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Wong Yue Sie died at 49

Wong Yue Sie is survived by his wife, Mdm Choy Sok Cheng, 47, and two teenage daughters. SingHealth#39;s Group chief operating officer, Dr Wong Yue Sie has died after developing a massive stroke. He was 49. SingHealth says that despite emergency surgery after his stroke last Friday, Dr Wong succumbed to the severity of the condition yesterday, without regaining consciousness. In a statement, SingHealth#39;s Group CEO Professor Tan Ser Kiat said that they have ve lost a gifted clinician leader

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Wong Yue Sie died at 49

James McAvoy To Star In ‘X-Men: First Class’

Actor has been cast as a young Charles Xavier. By Adam Rosenberg James McAvoy Photo: Getty Images The X-Men are coming back, but not the way most know them. Fox is prepping “X-Men: First Class” for a June 3, 2011, release, and the big news is that James McAvoy will star as a young Charles Xavier, better known by his superhero name, Professor X. The Hollywood Reporter broke the news Thursday, though there’s no word yet whether McAvoy’s younger X will sport the older character’s trademark baldness. Previous “X-Men” movies, which have drawn characters directly from the comics, feature an older Charles Xavier played by Patrick Stewart. In “X-Men: First Class,” the story rolls the mythology back to a time long before Cyclops, Jean Grey and the rest of the crew lived and learned under the tutelage of Stewart’s Professor X. Next year’s movie will instead focus on the relationship between Charles Xavier and Eric Lensherr, the mutant who one day becomes supervillain and X-Men arch-nemesis Magneto. Before they parted ways, Xavier and Lensherr were close friends and allies. According to Fox’s description, “First Class” finds the two working together “with other mutants (some familiar, some new) to stop the greatest threat that the world has ever known.” These events directly inform their split, with Xavier going off to form his crime-fighting mutant X-Men while Lensherr assembles the more militant, human-hating Brotherhood. For McAvoy, “First Class” isn’t exactly new territory. The actor previously starred in “Wanted,” Timur Bekmambetov’s slick action movie loosely adapted from the Mark Millar comic books. Next year’s “X-Men” will be directed by Matthew Vaughn, who also has some recent comics experience, adapting Millar’s “Kick-Ass.” The story for “First Class” comes from “X-Men” and “Superman Returns” director Bryan Singer, who will produce with Lauren Shuler Donner and Simon Kinberg. For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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James McAvoy To Star In ‘X-Men: First Class’

Bono Released From Hospital After Back Surgery, U2 Postpones 360 Tour Dates Until 2001

LOS ANGELES — U2 lead singer Bono has been released from Ludwig Maximilians-University (LMU) Hospital in Munich, where he underwent emergency surgery on Friday for a back injury. “Bono suffered severe compression of the sciatic nerve,” Dr. Muller Wohlfahrt said in a statement on the band’s official Web site. “On review of his MRI scan, I realized there was a serious tear in the ligament and a herniated disc, and that conservative treatment would not suffice. I recommended Bono have emergency spine surgery with Professor Tonn at Munich’s LMU University Hospital on Friday.” read more

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Bono Released From Hospital After Back Surgery, U2 Postpones 360 Tour Dates Until 2001

Disputed Arrangement Puts the "Yellowstone 87" Bison on Ted Turner’s Montana Range – Turner Can Use Bison for Breeding or Sale

