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| Humane society eyes $1M Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:30:39 -0500 Local pet lovers have helped place the Bowling Green-Warren County Humane Society’s animal shelter within reach of a $1 million makeover. |
| Soldier with local ties killed Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:30:40 -0500 A Fort Campbell soldier whose wife lives in Bowling Green died April 21 in Iraq. |
| Funds report shows tallies Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:30:41 -0500 If campaign contributions were the determining factor in a race, Steve Newberry would be the clear front runner in the race for the 9th District Senate seat. |
| Murder trial delayed again Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:30:42 -0500 A trial was delayed in the case of two people accused of murder in the 2006 beating death of a Bowling Green woman. |
| Student exchange program looking for host families Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:30:42 -0500 An international student exchange program is seeking host families in Barren County and Bowling Green for the summer. |
| POLICE NEWS: Three men arrested in connection with meth lab Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:30:43 -0500 Three Bowling Green men were arrested Sunday after the Warren County Sheriff’s Office received an anonymous call about a methamphetamine laboratory. |
| Correction Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:30:43 -0500 The gas purchase figures for the city of Bowling Green were incorrect in an article on Page 1A Sunday. The city spent $52,000 in March and its estimated fuel cost for April is $58,000. |
| A Family’s Struggle Mon, 28 Apr 2008 10:00:30 -0500 Ask Kathy Bridgeman about cancer and she can tell you of her intimate knowledge about the disease. “My dad died of colon cancer 19 years ago. My mom was diagnosed with leukemia 13 years ago,” she said. Her sister “Sharon was diagnosed with breast cancer three years ago. I was diagnosed with skin cancer five years ago.” The Bowling Green woman, her mother, Nellie Woodcock, also of Bowling Green, and Bridgeman’s sister, Sharon Watt of Alvaton, fight the disease in various ways. One way is by being a part of “Insuring a Cure,” a team sponsored by the Center of Insurance that participates in the American Cancer Society’s fundraiser Relay for Life. This year’s relay will be June 6-7 at Bowling Green High School with the circus theme, “The Greatest Cure on Earth.” The team, now in its seventh year, will have a yard sale at 7 a.m. May 10 at 1502 Collegeview Drive and is giving away chances - $2 each or three chances for $5 - to win a C5 Corvette office chair. They have raised about 60 percent of their $6,000 goal, Bridgeman said. “We’ve been in the $5,000 range each year,” she said. “Our team is made up of family, friends and coworkers. We get a lot of support from the community, too.” The family’s first round with cancer with was short-lived, Bridgeman said. “With my dad, it was over in 11 months,” she said. “We didn’t know about the American Cancer Society. We were at a loss.” By the time Woodcock learned about her leukemia a few years later, the family knew about the American Cancer Society. “When mom was diagnosed, I went to the American Cancer Society to get her a wig and found out all kinds of things,” Bridgeman said. “I went in to get a wig on my lunch hour and came out a team captain (for a Relay for Life team).” Since then, the bouts with cancer have been what Bridgeman describes as a “roller coaster ride.” “Mom was in remission and had to do treatment again (in 2005),” she said. “Sharon was diagnosed with breast cancer during this time.” Again, Bridgeman and Woodcock turned to the American Cancer Society for help. They went to Hope Lodge in Nashville, which, according to the American Cancer Society Web site at www.cancer.org, is free, temporary housing for patients undergoing cancer treatment at one of the nearby hospitals. Nashville’s Hope Lodge is one of 26 across the country. “Mom and I stayed there for her second treatment for two nights,” she said. The battle continues. Soon Woodcock will have to undergo treatment again. “See what leukemia does to you,” she said, raising the long sleeves of her blouse to show various purple bruises caused by treatments. The family works hard to bring awareness to cancer. Two years ago, Watt and Bridgeman went to Washington, D.C., as cancer survivors to talk to senators about restoring cancer research money that had previously been cut. “We wouldn’t just sit back quietly and just let