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‘Twilight’ Actors Recall Interesting Fan Encounters At ‘Eclipse’ Premiere

‘She was so excited … that she vomited as soon as she saw me,’ Alex Meraz says of one fan. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Alex Meraz Photo: Jeff Kravitz/ Getty Images With the level of enthusiasm Twi-hards have for the series, it’s no surprise that the “Twilight” franchise’s three main stars — Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner — have had their fair share of unique fan encounters. However, when MTV News caught up with fellow “Twilight” players Justin Chon and Alex Meraz, we learned that the fan enthusiasm extends to embrace the entire family. Chon, who plays enthusiastic high schooler and Bella fan, Eric Yorkie, recounted a particularly interesting offer from one eager female admirer. “I had a lady offer me her keys to her cabin somewhere in the mountains,” Chon remembered. “And she said I could come anytime [I] wanted, just [to] let her know because she’ll meet me there.” So did Chon take her up on the cabin getaway? “No, no. I didn’t go,” he said. “I passed on that one.” Alex Meraz, who plays wolf pack member Paul, described a similar encounter — though his fan expressed her enthusiasm in an entirely different manner. “I was in Miami [and] a fan was camped out for three nights [to see me],” Meraz said. “She was so excited and dehydrated that she vomited as soon as she saw me.” To his credit, Meraz didn’t balk at the unique reception — rather, he stuck with the fan. “I held her hair up, I patted her through it. It was a humbling moment because I thought a) she’s really excited to see me, or b) she’s really, really disgusted to see me,” Meraz rationalized. “It kept me very very humbled. I think that sums everything up for me.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” and “Breaking Dawn.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos ‘The Twilight Saga: Eclipse’ Hollywood Premiere Brings Out The Stars Related Photos “Eclipse” Premieres In Los Angeles Behind The Scenes At “Eclipse” Premiere In Los Angeles

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‘Twilight’ Actors Recall Interesting Fan Encounters At ‘Eclipse’ Premiere

Oil Spill Hits Utah, Official says spill hasn’t reached Great Salt Lake

Imagine if an oil spill happened in your town and contaminated a whole park… that's exactly what just happened in this Utah town. VIDEO OF THE UTAH SPILL: http://news.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474978299489 http://heraldextra.com/news/state-and-regional/article_b28deb54-3914-5051-8ce0-d… Emergency workers believe they have stopped a 21,000-gallon oil leak from reaching the environmentally sensitive Great Salt Lake, one of the West's most important inland water bodies for migratory birds that use it as a place to rest, eat and breed. But the spill has taken a toll on wildlife at area creeks and ponds, coating about 300 birds with oil and possibly threatening an endangered fish. The leak began Friday night when an underground Chevron Corp. pipeline in the mountains near the University of Utah broke. The breach sent oil into a creek that flows through neighborhoods, into a popular Salt Lake City park, and ultimately into the Jordan River, which flows into the Great Salt Lake. The 10-inch pipeline was shut off Saturday morning, when workers at a nearby Veterans Administration building smelled oil and called the Salt Lake City fire department, which notified Chevron. The pipe carries crude oil from western Colorado to a refinery near the Salt Lake City International Airport. Jason Olsen, spokesman for the Salt Lake City Joint Information Center, said Sunday that emergency workers believe they have contained the spill to the Jordan River. But the spill still took its toll on birds at Red Butte Creek and at a large pond at Liberty Park, where visitors often feed birds from the shore and on rented paddle boats. About 300 birds were coated in oil and cleaned at Utah's Hogle Zoo. Fewer than 10 have died, said Salt Lake City spokeswoman Lisa Harrison-Smith. Most of the birds were Canada geese, although some ducks were also covered. Harrison-Smith said the oil also flowed through several other riparian areas, which could threaten the June sucker. It's been listed as an endangered species since 1986. Most of Liberty Park reopened Sunday. The pond remained closed, and Olsen urged those who live near affected waterways to stay away from them. “Wherever the oil is, the smell is still fairly strong,” Olsen said. The Salt Lake City Police Department told residents whose yards were polluted by the spill not to clean them up, but to file a claim with Chevron first. Chevron has said it is taking full responsibility for the spill and will pay for its cleanup. Harrison-Smith said Chevron had investigators at the scene of the leak Sunday and that the Environmental Protection Agency had brought in a U.S. Coast Guard water recovery expert to assist with cleanup efforts. She said city officials were hoping to receive a report on the spill from Chevron sometime Sunday evening. U.S. Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, said he spoke by telephone Sunday with Becky Roberts, president of the company's Chevron Pipe Line Co. unit. Matheson said Roberts told him that until Chevron crews dig up the broken section of pipe, the company can't be sure what caused the leak. Matheson is urging full disclosure on the leak's cause, and said his office will follow up to make sure Chevron follows EPA regulations. “I would say they are responding very aggressively to it. I think they know there is a heightened concern among people in this country about oil spills,” Matheson said. “I think they understand it's in their best interest to do everything they can to fix this as soon as possible.” Online: http://www.chevron-pipeline.com added by: captainplanet71

