Spitzer’s call girl Ashley Dupre walks runway at NY Fashion Week

Melbourne, September 17 (ANI): Ashley Dupre, the former high-class call girl at the centre of the Eliot Spitzer prostitution scandal, walked the runway during New York Fashion Week.

The 24-year-old made the appearance at Bahar Shahpar’s fashion show, according to Jill Fehrenbacher at Ecouterre.

“It’s a rare rare thing when the tabloid world crosses into the world of eco-fashion, and one that might bring a little more attention to Bahar’s already-provocative line than would normally have been the case,” the Courier Mail quoted Fehrenbacher as saying.

Dupre was dubbed as an ‘informant’ during the scandal that saw the politician patronising a prostitution service that subsequently led to his resignation from the post of New York Governor.

Eighteen months after the storm, Dupre has been recording pop songs and wooing a record deal. (ANI)

Lady GaGa nips out in racy see-through lace catsuit at NY fashion week

London, September 16 (ANI): Lady GaGa continued her shock tactics as she stepped out in a bizarre see-through red lace catsuit teamed up with eye mask and eccentric spiky hair piece at the New York fashion week.

The singer’s modesty was said to be hardly covered by a barely there red G-string and an almost-strategically placed ruffle on her costume.

Meanwhile, the 23-year-old recently gave a blood-covered performance and faked her own death at the MTV Video Music Awards, during which she changed her outfit five times, reports the Daily Mail.

However, the ‘Poker Face’ hitmaker’s appearance was said to be a little toned down at the Marc Jacobs Spring Summer 2010 fashion show after party, where she bumped into fellow ‘shocker’ Madonna.

Madonna admitted she was “very flattered” by comparisons to the newcomer.

The Queen of Pop complimented the star, saying: “She looks like she’s going to a carnival in Venice, very beautiful.” (ANI)

High-priced hooker’s mum dismayed over ex-NY Guv Spitzer’s comeback moves

New York, Sep.2 (ANI): The mother of the high-priced hooker who famously serviced former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer has expressed dismay over reports that he may consider running for office again less than two years after the sordid sex scandal.

“Only in America,” Ashley Dupre’s mom, Carolyn Capalbo, told The New York Post.

While Spitzer is discussing the possibility of a run next year, Dupre-who was 22 when the self-described “steamroller” of Albany paid to play with her-is struggling to get back on her feet, said Capalbo.

“I really can’t blame him, but at the same time, my daughter’s having a rough go,” she said at the beach, near her home in Wall. “I can imagine she’s not happy about it.”

“He has more credibility than a 22-year-old,” Ashley’s mom said in disbelief.

Capalbo said her daughter had turned down lucrative offers to make a buck off of the scandal, including posing for nude magazines.

Less than 18 months after he left Albany in a prostitution scandal, Spitzer has held informal discussions in recent weeks about the possibility of making a bid for state comptroller or the US Senate seat currently held by Kirsten Gillibrand, sources said.

The hooker-happy Democrat has also discussed his own halfway-decent poll numbers in recent surveys, which have shown him more popular than Gov. Paterson, whose own numbers have tanked.

“He”s weighing it,” said one source.

But Spitzer hasn”t shown any interest in campaigning for the office he briefly held, sources said.

The sources stressed that Spitzer, who also served two terms as state attorney general before his landslide election as governor in 2006, has not engaged in any active discussions with political consultants.

Reached at his father”s real-estate firm, where he has been working since he resigned as governor last spring, Spitzer declined comment.

But a source close to him insisted, “It”s not true,” and two other close associates also insisted he was not interested in running for office again and was looking at a range of other options.

Spitzer quit in disgrace in March 2008 after he was unmasked in Manhattan federal court as “Client 9″ in a prostitution bust involving a major call-girl ring. He was revealed to have paid 4,300 dollars for a romp with escort Ashley Dupre, then 22. (ANI)

Britney, kids taken for a rickshaw ride in NY

London, Aug 26 (ANI): Britney Spears recently took her two babies on a rickshaw ride for a sightseeing tour of New York.