Photo: Bison wander out of Yellowstone National Park in Montana to give birth or find fresh grazing. May 21, 2010 Disputed Deal Puts Yellowstone Bison on Ted Turner’s Range By KIRK JOHNSON BOZEMAN, Mont. — When dozens of wild American bison wandered out of Yellowstone National Park in search of greener grass and wound up five years later sheltered on a giant ranch owned by Ted Turner, media mogul and bison meat kingpin, the species reached what many believe could be a turning point. Mr. Turner, under an unusual custodial contract with the state of Montana, offered to shepherd the animals for the next five years as part of an experimental program. It will grant him a sizable portion of their offspring in exchange, much to the chagrin of environmentalists who sued the state, saying the bison belong to the public. Mr. Turner is not restrained from using the bison for commercial breeding or sale. The “Yellowstone 87” are a kind of Noah’s ark of their kind. Genetically, these bison still carry the shaggy swagger of their Ice Age forebears that lived alongside saber-toothed cats and woolly mammoths. Montana wildlife managers hope they will be the fount for establishing new free-roaming populations elsewhere in the state or around the West — if the animals prove, through the five years of testing, to be free of diseases that can infect cattle, especially brucellosis. At the heart of the controversy is the human intervention that has shaped the animal’s history, from the brink of extinction around 1900 to their strange modern status. They are now raised for meat by the hundreds of thousands on private ranches, or left to roam free in Yellowstone. On Friday, with the snow-capped Big Belt Mountains in the distance, the animals on Mr. Turner’s ranch looked straight out of Frederic Remington — calves frolicked and cows dozed while a giant bull stood his ground, staring down a group of would-be intruders on his realm. A lawsuit by a coalition of environmentalists argues that the state, by facilitating the bison’s passage from wild to owned — and by the biggest purveyor of bison meat in the nation, no less, through Mr. Turner’s vast ranches and restaurant chain, Ted’s Montana Grill — violates its duty to manage wildlife, like water or air, for the good of all. In court papers filed this month, state officials said that they were working for the benefit of the species, and that the plight of individual animals — by their calculation, about 188 bison will be born over the next five years and remain in Mr. Turner’s possession — did not cancel out the higher goal. They also say that Mr. Turner filled an urgent need: The 87 animals spent more than four years in quarantine for a round of disease testing and needed a bigger home on the range, and Mr. Turner’s ranch and expertise were unmatched. The cattle industry remains a powerful cultural force in Montana, and is generally no big fan of Mr. Turner’s, given his openly expressed disdain for cattle. It has opposed the establishment of free-roaming bison populations that could compete with cattle for grass on federal grazing lands or endanger herds with disease. And so this week, as they do every spring in a process called hazing, state workers and livestock agents used helicopters, horses and trucks to chase back the wild bison that had wandered out of Yellowstone to give birth or find fresh grass. About five miles from the park boundary, an odd dynamic was in play. In a residential area of vacation and retirement homes, a group of 15 animals sauntered and grazed. Frisky calves a week or two old gallumphed about, butting against their stolid mothers. But a few miles a way, a hazing operation, with helicopter overhead, was chasing another herd back in as volunteers from the Buffalo Field Campaign, a group that opposes the forced removal of the animals from lands on park borders, monitored and photographed on the ground. (“Buffalo” and “bison” are used interchangeably.) “Every year is different, and the animals are always incredible, so I keep coming back,” said Cindy Rosin, 33, an elementary school art teacher from Queens, who was in her fifth season as a hazing monitor. But the tangled web of bison life here, and the new chapter of its history beginning on Mr. Turner’s Flying D Ranch, raise major questions for environmentalists, ranchers and bison chefs, too — most notably perhaps, what does it mean to be wild? Are bison like the 3,000 or so inside Yellowstone, confined and accustomed to gawking tourists, truly wilder than their ranch-raised cousins? And should one group of animals have the right to roam free — with environmentalists and lawyers as allies, ready to file lawsuits — while the other group is just burgers on the hoof? About 70,000 ranch bison go to slaughter each year according to the National Bison Association, a ranchers’ trade group, about one-fifth of them from Mr. Turner’s herd of about 55,000 animals. A biological wrinkle further compounds those questions. Most ranch-raised bison, unlike their Yellowstone cousins, carry a few cattle genes, wildlife biologists say, mostly from cross-breeding experiments early in the 20th century. But Yellowstone bison, marooned in the park during the decades of widespread slaughter elsewhere, are considered genetically pure. Mr. Turner would not be interviewed, but in application documents with the state he said that the offspring he kept would be used to “increase the genetic diversity” in a bison herd on another Turner ranch in New Mexico. His company, Turner Enterprises, specifically said it could make no guarantees about the animals’ ultimate use or fate. In the past, bison from the New Mexico herd, which the filing said originated from Yellowstone breeding stock in the 1930s, have been sold to private parties. On Friday, Turner Enterprises allowed journalists a first look at the Yellowstone 87 now roaming on 12,000 acres at the Flying D Ranch, about a half-hour from Bozeman. In the three months since their arrival, and the onset of calving season, their number has grown to 94, with eight new calves (one of the original herd died). Six, under the formula, will stay behind as Turner property. “This may sound simplistic, but we are doing this to help,” said Russell Miller, the general manager of Turner Enterprises, explaining that the idea of giving the animals ample room and board without taking any cash for their services came from the Turner side. “We knew the state was cash-strapped and we thought it would be a palatable solution,” he said. One expert on environmental law and the public trust, Prof. Mary C. Wood, said the Turner arrangement, whether proven illegal or not in court, had put the state in an awkward position. The potential trouble comes not from having a management deal to shelter and test the bison, she said, but from making it a cashless transaction, with payment in a sort of barter of live, presumably state-protected animals. “Under public trust doctrine, the state has a 100 percent obligation to protect the species,” said Professor Wood, the director of the Environmental and Natural Resources Law program at the University of Oregon Law School. “When it starts walking the line of contracting out its essential sovereign functions and bartering the yield that comes out of that, it raises very serious questions.” added by: EthicalVegan