Oil Spill Hits Utah, Official says Oil spill hasn’t reached Great Salt Lake

Imagine if an oil spill happened in your town and contaminated a whole park… that's exactly what just happened in this Utah town. http://heraldextra.com/news/state-and-regional/article_b28deb54-3914-5051-8ce0-d… Emergency workers believe they have stopped a 21,000-gallon oil leak from reaching the environmentally sensitive Great Salt Lake, one of the West's most important inland water bodies for migratory birds that use it as a place to rest, eat and breed. But the spill has taken a toll on wildlife at area creeks and ponds, coating about 300 birds with oil and possibly threatening an endangered fish. The leak began Friday night when an underground Chevron Corp. pipeline in the mountains near the University of Utah broke. The breach sent oil into a creek that flows through neighborhoods, into a popular Salt Lake City park, and ultimately into the Jordan River, which flows into the Great Salt Lake. The 10-inch pipeline was shut off Saturday morning, when workers at a nearby Veterans Administration building smelled oil and called the Salt Lake City fire department, which notified Chevron. The pipe carries crude oil from western Colorado to a refinery near the Salt Lake City International Airport. Jason Olsen, spokesman for the Salt Lake City Joint Information Center, said Sunday that emergency workers believe they have contained the spill to the Jordan River. But the spill still took its toll on birds at Red Butte Creek and at a large pond at Liberty Park, where visitors often feed birds from the shore and on rented paddle boats. About 300 birds were coated in oil and cleaned at Utah's Hogle Zoo. Fewer than 10 have died, said Salt Lake City spokeswoman Lisa Harrison-Smith. Most of the birds were Canada geese, although some ducks were also covered. Harrison-Smith said the oil also flowed through several other riparian areas, which could threaten the June sucker. It's been listed as an endangered species since 1986. Most of Liberty Park reopened Sunday. The pond remained closed, and Olsen urged those who live near affected waterways to stay away from them. “Wherever the oil is, the smell is still fairly strong,” Olsen said. The Salt Lake City Police Department told residents whose yards were polluted by the spill not to clean them up, but to file a claim with Chevron first. Chevron has said it is taking full responsibility for the spill and will pay for its cleanup. Harrison-Smith said Chevron had investigators at the scene of the leak Sunday and that the Environmental Protection Agency had brought in a U.S. Coast Guard water recovery expert to assist with cleanup efforts. She said city officials were hoping to receive a report on the spill from Chevron sometime Sunday evening. U.S. Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, said he spoke by telephone Sunday with Becky Roberts, president of the company's Chevron Pipe Line Co. unit. Matheson said Roberts told him that until Chevron crews dig up the broken section of pipe, the company can't be sure what caused the leak. Matheson is urging full disclosure on the leak's cause, and said his office will follow up to make sure Chevron follows EPA regulations. “I would say they are responding very aggressively to it. I think they know there is a heightened concern among people in this country about oil spills,” Matheson said. “I think they understand it's in their best interest to do everything they can to fix this as soon as possible.” Online: http://www.chevron-pipeline.com added by: captainplanet71

