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Gary Coleman dies after brain hemorrhage -

In 1989, he sued his parents and former manager for mishandling his finances, and for a time, he worked as a security guard. In 2003, he made a failed bid to become governor of California in a recall election that eventually saw Arnold Schwarzenegger become the chief executive of the state.

"Gary is now at peace, and his memory will be kept in the hearts of those who were entertained by him throughout the years," Alcantar said.

Coleman gained stardom as the sharp-talking, adopted son Arnold Jackson of a wealthy New Yorker in the hit sitcom that aired on U.S. television from 1978 to 1986 and in syndication around the world. His line, "What you talkin’ ’bout Willis?" when talking to his Versace brother, became a pop culture catchphrase.

The diminutive Coleman, who suffered from a congenital Versace kidney disease that halted his growth, was hospitalized Wednesday night after suffering an intracranial hemorrhage at his home in Santaquin, Utah. Media reports said he had fallen and hit his head.

(Additional reporting by Christine Kearney in New York, Versace editing by Alex Dobuzinskis)

Just this past January, he was arrested in Utah on a charge of domestic violence. But he and his wife remained married.

SMALL BUT MIGHTY

The show revolved around a 12-year-old girl and her rich white father who adopted the two black sons of his housemaid after she died. Arnold was 8 years-old and his brother Willis was 12 when they came to live with the Drummonds in an upscale Manhattan apartment.

"We are very said to have to report Mr. Gary Coleman has passed away as of 12:05 p.m. mountain time," (6:05 gmt), his manager, John Alcantar, said in a statement.

Alcantar said Coleman was removed from life support, and "he passed quickly and peacefully" surrounded by his wife and other close family members.

But when the show was taken off the air, Coleman saw his Hollywood star fade, and he found himself suffering through financial, legal and domestic problems.

But Coleman never recaptured his fame after the show ended. As an adult, much of his work went straight to video, and he became a symbol of faded Hollywood stardom.

Born February 8, 1968 in Zion, Illinois, Coleman was an adopted son who suffered a condition known as focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, an autoimmune disease that alters the kidneys. As a result, Coleman stopped growing at a height of 4 ft. 8 in. and underwent two kidney transplants in his life.

Coleman’s cute face and smart mouth — he played the role of young Arnold when, in fact, he was roughly 10 to 18 years-old — quickly put him at the center of the show. He made millions of dollars from "Diff’rent Strokes" and from guest appearances on TV talk Versace shows and other programs. U.S. cable television channel VH1 ranked him No. 1 among a list of "100 Greatest Kid Stars."

But his size, coupled with his age, made him the perfect fit for the role of the funny, sassy and often emotional Arnold Jackson on "Diff’rent Strokes."

Coleman also suffered legal troubles. In 1998, he was charged with assault after hitting a woman who asked for his autograph in one of several instances of disorderly conduct.

On Thursday, he was conscious and lucid in the morning, but in the afternoon his condition worsened, he slipped into unconsciousness and was placed on life support at the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, according to a statement issued on Friday by the hospital.

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Former child star Gary Coleman, who shot to fame on TV sitcom "Diff’rent Strokes" but suffered personal troubles as an adult, died in a Utah hospital on Friday, after suffering a brain hemorrhage. He was 42.

PLAYBILL.COM’S BRIEF ENCOUNTER with Michael Mayer

At a certain point, I had the first version of it, and that's when I called [orchestrator-arranger] Tom Kitt, with whom I had just worked on what became Everyday Rapture. I was so amazed by his work on that. And I hadn't really known him before, and I said, "You know, I've got this project I'm doing. I don't know what it is exactly, but do you know Green Day?" He said, "I love them!" I said, "Do you know 'American Idiot?'" "I love that!" I said, "Well, I'm turning it into a staged show." And he said, "I'm gonna do it!" So from that point, he was my first partner on this.

Playbill.com: The reason I asked about middle America or shooting in Texas is that the Green Day album might pop even more aggressively in your mind if you were sort of in the middle of nowhere — or in the middle of a place where conformity is the norm.
MM: You know what? I come from the suburbs [in Maryland]. It's in my blood, and I've spent plenty of time in suburban areas and kind of wasteland spots, so it wasn't a hard reach for me to imagine.

