence and charm make for warmly enjoyable entertainment...........................................................................................................................59
Korea: Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter... And Spring. Hitherto best-known amongst Asian cinema connoisseurs for such violent fare as The Isle and "Bad Guy", Korean writer-director Kim Ki-Duk casts off his bad-boy reputation with magical fable Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter... And Spring. The film's dreamlike setting is a beautiful lake, surrounded by mountains and forests, and on whose waters floats a small wooden temple. Here live an elderly monk (Oh Young-Soo) and his mischievous child pupil (Seo Jae-Kyung). We follow the turbulent passage of the latter's life without moving away from this enclosed environment. Over the course of the film's five concise chapters, Spring, Summer... explores a whole range of human experiences.............................................................................................................................................................62
Obscene:
The Football Factory. "OBSCENE
VIOLENCE, GRUESOME SENTIMENTALITY". Once the
scourge of the terraces, football hooliganism is making a comeback - at the
cinema. In 2005 we'll see Elijah Wood as a West Ham yob in The Yank, but first
we have The Football Factory, a grim and earthy look at soccer's underbelly
based on John King's cult 1996 novel. Danny Dyer plays a young hoodlum who has
dedicated his life to "thieving, f***ing and fighting.......................62
7-FESTIVAL: CANNES FILM FESTIVAL
7-FESTIVAL: CANNES FILM FESTIVAL 63-74

Glamour: THE GLAMOUR, THE FILMS, THE STARS, CELEBRITIES AND JURY MEMBERS OF CANNES IN PICTURES..................63-74

3B
TABLE OF CONTENTS: PART III
8-LIFESTYLE OF THE STARS
8-LIFESTYLE OF THE STARS 75-77

Kim:
Kim Novak: "What would I be doing if I still lived here?" Kim Novak mused.
She supplied her own answer: "I'd be spending my afternoons shopping on
Rodeo Drive." Instead, she has chosen to live in a wooded paradise near
Ashland, Ore. Called Windsong, it's a place she and her husband, Bob Malloy,
share with golden eagles, geese, deer, elk and a host of other wild fauna,
not to mention a barnyard full of farm animals. "We have two or three
hundred acres (80 to 120 hectares), including two large islands," she
reported. "The main channel of the (Rogue) river runs past the islands. A
smaller tributary passes in front of our house. It has very little traffic,
so we can enjoy it without the noise of the motor boats." It's a far cry
from the Kim Novak of the 1950s and '60s, who kept the gossip columns agog
with her romances.
..............................................................................75-77
9-NEWS OF THE STARS
9-NEWS OF THE STARS 78-81
Beyonce: Beyonce's lavish wardrobe is about to get even bigger: The singer-actress now has her own fashion label. Beyonce and her mother, Tina Knowles, who already styles many of her daughter's outfits, announced a joint venture to create a contemporary women's brand with Arthur and Jason Rabin, founders of manufacturer Wear Me Apparel/Kids Headquarters. "My mother and I share a love of fashion and style, and with this brand we're going to be able to share our vision of what is truly beautiful," the Destiny's Child singer said in a statement this week. "Our line will consist of fashions that I enjoy wearing and ...........................................................................................................................78
Vanity The editor of Vanity Fair magazine has come under scrutiny for his activities within the entertainment industry and his involvement with people the magazine covers. Among the circumstances that have led to questions about Graydon Carter is a $100,000 "consultant fee" he accepted for his role in the production of the film A Beautiful Mind. That payment and other relationships Carter has within the entertainment industry were detailed Friday in two newspaper reports..................................................................................................78
Stallone: Actor Sylvester Stallone has sued Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. and a production company, claiming they stymied his efforts to make a sequel and Broadway musical based on the Rocky film franchise. The lawsuit filed Thursday in Los Angeles County Superior Court seeks unspecified damages against the studio and the production company. It also seeks an order allowing Stallone to proceed with a Rocky VI film. "He looks at litigation as the very of very last resorts," said Stallone's attorney, Gerald Margolis. "It means he's extremely sad, disappointed and put out by all of this."................................................................................................................................................................81
10-GOSSIPS
10-GOSSIPS 82-