Well-Done Meat Lovers Will Most Likely to Develop Bladder Cancer

Most of us has been lovers of meat. Majority of us prefer to eat meat rather than vegetables even before when we were still kids. Aside from loving the meat per se, we also love our meats to be well-done or slightly burned. According to experts, meat that has been fried, grilled and barbecued until meat is charred can form cancer-causing chemicals. People whose diets included well-done meats were over twice as likely to develop bladder cancer than those who preferred meats rare. The University of Texas investigators found the risk was highest for those who ate well-done red meat such as steaks, pork chops and bacon. It is not only true to pork but to chicken, beef and fish as well when it is eaten nearly charred. Professor Xifeng Wu, the lead author of the study said that this research reinforces the relationship between diet and cancer. The charred food contains heterocyclic amines (HCAs), one of the cancer chemicals and has raised cancer risk by more than two-and-a-half. “These results strongly support what we suspected – people who eat a lot of red meat, particularly well-done red meat, such as fried or barbecued, seem to have a higher likelihood of bladder cancer”, Professor Wu added. Well-Done Meat Lovers Will Most Likely to Develop Bladder Cancer is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Bay of Bengal Island Vanished Under the Sea

For India it is known to be The New Moore Island and for Bangladesh it is the South Talpatti Island. The two countries has been fighting for territorial claims of this island for years. As of this time, they won’t be fighting for it anymore because nature itself has claimed it as his own. The island has already vanished under the sea. Recent satellites images show the whole island under water, says the School of Oceanographic Studies in Calcutta. The nearby islands might as well follow it due to rising of sea level. “What these two countries could not achieve from years of talking, has been resolved by global warming,” said Professor Sugata Hazra of the School of Oceanographic Studies at Jadavpur University in Calcutta. If anyone would wish to visit the island right now, well, you would probably be needing a submarine already. These loss of lands has been an annual event in which Bangladeshis has already accepted. Bay of Bengal Island Vanished Under the Sea is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

2010 New York Festivals TV & Film Awards – Philippines Finalist

From 30 different countries Philippines have six(6) finalist in the 2010 New York Festivals TV & Film Awards. 3 finalists are from GMA Network, 2 from ABS-CBN and 1 from Unico Entertainment. 1. Best News Analysis/Commentary: News on Q (QTV-11) 2. Docudrama: Case Unclosed (GMA Network, Inc.) 3. Documentaries: The Last Journey of Ninoy (Unico Entertainment) 4. Environment & Ecology: Planet Philippines (GMA Network, Inc.) 5. Music Video: Low Budget: Boto Mo, iPatrol Mo: Ako Ang Simula (ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation) 6. News Promotion category: Pagpag (ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation) The 2010 New York Festivals TV & Film Awards will be held on May 3, 2010 at the Penthouse Lobby of the American Airlines Theater in New York City. NYF decided to combine both the Television Programming Awards and the Film & Video Awards to create one of the world’s largest international competitions dedicated to both the TV and film industries. 2010 New York Festivals TV & Film Awards – Philippines Finalist is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