A bodyguard accompanied the singer and her kids, Jayden James and Sean Preston.

The ‘Womanizer’ hitmaker toured the Big Apple’s most famous sights, reports The Sun.

She later performed at Madison Square Garden, as part of the second half of her Circus tour.

It was first of the three shows she is scheduled to do at the place before she heads to Boston.

Britney’s Circus tour will end with her performances in America and Australia. (ANI)

‘Free sex shows’ turn NY hotel tourist attraction

New York, Aug 25 (ANI): The plush Standard hotel in New York has become a tourist attraction as randy guests are performing sex acts in front of the floor-to-ceiling hotel windows.

Guests at the hotel have been spotted romping, drying off and even pleasuring themselves in full view of onlookers.

People strolling in the newly opened High Line urban park near the hotel are witnessing a free peep show and now more people are flocking to the area to catch a glimpse.

Andre Landeros Michel, 34, a Chelsea designer, who regularly ventures over to view randy Standard guests having sex in front of the massive floor-to-ceiling windows in full view of the park, said that it’s a

“It’s a little peep show-but instead of being on 42nd Street, it’s down here at the High Line,” the New York Post quoted Landeros Michel as saying.

A Parks Department worker said that plenty of people come to the park specifically to watch the erotic exhibitionism.

Harlem resident Aaron Lipman, 34, a media research analyst who works near the park, said: “I think it’s healthy and fun — it’s flirtatious. It’s like ‘Wild Kingdom.’ (ANI)

Musician reunites with £300K violin forgotten in NY cab through GPS!

London, August 19 (ANI): A musician has GPS technology to thank for a reunion with his 300,000-pound violin that he forgot in a New York cab.

Hahn-Bin left the 18th century instrument in a yellow taxi while heading back home from a concert.

The absent-minded 22-year-old later realised his loss after reaching his Chinatown apartment and called the city’s taxi authorities and the police.

“Losing an instrument is a greatest fear, even more than making a mistake on stage,” the Telegraph quoted Hahn-Bin as saying.

The taxi dispatcher located the cab with ease since all yellow taxis are fitted with GPS trackers.

Overnight records showed that the musician had been dropped off by Dalbir Singh, before the driver finished his shift and headed home to New Jersey, where the violin was safely waiting. (ANI)

Les Paul | Les Paul Death | Les Paul Died | Les Paul Dead | Gibson | Gibson Les Paul | Les Paul Expired | Les Paul Passed Away | Les Paul is No More | Les Paul Grammy Award Winner

Les Paul | Les Paul Death | Les Paul Died | Les Paul Dead | Gibson | Gibson Les Paul | Les Paul Expired | Les Paul Passed Away | Les Paul is No More | Les Paul Grammy Award Winner

Lester William Polsfuss, known as Les Paul, 94, a Grammy Award-winning guitar virtuoso and inventor of the solid-body electric guitar and recording studio innovations changed the course of 20th-century popular music, who helped bring his instrument to the forefront of jazz and rock-and-roll performance,died today at a hospital in White Plains, N.Y.

Les Paul was a pioneer in the development of the solid-body electric guitar which “made the sound of rock and roll possible. His many recording innovations included overdubbing known as sound on sound, delay effects such as tape delay, phasing effects, and multitrack recording.

His innovative talents extended into his unique playing style, including licks, trills, chording sequences, fretting techniques and timing, which set him apart from his contemporaries and inspired many of the guitarists of the present day.

Paul first became interested in music at the age of eight, when he began playing the harmonica. After an attempt at learning to play the banjo, he began to play the guitar. By 13, Paul was performing semi-professionally as a country-music guitarist. At the age of 17, Paul played with Rube Tronson’s Texas Cowboys.

Paul received a Grammy Trustees Award for his lifetime achievements in 1983. Les Paul was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in May 2005 for his development of the solid-body electric guitar. In 2006, Paul was inducted into the National Broadcasters Hall of Fame. He was named an honorary member of the Audio Engineering Society.