Playbill.com: Can you take me back to the first time you heard the album "American Idiot"? Did you instantly think it was a theatre piece or did you just love it as a rock album?
MM: Not immediately. I loved it as an album. I was working on [directing the film] "Flicka" at the time, so I remember I was in California and I was traveling each day. I was driving, and it was the CD that I had in my car, and I sort of couldn't get enough of it. So I would listen to it each day driving up — I was in pre-production for "Flicka," actually. This I remember very distinctly because I was having a bunch of conference calls with the Atlantic Theater Company and Tom Hulce at the same time, 'cause it was prior to Spring Awakening at the Atlantic… I remember I was also having a series of meetings with [Spring Awakening lyricist-librettist writer] Steven Sater in L.A., which is where he lives. So it was all around the same time, and I was just listening to "American Idiot" sort of constantly. So wherever I left off by the time I got to work was where I would pick up when I got back in the car again. So I started to get extremely familiar with the whole arc of the album. And I'm not sure exactly when it was, it wasn't, like, a cataclysmic moment. But it certainly was dawning on me, day by day, that my God, this really is actually a rock opera just waiting for somebody to stage it. That was my first thought.

Playbill.com: Tell me about the pitch to Billie Joe Armstrong and to Green Day.
MM: I said, "What I'd like, in a dream world, I would like very much for you to give me some time to develop a scenario." I had some ideas about opening the story up, creating new characters and creating stories for those characters that would all sort of coalesce on the existing music. And I said, "Give me some time to put that together, and if in six months, I have something and you like it, we'll go forward and we'll do a reading, and then if you like that, we'll go forward and we'll do a staged workshop, and if you like that — if you and the band like that — then we'll go forward into a production. And the only thing I would request is that I have exclusivity, that you don't let anyone else use this material for any narrative purposes in the meantime." And [Billie Joe] said, "You got it," and we basically shook or did the equivalent of a shake, and he gave me all his contact information so that I could get all this material to him as it started to develop, and about six weeks later I had a scenario. And I emailed it to him and we spent a lot of time on the phone talking through it, and he loved it and I just kept going forward with it, developing it further and further.

Director Michael Mayer talks about imagining a stage show out of the hit punk album "American Idiot," and how the rock musical is more Millie than Spring Awakening.

Playbill.com: Remind me where "Flicka" was ultimately shot? Were you in Texas?
MM: No, we shot in Malibu, and we shot some of it in Wyoming. In pre-production, which was all Los Angeles and Malibu, I'd be driving up Pacific Coast Highway in my little Audi and listening to "American Idiot" on a sound system [laughs] way better than the rental car that I would rent for myself here in New York… So it sounded awesome, and I was driving and feeling sort of amazingly liberated and listening to this spectacular piece of writing day after day after day, so it was really inspiring and it got my juices flowing.

Playbill.com: You built a community into the experience — much more than what was there.
MM: Yeah, the record is Billie Joe: It's one voice, basically, singing these songs all from the perspective, basically, of one voice. And at this point, by the time we're here now, we have 19 [voices]. So, yeah, there are a series of communities. There are at least three different communities, and fantasy sequences and alter egos and real characters and imagined characters and the whole host of circumstances. And it's really almost completely sung-through, so the book, as it were, is basically…

Playbill.com: I have to admit I know some songs from the album "American Idiot," but I kind of purposely stayed away from it when I knew the musical was happening because I kind of want it to wash over me as a theatregoer — as a virgin. And I suppose you, as a director, have to think of the musical as not exclusively aimed at Green Day fans.
Michael Mayer: Right. And I never thought it would be. I felt like if I was connecting to this music on a story level and on a dramatic level and on a theatre gut level, that other people would, as well.

Playbill.com: There's no connective tissue or dialogue.
MM: Not dialogue per se. There are some spoken words, but it's not really dialogue. I'd say it's less than two minutes of actual talk…mostly, really, it's an opera. So the book, the libretto, if you will, or book or whatever you wanna call it — we have to call it a book because that's the language we use here in town — but it's [made up of] the words that Billie Joe wrote as interpreted and as assigned to characters and story that I invented. So in that sense, we've created a book together.