YouTube’s Best Stunt Fails

Brett Erlich teaches you how to reach viral video fame with the very best daredevil fails on YouTube. Viral Video Film School is a recurring segment on the weekly television show infoMania. In each episode of VVFS, Professor Brett Erlich teaches you valuable skills in the discipline of Viral Video making. So sit down, take notes, and try not to piss him off. For more Brett visit http://current.com/viral-video-film-school-im/ and Current TV. infoMania is a half-hour satirical news show that airs on Current TV. The show puts a comedic spin on the 24-hour chaos and information overload brought about by the constant bombardment of the media. Hosted by Conor Knighton and co-starring Brett Erlich, Sarah Haskins, Ben Hoffman, Bryan Safi and Sergio Cilli, the show airs on Thursdays at 10 pm Eastern and Pacific Times and can be found online at http://current.com/infomania/ or on Current TV. And make sure to check out our facebook profile for special features at http://infomaniafacebook.com . added by: Brett_Erlich

American Idol: The Blind Side [Recaps]

You there, Seacrest! What day is this? Oh I had the most wondrous vision last night. Last night I think I actually cared about this season of American Idol . I felt real feelings. Too bad they were angry feelings. Yeah. Those eliminations last night? They were bunk , man. Well three quarters of them were, at least. But we’ll get to those in a moment. You know what else was bunk, though? That new bit they tried called Two Completely Forgettable Contestants From Last Year Do Dueling Pianos. What the Dunkleman was that thing? And then afterward Seacrest walked up to Scott the Blind Guy and it was all “Hey, dude how’s it going, dude” and all faux relaxed and shit when all Seacrest was thinking was “Don’t try to high-five him. Don’t try to high-five him. Oh god, don’t try to high-five him.” And then Matt Giraud was on the other side. Matt Giraud, ladies and gentlemen. Him. Nothing says “music star” quite like… Matt Giraud. He said he was working on some stuff, a jazz tune he did with some lady had hit number one on iTunes’ jazz charts. Oh I’ll bet iTunes’ Jazz Charts are just a bumping place to be, here in the year 2010. Ohhhhhh smoooooth jazz on the computer. So many people who love jazz know how to operate a computer. Jazz. Matt Giraud. Ladies and gentlemen. The eliminations! Todrick Hall This was not surprising. The guy just didn’t have much steam. He was perfectly capable, but would always be known as the dancer who was trying to sing. For whatever reason, folks just don’t cotton to that kind of thing on Idol . I think in some ways they don’t want to root for someone who’s already sorta worked in The Biz. Todrick was on Broadway. There’s not a lot of come-up-from-nowhereism in that story. Plus, he just wasn’t the strongest vocalist. Plain and simple. Simple and plain. Goodbye Todrick! See you on the White Way. The Witch of Blackbird Pond This was surprising! I thought people loved Willa the Wisp. Though maybe she suffered from a sort of vote-splitting kind of thing. Those that wanted weird-haired ladyguitar went for Crystal Bloomersmacks, and those that wanted a pretty girl who plinked out a few notes on her cute little mandolute went for Didi Baloney. So Elizabeth Proctor just got stuck in the middle, left to fend for herself with nothing but her fading witch powers to protect her. It’s too bad, because the gal had chops. And she was up against Katie Stevens! This season’s second most-annoying contestant! (After Haeley, of course and forever.) Though in America’s defense, sort of, I will say that Professor Trelawney was maybe one of the worst-styled contestants in American Idol history. (OK, that’s probably overreaching, but.) I mean those ridiculous gray tatters of hair. Gray!!!! On a show about youth and spunk! You’re gonna show up with motherfucking gray hair you idiot? Gah. Plus she always wore fourteen layers of pancake makeup and then no color, so her whole face, lips included, were this washed-out mess. I mean she looked really terrible . So I get that, America. You are all horrible shallow people, but I get you. Because I too am a horrible shallow person. The witch has been burned