On November 15, 2008, Les Paul received the American Music Masters award through the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame at a tribute concert in the State Theater in ClevelandLes Paul was an Honorary Board Member for Little Kids Rock, a nonprofit dedicated to bringing free musical instruments and music instruction to underserved schools across the United States of America.

Migraines more common in women than men

Washington, June 26 (ANI): Next time your wife complaints about migraine pain, don’t think of it as an excuse for not cooking food, for the most common type of headache that sends patients running to their doctor’s office is more common in women than men, says a new study.

Migraines occur when constricting blood vessels in the brain cause intense, recurring vascular headaches.

Approximately three out of four migraine sufferers are women and researchers have often cited hormones as a possible explanation.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, over half of migraines in women transpire right before, during or after a woman has her menstrual period.

And while some women experience migraines throughout their cycle, menstrual-related migraines could be one trigger of the condition.

Right before a woman’s cycle begins, the levels of oestrogen and progesterone drop sharply.

Such a drop in hormone levels may initiate migraine headaches because oestrogen is known to control brain chemicals that affect pain sensation in women.

“Like in all neurological diseases, a combination of genetics and environment play a role. One environmental factor is oestrogen but a genetic predisposition has been firmly established,” said Richard Pearl, MD, a clinical neurologist in Suffolk County, N.Y.

While hormones cannot give a clear picture behind the phenomenon, a recent study has revealed that women with a history of migraines may be less likely to develop breast cancer than other women.

As breast cancer is linked to higher lifetime exposure to oestrogen, the fact that migraines are more common when there is a drop in oestrogen could support the hormone theory. (ANI)

How small ‘guys’ can get the ‘gals’ just as their bigger counterparts

Washington, June 25 (ANI): In the world of yellow dung flies, the small guys can also get the girl, but only if they are hanging out on apple pomace instead of cow dung, reveals a new study.

While the large, brawny males almost always have an upper hand in getting a mate, but this is the first time that alternative male reproductive strategies have been observed in this species.

Syracuse University (N.Y.) undergraduate students found that small male dung flies, which are traditionally unsuccessful at finding and keeping mates on dung pats, successfully mated with females feeding on composting apple pomace.

In fact, large males were generally absent from the pomace mounds.

“This is a new chapter in the story of yellow dung flies. No one has carefully studied this species off the dung. Small male dung flies can’t compete with their larger counterparts on the dung, so in this case, they developed a different tactic to successfully pass their genes to the next generation,” said Scott Pitnick, professor of biology in SU’s College of Arts and Sciences.

The students were tasked with designing a study around the size and mating success of yellow dung flies.

“After we made our initial field observations for the class assignment, we could tell from our professors’ reactions that our discovery was a piece of important information in the field. The course was designed to teach us how to be biologists; as such, we made a unique observation that ultimately resulted in a publication,” said Stephen Maheux ’09, a biology major who graduated in May.

The researchers believed that yellow dung flies mated almost exclusively on manure and females were drawn to the dung only when they are ready to mate.

However, Pitnick said that not much is known about the feeding habits of females when they are not at the dung pats.

On the other hand, males were thought to hang out almost exclusively around the manure, awaiting the arrival of the females.

Competition on the dung among males is fierce and can result in injury or death to smaller males as well as females caught up in the struggle.

However, on Toad Hollow Farms in Nedrow, N.Y., the students noticed large numbers of females feeding on apple pomace in a field adjacent to the cow pasture where they were observing flies on dung pats.

Surprisingly, the females were frequently mating on the pomace, and with males that were significantly smaller in size than those found in the cow pasture.

Furthermore, none of the sexually aggressive behaviours normally observed on the dung pats occurred on the pomace.

Apple pomace is the pressed pulp that remains after juicing.

The students’ initial observations suggested that the availability of the pomace seemed to provide male dung flies with alternative mating opportunities.

The study is published in the latest issue of Proceedings of The Royal Society. (ANI)

Yoko Ono holds back tears at press unveiling of Lennon’s NY exhibition

Washington, May 12 (ANI): John Lennon’s widow Yoko Ono kept her tears from pouring while speaking about a forthcoming New York exhibition in honour of the late Beatle.