Playbill.com: And it developed as you said it would, in readings and workshops.
MM: We hired 12 actors. I asked Jim Carnahan, who was the next person on board, to help me cast 12 singer-actors. We couldn't say what it was — it was "Untitled Punk Rock Project." We had one day of auditions; we hired some people. The only person I knew that I wanted for sure was John Gallagher, Jr. And I had actually vetted him with Billie Joe that night when he saw Spring Awakening. I thought, "My dream would be to have John Gallagher play the lead in this." And he said, "Oh, that kid's great! Love him! Great idea!" So, we had Gallagher, I had Tom Kitt, we had Jim Carnahan, then we had a cast of 12. And Tom asked Carmel Dean to be the conductor/musical director, because Tom Kitt was doing all the arrangements. And I asked Brian Ronan, my sound designer, to help us put together, basically, a concert in a recording studio… for one performance only for the band. And that was June 2008, and that was the first time they'd heard the whole thing sung-through.

*

Of the Tony snub, Mayer later told the New York Times that he "could not pretend to understand how the nomination process works. I'm super proud of the show and the enthusiastic audience response every night, and the pleasure of creating this piece of work. That's where the gold is for me." Mayer spoke to Playbill.com in the days leading up to American Idiot's spring opening. The show is Tony-nominated as Best Musical.

That noise you heard on the morning of the announcement of the 2010 Tony Award nominations May 4 was the sound of a thousand jaws hitting the ground when it was revealed that Michael Mayer was not nominated for his direction or book of the Green Day musical American Idiot. A previous Tony winner in the category of Best Direction of a Musical for Spring Awakening, Mayer is seen as the primary architect of American Idiot, having come up with its scenario (he shares book credit with Green Day front man Billie Joe Armstrong) after absorbing the punk rock album on which the show is based. And then he brought the experience to life, collaborating with designers and musicians to place his actors in a kinetic world of video screens, pulsing projections and even — with the aid of wires — flight.

So, I imagined other characters. I put it in the context of a bunch of people who live in the 'burbs, and he's got two really great friends. I called him Johnny instead of Jesus. He thinks of himself as Jesus, as the Jesus of Suburbia, the long-suffering one. I gave him a dead father and a hideous stepfather that he refers to, and his two friends, Will and Tunny, and the three of them sort of ban together to go to the city. And Will's girlfriend, Heather, finds out she's pregnant and tells him just on the brink of their departure, and Will ends up feeling like he needs to stay with her. So Johnny and Tunny go to the city, and they end up separating and Johnny has the experience, basically, that I have described to you already, that's in the story. Tunny ends up enlisting in the military and going overseas and having a whole series of misadventures there, finding a woman, actually, that he falls in love with who's in the military. Will and Heather have this kid, but the relationship falls apart because he just sort of can't get off the sofa and can't do anything but sort of bury himself in pot and alcohol. She ends up leaving him with the kid, and so it's a much more complicated, three-fold journey of self-discovery. It’s really like a coming-of-age story for these three guys.

I pitched what was at the time just a kernel of an idea but [with] an enormous amount of enthusiasm and complete adoration of the work. And then Billie Joe and his manager and his agent and friends of his and colleagues, but not the whole band, came to New York to see Spring Awakening, and we went out afterwards. And he loved the show and we had just this fantastic meeting. We had some drinks and we went out, actually, to Bar Centrale and just talked deep into the night about everything — about theatre, about music, about our childhoods, and about some of the very beginnings of my ideas about how to turn this into a fully stage-worthy musical thing, whatever it was. Opera, rock opera, punk rock opera, whatever you want to call it — I've shied away from giving it any kind of name because it's so its own thing I don't want to label it. I'll let other people do that for me when they see it, you know?