them take it away,” Bridgeman said. “When you lose grant money, it takes eight years to regenerate it because the people involved with the research go back to their lives and jobs.” Cancer survivors came to the advocacy rally in droves. “There were 10,000 survivors there,” Watt said. “Each state was identified.” The advances in cancer treatments are benefited by the research, Watt said. “Now there’s a (human papilloma virus) vaccine,” she said. “The money we raise goes back to research.” The duo are also participating in a study of sisters with breast cancer. According to the study’s Web site at www.sisterstudy.org, the Sister Study looks at environmental and genetic risk factors for breast cancer. It looks at women ages 35 to 74 whose sisters had breast cancer. Bridgeman found out about it through an e-mail. “They will monitor me for 10 years,” Bridgeman said. Participating in cancer-related events and studies helps the family, Bridgeman said. “It has helped us to vent and to give back, to gain knowledge about cancer and talk to others who are going through the same thing,” she said. “It’s never curable, but it’s manageable.” Watt agreed. “I don’t think you can find a family that hasn’t been touched by cancer at some time or other,” she said. “Prevention is what people need to do.” Survivors who plan to attend Relay for Life should call 745-1968 so that they can be recognized. The Sister Study is currently enrolling women from groups that are underrepresented in the study to date: Blacks, Latinas, Asians and Pacific Islanders and American Indians between ages 35 and 74; and Caucasian women between the ages of 65 and 74 or with a high school degree or less. — For more information about “Insuring a Cure” events, call 781-6200. For more information the study, go to www.sisterstudy.org. Upcoming Relay for Life events The following upcoming American Cancer Society Relay for Life events in southcentral Kentucky: |
| Pathologist enjoys seeing diseases, making diagnoses Mon, 28 Apr 2008 10:00:30 -0500 Juli McCay doesn’t mind being in the background. As a pathologist at The Medical Center, where she has worked since January 2005, she gets to see diseases and make diagnoses. Pathologists are often associated with Pap smears and autopsies, but actually do a lot more, McCay said. “We examine all the tissue removed (from the body). We look at it with the naked eye and under a microscope,” she said. “We do bone marrow biopsies and fine needle aspirations. We consult with other physicians a lot.” The pathologists are also medical directors for the lab. “We have three pathologists (at The Medical Center),” she said. “I’m the director for the blood bank and the chemistry part of the lab.” McCay, a Bowling Green native, said she has known she wanted to be a doctor since she was in junior high school. She got a little sidetracked, though - she got married while she was still in high school. “My husband was in the military,” she said. “We thought he was going to be shipped overseas, but he wound up being shipped to California.” After she moved to California, McCay had two children. The family eventually moved back to Bowling Green and the couple went to Western Kentucky University, where McCay earned a bachelor’s degree in biology and chemistry. “We got a lot of support from our parents, and we had a great babysitter,” she said. Her children were still small when McCay began medical school at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Medical students often take pathology during their second year of medical school, and that’s when she began looking at the specialty in a new light. “They made it so fun at Vanderbilt that I knew that’s what I wanted to do,” McCay said. After finishing medical school, McCay did a five-year residency at Vanderbilt. She worked in a variety of areas, including obstetrics and gynecology and surgery, but she learned a lot during a six-month stint in internal medicine. “I had wondered if I had missed an opportunity to see patients,” she said. “It helped me understand things on a deeper level than you get in medical school. I missed pathology when I wasn’t doing it.” After finishing her residency, McCay came back to Bowling Green. She said her job at The Medical Center makes it easy for her to be a wife and mother. “I work pretty regular hours,” she said. “My partners are family oriented so it makes for a nice work environment.” McCay said she enjoys her career. “I still love seeing diseases and making diagnoses,” she said. “For our town, you’d think you would see a lot of common things, but you see a lot of interesting things.” |