‘The Karate Kid’: Crane Shot, By Kurt Loder

Jackie Chan sets up a star turn for the surprising, young Jaden Smith. Jaden Smith in “The Karate Kid” Photo: Columbia Pictures Is there a generation of 12-year-old girls out there yearning for a 12-year-old action-hunk to obsess about? If so, their prayers have been answered. In “The Karate Kid,” Jaden Smith, in only his third film, emerges as a charismatic star with what would seem, to this non-12-year-old girl, to be a precocious romantic appeal. The movie is a sort-of remake of the 1984 “Karate Kid,” which turned 23-year-old Ralph Macchio into a generational touchstone back in the day. Here, the bones of the original story remain, but they’ve been freely reassembled. In the first film, Macchio’s fish-out-of-water character had been forced to relocate from New Jersey to California — a puny challenge in this global age. Now, Smith’s character, Dre Parker, has to relocate all the way to China with his widowed mother (Taraji P. Henson), who’s been transferred there by the company for which she works. (A vague plot element, but really, who cares?) So Dre arrives in Beijing, friendless and alienated, and enrolls in some sort of international school. He hates his life. But then he meets a cute girl, a violin prodigy named Meiying (angel-faced Wenwen Han), whose disapproving father will soon complicate their budding relationship. Then, unfortunately, he meets a less-charming group of local hooligans led by an older kid named Cheng (Zhenwei Wang), who immediately start pushing him around. Dre tries to retaliate with some meager karate moves he learned off television back in the States, but the hooligans just sneer. Karate is a trifling Japanese discipline; the native Chinese martial art is kung fu (or, more precisely, I suppose, wushu). As we see, the movie’s title is entirely vestigial. One day, during a beatdown by Cheng and his friends, Dre is rescued by the maintenance man in the apartment building he now calls home. This is Mr. Han, and he’s played, in a bit of perfect casting, by the great Jackie Chan. Chan is such a warm and appealing presence that his entry into the story gives it a new emotional glow. Unbeknown to anyone, Mr. Han is actually a kung-fu master who has withdrawn from the world following a personal tragedy about which we only later learn. Informed that Cheng and company are members of a kung-fu team called the Fighting Dragons, he takes Dre to their training school to try to smooth things over. There, however, they also encounter the Dragons’ instructor, the snarling Master Li (Rongguang Yu), whose exhortations to his students (“No Mercy! Our enemies deserve pain!”) suggest that he hasn’t entirely internalized the spiritual component of his chosen art. At the point where Mr. Han volunteers Dre for an upcoming kung-fu tournament in which he’ll face off against the various Dragons, we begin a long wait for that showdown to actually happen. The movie runs nearly two-and-a-half hours, and you can tick off whole sequences that might have been cut, mainly welcome-to-Beijing travelogue footage of the city’s streets and parks and exotic markets (fried scorpions!). There are some lovely scenes at a sort of kung-fu temple high up in the mountains, and a visually arresting (if implausible) training session with Mr. Han and Dre high atop the Great Wall. This material takes up a lot of time, though. Presumably, having gone to considerable trouble to stage these and other interludes (including a rarely allowed visit to Beijing’s Forbidden City), director Harald Zwart was reluctant to compress them. Still, the movie flows. And the classical simplicity of the story leads us along smoothly to the high-flying tournament confrontation that concludes the picture. (Although the famous “crane kick” of the 1984 film, which belatedly crops up at this juncture, comes out of nowhere and for no particular reason.) Chan himself, who’s now 56 years old, doesn’t whip out any of the astonishing acrobatics for which he’s become famous over the last 40-odd years; but any slack in that department is skillfully taken up by Jaden Smith, who underwent what must have been intense training to develop whiplash martial skills of his own. As an actor, with his thoughtful composure and subtle humor, he strongly resembles his father, Will Smith, who co-produced the movie with his son’s mom, Jada Pinkett Smith. Happily, what they have wrought is not an exercise in rich-and-famous nepotism — it’s a showcase for a worthy heir. The kung-fu kid delivers. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Karate Kid” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos ‘Karate Kid’ Premieres In Los Angeles