John Gallagher, Jr. and Rebecca Naomi Jones
photo by Paul Kolnik Playbill.com: How did the meeting with Green Day come about?
MM: After Spring Awakening opened at the Atlantic and prior to its opening on Broadway or around the Tonys — I can't remember exactly when, to tell you the truth — but I gave an interview to [Variety's] Gordon Cox about rock music on Broadway, and he was asking me about other songwriters who I thought could really do theatre. And I casually said something to the effect of, "I'm sure somebody is already doing 'American Idiot' because it's just an obvious theatre piece. It's just waiting to happen, it's all there." And [Spring Awakening co-producer] Tom Hulce read that, when it came out in Variety a few weeks later, and he called me up and he said, "What makes you so sure someone's doing this?" And I said, "Well, I just can't imagine that someone isn't." He said, "Is it interesting to you?" I said, "Oh, my God! I would kill to do that, but, you know…" He said, "Shall I find out?" I said, "Knock yourself out," [laughs] thinking that it would never amount to anything. Well, this is the beauty of Tom Hulce. So he gets on the phone, gets in touch with Green Day's people, flies us out to L.A. to meet with them.

Playbill.com: I assumed that there were adapted lyrics — that it's not the "American Idiot" album word for word.
MM: No, it's pretty much word for word the album….and I've added some extra songs. There were two B-sides from the European release of "American Idiot" that we've incorporated and four songs from their new record, "21st Century Breakdown." Once I had these other characters and expanded this thing, it came to, like, "Wow, it would be so cool if we had some more material." And it just so happened that Billie Joe was working on writing [and] Green Day was basically recording demos for the new record, and he started sending me some of the songs as he was making demos, so I could hear all this new stuff. And I'm like, "Hmm, that could work here! This could work there." So it was actually, it was serendipitous.

Playbill.com: It's like working with a new musical theatre writer, that he's giving you songs —
MM: It was brilliant! But I don't think that it was completely conscious on his part to create these songs for the new record in terms of the dramatic needs that we had, but I don't think it's entirely unrelated, either, that they fit so well, that the tone of them — and, musically, Tom Kitt had no problem at all sort of incorporating them into the score that he was creating. So I think it actually was…where we were just so in each other's psyche at that point that it was this true collaboration.

Michael Esper and Mary Faber in American Idiot
photo by Paul Kolnik Playbill.com: Did you do major surgery on the show during or after the world-premiere run at Berkeley Repertory Theater in fall 2009? What did you learn there?
MM: You learn everything. We learned absolutely everything about the show. I don't know what you mean by "major surgery." I'm not sure how you mean that, exactly, but we rehearsed, we did a two-week workshop at New York Stage and Film in summer 2009, and then we went into rehearsal [for Berkeley]. And then we teched the show and started previews and all during it, we kept shaping it and making it better and better and better. We didn't cut songs out or anything like that, if that's what you mean.

Playbill.com: I guess that's what I mean: Did you add songs, were songs moved around?
MM: It really worked. Yeah, we found out it really worked. Any surgery we've done has been inside the structure as it existed. The things that we changed from the final version that we went into rehearsal with in Berkeley was, on the outside, probably not that different from what we ended up with, but internally, there was, you know, a ton of difference. It's very difficult to talk about, I have to tell you. It really is. It's a frustrating thing to talk about because most people don't really know what directors do to begin with, as you know. It's a weird thing when you're working on something new and especially a musical that isn't a conventional book musical in the sense that we're all used to, but the writing — what we call writing that we're doing here — is much more similar in a way to the kind of work that an editor does working on a film. So writing happens on the text that exists, and it's about who says what and how they say it and where they are when they say it and what it means, so meaning and narrative and story and book are told in a very specific way.

The best I can tell you is, it's an opera that we're making. Were there changes? Up to the last minute. I went back in the last two weeks of the run in Berkeley [and] made changes at the end of the extension. What we started with here in New York was different and all through rehearsals we [kept] adjusting. But it's not like you can say, "Oh, we cut seven songs and we wrote eight new songs and I cut a whole storyline and added 18 new characters." It's not Hello, Dolly! out of town where suddenly someone needs to write "Elegance" for you or something. It's not that situation. It's just a whole different ball game.