American Idol: Many would-be ``American Idol'' voters are disenfranchised by overburdened phone lines and by ``power dialers'' who hog the system, the magazine Broadcasting & Cable reported. According to the magazine's issue being released Monday, ``the only people choosing the next 'American Idol'' are the ones lucky enough to get through - or skilled enough to get around - tremendously overtaxed phone lines.'' Fox TV, which airs the talent contest, has failed to address the difficulties viewers must overcome to log votes, the magazine said. The show is a ratings winner and valuable property for its producers and Fox, but Broadcasting & Cable said the network is alienating viewers who repeatedly get a busy signal when they try to call in their votes. ........................................................................................................82
Kiss: Kiss bassist Gene Simmons has sparked outrage in Australia with comments seen as attacking Islam. "This is a vile culture and if you think for a second that it's willing to just live in the sands of God's armpit, you've got another thing coming," Simmons said during an interview on Melbourne's 3AW radio Thursday. "They want to come and live right where you live and they think that you're evil." The western world is under threat from extremists and a culture that treats women worse than dogs, he claimed in a segment..............................................................83
More gossips: Destiny's Child to marry Dallas Cowboy. Rupert, the nice All-Star, gets bonus.................................................................83-84
11-US ENTERTAINMENT
11-US ENTERTAINMENT 85-89
US Entertainment: Just because the wry vampire drama Angel is over doesn't mean it's the end of the world ... even if the final episode does include an apocalypse. Angel creator Joss Whedon - whose efforts to remake the show this year boosted ratings and garnered continued critical acclaim, but were not enough to keep it on the air - says the theme of the closing installment is "keep on fighting." That goes for the title hero himself, a 250-year-old vampire played by David Boreanaz, who is trying to redeem past decades of undead wickedness by helping the hopeless amid the supernatural evildoers of Los Angeles. "Redemption is something you have to fight for in a very personal down.....85-86
Murray: Bill Murray, who won a Golden Globe earlier this year for his role in Lost in Translation, received a lifetime achievement award at the Jacksonville Film Festival. Murray, 53, kissed the award -- a glass-and-wood turtle -- then made a face. "It smells like the ocean," Murray said at the ceremony Saturday night. "It's the only award I have that does." The Golden Globe was the first major acting prize for Murray, who gained fame in the 1970s as a goofball on TV's Saturday Night Live and continued that schtick in movies such as Caddyshack and Meatballs. Lost in Translation, about two lonely Americans......................................................................................................................87
Wicked: Wicked was chosen best musical of the New York theatre season, and I Am My Own Wife by Doug Wright was named best play in awards given Sunday by the Drama Desk, an organization of theatre journalists and critics. Wicked, based on Gregory Maguire's cult novel about the witches in Oz before Dorothy arrives on the Yellow Brick Road, took six Drama Desk honours. Assassins, a revival of the Stephen Sondheim-John Weidman musical, about presidential killers picked up four prizes, including the award for musical revival. The Lincoln Center Theater production of Henry IV received three awards, including a top acting honour for its star, Kevin Kline, who played Falstaff...................87
Pitt: Muscle-bound Brad Pitt fought his way through scrawnier competition to help the Greek epic Troy claim the top spot at the box office with $45.6 million. A handful of older movies aimed at teenagers continued to dominate the top 10. Lindsay Lohan's high-school comedy Mean Girls continued its strong run with $10.1 million for third place, dropping only 26 per cent in its third week. 13 Going on 30 fell only 28 per cent to earn $4.2 million for sixth place. Even the Olsen twins bomb New York Minute fell by a relatively small 37 per cent to earn $3.7 million in seventh place. Most movies this time of year see earnings drop 50 per cent or more each week. "These are very minimal drops, which shows that the most consistent audience right now is young girls," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations Co...90
12-NEWS FROM THE USA
12-NEWS FROM THE USA 91-92
USA : Bishop says no communion for some voters. Kerry derides American 'Arrogance' in Iraq. Gore endorses "The Day After Tomorrow".91
Janice Dickinson: Supermodel Janice Dickinson has survived a punishing childhood, various addictions and a truckload of bad relationships. She's done everything to excess -- and lived to tell about it. A recovering alcoholic -- "... even today, in my darkest moments, I want to drink so badly my entire body is screaming" -- Dickinson found it therapeutic to write down her feelings about the abuses she'd suffered as a child and the life issues she's suffered since. That writing became her first memoir, No Lifeguard on Duty, which told the story of how she became one of the world's top models during the 1970s. Now she's back with Everything About Me Is Fake . . . and I'm Perfect! (ReganBooks), in which Dickinson writes about some of her not-so-glamorous modelling jobs (swimming in a shark tank, passing out while wearing fur on an oppressively hot day) and being under....................................................................................................................................................93