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‘The Karate Kid’: Crane Shot, By Kurt Loder

Tea Party leader Mark Williams says Muslims worship a ‘monkey god’; blasts Ground Zero Mosque

A national Tea Party leader protesting a proposed mosque near near Ground Zero, has angered Muslims nationwide by saying they worship “the terrorists' monkey god.” Mark Williams, chairman of the Tea Party Express, blogged about the 13-story mosque and Islamic cultural center planned at Park Place and Broadway, calling it a monument to the 9/11 terrorists Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2010/05/19/2010-05-19_tea_party_leader_mark_… added by: riffhard98

Mathematicians Solve 140-Year-Old Boltzmann Equation

Two University of Pennsylvania mathematicians have found solutions to a 140-year-old, 7-dimensional equation that were not known to exist for more than a century despite its widespread use in modeling the behavior of gases. added by: danteglam

Four endangered mountain gorillas die in Rwanda

Four highly endangered mountain gorillas have been found dead in Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park, likely because of extreme cold in their mountain habitat, experts said Thursday. Some of the group were found still alive but dying earlier this week by trackers from the Karisoke Research Centre in the mountains of north-west Rwanda. “While the cause of death has yet to be determined, the gorillas are thought to have died because of the extreme cold and rainy conditions,” the World Wildlife Fund said in a statement. “The gorillas? current range is high on Mount Karisimbi, and at high altitude it will be even colder,” WWF said. The wildlife group said there were no signs of foul play but that the dead gorillas, one female and three infants, have been sent for autopsy to determine the cause of death. The four were part of a research group called Pablo. “Unless the post mortem results show something contagious, it may be just a natural event … likely to be down to the cold weather,” said Ian Redmond, a gorilla expert who is chief consultant with the UN's Great Ape Survival Partnership. “As in human populations, an extreme cold spell can be the cause of death for weak or ill individuals who might have otherwise recovered,” Redmond told AFP. Karisoke research centre was founded in 1967 by Dian Fossey, the US primatologist who brought mountain gorillas to the attention of the public and who was brutally murdered in the Virunga National Park in 1985. “The sudden death of the four is not only a great shock but also a big loss for Rwanda and for the whole conservation team,” said Rica Rwigamba, a tourism and conservation official at the Rwanda Development Board. The Virunga volcanoes on the borders of Rwanda, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo are home to about half of the world's 700 mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei). The other half live in Uganda's Bwindi Impenetrable Forest. Gorilla tracking is a major draw for tourists in Rwanda, with visitors paying 500 dollars for a permit to spend an hour with the primates in their bamboo forest habitat. http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gb2hOzVW2TGZ2etDI4r_ZxLlfhIA added by: julesrs007

Two activist receive $100,000 bail for non-violent protest at Massey Regional HQ

We teach our children to care for the earth. We teach them to defend their home and we say that the flag of these United States of America unifies us as a nation, that our country is their home. We teach them to take responsibility and speak out boldly against the tyranny of injustice and evil men. And them we jail them and label them as terrorists. It's just as likely that Bill Massey is a mass murderer. It is just as likely that the deaths of 29 miners in West Virginia were acts of murder funded by JPMorgan Chase in an effort to silence a growing internal resistance to Mountain Top Removal Mining or a group of miners intent on speaking out against repeated Massey Energy safety violations, the modern equivalent of burning them in a church, a longstanding tradition of West Virginia coal mine operators. A $100,000 suggests collaboration between Massey Energy and the West Virginia judicial system. It represents a war crime, an atrocity committed by felons against the children on the front lines of the Coal War. Who are we in America to stand in collusion by allowing evil men to prosper while our sons and daughters face brutal attacks for peaceful acts of courage? Who are we to sit in silent witness to the brutal murder of 29 miners and the weeping of their sons and daughters and wives and mothers? EmmaKate Martin and Benjamin Bryant are to be commended not condemned for their actions. They defended our mountains against the true eco-terrorists. They acted bravely just like we taught them to in school, to defend American soil against all enemies, foreign and domestic and we made it a crime of the highest order at a time when they should be decorated as heroes. http://itsgettinghotinhere.org/2010/05/17/two-activist-receive-100000-bail-for-n… added by: Willowguy