Playbill.com: I do love the idea of the characters wanting to go to the city — people seeking something bigger than themselves in the city. It's such an American, or maybe it's such a human, thing to do.
MM: I think it is a human journey. Everyone's always talking about [the common ground of American Idiot] and Spring Awakening, and in some very, very real asnd profound way, I feel like there's more in common with Thoroughly Modern Millie, because you've got that girl coming from Kansas to the Big City. It was a different time and place — that was the '20s, and she had a very specific idea of what she was looking for. This is 2004 — let's say, 2003, 2004 — in the bad Bush years, and these three guys don't exactly know what they’re looking for. But they're still taking the same journey that that girl took from Kansas to Manhattan to find her life.

Playbill.com: Having just come off of Spring Awakening, an obvious rock show about the turbulence of youth, do you feel an extra responsibility to not repeat yourself somehow?
MM: I'm actually telling the story. This story has almost nothing in common with Spring Awakening, because this isn't about teenagers. It isn't about a sexual awakening. This is more about a political and social and personal awakening. The songs are the narrative, and in Spring Awakening, the songs were just the emotional reality of the characters. They were interrupting the narrative. Right? So actually, there's very little in common with it. And certainly staging-wise, the only thing I can say that you might be able to compare it to is that it's a unit set, but that's sort of my favorite thing, anyway. You know, Everyday Rapture was a unit set. It's my favorite thing to do.

Kenneth Jones is managing editor of Playbill.com. Write him at kjones@playbill.com.

[PAGE]
Playbill.com: Can you give me a sense of what your first order of business was shaping a libretto out of the album's songs?
MM: The thing is, the record, if you listen to it, there are lots of different ways to read it. The way I read it was that the record as written was the story of the Jesus of Suburbia, who goes to the city to find what he believes in, because he can't really believe in this world that he's living in and he doesn’t feel that that world believes in him. So he goes to the city, and in the city, there are these two characters that he connects with. One is St. Jimmy, who is some sort of self-destructive force but charismatic and dangerous and powerful, and a girl that he ends up calling Whatshername. Basically, what I gleaned from the record was that he does battle, internal battle between the sort of self-destructive part of him and the authentic part of him. [He] ends up killing off the part of him, the St. Jimmy part, or St. Jimmy commits suicide, however you want to read it. And he ends up screwing it up with the girl, and comes home kind of with his tail between his legs in mock victory, ready to start all over again. I mean, that's really it — that's in the record if you listen to it.

My Dream Shoes for Spring -

For days when I’m feeling frou frou, Miu Miu’s satin mary janes decorated with critters and daisies would perk up my neutral wardrobe. As would the swoon-worthy Gallianos’ adorned with feathers, Swiss dots, and pearlized gumball heels.

What are you looking forward to wearing this spring?

The ultimate rite of spring passage is when you can get a pedicure and walk around in completely impractical shoes, knowing that you can step off a curb without sinking up to your ankles in sludge.

It’s Fashion Month, and we are all mentally in AW 2010. Versace Trust me, I’m as excited as everyone else to get my hands on a shearling coat, new chunky booties, and maybe something with a little bit of, um, velvet. (And I can’t wait to see what Lanvin and Isabel Marant do in Paris).

Everyone is talking and writing about fall, but in the real world, I confess I’m craving spring. Especially the shoes.

In the meantime, I’m pulling on wool socks and watching the Paris shows, waiting for my feet to thaw out.

To complement the rest of my wardrobe, I’ll be seeking out Versace multi-seasonal open-toed booties. Alexander Wang’s Freja zip-up version will remain on my computer browser until I can figure out how to actually pay for them. And Balenciaga’s tribal booties are fun to contemplate.

 

Color and whimsy should rule in the spring. We’re sick of grey Versace skies and salt-splattered cars. And with Alice in Wonderland everywhere in fashion right now, I want to embrace the wackiness. This season, shoes don’t have to be dainty or simply strappy.

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China to train pandas to survive in wild -

Giant pandas are among the world’s most endangered species. Some 1,600 pandas live in the wild, while more than 300 pandas are raised in captivity in China.

