Tuesday, October 30, 2007




Singer Robert Goulet dies at 73 2 hours, 35 minutes ago


Associated Press

LOS ANGELES - Robert Goulet, the handsome, big-voiced baritone whose Broadway debut in "Camelot" launched an award-winning stage and recording career, has died. He was 73.

The singer died Tuesday morning in a Los Angeles hospital while awaiting a lung transplant, said Goulet spokesman Norm Johnson.

He had been awaiting a lung transplant at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after being found last month to have a rare form of pulmonary fibrosis.

Goulet had remained in good spirits even as he waited for the transplant, said Vera Goulet, his wife of 25 years.

"Just watch my vocal cords," she said he told doctors before they inserted a breathing tube.

The Massachusetts-born Goulet, who spent much of his youth in Canada, gained stardom in 1960 with "Camelot," the Lerner and Loewe musical that starred Richard Burton as King Arthur and Julie Andrews as his Queen Guenevere.

Goulet played Sir Lancelot, the arrogant French knight who falls in love with Guenevere.

He became a hit with American TV viewers with appearances on "The Ed Sullivan Show" and other programs. Sullivan labeled him the "American baritone from Canada," where he had already been a popular star in the 1950s, hosting his own show called "General Electric's Showtime."

>> May God Bless His Soul<<

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Celeb Homes threaten as fire torch Penn's Land

Fires Torch Penn's Land, Threaten Celeb Homes Natalie Finn
Mon Oct 22, 5:12 PM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) - Private beaches, a fleet of luxury cars, 24-hour private security and sweeping ocean views are no match for Mother Nature, especially on a windy day in SoCal after a hot, dry summer.

A wildfire that began early Sunday morning in Malibu scorched a plot of land belonging to Sean Penn on Monday and has forced evacuations all over the tony Pacific-adjacent enclave, including gated communities where celebs such as Mel Gibson, Jennifer Aniston and Kelsey Grammar reside.

Penn's lot at the top of Carbon Canyon Road, where he used to have a home before it was destroyed in an arson-suspected 1993 brushfire, contained two trailers, both of which burned after firefighters determined that, since they were unoccupied, there was no use risking lives to save them.

Photos posted on splashnews.com, which first reported Penn's loss, show the burning structures.

No damage has been reported, however, to David Duchovny and Téa Leoni's home, which is right near Penn's property.

Firefighters were also spotted clustered outside David Arquette and Courteney Cox's home, but according to images on celebrity photo site X17.com, the house remains intact and it looks to have been hosed down to ward off damage.

The gated community where Gibson, Olivia Newton-John and country singer Tanya Tucker have homes has been evacuated. James Cameron and Cindy Crawford's residences are also said to be in danger; Mark Hamill and his wife are also packed and ready to go should the siren sound, per the actor's rep.

Grammar and Victoria Principal were also among those who were forced out of town over the weekend, according to their publicists.

The Malibu fire, which as of Monday afternoon was reportedly only 10 percent contained, started at about 4:50 a.m. Sunday and has since charred at least 2,400 acres.

According to authorities, the blaze was probably triggered when the oft-destructive Santa Ana winds, which were blowing at about 65 miles per hour on Sunday, crossed paths with some high-voltage power lines.

Meanwhile, a dozen conflagrations have sprung up all over the Southland, affecting parts of the San Fernando Valley, Orange County, San Diego and Lake Arrowhead. More than 250,000 people have been evacuated altogether.

Taking matters into their own hands were The Hills' Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt, who talked to Ryan Seacrest on Monday about their own containment efforts when a brushfire inched toward their Los Angeles-area home on Sunday.

"Spencer was literally down there putting out the fire, and I was screaming at him 'Come back here, the firemen are coming!'” Montag said on Seacrest's KIIS-FM morning show.

“It was here and I was putting out the fire with the hose,” Pratt added. “Until the firemen got there. They were fast.”