| Beatrice K. Barnard Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:05:59 -0500 Beatrice K. Barnard, 88, of Bowling Green died April 27, 2008, at The Medical Center. Funeral arrangements, which are incomplete, are under the direction of Heritage Funeral Services. |
| Marilyn Boles-Smiley Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:03 -0500 Marilyn Boles-Smiley, 87, of Glasgow died April 26, 2008, at The Medical Center. She was a housewife and a member of Pleasant Union Baptist Church, where she served as assistant secretary. She was also a choir member, Sunday school teacher, missionary president and a member of the Sick Committee at the church. She was a daughter of the late John Boles and Minnie Wathal Boles and the wife of the late William Porter Smiley. She was preceded in death by two sisters, Nora Lee Bailey and Delcenia Stockton; four brothers, Willie, Paul, Earnest and Ester Boles; and grandparents, Vickie Wathal and Delcenia and John Boles. Funeral is at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Pleasant Union Baptist Church in Glasgow, with burial in the church cemetery. Visitation is from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday at Eleventh Street Baptist Church. Burnam & Son Mortuary is in charge of arrangements. Survivors include two daughters, June Demps and Jo Nell Hatchett and her husband, Donnie, all of Bowling Green; two sons, William R. Smiley and Larry Smiley and his wife, Carolyn, of Horse Cave; two sisters, Minnie L. Smiley of Glasgow and Pauline DuVall and her husband, Sterling, of Louisville; eight grandchildren, James W. Demps, Laronzo Smiley, Shawn Smiley, Tristan Smiley, Travis Smiley, Justin Hatchett, Shant/ Hatchett and Katina Smiley; six great-grandchildren; and several nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. |
| Calvin C. Byers Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:03 -0500 Calvin Carl Byers, 62, died at 1 a.m. April 25, 2008, at a Bowling Green nursing home. The Detroit native was born Oct. 19, 1945. He was a retired policeman and served in the Army. Graveside service is at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Fairview Cemetery, Veterans Section. J.C. Kirby & Son Funeral Home, Broadway Avenue chapel, is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may be made at www.jckirbyandson.com. Survivors include two daughters, Tonya Byers and Sonja Byers, both of Owensboro; two sons, Carl Byers of Utica and Jim Byers of Louisville; and a brother, Tom Byers of Louisiana. |
| Lenny T. Cummings Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:04 -0500 Lenny Travis Cummings, 67, of Bowling Green died at 11:03 p.m. April 25, 2008, at The Medical Center. The Warren County native was born Oct. 13, 1940. He was a concrete worker. He was a son of the late Everette Cummings and Dora Meredith. Graveside service is at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Fairview Cemetery. Visitation begins at 9 a.m. Wednesday at J.C. Kirby & Son Funeral Home, Broadway Avenue chapel. Online condolences may be made at www.jckirbyandson.com. Survivors include two sons, Travis Cummings of Bowling Green and Billy Cummings of Morgantown; a daughter, Twana Hudnall and her husband, Kerry, of Morgantown; five grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. |
| William H. Franklin Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:05 -0500 MORGANTOWN — William Harrison “Bill” Franklin, 94, of Provo died April 28, 2008, at his residence. The Butler County native was born May 28, 1913. He was a retired farmer and a founding member of Provo Rural Development. He was a son of the late Annie Lee Layne Franklin and George Thomas Franklin and the husband of the late Eliene Holeman Franklin. He was preceded in death by a sister, Mary A. McKinney. Funeral is at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Monticello Missionary Baptist Church, where he was a member, with burial in Monticello Church Cemetery. Visitation is from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday and from 8 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. Wednesday at Jones Funeral Chapel. Expressions of sympathy may take the form of contributions to Monticello Church Cemetery, 5999 Provo Road, Morgantown, KY 42261. Online condolences may be made at www.jonesfuneralchapel.com. Survivors include two sons, Tommy Franklin and his wife, Mary Joe, and Dale Franklin and his wife, Martha, all of Provo; a daughter, Deborah K. Jessup and her husband, Jackie, of Greenville; a very special friend, Anna Jo Peay of Morgantown; 21 grandchildren; 36 great-grandchildren; and three great-great-grandchildren. |