at the stake of public opinion. Now. What else floats? Very small rocks? Churches? Katelyn Epperly This was really a “The fuck?” moment last night. She was up against Paige Miles. Yes, the Paige Miles. Paige Miles who’s had no idea where she is for weeks now. She wants to go home but is too nervous to ask anyone how exactly she can go about doing that. “Well, I don’t want to bother them, they all seem so busy… I’ll just stand here. They’ll figure it out eventually.” Except they won’t, Paige! They once put a cat scratching post through to the final two! They didn’t notice until almost the very end! You could literally put a wig on a shoe and the Idol producers would be like “Great great, get this kid in hair and makeup, we’re live in ten.” Paige, you need to say something. Just tell them you have an emergency or something. It’ll be fine. But if you don’t, then more people like Katelyn Epperly, a deserving contestant, will be sent home. Epperly! Can you believe it? What is America thinking? First, and most importantly, she’s pretty. (Though I suppose that doesn’t matter that much to the TeenScream 5000 voting collective.) But also she was certainly one of the better singers out of the rumpled and disastrous ladies. And yet, now she’s dead. Dead and buried. Out by that old creepy shed in the back. A sad little barely-marked grave. Just a cross of sticks. Ryan muttering “In spirito sancto…” and blessing himself and walking away. A cold moon perched in the sky. The air in wisps. A faraway cackle. The Witch out there somewhere in the woods, planning. Alex Lambert Watch this at the 1:35 mark. That’s how I feel about you, America. No, ya didn’t. YOU ELIMINATED THE BEST GUY. Ohhhhhh I know Fozzie Bear sang that pretty Maxwell song on Wednesday and hurbity-burbity. But will you ever actually buy that fool’s slow-moans album? No, you won’t. Would you buy Carol Brady’s album of teen-centric Jason Mraz songs? Yeah, you would. So why are you not voting for him, America? I suppose I could have done my part and cast a vote or two, but I’m just one man. I just don’t understand this. That Teenager from Texas is still on the show! Still on the show! And Alex Lambert, the great white hope of Idol season 27 has now been tossed in a shallow grave next to Epperly, two blondes not making a right, his sad and beautiful mullet lost forever to the ages. I do not understand. I will never understand. I just want to know why. So that’s that and here’s your Top 12, America! You’ve got Fozzie Bear, Idi Amin, a kid from Texas who’s someday going to go on a shooting spree from a bell tower or settle down with a nice fellow named Bruce or both, Katie the Uneven Stevens, the Egghead Latino who somehow made it through, a couple of other people, Paige Miles who’s starting to really get worried that they might never let her leave, and Tim Urban. Tim Urban. Sex bomb. Hollister mannequin. Beautiful disaster. This is the worst season of American Idol in history. And the worst part? All of a sudden, I care .

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American Idol: The Blind Side [Recaps]

How to Make Weapons at Home (Preview) – Viral Video Film School

Brett gives you a little preview of this Thursday's Viral Video Film School: Weapons of Little or No Destruction. If you have any good weapons videos for Brett to use in the show, send them to him: Brett@Current.com infoMania. In each episode of VVFS, Professor Brett Erlich teaches you valuable skills in the discipline of Viral Video making. So sit down, take notes, and try not to piss him off. For more Brett visit http://current.com/viral-video-film-school-im/ and Current TV. infoMania is a half-hour satirical news show that airs on Current TV. The show puts a comedic spin on the 24-hour chaos and information overload brought about by the constant bombardment of the media. Hosted by Conor Knighton and co-starring Brett Erlich, Sarah Haskins, Ben Hoffman, Bryan Safi and Sergio Cilli, the show airs on Thursdays at 10 pm Eastern and Pacific Times and can be found online at http://current.com/infomania/ or on Current TV. And make sure to check out our facebook profile for special features at http://infomaniafacebook.com . added by: Brett_Erlich