The exhibition, entitled John Lennon: The New York City Years, will feature the singer’s personal possessions public for the first time at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Annex.

Items like guitars, a posthumous Grammy Award, and the star’s iconic New York City T-shirt are set to go on public display.

And Ono, who held herself together while discussing Lennon’s love for the city in which he was murdered, continues to get upset when the tragedy is mentioned.

“It (the bag) was hard to include. And I thought it might be criticised as well,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

“I know it’s a kind of a sad and very poignant kind of paradox that he loved this place so much and this is where he was killed. I still get affected by it. If it (his death) was a slow a process we could have talked about it or something,” she said. (ANI)

NYT wins five Pulitzers

New York, Apr.21 (ANI): The New York Times picked up five Pulitzer Prizes today, the most of any publication.

Times reporter David Barstow won the Investigative prize for his report on the relationship between the Pentagon and TV military analysts.

The Times also won staff awards for Breaking News in covering the Eliot Spitzer scandal – which included as many as 25 reporters – and International for political fallout in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Art critic Holland Cotter won for Criticism, and Damon Winter took the prize for Feature Photography.

The St. Petersburg Times won two awards: National Reporting (for PolitFact) and Feature Writing (Lane DeGregory).

The Washington Post, after picking up six last year, took home one award – Eugene Robinson for Commentary.

Other awards went to the Las Vegas Sun (Public Service) Los Angeles Times (Explanatory Reporting); Detroit Free Press (Local Reporting); Mark Mahoney of The Post-Star, Glens Falls, N.Y. (Editorial Writing); Steve Breen of The San Diego Union-Tribune (Editorial Cartooning); and The Miami Herald’s Patrick Farrell (Breaking News Photography).

Newsweek editor Jon Meacham won the Biography award for his book “American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House.”

The rest of Letters, Drama and Music were as follows: “Olive Kitteridge” by Elizabeth Strout (Fiction); “Ruined” by Lynn Nottage (Drama); “The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family” by Annette Gordon-Reed (History); “The Shadow of Sirius” by W.S. Merwin (Poetry); “Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II” by Douglas A. Blackmon (General Nonfiction); and “Double Sextet” by Steve Reich, premiered March 26, 2008, in Richmond, Va. (Music). (ANI)

Rattner named in SEC probe of NY kickbacks: report

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Steven Rattner, the leader of the Obama administration’s auto task force, was one of the investment-firm executives involved with payments now under scrutiny in a state and federal investigation into an alleged kickback scheme at New York state’s pension fund, The Wall Street Journal reported.

A “senior executive” of Rattner’s firm, Quadrangle Group, identified in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission complaint against two former New York political officials and others, is Rattner himself, the Journal reported, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The “senior executive” met with a politically connected consultant about a finder’s fee, then the firm agreed to pay what became a $1.1 million fee after receiving an investment from the state pension fund, the complaint said, according to the Journal report, published online on Thursday.

Neither Rattner nor Quadrangle has been accused of any wrongdoing, the Journal reported.

A representative for Quadrangle declined comment.

A spokesperson for the U.S. Treasury also declined comment, but when asked whether the Obama administration knew of Rattner’s role in the investigation, said: “During the transition Mr Rattner made us aware of the pending investigation.”

The auto task force headed by Rattner operates under the Treasury.

Sources familiar with the investigation told Reuters earlier this week that several investment firms are being scrutinized over whether they made improper payments to intermediaries to gain business from New York state’s pension fund.

The inquiry by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and the SEC includes The Carlyle Group CYL.UL, one of the world’s biggest private equity firms, the sources said.

Last month, Henry Morris, the former New York state comptroller’s top fund-raiser, and David Loglisci, the state’s pension investment chief, were charged with taking millions of dollars in kickbacks from money manager firms.

The main legal issue for the investment firms turns on whether they knew, or should have known, that fees they paid to certain entities for access to the New York fund were legitimate or were improper kickbacks, and whether they were properly disclosed, people familiar with the matter told the Journal.

Rattner, who co-founded Quadrangle in 2000, left the firm earlier this year to lead the government’s effort to restructure struggling U.S. car makers General Motors Corp (GM.N) and Chrysler Corp.