MTV News Visits Haiti To Track ‘Hope For Haiti Now’ Donations

MTV crew meets with Partners in Health to see how telethon donations are being used. By Gil Kaufman Victims of the Haiti earthquake Photo: MTV News Nearly two months after a massive earthquake leveled thousands of buildings and killed more than 200,000 people in Haiti, MTV News returned to the island in late February to follow the trail of some of the more than $65 million raised during January’s “Hope for Haiti Now” telethon . MTV News’ Sway traveled to Haiti to follow a mission from Partners in Health, which is providing crucially needed food, water and medical supplies to the millions of Haitians displaced by the 7.0 earthquake thanks to an $8 million grant from “Hope for Haiti Now.” From a collection point in Miami to the airport in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince, Sway and company tracked the shipment of a pallet of goods tagged with a “Hope for Haiti Now” sticker as it made its way to the Caribbean island. “[This shipment contains] surgical supplies, and especially urgent, we have wound VACs [which clean open wounds to avoid infection], which go to help keep wounds clean, protects against infection, and we need it really urgently up in Cange, which is our main site,” Jonathan Lascher of Partners in Health said on the tarmac in Port-au-Prince as the shipment was unloaded from a cargo plane. The crew then piled into vehicles for the three-hour ride up into the mountains to deliver the kits to Cange, driving past the miles of temporary tent cities and piles of rubble left in the wake of the quake. “The epicenter of the earthquake was just outside of Port-au-Prince, and most of the major destruction was in Port-au-Prince, but as a result of that destruction, hundreds of thousands of people have been fleeing Port-au-Prince out into the other regions of Haiti,” Lascher explained. As a result, the patient load in more remote cities has greatly increased, as has the need for funding to care for the displaced wounded. Upon arrival in Cange, the vital nature of the shipment became immediately clear as doctors in the town said they were needed urgently for surgeries scheduled for that very day. “We only have enough dressings left to finish one or two cases today,” Partners in Health’s Sarah Marsh said. “And we have many, many more children particularly who are in need of VACs and new dressings.” The kits are crucial to saving limbs in danger of being lost, one of the most common medical issues in the wake of the disaster and a mission that Dr. Aaron Glynn said was akin to saving lives in the troubled nation where tens of thousands face amputation due to infection and lack of adequate medical care. Sway then watched as one of the wound VACs was used during a surgery to save the leg of a 13-year-old quake victim. “No VAC, no leg,” he said from the surgical theater. “This is a prime example of positive action here on the ground on the frontlines in Haiti, right now.” Learn more about what you can do to help with earthquake-relief efforts in Haiti , and for more information, see Think MTV . Visit HopeForHaitiNow.org or call (877) 99-HAITI to make a donation now. Related Videos ‘Hope For Haiti Now’ Backstage Interviews MTV News Extended Play: The Story Behind “Hope For Haiti Now” SuChin Pak Visits Haiti Related Photos Hope For Haiti Now | Backstage Hope For Haiti Now | Live Event Coverage ‘Hope For Haiti Now’ Participants Hope For Haiti Now | Performers

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MTV News Visits Haiti To Track ‘Hope For Haiti Now’ Donations

Venice, Telluride Fests Build Buzz For Fall’s Most-Anticipated Movies

‘Up in the Air,’ ‘The Informant!’ and George Clooney’s girlfriend, Elisabetta Canalis, were the talk of the weekend. By Eric Ditzian George Clooney and girlfriend, Elisabetta Canalis Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/ Getty Images In the mountains of Colorado and along the canals of Italy this weekend, two film festivals delivered advance looks at films that are quickly becoming among the most anticipated of the upcoming months.

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Venice, Telluride Fests Build Buzz For Fall’s Most-Anticipated Movies