Miramax: Get ready for an earful -- or at least an eyeful -- from Harvey Weinstein. The famously bullish boss of Miramax Films is writing his memoirs. HarperCollins will publish the book, currently untitled, in 2006. "Harvey is someone we read about every day. Now, in this book, we will read the true story behind Miramax's amazing success, as only Harvey can tell it," Jane Friedman, president and CEO of HarperCollins, said Thursday. Financial terms weren't disclosed, but Weinstein will donate all profits to charity. According to HarperCollins, "The memoir will trace the lives of the Weinstein brothers (Harvey and Bob) from their lower-middle-class roots in Queens, New York, through the founding of Miramax..............................................................................................................................................................................93
13-SCIENCE
13-SCIENCE 94
Science: London under Attack reveals some serious gaps in the government's emergency planning system, which would come into force in the event of an attack. The docu-drama, to be broadcast on BBC One on Sunday, focuses on how the emergency services would cope with multiple terrorist explosions in the capital. The programme which features a fictional terrorist attack, has already been criticised by the Home Office, who declined to co-operate with the making of the programme and have called it "irresponsible and alarmist". The programme reveals that police, ambulance and fire services communications systems are incompatible with each other in London and across the UK and that in the deep underground, Metropolitan Police radios do not work. Radios incompatible: The communications system used by Civil Contingency Reaction Force (CCRF) - a specialist groups of reservists whose role is to help out in the event of disaster scenarios.................................................94
Science: Private Firm Blasts Man Into Space ....Green Veges Make Cancer Mortal ........................................................................94
Planet:
The Ediacaran Period covers some 50 million years of ancient time on our
planet from 600 million years ago to about 542 million years ago. It
officially becomes part of the Neoproterozoic, when multi-celled life forms
started to take hold on Earth. However, Russian geologists are unhappy their
own title - the Vendian - which was coined in 1952, was not chosen. The
decision was taken after a fifteen-year long period of consideration by
expert geologists. "There's always been a recognition that the last part of
the Precambrian is a special time before the first shelled animals, when
there are these mesh-like creatures of uncertain
affinity,"...........................................................................................................................................................................95
Crops: Genetically modified crops could form part of the answer to world hunger, according to a United Nations report. With the world population set to rise by two billion over the next 30 years, such crops could help meet food needs. Drought and insect-resistant crops could boost yields and incomes, the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) says. But it warns that biotechnology is no panacea and must focus on the needs of developing countries. Global attitudes: The report comes days after the decision by US agri-chemical company Monsanto to stop marketing modified wheat because of consumer opposition........................................................................95-96
14-ART
14-ART 97
Art
and Bin Laden: Artwork inspired by the al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden
is one of the four pieces nominated for this year's £40,000 Turner Prize
2004.The four artists on the
shortlist are Kutlug Ataman, Jeremy Deller, Langlands and Bell and Yinka
Shonibare. The installation of video and photos from Afghanistan by
Langlands and Bell, is called The House of Osama Bin Laden. The
controversial UK prize is also very prestigious and was won last year by
transvestite potter Grayson Perry. Kutlug Ataman, a Turkish artist who lives
in the UK, is nominated for his "poignant and incisive video
installations"...................................................................................................................97
Turner:
Turner winner faces media whirl. Turner Prize winner Grayson Perry has
described the first few hours of his new-found media fame after lifting the
UK arts world's most prestigious award.
Perry told BBC News Online he would have to get used to becoming
"fashionable" now he had become part of the British artistic establishment.