(Reporting by Anupreeta Das)

UPDATE 1-Rattner named in SEC probe of NY kickbacks -WSJ

NEW YORK, April 16 (Reuters) – Steven Rattner, the leader of the Obama administration’s auto task force, was one of the investment-firm executives involved with payments now under scrutiny in a state and federal investigation into an alleged kickback scheme at New York state’s pension fund, The Wall Street Journal reported.

A “senior executive” of Rattner’s firm, Quadrangle Group, identified in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission complaint against two former New York political officials and others, is Rattner himself, the Journal reported, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The “senior executive” met with a politically connected consultant about a finder’s fee, then the firm agreed to pay what became a $1.1 million fee after receiving an investment from the state pension fund, the complaint said, according to the Journal report, published online on Thursday.

Neither Rattner nor Quadrangle has been accused of any wrongdoing, the Journal reported.

A representative for Quadrangle declined comment.

A spokesperson for the U.S. Treasury also declined comment, but when asked whether the Obama administration knew of Rattner’s role in the investigation, said: “During the transition Mr Rattner made us aware of the pending investigation.”

The auto task force headed by Rattner operates under the Treasury.

Sources familiar with the investigation told Reuters earlier this week that several investment firms are being scrutinized over whether they made improper payments to intermediaries to gain business from New York state’s pension fund.

The inquiry by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and the SEC includes The Carlyle Group [CYL.UL], one of the world’s biggest private equity firms, the sources said.

Last month, Henry Morris, the former New York state comptroller’s top fund-raiser, and David Loglisci, the state’s pension investment chief, were charged with taking millions of dollars in kickbacks from money manager firms.

The main legal issue for the investment firms turns on whether they knew, or should have known, that fees they paid to certain entities for access to the New York fund were legitimate or were improper kickbacks, and whether they were properly disclosed, people familiar with the matter told the Journal.

Rattner, who co-founded Quadrangle in 2000, left the firm earlier this year to lead the government’s effort to restructure struggling U.S. car makers General Motors Corp (GM.N) and Chrysler Corp.

(Reporting by Anupreeta Das; Editing by Bernard Orr)

NY governor introduces bill to allow gay marriage

NEW YORK
: Gov. David Paterson announced plans Thursday to legalize same-sex marriage in the state of New York, making a political gamble that he
can ride the momentum of other states that have recently allowed the practice.

The proposal is the same bill the Democrat-controlled state Assembly passed in 2007 before it died in the Senate, where the Republican majority kept it from going to a vote. Democrats now control the Senate, but opponents are vowing to make sure this one fails, as well.

The governor’s approval ratings have plunged to below 20 percent, and it’s still unclear how the legislation will play in the state. Paterson says gay marriage is a crucial issue of equal rights in America that cannot be ignored.

“I’m introducing a bill to bring marriage equality to the state of New York,” Paterson said to applause, surrounded by leaders including Mayor Michael Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who is a lesbian.

Paterson, who is black, framed the issue in sweeping terms, invoking abolitionists Frederick Douglass and Harriet Beecher Stowe and drawing a parallel between the fight to eliminate slavery in the 1800s to the current effort to allow gay marriage
.

“Rights should not be stifled by fear. What we should understand is that silence should not be a response to injustice. And that if we take not action, we will surely lose,” Paterson said.

Paterson said gay and lesbian couples are denied as many as 1,350 civil protections, such as health care and pension rights, because they cannot marry.

Gay marriage is now legal in four states, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont and Iowa.

At the same time Paterson was to announce his proposal, Sen. Ruben Diaz of the Bronx, an opponent of same-sex marriage, planned to meet with religious leaders to discuss how to block the bill.

Diaz, who is an evangelical pastor, said his meeting in the Bronx was to inform Hispanics, Catholics, evangelicals and others opposed to same-sex marriage of their options to prevent the bill’s passage.

Diaz also said it is “disrespectful” of Paterson to introduce the legislation in the same week that Catholics celebrated the installation of New York City Archbishop Timothy Dolan.