| Beulah K. Furlong Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:05 -0500 GLASGOW — Beulah Kelsey Furlong, 92, of Glasgow died April 27, 2008, at a Glasgow nursing home The Barren County native was a homemaker, foster parent and worked in the Foster Grandparent Program. She was also a member of the Samson Street Church of God. She was a daughter of the late Myrton Kelsey and Dartha Hughes Kelsey and the wife of the late Woodard Furlong. She was preceded in death by a daughter, Vera Eaton; three sons, Leroy Stiles, J.B. Turner and Bill Brown; a son-in-law, Delbert Williams; two brothers; and two sisters. Funeral is at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Hatcher & Saddler Funeral Home, with burial in Happy Valley Memorial Gardens. Visitation begins at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Expressions of sympathy may take the form of contributions to the donor’s favorite charity. Survivors include a daughter, Burdene Williams; three sons, David Brown and his wife, Pam, and Chester Stiles, all of Glasgow, and Ernest Turner of Texas; eight grandchildren, Barry Eaton and his wife, Beverly, Baretta Shirley and her husband, Eutre, Jackie Cash and her husband, Greg, Joni Poynter and her husband, Choppy, Ricky Eaton, Kim Dobbs, Matthew Stiles and Tiffany Stiles; several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren; a nephew; and several nieces. |
| Tommie F. Hagan Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:06 -0500 BROWNSVILLE — Tommie F. Hagan, 89, of Park City died at 5:10 p.m. April 25, 2008, at a Bowling Green nursing home. The Edmonson County native was a farmer, a retired maintenance worker at Western Kentucky University and a member of Cedar Grove General Baptist Church. He was a son of the late Lon Hagan and Lizzie Wilkins Hagan and the husband of the late Dulcie “Dot” Saling Hagan. He was preceded in death by a sister, Alice Moore; and a brother, George Hagan. Funeral was Sunday at Gravil Funeral Home, with burial in Saling-Vincent Cemetery. Survivors include two daughters, Arlene Hogan of Bee Spring and Helen Vincent of Park City; a sister, Beatrice Keith of Rocky Hill; five grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; and seven great-great-grandchildren. |
| Artemis Lambrianou Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:06 -0500 JERSEY CITY, N.J. — Artemis “Diana” Lambrianou, 80, of Jersey City died April 26, 2008, at her daughter’s home in Athens, Greece. She was born Oct. 18, 1927, in Cyprus and immigrated to the United States with her husband and six children in 1969. She was a homemaker and a devoted mother to her children and was greatly loved and respected by her grandchildren. She was a parishioner of the Evangelimos Greek Orthodox Church in Jersey City. She was preceded in death by her husband, Arestis “Harry” Lambrianou; and a sister, Katherine Vasilles Carlis. Burial was April 27 in Athens. A 40-day memorial service will begin in June at St. George Greek Orthodox Church in Little Falls, N.J. Expressions of sympathy can be made to Community Action of Southern Kentucky Senior Services Program or the Family Enrichment Center’s Adoption Resource Center. Survivors include four daughters, Maria Rizzo and her husband, Tony, and Andrea Lambrianou, all of Little Falls, Tina Tentes and her husband, Anthony, of Athens and Kitty Jedra and her husband, Bogden, of North Plainfield; two sons, Michael Lambrianou and his wife, Denise, of Bowling Green, Ky., and Lambro Lambrianou and his wife, Anna, of Jersey City; a sister, Thea Vasilles of Jersey City; eight grandsons, Nikko Tentes of Athens, Andreas and Nikko Lambrianou of Jersey City and Harry, Matt, Ricky, Dakota and Jax Lambrianou, all of Bowling Green; and five granddaughters, Angela and Christina Rizzo and Deanna Lambrianou, all of Little Falls, and Stephanie and Christina Jedra of North Plainfield. |
| Sherrie A. Smith Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:07 -0500 FRANKLIN — Sherrie Ann Smith, 47, of Indian Mound, Tenn., formerly of Bowling Green, died April 26, 2008, at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Funeral arrangements, which are incomplete, are under the direction of Crafton Funeral Home. |