"It is going to be odd," said Perry, who used some of his prize-winning
pottery to comment on the UK art scene. "I'll have to pick on someone else
and find something else to rail against." Perry, a transvestite who wore a
frilly dress at Sunday night's awards ceremony, said he had enjoyed his
first post-Turner encounters with newspapers and broadcasters. Speaking to
BBC News Online on Monday, he said: "I like the contrast between all the
different journalists. This morning I came here to do Today (on BBC Radio
4), followed by breakfast TV. It was like bad cop, good
cop..................97-98
House: House finds a new home in gallery: The two-storey, four-bedroom pebbledash house is an exact copy of where artist Michael Landy's parents live in Essex. Every tiny detail has been recreated, from flaking paint to a Neighbourhood Watch sticker in the front window. The piece, entitled Semi-detached, is said to be about the shared human experience of living in a space. It opens at the London gallery on Tuesday. The inspiration is Mr Landy's father, John, a tunnel miner who was forced to stop work when a tunnel collapsed on him in Northumberland in 1977. John Landy was permanently injured in the accident and is still unable to carry out most physical tasks...............................................99-100
Tate: In pictures: Tate Modern anniversary...............................................................................................................................99-100
3C
TABLE OF CONTENTS: PART IV
15-THEATRE
15-THEATRE 102-104
Hamlet:
An unforgettable and most lovable Hamlet.This
is the kind of evening of which legends are made, one of those rare first
nights that those who were present are never likely to forget. Ben Whishaw
as a raw and vulnerable Hamlet with Imogen Stubbs as a sex-obsessed Gertrude
were perfect. No theatre has boasted a more illustrious line-up of Hamlets
than the Old Vic, among them Gielgud, Olivier, Burton, Guinness, Redgrave,
O'Toole and Jacobi. Last night,23 year old Ben Whishaw
spectacularly earned his place in such distinguished company. Ben who?,
you may well be asking, and you would be entirely within your rights to do so.
Whishaw only left RADA last year and was last seen playing bit parts in the
National Theatre's Christmas production of His Dark Materials. Trevor Nunn
spotted his potential, and signed him up for this thrillingly youthful
production, in which all the younger roles are played by actors in their early
twenties...................................................102
Bennett: School's back with Bennett at his best. Class act: The History Boys is one of the finest plays Alan Bennett has written It is getting on for 40 years since Alan Bennett made his wildly entertaining debut as dramatist with Forty Years On, set in a minor English public school. Though Bennett has described the play as "an elaborate life-support system for the preservation of bad jokes", it was also a notably ambitious piece that wittily refracted key events and personalities of 20th-century England through the dramatic prism of a chaotic end-of-term revue. In this eagerly awaited new drama, he returns to the themes with which he began, in a play that, as the title suggests, has schoolboys and history at its centre. Appropriately enough, last night's press performance of The History Boys began like a scene from Forty Years On. Just before the show was due to start, a small fire broke out in the lighting rig, setting off the sprinkler system and drenching the stage................102-104
Loneliness:
Loneliness played to perfection.
At the time of its West End premiere in 1962,
Charles Dyer's Rattle of a Simple Man probably gave the theatrical censor, the
Lord Chamberlain, serious pause for thought, while many members of the
first-night audience doubtless concluded that it was far too risqué for their
maiden aunt. Now it seems, initially at least, almost quaint in its
innocence, a reminder of the vanished world we inhabited before, as Philip
Larkin wittily put it, sexual intercourse began in 1963. The play is virtually
a two-hander, set during a single night when Percy, a gauche Mancunian down in
London for a football match, accepts a £50 bet from his mates to go off with a
prostitute. One quickly realises that it was only the drink that persuaded him
take on this highly uncharacteristic challenge. As he arrives at Cyrenne's
basement bed-sit, this tongue-tied middle-aged virgin who lives at home with
his mum and works as a number-cruncher in the research department of the local
mill, is overcome with embarrassment....104
16-SHOWBIZ: NEWSMAKERS & WORLD CELEBRITIES
Showbiz:
Hanks told reporters at Cannes
that he wanted to avoid comparisons with the original's star, Sir Alec
Guinness. "The last thing I wanted was to see the film and inadvertently
imitate Sir Alec," he said at a press conference. Hanks also offered his
support to US soldiers in Iraq. "God bless every one of them," he said. Hanks,
who starred in Steven Spielberg's film Saving Private Ryan, said the world was
living in "extremely tough times". Hollywood players: He was positive about
the work of US troops.....The male star of British director Michael
Winterbottom's sexually explicit new film has defended the movie, Nine
Songs, at Cannes. Kieran O'Brien, who stars with US actress Margo Stilley,
said: "There is no film like this, it is so graphic. "If people ask 'why make
this film?' I would say 'why not?'," the actor said. O'Brien has been talking
about the film at the festival, but Stilley is not publicising her role - and
is not named in the film's closing credits. The film, which includes real sex
scenes, has been shown in at the festival. "People who have seen it, even
though they are forewarned about how explicit it is, come out of the cinema
saying they can't believe that it's so
explicit,".................................................................105

Brando:
Brando to star as himself in film: Veteran actor Marlon Brando is set to make
a big screen comeback, playing himself in a low-budget drama.Brando
and Brando, details of which have been revealed at Cannes, is about a young
boy who heads for the US in search of the actor. Shooting on the £3m project,
to be directed by Tunisian filmmaker Ridha Behi, will begin this summer.