Also affected Monday was Young Hollywood's home away from home—Promises treatment center. Patients staying at the Malibu rehab facility, where Lindsay Lohan, Britney Spears, Ben Affleck and a host of others have stopped to sober up, were transferred to an outpatient locale after the area was included in a mandatory evacuation.

"Part of the problem is that Promises is on a single-lane road, and we didn't want to have problems with a lot of people trying to get out at one time," an L.A. County Fire Department spokesperson told reporters.

Despite the allure of all that oceanside luxury, Malibu has always been a notorious hot spot, so to speak.

Suzanne Somer's beachside manse was one of 11 homes destroyed when a brushfire, spurred by big winds, whipped through Malibu Road in January. Penn's residence was one of 268 homes that burned in 1993 when a possible arson blaze killed three people and caused $219 million in damage.

Collier Glacier is shrinking

BEND, Ore. - Between the North Sister and Middle Sister in Oregon's Cascade Range, Collier Glacier has advanced and receded for hundreds of thousands of years. But like many glaciers, it is headed in one direction these days: backward.

It is in serious peril, says geologist Ellen Morris Bishop of the Fossil-based Oregon Paleo Lands Institute. "We have basically a really sad picture of Collier Glacier today."

Geologists blame among other things a warming climate, altering the landscape and perhaps the availability of water to high-elevation ecosystems. Collier is shrinking faster than most of the 35 glaciers in the state.

"Now everything is just in a chaotic shrink," Bishop said.

This summer she led a climate change-themed tour of the Central Oregon Cascades, starting from McKenzie Pass and heading south. Volcanic activity built the Cascades, but over eons the glaciers have worn them down.

At the glacier's base is a moraine, or a ridge of rocks, deposited by the slowly moving glacier when it was bigger. Today an empty valley fills the space between the ridge and the glacial edge.

"This was a full valley in 1906," Bishop said. Since then it has retreated more than a mile.

The ice sheet has visibly shrunk since she first visited the glacier in the 1980s, Bishop said.

"We're in trouble," said David Eddleston, of Bend and a participant in the field trip. "It's right there in front of our eyes."

The shrinking of the glacier started about the same time carbon dioxide emissions started rising, Bishop said.

"It's all tied to climate change, said Peter Clark, a geosciences professor at Oregon State University.

In the late 19th century, many glaciers started to retreat, he said. That shrinking was probably due to natural fluctuations in the atmospheric temperature.

But in the last 20 to 30 years, all of the Cascades' glaciers have been shrinking, he said.

Collier is reflective of glaciers all along the Cascades, Clark said.

And because the actions of glaciers reflect temperatures from two decades ago, even if warming trends were to stop today, glaciers would still be shrinking for at least 20 years to come, he said.

With warming predicted to rise between 3 and 5 degrees by the end of the century, temperature will likely be the main factor that causes glaciers' decline.

"Most people would say that by the turn of the century there will be very little ice left on the mountains," Clark said.

Glaciers store water in the winter and then release it throughout the year, Clark said, spreading out the time when water is flowing. Without the glaciers, many streams will rely more on springtime runoff.

"It will affect the water balance of the mountainous regions," he said.

"At some point, they're going to be so small that they're not going to pump out that water," said Andrew Fountain, a geology professor at Portland State University.

And when that happens, lands at higher elevations will be much drier and subject to droughts, Fountain said. Stream flow will probably decrease, which means that plant life along those waterways would diminish.

Some lakes previously fed by glaciers would become clearer because there would be no sediment but they could also start to evaporate and become smaller.

But while glaciers might shrink, that doesn't mean the ice on mountains will disappear completely, he said.

"It's actually tough to get rid of a glacier," Fountain said. As glaciers retreat, they do so by inching up to higher mountain elevations, where the air is colder.

"But it's the difference," Fountain said, "between the Collier Glacier today and a little ice patch that might be 100 yards long."

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Information from: The Bulletin, http://www.bendbulletin.com