| Kathleen F. Thomas Mon, 28 Apr 2008 11:06:07 -0500 MUNFORDVILLE — Kathleen Frances Thomas, 87, of Munfordville died at 8:15 p.m. April 26, 2008, at a Horse Cave nursing home. She was a former cook for Cub Run Elementary School, a housewife and a member of Macedonia Baptist Church. She was a daughter of the late Louis Simpson Childress and Mary Belle Polston Childress and the wife of the late Jesse Thomas. She was preceded in death by two sons, Louis and Solon Thomas. Funeral is at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Sego Funeral Home, with burial in Cub Run Cemetery. Visitation is in progress until 9 p.m. today and begins at 8 a.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Survivors include a daughter, Nora Jean Gardner of Munfordville; a sister, Lora Hester of Cub Run; 14 grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; and three great-great-grandchildren. |
| Overnight shooting reported on Simmons Court Tue, 29 Apr 2008 06:45:00 EST A shooting was reported at 11:07 last night in the 300 block of Simmons Court, according to MetroSafe Communications. |
| Weather: Chilly conditions Tue, 29 Apr 2008 06:18:00 EST Patchy frost is possible this morning and temperatures will be linger in the high 30s and 40s, according to the National Weather Service. Skies will become partly sunny with a high near 55 degrees. |
| UAW/Ford again has the best bed Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:52:00 EST The UAW/Ford Louisville Assembly Plant team did it again, winning the Stock Yards Bank Derby Festival Great Bed Races last night for the sixth time, running the 600-yard course in 26.5 seconds. |
| This deal is sweet! Tue, 29 Apr 2008 01:03:00 EST William Wrigley Jr.'s family spent more than 115 years building the soap salesman's fledging company into a massive corporation that made chewing gum a mass-market product. |
| Beshear as bouncer Tue, 29 Apr 2008 00:48:00 EST The decision to remove Susan Bush as commissioner of the Kentucky Department for Natural Resources just adds to the widespread impression, even among many of Gov. Steve Beshear's friends and supporters, that his young administration still doesn't have its act together. |
| 'Loose' talk Mon, 28 Apr 2008 22:25:00 EST Unlikely lovers Lulu Flannery and Cole Early fall for each other all over Louisville in "Fast and Loose," the new romance by best-selling novelist and Louisville native Elizabeth Bevarly. "Fast" is mostly a love letter to the Highlands, but Lulu and Cole's affair extends beyond, to The Brown hotel and ultimately to Churchill Downs. |
| Big Brown's trainer say he has 'best horse' Tue, 29 Apr 2008 04:08:00 EST Imagine the possibilities if Big Brown wins Saturday's Kentucky Derby: "Big Brown delivers" headlines will shout. Or "Big Brown keeps trucking." How about "Big Brown the total package"? |
| 30 years later, it's 'Mudcrutch' Mon, 28 Apr 2008 22:27:00 EST In a week filled with high-profile releases, including Madonna and The Roots, the most intriguing is from a Florida band called Mudcrutch. It's a lot more famous than it sounds. |
| Supreme Court backs Indiana's photo ID law for voters Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:37:00 EST States can force voters to show government-issued photo IDs before casting a ballot, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled yesterday in upholding an Indiana law that critics say will create unnecessary barriers for older and poor people. |
| Retired jockey Pat Day on a mission to spread God's message Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:06:00 EST Nearly three years after retiring as one of the most successful and popular jockeys in racing history, Pat Day sees it as his God-given responsibility to use his reputation to reach audiences with his evangelistic message. |
| Derby Week reunion is a sweet meet Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:07:00 EST Patricia Kane married Ewell Karrick on May 30, 1945, in St. Peter's Catholic Church in Gloucester, England. He had grown up on a Bath County, Ky., farm near Mount Sterling, was stationed in England with the U.S. Army. She was from Caernarfon in North Wales, was working in a Royal Air Force records office in Gloucester. |
| Police have plan to keep race fans safe Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:08:00 EST With thousands of people headed to Churchill Downs later this week for Kentucky Oaks and Derby festivities, traffic will be heavy. |
| Today's Kentucky Derby Festival activities Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:09:00 EST For more information, visit www.kdf.org, text KDF to 59454 or call the telephone numbers where listed. |
| 3rd District debate polite Tue, 29 Apr 2008 03:50:00 EST Kentucky's 3rd Congressional District squared off last night in a debate that was mostly polite - but occasionally testy. |
| JCPS requests single attendance plan Tue, 29 Apr 2008 03:49:00 EST JCPS officials promised the school board last night that they will come back with a single student-assignment proposal. |