Brando, who recently turned 80, was last seen on screen in the 2001 crime
drama The Score...Director
Quentin Tarantino been handed a special new award by the French government at
the Cannes Film Festival....Director Michael Moore has been tipped by critics
as one of the favourites to win the top prize - the Palme d'Or - at the Cannes
Film Festival.........................106-108
Jolie:
Actress Jolie's animation passion.
Working on animations is more exciting than performing in the flesh - even
though actors are paid less, Will Smith and Angelina Jolie have
said...................................................................................109
George Michael: After lying low for several years, George Michael is gingerly re-entering the demanding world of music. His wounds from years of negative reports in the media -- most centred around the embarrassing arrest for indecency in a Los Angeles public washroom and a legal battle with his label Sony -- have healed somewhat, though left scars. He's also emerged from a bout with depression prompted by the death of his mother from cancer in 1997, during which time, Michael says, writing was akin to pulling teeth. "I was just depressed," he said in an interview with The Canadian Press. "It took a long time to get over, unfortunately." As part of his therapy, and to keep up his musical chops..................................................................................................................................109-110
Davis: Veteran actor never expected the part.One thing's for sure. Movie fans who are familiar with actor Ossie Davis' stellar career, one that spans more than 50 years in the movies, never, ever expected him to be offered the role of John F. Kennedy. "Let me join you," says Davis in a telephone interview to promote next Tuesday's video release of the cult film Bubba Ho-Tep. "And even now I'm still surprised at the kind of response it's getting." Bubba Ho-Tep is one of those underground films that defines the term cult favourite. Directed by indie filmmaker Don Coscarelli (The Phantasm), it proposes that Elvis Presley and slain U.S. President John F. Kennedy are still alive and living incognito in a Texas old-age home. There, they become aware that a demon mummy is at large stealing the souls of the elderly and they must join forces............................111
Huffman: Huffman amazed Macy chose her. Actress and Oscar-nominated husband occasionally work together. Felicity Huffman is on her cell as she enters the restaurant for an interview. She's talking to husband William H. Macy, who's half a world away filming the adventure Sahara. As parents of two young daughters, the acting couple try to juggle their busy schedules so only one of them is working at a time. Occasionally, however, they end up working at the sam..................................................................................................................111-114
Walters: Vargas replaces Walters on 20/20. ABC News appointed Elizabeth Vargas to replace Barbara Walters as co-host of the newsmagazine 20/20, and hired British celebrity interviewer Martin Bashir for the show. Vargas has been a frequent fill-in on various ABC News broadcasts and a reporter for its newsmagazine. She'll be teamed with John Stossel on 20/20, which retained its Friday time slot in the fall schedule announced by the network Tuesday. Walters was the show's original co-host since 1979, and will continue doing interview specials for the network. Bashir, no stranger to ABC audiences, will fill Walters' role in competition for the big celebrity interviews. His interview with Michael Jackson was seen by 27 million people in February 2003, and won the enmity of the star, who sold his version of his story to Fox. ABC has also shown other Bashir programs about the late Princess of Wales and an investigation into a scandal on the British version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. ABC's other newsmagazine will go back to the name Primetime Live .....................................................................................115