Paterson attended the ceremony Wednesday at St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

“I think it’s a laugh in the face of the new archbishop,” Diaz said Thursday before the start of his meeting. “The Jews just finished their holy week. The Catholics just received the new archbishop. The evangelical Christians just celebrated Good Friday and resurrection. He comes out to do this at this time? It’s a challenge the governor is sending to every religious person in New York and the time for us has come for us to accept the challenge.”

UPDATE 1-Entergy NY Indian Pt 3 reactor reonnects to grid

(Releads with reconnection to grid)

NEW YORK, April 15 (Reuters) – Entergy Corp’s (ETR.N) 1,025-megawatt Unit 3 at the Indian Point nuclear power plant near New York City reconnected to the power grid Wednesday afternoon after a 35-day refueling outage, the company said.

The unit had been shut since March 11 for scheduled maintenance and refueling. By late Wednesday afternoon, it was operating at 28 percent of production capacity, said Jerry Nappi, Indian Point spokesman for Entergy.

The 2,045 MW Indian Point station is located in Buchanan in Westchester County about 45 miles north of New York City. The station has two units: the 1,020 MW Unit 2 and the 1,025 MW Unit 3, which entered service in 1973 and 1976.

Unit 2 continued to operate at full power early Wednesday.

Before it shut on March 11 to refuel, Unit 3 had operated for 678 consecutive days, a U.S. record for continuous operation for Westinghouse pressurized water reactors, Entergy said.

One MW powers about 800 homes in New York.

Entergy, of New Orleans, owns and operates about 30,000 MW of generating capacity, markets energy commodities and transmits and distributes power to 2.7 million customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. (Reporting by Joe Silha and Bernie Woodall, editing by John Picinich)

Gunman kills 13 in NY immigrant center – ABC News

A man opened fire in a building where services are provided to immigrants in the New York town of Binghamton on Friday and killed 13 people before killing himself, ABC News reported.

New York Governor David Paterson confirmed that a number of people had been killed. ABC News, citing federal and state authorities, said 26 people were also wounded.

There was no official confirmation of the death toll or the gunman’s fate.

Other local media earlier reported between four and 13 dead in the incident in Binghamton, about 150 miles (240 km) northwest of New York City.

“This is a tragic day for New York. While the situation is still developing and details are being gathered, we do know that a gunman entered the American Civic Association in Binghamton this morning and that there are fatalities,” Paterson said in a statement.

The area was surrounded by police with rifles, some carrying shields. Some local media reports said the suspected shooter was Asian and that authorities requested a Vietnamese translator to speak with him.

As many as 41 people were inside the building when a man entered and started shooting, WBNG television news said, citing police scanners. It said some fled to a basement and more than a dozen were hiding in a closet, adding that emergency dispatchers had been in contact with people inside.

Four people were removed from the American Civic Association building on stretchers and taken to hospitals, the Press and Sun-Bulletin newspaper reported on its website.

Others came out on foot.

“About 15 or so employees of the Civic Association came out crying with their hands behind their heads and they were escorted by the police and they took them to ambulances and took them away,” a witness told WNBF radio.

The American Civic Association building is used to teach English and provide other services to recent immigrants to the United States who are preparing for U.S. citizenship.

Man opens fire in NY town, possible victims – media

A man opened fire in a building where services are provided to immigrants in the New York State town of Binghamton on Friday, shooting as many as four people and taking up to 40 hostage, local media reported.

Four people were removed from the American Civic Association building on stretchers and taken to hospitals, the Press and Sun-Bulletin newspaper reported on its website.

A police special weapons and tactics team was on scene and the shooter still inside, the newspaper said, citing police. Television coverage showed armed police deployed around the building.

As many as 41 people were inside the building when a man entered and started shooting, WBNG television news reported on its website, citing police scanners.

Some people escaped to a basement and more than a dozen were hiding in a closet, WBNG said, reporting that emergency dispatchers had been in contact with people inside.

Police closed down surrounding streets and locked down a high school, WBNG said.

