Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Strike A Pose...


A model displays a creation of Golden Point fashion house during the opening evening of Skopje Fashion Week November 29, 2005. REUTERS/Ognen Teofilovski




105 -- Gisele Bundchen walks the runway at the 2005 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in New York on Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2005. (Fashion Wire Daily/Grant Lamos IV)





A model displays a creation of Golden Point fashion house during the opening evening of Skopje Fashion Week, Macedonia, late Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005. (AP Photo/Boris Grdanoski)





A model displays a creation of Extyn fashion house during the opening evening of Skopje Fashion Week November 29, 2005. REUTERS/Ognen Teofilovski




A model displays a creation of Golden Point fashion house during the opening evening of Skopje Fashion Week November 29, 2005. REUTERS/Ognen Teofilovski




104 -- Heidi Klum walks the runway at the 2005 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in New York on Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2005. (Fashion Wire Daily/Grant Lamos IV)

Thursday, November 24, 2005

SWEET!!

SHE IS STILL HOT!!
Jenny McCarthy arrives for the 33rd annual American Music Awards in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2005. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)


Not a huge fan, but c'mon, she is smokin' hot!

Singer Mariah Carey performs 'Don't Forget About Us' at the 2005 American Music Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, November 22, 2005. Carey went on to win the American Music Award for favorite female Soul/R and B artist at the awards show. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)



This bike is awesome...Why the model is wearing so many clothes is beyond me.

A model poses with a Robotica chopper, worth US$200,000 and made by the U.S. company 'Ghostrider' from Duneaville, AL, during a press presentation prior to the Essen Motor Show in Essen, Germany, Monday, Nov. 21, 2005. About 570 exhibitors from 21 countries will present their latest developments at the Essen trade fair from Nov. 25 until Dec. 4. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)


Nice thighs!

Mariah Carey sings during the halftime show at the Detroit Lions-Atlanta Falcons game in Detroit, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2005. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Monday, November 21, 2005

Girls Girls Girls


Brazilian model Gisele Bundchen models for the 2006 Pirelli calendar in Cap d'Antibes in France in this undated handout image released by Pirelli November 17, 2005. The 2006 calendar from the Italian tyre firm Pirelli is due to be launched in Paris on Friday. EDITORIAL USE ONLY, NO ARCHIVE, NO SALES REUTERS/Mert Alas & Marcus Piggott/Copyright 2006 Pirelli Calendar/Handout



Actress Jessica Alba arrives for the first anniversary celebration of Voto Latino, organized to encourage young Latinos to participate in the democratic process, Tuesday, Nov.15, 2005, in New York. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano)


Supermodel Gisele Bundchen poses on the runway during the Victoria's Secret Fashion show in New York November 9, 2005. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)


Miss Paraguay Dallys Ferreyra performs during the 2005 Miss Playboy TV Latin America and Iberia contest in Mexico City November 3, 2005. Picture taken on November 3, 2005. REUTERS/Daniel Aguilar

Friday, October 28, 2005

Feels Like Halloween!


Otis, a bulldog, runs through the pumpkin patch at Muzzi's Pumpkin Patch and Corn Maze in San Gregorio, Calif., on Saturday, Oct. 22, 2005. Otis ws visiting the pumpkin patch with his owner Christopher Burke of San Francisco. (AP Photo/Susan Ragan)




This image captured by NASA's Earth-orbiting Hubble Space Telescope shows Mars when it was approximately 43 million miles (68 million km) from Earth. On Sunday, October 30, the Red Planet will be 69.4 million kilometers (43.1 million miles) from Earth -- a distance that in galactic terms is less than wafer-thin and will not be equalled until 2018.(AFP/NASA/File)



This photo provided by Six Flags Marine World shows Fedor, a 14-month-old Siberian tiger, as he holds onto a pumpkin after romping around in a pumpkin batch at Six Flags Marine World's Tiger Island exhibit on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2005, in Vallejo, Calif. (AP Photo/Six Flags Marine World, D. Arnold)





Monday, October 24, 2005

Book Details Artist's Civil War Interviews

By NAHAL TOOSI, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - Late in his life, artist James Edward Kelly tried to publish his memoirs, a book that would have featured his colorful interviews with the many Civil War figures who posed for him. But by then, the Great Depression had set in and publishers told him no one was interested in a war long past.

Seven decades after his death, Kelly's dream is being fulfilled. Civil War historian William B. Styple has written a book that chronicles Kelly's life and includes the artist's interviews with key 19th century figures.

The book, "Generals in Bronze," comes out Nov. 1, and is already generating tremendous buzz in the world of Civil War buffs.

"I was absolutely fascinated by it because it gives such a feeling of intimacy," said Richard Snow, editor of American Heritage magazine. "It may not add anything momentous to the historical record, but it gives you the pleasure of gossip."

"Generals in Bronze" provides valuable insight into the personalities of the era, thanks in large part to Kelly's meticulous notes. His interviews covered a range of subjects, from Gen. George A. Custer's "boyish chuckle" and his canteen of iced tea to whether Gen. George G. Meade wished to retreat from the Battle of Gettysburg (apparently so).

One general told Kelly how Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's drinking had led him to resign as a captain in 1854. The account claims that Grant remarked: "I'll make my mark yet. I don't propose to remain in the gutter."

"These are things they wouldn't write in their memoirs," Styple, 45, said of the people interviewed. "In those days, they didn't write tell-all books."

Styple, who has been fascinated by the Civil War since childhood, embarked on the project two years ago after finding a large batch of Kelly's interview notes at the New-York Historical Society.

Kelly, born in New York in 1855, had demonstrated an aptitude for art early in life. His work appeared in publications including Scribner's and Harper's. Five of his bronze reliefs adorn the Monmouth Battle Monument in Freehold, N.J.

When Kelly died, he left much of his artwork and notes to his physician, George Ryder. Over the years, Ryder and his descendants gave many of the items to institutions. Styple found 27 boxes of papers at the New-York Historical Society alone.

One Civil War debate that Styple's book might help settle is whether Meade wanted to withdraw from Gettysburg.

According to Kelly's interview with Gen. Winfield S. Hancock, Meade considered leaving but his men did not want to.

Hancock said the Union general remarked: "As you wish gentlemen; but Gettysburg is no place to fight a battle in."

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