Rob Lowe: CBS is offering Rob Lowe as a doctor, Jason Alexander as a sportswriter and John Goodman as a family patriarch in new series that will debut this fall. The network will also set up a battle of the franchises, pitting its spinoff series CSI: NY against NBC's Law & Order on Wednesday nights at 10 p.m. CBS, the most popular network this season, will introduce three new dramas and two comedies next season, it announced Wednesday. Alexander will be the latest Seinfeld alum to try to succeed in a new comedy. In Listen Up, he'll play a character based on Washington Post sportswriter Tony Kornheiser. The show was placed on CBS's successful Monday night comedy lineup. Lowe, who failed last year as a lawyer in NBC's short-lived The Lyon's Den, will play a doctor at a Las Vegas casino in Dr. Vegas. "It's a traditional medical show during the day and during the night, he sleeps with chorus girls and gambles,"............................................................115-117
Stallone: Sylvester Stallone stepped into the ring Monday and, though wearing jeans and long-sleeve shirt, struck a blow for his upcoming TV series The Contender. The site was a lower Manhattan gym hosting five days of tryouts for aspiring pugilists who aim to be among the 16 contenders vying for the $1 million purse on NBC's contest-drama. Each hopeful filled out forms, was examined by a doctor, then waited to be paired off for three minutes of sparring under the watchful eye of Frank Stallone, the show's boxing consultant and ............................118
17-CONTROVERSY
Review:
Fahrenheit 9/11. Controversial documentary-maker Michael Moore's intensely
political new film, Fahrenheit 9/11, was screened for the world's media at the
Cannes Film Festival on Monday. Disney
has refused to release this film, other distributors also seem reluctant and -
if Moore is to be believed - the White House wants to stop it being seen. The
reason is if viewers take the film at face value, they will think George Bush
is a fraudulent and possibly corrupt president who went to war in Iraq because
of a half-baked motivation of grudge, greed and thirst for power. But this is
a Michael Moore film and, while that does not mean he is wrong, it must be
watched with a critical eye. Moore wants Bush removed from office. He is
determined to have this film released before the US presidential election in
November for that very reason.
..........................................................................119-120
18-WORLD BREAKING NEWS
18- WORLD BREAKING NEWS 121-123
Chalabi: HE FOOLED THE AMERICANS BIG TIME AND GOT PAID $30MILLIONS AND NEVER TOLD THEM ONE SECRET!! U.S. troops and Iraqi police raided the home and party offices of Washington's former top Iraq ally Ahmad Chalabi, whipping up fresh turbulence in the run-up to a U.S. handover of power. Iraqi judge Hassan Muathin said the raid was carried out under an arrest warrant for men wanted for stealing state-owned vehicles, but CBS reported Chalabi had passed sensitive U.S. intelligence to Iran that could "get Americans killed." The U.S. television network cited unidentified senior U.S. officials for its information, but no independent confirmation of the report was immediately available. Four months ago Chalabi was a guest of first lady Laura Bush at the State of the Union speech, Washington's premier political event, and a favorite of the Pentagon, which paid his Iraqi National Congress $340,000 a month for intelligence. President Bush is shown with Chalabi (R) and Iraqi Governing Counsel member Dr. Jalal Talabani in Baghdad Nov. 27, 2003.