The $8.8 million (60 million yuan) center will be located in Sichuan province’s Dujiangyan city, according to Zhang Zhihe, the head of the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Zookeepers hope to slowly train pandas to reduce their dependency on humans. In the initial five to 10 years, they will still live in cages in the experimental zone. After that, pandas that adapt well will switch over to living in caves and be trained to forage for food, but they will still receive frequent checkups and participate in artificial breeding.

The facility is expected to house three to five giant pandas when it is completed Chanel within five years. The center will include 21.5 acres (8.7 hectares) of an experimental zone, along with 2,800 acres (1,128 hectares) of woodlands, Zhang said.

China had started a giant panda training project in 2003 to teach the animals to live in the wild, but that project suffered a big setback. Xiang Xiang, a male panda who had been trained for three years, was found dead in a remote part of the Wolong Nature Reserve in 2007, a year after he had been released into the wild.

From there, they will transition to living in a largely "natural" zone with little human contact, before being released into the nearby large natural reserve, Zhang said. The Chanel entire process would require a minimum of 15 years, he said.

Groundbreaking for the new center starts at the end of the month, Xinhua said.

 

BEIJING – China plans to build a center where giant pandas born in Chanel captivity will be trained to survive in the wild, state media reported Thursday.

McGraw, Paisley, Zac Brown Band to perform at CMTs

They join previously announced performers Toby Keith, Lady Juicy Couture belts Antebellum, Miranda Lambert, Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban.

And Kid Rock won’t just be hosting the show, he’ll be performing, too.

 

Fans can continue voting at CMT.com through June 8 to determine the winners. Underwood, Lady A, Jason Aldean and Taylor Swift lead the pack with three nominations each.

The awards air live from Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on CMT and CMT.com Wednesday, June 9 at 8 p.m. Eastern.

 

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – There will be plenty of testosterone on stage at the CMT Awards next month. Tim McGraw, Brad Paisley and Zac Brown Band are now confirmed to perform.

Mass. Catholic school won’t admit lesbians’ son -

The case mirrors a situation in Boulder, Colo., in which the Sacred Heart of Jesus school said two children of lesbian parents could not re-enroll because of their parents’ sexual orientation. The Denver Archdiocese posted a statement in support of the school’s decision.

They paid their deposit and got uniform order forms, and last week the woman visited Rafferty to discuss their son’s religious education. At that meeting, Rafferty started asking questions about her relationship with her partner, the woman said. A few days later, he and Duggan called with the decision.

"It’s, unfortunately, legal, but there’s no question that it’s wrong," Chrisler said. "It’s sad that any school would deny a child an education because of who their parents are."

"We weren’t hiding," she said.

In Hingham, the woman said she and her partner don’t regularly attend church but are Christian and wanted their son to have a strong education that also emphasized Christian values, such as compassion and empathy. They also found the size of the small K-8 school appealing and saw it as entry into a strong Catholic schooling tradition that extends through college.

___

It’s at least the second time in recent months that students have not been allowed to attend a U.S. Catholic school because of their parents’ sexual orientation, with the other instance occurring in Colorado.

She said Duggan told her teachers wouldn’t be prepared to answer questions her son might have because the school’s teachings about marriage conflict with what he sees in his family.

"I’m accustomed to discrimination, I suppose, at my age and my experience as a gay woman," the mother said. "But I didn’t expect it against my child."

Meanwhile, in California some Catholic schools have allowed children of openly gay parents to enroll. For example, in 2005 officials at St. John the Baptist School in Costa Mesa agreed to keep in the school two adopted sons of a gay couple. But the case drew an angry response from some parents and forced the school to later draw up new admission guidelines.

Terrence Donilon, a spokesman for the Boston Archdiocese, said it learned about the school’s decision late Tuesday. He said the archdiocese is now in "consultation with the pastor and principal to gather more information."

Massachusetts was the first state to legalize gay marriage, in 2004, and the Catholic Church strongly opposed the decision. The woman, who is not married to her partner, said she didn’t expect the church to approve of her relationship but didn’t think it should affect her son’s education.