Binghamton Mayor Matthew Ryan, who was at the scene, said there was a hostage situation and the shooter had a high-powered rifle, the Press and Sun-Bulletin said.

Binghamton is about 150 miles (240 km) northwest of New York City with a population of about 45,000.

NASA’s Mars rover Opportunity catches first glimpse of distant destination

Washington, March 19 (ANI): The panoramic camera on NASA’s Mars rover Opportunity has caught a first glimpse on the horizon of the uplifted rim of the big crater that has been Opportunity’s long-term destination for six months.

Opportunity’s twin, Spirit, also has a challenging destination, and last week switched to a different route for making progress.

Endeavour Crater, 22 kilometers (14 miles) in diameter, is still 12 kilometers (7 miles) away from Opportunity, and at least 30 percent farther away on routes mapped for evading hazards on the plain.

Opportunity has already driven about 3.2 kilometers (2 miles) since it climbed out of Victoria Crater last August after two years of studying Victoria, which is less than one-twentieth the size of Endeavour.

“It’s exciting to see our destination, even if we can’t be certain whether we’ll ever get all the way there,” said John Callas of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, project manager for the twin Mars rovers, Opportunity and Spirit.

“At the pace we’ve made since leaving Victoria, the rest of the trek will take more than a Martian year,” he added.

A Martian year lasts about 23 months.

According to Steve Squyres of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., principal investigator for the rovers’ science instruments, “We can now see our landfall on the horizon. It’s far away, but we can anticipate seeing it gradually look larger and larger as we get closer to Endeavour.”

“We had a similar experience during the early months of the mission watching the Columbia Hills get bigger in the images from Spirit as Spirit drove toward them,” he said.

Both rovers landed on Mars in January 2004 to begin missions designed to last for three months. Both are still active after more than five years.

For the next several days, the rover team plans to have Opportunity use the tools on its robotic arm to examine soil and rock at an outcrop along the route the rover is taking toward Endeavour. (ANI)

Peaches Geldof trying to woo American audience with TV show

London, Mar 13 (ANI): Singer Peaches Geldof is trying to entice the American audience with a TV show about her working on a New York magazine.

Geldof’s career at NY-LON will be filmed by BBC America as a rival to MTV’s The Hills – a “true life” series about Hollywood’s IT crowd.

She moved to New York last year to write a column about the latest trends for the glossy title.

“The show would follow life at NY-LON and feature Peaches and the mag’s larger-than-life characters. It will be a long-running documentary, with the feel of a drama,” the Sun quoted a source as saying.

“The Hills is the model, as it’s been really successful for MTV,” the source added.

The BBC show is at an early stage of production, but insiders claim it could be screened later this year. (ANI)

Women’s long-term fertility linked to reduced Parkinson’s risk

Washington, Feb 26 (ANI): Women who are fertile for more than 39 years and have natural menopause are at a lower risk of contracting Parkinson’s disease, says a new study.

The study, which will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology’s 61st Annual Meeting in Seattle, April 25 to May 2, 2009, provides evidence that longer exposure to the body’s own hormones may protect women from the disease.

According to the study’s results, women who have more years of fertile lifespan (number of years from first menstruation to menopause) had a lower risk of developing the disease than women with fewer years of fertile lifespan.

The fertile lifespan is a marker for the body’s own sex hormone levels.

In addition, women with four or more pregnancies were at greater risk of developing the disease than women with fewer pregnancies.

Separately, the risk of Parkinson’s disease was increased in women who had hysterectomies and had also previously taken hormone replacement therapy compared to those who never took hormone therapy, but it was not increased in women who took the hormones but had not had hysterectomies.

“This study does not support a role for treatment with hormone therapy in Parkinson’s, but there are still many unanswered questions,” said study author Rachel Saunders-Pullman, MD, MPH, MS, of Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Bronx, NY, and Beth Israel Medical Center in New York, NY, and a member of the American Academy of Neurology.

For the study, researchers analyzed the records of the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study to determine who developed Parkinson’s disease. The study involved about 74,000 women who underwent natural menopause and about 7,800 women who underwent surgical menopause. (ANI)