.........................................................................................121-12319- EDITORIAL REPRINT
19-IRAQ PRISON INCIDENTS 124-126
Military: The actions by U.S. military personnel in those photos do not in any way represent the values of our country or of the armed forces,'' said Mr Rumsfeld, and I do believe him. Dr Condoleezza Rice, President Bush's national security adviser, told the Arab television network Al Arabiya that Bush was ''determined to find out if there is any wider problem than just what happened at Abu Ghraib. And so he has told Secretary Rumsfeld that he expects an investigation, a full accounting.'', and I do believe her. On behalf of President Bush, Defence Secretary Rumsfeld said: "We're taking and will continue to take whatever steps are necessary to hold accountable those that may have violated the code of military conduct and betrayed the trust placed in them by the American people.", and I do believe him............................................124-126
20-DIVAS
20-DIVAS 127-137
Bitton:
Raquel Bitton… a warm, intelligent, creative, innovative and a powerful
singer! “ When I told Bitton that she had the voice, the physical
structure and style of Edith Piaf……….Briton rejected this analogy…and strongly
she did! She made it clear to me that she is not Piaf but herself with her own
style, artistic interpretation, style autonomy and individuality. She
completely distant herself from Piaf! Maybe…perhaps the individuality of her
style, her “facon” meaning “her own way of singing” and above all her very
strong personality constitute the trilogy of her phenomenal international
success. She separates herself from the Piaf's style, from the Piaf's persona,
from the Piaf's artistic essence, for the Piaf's...............................127-137
Loring:
Interview with Gloria Loring: The woman, the artist, the actress, the
author, the thinker and lady of wisdom. Loring: "This life has been the one
I've needed to live... don't think I ever had a vision. I just wanted to sing
and be heard. So there's nothing new in what I do. I've just been trying all
these years to become the best and fullest expression of this "Gloria." If
anything, I've accepted that we are all linked by our best and worst
intentions, emotions and motivations. I feel all the things everyone does, and
that's what I have come to look for in my musical expressions - our
commonality.".................................................................................................................................................138-141
21-ELEGANCE AND STYLE
21- ELEGANCE AND STYLE 142-152

Elegance:
THE BEST DRESSED AND MOST ELEGANT FEMALE STARS IN THE UNITED STATES. "You
have one minute to impress, 30 seconds to catch the moment and just 3 seconds
to make a lasting impression." Once, wrote Maximillien de Lafayette in his
book on world protocol and etiquette. And how you can you impress by catching
the moment in less than 3 seconds without saying a word? Simple: Dress to
kill. Dress for Success! Be Elegant and Refined. Elegance is the key.
Remember, nowadays stars don't create fashion anymore as did the femmes
fatales of the golden era of Hollywood, thanks to Valentino, Givenchy, Max
Factor and Edith Head. Today, Stars of the big screen compete for elegance
recognition. Anyway, almost 99% of them came from a background where elegance
was not necessarily le plat du jour. ..................................................................142-151
Awful Dresses: The bloodiest awful dresses and gowns belong to? The worst dressed stars...............................................152-156
22-MIDDLE/NEAR EAST CONFLICT AND WARS IN PICTURES
22-MIDDLE/NEAR EAST CONFLICT AND WARS IN PICTURES 157-161

Wars: Unmerciful World: The blood, the destruction, the victims, death and apocalypse on both sides of the fence.............................................157-161
23-NO COMMENTS
23-NO COMMENTS 162-164
No
Comments: Psycho scene the top movie death: Janet Leigh immortalized in
Hitchcock film. In the gore stakes,
Janet Leigh's shower scene in Psycho is the "best movie death" of all time,
according to a critics' poll published Thursday. The 44-year-old Hitchcock
thriller beat other iconic movies such as The Godfather (22nd) and Quentin
Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs (23rd) in the non-scientific poll by Total Film
magazine. Stanley Kubrick's Dr Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop
Worrying And Love The Bomb (1964) came second, with the surreal ending when
Slim Pickens rides an atomic
bomb..................................................................................................................................................................162
Psycho: In the gore stakes, Janet Leigh's shower scene in Psycho is the "best movie death" of all time, according to a critics' poll published Thursday. The 44-year-old Hitchcock thriller beat other iconic movies such as The Godfather (22nd) and Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs (23rd) in the non-scientific poll by Total Film magazine. Stanley Kubrick's Dr Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb (1964) came second, with the surreal ending when Slim Pickens rides an atomic bomb. Other highly rated movie deaths were the fatal plunge to earth of the ape in the 1933 Fay Wray movie King Kong.......................162
MI5: Female spies using sex to obtain secrets may be a staple of espionage thrillers, but it has emerged that in reality British intelligence did not approve. MI5 also instructed its staff on how to stop their female spies falling in love with targets.................162-164
Warhol: Major work by pioneering modern artist Andy Warhol - including pieces never seen before in the UK - go on show in London on Wednesday. The Haunch of Venison gallery in Mayfair is showing Warhol's Hammer and Sickle collection of prints. The 20 pieces, inspired by the Soviet symbol, were drawn in 1976 and 1977. The exhibition also includes a "photobooth" painting by Warhol of the artist Ethel Scull, which has never been exhibited before..................................................................................................................................164
TABLE OF CONTENTS: PART V
24-WORLD ENTERTAINMENT/WORLD GREATEST SINGERS
24-WORLD ENTERTAINMENT/WORLD GREATEST SINGERS 165-167

Famous
Singers: THE INTERNATIONAL POLLS. Previously,
WACJ (World Art Celebrities Journal) conducted two international polls in 65
countries and in the United States and targeted audiences which constituted
the majority of its readers in the eastern and western hemispheres. Over
200.000 questionnaires were completed and sent back to the magazine. No
importance was given to the age, profession and political views of those
persons who received and answered the questionnaires. The results received
from those previous polls are diametrically different from the results of this
current poll which was conducted between May and September of 2003. The
results were different and perhaps contradictory for obvious reasons. We have
published the results of the two previous international polls in other
sections of this edition. Please refer to.