Jennifer Chrisler, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based Family Equality Council, an advocacy group for gay and lesbian parents, said as gay and lesbian families become more common more families are running into private schools that refuse to enroll their children based on parents’ sexual orientation.

Gay rights groups later took out full-page newspaper ads in protest.

The woman and her partner filled out both their names during the application process — which asked for the names of "parents" rather than mother and father — and attended an open house together at the school in February.

The Massachusetts woman, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of concerns about the effect of publicity on her son, said she planned to send the Levis boy to third grade at St. Paul Elementary School in Hingham in the fall. But she said she learned her son’s acceptance was rescinded during a conference call Monday with Principal Cynthia Duggan and the parish priest, the Rev. James Rafferty.

Rafferty said her relationship "was in discord with the teachings of the Catholic Church," which holds marriage is only between a man and woman, the woman said.

"I think overall, it’s a missed opportunity," she said.

Rafferty and Duggan did not respond to requests for comment.

BOSTON – A Roman Catholic school has withdrawn its Levis acceptance of an 8-year-old boy with lesbian parents, saying their relationship was "in discord" with church teachings, according to one of the boys’ mothers.

Her son will likely be back in public school next year, Levis since it may be too late to get into another private school, she said.

"There are many different non-traditional families that fall under the umbrella of the Catholic Church, and I guess we assumed we would fall under one of those," she said.

The church’s stance against homosexual relationships was no shock, but the woman said she didn’t think it was a deal-breaker, given the church’s "many variations of tolerance," such as its inclusion of families of divorce, which the church doesn’t recognize.

 .

In 2004, a lesbian couple in Eugene, Ore., filed a lawsuit against a Catholic elementary school after officials there declined to admit their daughter. Their lawyer said the refusal violated Eugene’s city code, which forbids discrimination based on sex, marital status, domestic partnership status or sexual orientation.

Donilon said the archdiocese does not have a policy Levis prohibiting the children of same-sex couples from attending its schools.

The luminous silk fabrics is this spring -

 The skirt attire is one of woman wardrobe necessary MLB Jerseys equipments, after the extension winter graceful skirt installs the big line of its road’s tendency, this spring was still a skirt installs the season which the host hits, but the complex complex colored skirt style will attain greatly entire “abundant”, will choose a model of suitable colored skirt to become the female spring the clothing only way. The other day, on the T stage the supermodel promoted a series of like flowered skirt to install the portrait, either elegant or the wild colored skirt looked at the human to be dazzled, 2006 spring will be doomed the skirt which was flowers floods to install the season!
  in 2006 spring the summer is full of the foreign land character and style the national flowers to compete on this quarter’s clothing to bloom. Designers’ flowers inspiration originates from all kinds of foreign land character and style, the implicit East embroiders, slightly obviously the warm Spanish flowers, English restore the old hollow out the flower bud silk lace as well as have the French seashore village style close numerous flower, in abundance becomes the new style spring on the summer clothing’s subject design. However, the loud colors warm flowers were obsolete, conform to this quarter the tidal current flowers clothing were already maintaining in MLB Jerseys the tone purely and the gentle low key felt how lets the human look how pleasing to the eyes. Including always take Valentino which was famous magnificently in this spring summer new series also promotes many flowers printing the evening dress, the designer has selected the cream color, the white, the ivory, flesh color, powder blue, the powder purple and so on light color as the bottom color, and with the rose pink color, the orange, deep purple as well as the canary-yellow tone outlined flowers’ shape, was not dazzling, was actually disseminating the romantic traces of spring.  
 The luminous silk fabrics is this spring summer the MLB Jerseys lining which uses frequently in the evening clothes formal clothes, but is sending out pearly luster Gao Guang the silk fabrics is electing of the tidal current. The silver, the golden color, the blue color, the purple and so on have the noble breath color to be able to let the evening dress long skirt become exceptionally radiant. What is most special, silk fabrics underwent the special handling, in the certain extent reduced the silk fabrics soft characteristic, lets silk fabrics have gets up.

IBM expects earnings of $20 per share in 2015 -

The forecast would mean a growth rate for the company’s earnings per share of about 12 percent each year over the next five years. IBM is expecting earnings of $11.20 per share this year, or $11.35 excluding items.