| TARC proposes fare increase Tue, 29 Apr 2008 03:46:00 EST Most Louisville TARC users should plan to shell out another 10 cents every time they board a bus, starting July 1. |
| Beshear vetoes 2-year road plan Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:32:00 EST ov. Steve Beshear vetoed the Kentucky legislature's two-year highway plan yesterday, saying House Bill 79 would limit the Transportation Cabinet's flexibility to make necessary changes in construction projects across the state. |
| Hillary Clinton plans Louisville visit next week Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:32:00 EST U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton will headline a Kentucky Democratic Party fundraiser May 9 in Louisville, and organizers are still trying to get U.S. Sen. Barack Obama to attend. |
| Clintons, Obama court GOP strongholds Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:38:00 EST The tight race between Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama has their presidential campaigns looking in even the most-Republican corners of Indiana. |
| Indiana urging citizens to cut ozone pollution Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:37:00 EST Sandra Fulkerson of Lanesville said she didn't realize that waiting in a restaurant drive-through lane contributes to ozone pollution -- until an Indiana Department of Environmental Management crew waved her inside yesterday. |
| Sen. Clinton plans stop Thursday in Jeffersonville Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:38:00 EST U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton will be in Jeffersonville on Thursday to campaign for the Democratic nomination for president, her campaign announced last night. |
| Seven Democrats vie for two Clark commissioner seats Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:39:00 EST Voters in next week's Democratic primary in Clark County face a combative three-way race for District 1 commissioner with two challengers critical of the record of incumbent Ed Meyer, but there's a more collegial four-way race in District 2 where the incumbent isn't running. |
| Rep. Carson gets help to settle, stay in office Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:40:00 EST The bookshelves flanking Rep. Andre Carson's desk haven't been filled. His office walls are mostly bare. Some of his aides are on loan from other lawmakers. |
| Corydon votes in new town clerk-treasurer Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:40:00 EST The Corydon Town Council voted last night to make official what has been in the works for the last month -- a switch in the town clerk-treasurer's office. |
| Ivy Tech's largest class graduating on May 9 Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:41:00 EST Ivy Tech Community College in Sellersburg will graduate its largest class ever May 9 at its 37th commencement ceremony. |
| Coal gasification plant blast kills 2 Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:41:00 EST A leak at a plant that turns coal into gas caused an explosion that killed two workers yesterday, authorities said. |
| Poster contest targets water conservation Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:42:00 EST The Clark County Soil and Water Conservation District is accepting entries for its "Water is Life" conservation poster contest. |
| Run for the Rosé is a balancing act Tue, 29 Apr 2008 01:08:00 EST The day of wine and roses — actually rosé — is at hand, foot, corkscrew and tray as dozens of area restaurant servers and bartenders, corporate teams and media people compete in the Arison Derby Festival Run for the Rosé. |
| Mint Jubilee guests Tue, 29 Apr 2008 01:08:00 EST "Saturday Night Live" alum Joe Piscopo will attend the Mint Jubilee Gala on Derby Eve at the Galt House Hotel & Suites. The 56-year-old comedian will perform a "killer" Frank Sinatra set. |
| Networks hope to lure viewers back during sweeps Mon, 28 Apr 2008 22:41:00 EST "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" sounds like it's plotting the demise of one of its team members, Dr. House will lose his memory and Robin Williams will pop up as a criminal prankster. And, oh yes, there will be a new "Dancing With the Stars" champ and the 2008 "American Idol" will be named. All this and more will happen during the merry month of May. |
| Songwriter Newman Mon, 28 Apr 2008 22:39:00 EST "Dear Sir: There's a scene in "Leatherheads" in a speakeasy where a guy is playing the piano. Is that the songwriter Randy Newman? " |
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