25-WORLD SHOWBIZ & ENTERTAINMENT BREAKING NEWS
Anti-Bush
film tops Cannes awards. Director Michael Moore's
controversial anti-Bush documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 has won the prestigious
Palme d'Or best film award at the Cannes festival.
It was the first documentary to win the top
prize since Jacques Cousteau's The Silent World in 1956. The film received a
15-minute standing ovation when it was screened on Monday. Fahrenheit 9/11
explores the Iraq war and alleges connections between President George W Bush
and top Saudi families, including the Bin Ladens. The documentary uses Moore's
customary satirical style to accuse Mr Bush of stealing the presidential
election in 2000, ignoring terrorism warnings before 11 September 2001 and
fuelling fears of more attacks to secure Americans' support for the war in
Iraq. "What have you done? I'm completely overwhelmed by this," Moore said in
his acceptance
speech...................................................................................................................................168-169
Shrek2:
Computer animated sequel Shrek 2 has broken box office records in the US,
taking $11.8m (£6.7m) in one day. It has scored the biggest midweek
opening to date for an animated feature, beating the record set by Pokemon:
The First Movie in 1999. A spokesperson for Dreamworks, which made the film,
said the opening "exceeded all of our expectations". Shrek 2, which features
the voices of Mike Myers and Cameron Diaz, is in competition at the Cannes
Film Festival. Unprecedented: The film is also set to break another
record in the US over the weekend..................................169

Troy:
In pictures: Troy's Cannes premiere
...................................171
26-HOLLYWOOD FILE
26-HOLLYWOOD FILE 172-177



Billion
Dollar Women: THE ONE BILLION
DOLLAR WOMEN. THE MOST EXPENSIVE STARS IN HOLLYWOOD.
What so special about these women? Are they the
most intelligent and captivating human beings in the world? NO! Have they
contributed the most essential and the most needed help, knowledge and wisdom
to the society and world of excellence, humanities and human science? NO! So
why are they so expensive? Why they are making so much money, millions and
millions of Dollars, when so many talented artists, creative singers and
entertainers, devoted teachers, academicians and much more intelligent,
fascinating..................................................172-177
27-WOMEN AND BILLIONS
27-WOMEN AND BILLIONS 178-183


Billions:
The richest women in the world: The Billionaires.
Marilyn Carlson. She runs one of the biggest privately held companies in
America, Carlson Companies, which she took over as chairman and chief
executive when her father, founder Curt Carlson died in 1999. Marilyn, 61, and
her sister Barbara Carlson Gage each own half of the $31 billion (2000 sales)
company. As a marketing, travel and hospitality company, Carlson has been hit
by the economic downturn and Sept. 11 terror attacks. Marilyn, along with
other travel executives, lobbied congress for a 100% tax deduction for
business travel expenses. She's also been working to expand and modernize
Carlson, spending $1 billion over four years on technology and integration.
She also made the decision to sell the company's 25%
stake.......................178-183
28-PROFILE OF GREATNESS
28-PROFILE OF GREATNESS 184-189
Marjorie:
Marjorie Maye is a very expensive enigma. A puzzling and complex delightful
“Femme Fatale”. She looks stunning, she flirts with “La Forza del Destino”,
s