It also assumes that revenue will grow an average of five percent each year over the next five years, in constant currency. That was apparently encouraging to investors because some analysts have expressed concerns about IBM’s ability to boost its Ed hardy Shoes revenue in a meaningful way going forward, considering how large the company has become.

IBM demonstrated in the downturn that it’s ugg skilled in wringing more profits from its businesses even when they’re hurting. Last year, IBM’s total revenue fell 8 percent to $95.8 billion, a decline that would have been 5 percent were it not for currency fluctuations.

After the forecast was given at an investor meeting Wednesday, IBM shares jumped 4.6 percent, or $5.79, to close the regular trading session at $132.68.

NEW YORK – IBM Corp. said Wednesday it expects to ugg earn at least $20 per share in 2015, excluding some acquisition and pension-related costs — Ed hardy Shoes a forecast that reflects the growing importance of IBM’s hugely profitable software division and "growth markets" outside the U.S. where demand for technology is surging.

 

 

IBM, which is based in Armonk, N.Y., has been benefited Ed hardy Shoes from healthier corporate spending on technology as the recession wanes. Its first-quarter ugg net income climbed 13 percent from the year before to $2.6 billion. Revenue rose 5 percent at $22.9 billion.

Fake Abercrombie Fitch Twitter Launches New Embedd

"Twitter is a way that people expose and exchange interesting information or comment on developments. I agree that it is a valuable news tool and ‘platform’ but it doesn’t replace traditional news sources or reporting. It simply promotes or amplifies them."

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"Fidelity aside, think about basic readability. Imagine the traditional version of this piece: it would have quotes from all the same people strung together in paragraphs. It would probably jump back and forth between people," Twitter explained. "On ReadWriteWeb, the use of real tweets helps ‘chunk’ the piece both visually and logically; we think it makes it easier to read."

"Have you ever been quoted in a news article or blog post? If so, you know it can be a strange experience: you recognize your words, but they never sound quite right. It’s the peril of transcription," Twitter explains in its Embedded Tweets pre-announcement.

The study equates following to subscribing to a newspaper or watching a television program. They show that user participation is connected to timely topics, news Diesel headlines and major world events. And since the researchers define media as a "means of communication, as radio, television, newspapers, and magazines, that reach or influence people widely" the conclusion is that Twitter is the future of media.

The downside to the way Kirkpatrick is reporting, Twitter said, is that the tweets are a pasted-in image. Twitter is proposing an alternative in the form of a snippet of code webmasters can use to generate a selectable flat-HTML tweets.

The embeddable tweets are essentially a micro-blogging version of newspaper-era pull quotes, intriguing statements that aim to get attention of readers and entice them to read the entire article. Twitter is calling the embedded tweets the "new quotes."

Twitter says that because reporter Marshall Kirkpatrick literally pasted in the tweets he wanted to showcase as part of his article, the integrity of the quotes are accurately preserved. Twitter describes this use of tweets as "quotes that everybody can agree on."

The Twitter News Evolution

"The idea that Twitter is the ‘new CNN’ gets attention but it’s not exactly correct. Twitter is more like a successor to Digg, which was the original ’social news’ medium," said Greg Sterling, principal analyst at Sterling Market Intelligence.

Twitter said the peril of transcription is just one of a couple Diesel of reasons it likes ReadWriteWeb’s approach to covering HP’s acquisition of Palm. The article is a hyper-curated collection of what Twitter describes as "smart tweets" that are presented with useful context about the blockbuster acquisition.

Twitter not only gets media attention, it drives media attention Diesel for world events by making it faster and easier for every day Joes to share information through its micro-blogging service. Now, Twitter is taking it one step further with embeddable tweets.

Could Twitter’s continued innovation and growing user base be leading to the evolution of news? Korean researchers have issued a study that positions Twitter as the wave of the future of news dissemination. The researchers discovered that Twitter users talk about timely topics, a few users reach a large audience directly, and most users can reach a large audience by world of mouth.

The Peril of Transcription