Friday, March 21, 2008

Former Symbionese Liberation Army member released from prison

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A state Department of Corrections spokesman says former Symbionese Liberation Army member Sara Jane Olson has been released from prison after serving time for trying to bomb police cars.

Olson, formerly known as Kathleen Soliah, walked out of the Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla.

In 2001, Olson pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 14 years in prison for the attempted bombings of police cars in 1975 for the SLA, the urban guerrilla group that kidnapped newspaper heiress Patty Hearst.

Prisons spokesman Bill Sessa says "Like all inmates in her circumstance, she earned time for her good behavior in prison, she wasn't treated any differently than anybody else."

©2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Steelers' Cedrick Wilson Released After Lindsey Paulat Assault

Atlanta, GA 3/20/2008 03:58 PM GMT (FINDITT)

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Cedrick Wilson was released Thursday, hours after being charged with assaulting Lindsey Paulat, his estranged girlfriend, at a suburban restaurant.

The Steelers gave no reason why they cut Wilson, who caught 81 passes for 1,162 yards and two touchdowns in his three years in Pittsburgh.

Wilson, 29, entered the Patron Mexican Grill in Pine Township shortly before 8 p.m. Wednesday and saw Paulat sitting at the bar, according to a criminal complaint filed by Northern Regional Police.

Paulat told police Wilson pushed her on the shoulder and, as she turned around, punched her in the left side of her face before leaving the eatery promptly, according to the complaint.

Wilson was arraigned around 4 a.m. Thursday on charges of simple assault, harassment and disorderly conduct and freed on $10,000 bail.

Paulat and Wilson have a one-year old daughter, Anya, together. However, their relationship has been violent.

In January, the estranged couple was involved in a fight at Wilson's home that ended with her holding police at bay for about 12 hours.

For more sports news, please check out http://news.finditt.com/NewsList.aspx?cat=6&wcat=5

NCAA March Madness on Demand Begins Thursday

Atlanta, GA 3/20/2008 04:18 PM GMT (FINDITT)

NCAA March Madness on Demand begins its annual NCAA Tournament coverage Thursday. The first game of the tournament will be at 12:20pm as No. 3 Xavier takes on No. 14 Georgia in Washington, DC.

NCAA March Madness on Demand (MMOD) is the online video player that allows users to view all 63 games of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship.

MMOD airs every game from the first round of the tournament through the Men's Final Four in San Antonio, including the Championship game on April 7.

NCAA March Madness on Demand is produced in partnership with CBS Sports, CBS College Sports Network and the NCAA.

MMOD is available on CBSSports.com. 2008 is the first year CBSSports.com will allow users to view the live streaming video of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship without having to register for the product.

For more sports news, please check out http://news.finditt.com/NewsList.aspx?cat=6&wcat=5

For an Aspiring Singer, a Harsher Spotlight

Published: March 13, 2008

She left a broken home on the Jersey Shore at 17 and came to New York City to work the nightclubs as a rhythm and blues singer. Now, at 22, she is the unwitting, and as yet unseen, star of the seamy drama that is the downfall of Gov. Eliot Spitzer of New York.

Kristen, the prostitute described in a federal affidavit as having had a rendezvous with Mr. Spitzer on Feb. 13 at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, has spent the last few days in her ninth-floor apartment in the Flatiron district of Manhattan. On Monday, she made a brief appearance in federal court, where a lawyer was appointed to represent her. She is expected to be a witness in the case against four people charged with operating a prostitution ring called the Emperor’s Club V.I.P.

In a series of telephone interviews on Tuesday night, she said she had slept very little over the past week, with all the stress of the case.

“I just don’t want to be thought of as a monster,” the woman said as she told the tiniest tidbits of her story.

Born Ashley Youmans but now known as Ashley Alexandra Dupré, she spoke softly and with good humor as she added with significant understatement: “This has been a very difficult time. It is complicated.”

She has not been charged. The lawyer appointed to represent her, Don D. Buchwald, told a magistrate judge in court on Monday that she had been subpoenaed to testify in a grand jury investigation. Asked to swear that she had accurately filled out and signed a financial affidavit, she responded affirmatively.

A person with knowledge of the Emperor’s Club operation confirmed that the woman interviewed by The New York Times was the woman identified as Kristen in the affidavit. Mr. Buchwald confirmed various details of Ms. Dupré’s background but would not discuss the contents of the affidavit.

Ms. Dupré said by telephone Tuesday night that she was worried about how she would pay her rent since the man she was living with “walked out on me” after she discovered he had fathered two children. She said she was considering working at a friend’s restaurant or, once her apartment lease expires, moving back with her family in New Jersey “to relax.”

She did not say when she had started working for the Emperor’s Club, or how often she had liaisons arranged through the ring. Asked when she met Governor Spitzer and how many times they had seen each other, Ms. Dupré said she had no comment.

As of Wednesday morning, Ms. Dupré’s MySpace page recounted her “odyssey to New York from New Jersey through North Carolina, Miami, D.C., Virginia and Austin, Texas;” public records show that she lived in Monmouth County, N.J., in 2001, and in North Carolina in 2003. She owns a company, created in 2005, called Pasche New York, which her lawyer said was an entertainment business designed to further her singing career.

Music is her first love, and on the MySpace page, Ms. Dupré mentions Patsy Cline, Frank Sinatra, Christina Aguilera and Lauryn Hill among a long list of influences, including her brother, Kyle. (She also lists Whitney Houston, Madonna, Mary J. Blige and Amy Winehouse as her top MySpace friends.) In the interview, she said she saw the Rolling Stones perform at Radio City Music Hall on their last tour after a friend gave her two tickets. “They were amazing,” she said.

On MySpace, her page says: “I am all about my music and my music is all about me. It flows from what I’ve been through, what I’ve seen and how I feel.”

She left “a broken family” at age 17, having been abused, according to the MySpace page, and has used drugs and “been broke and homeless.”

“Learned what it was like to have everything and lose it, again and again,” she writes. “Learned what it was like to wake up one day and have the people you care about most gone.

“But I made it,” she continues. “I’m still here and I love who I am. If I never went through the hard times, I would not be able to appreciate the good ones. Cliché, yes, but I know it’s true.”

Ms. Dupré’s mother, Carolyn Capalbo, 46, said that after her daughter finished sophomore year in high school, Ms. Dupré moved to North Carolina. “She was a young kid with typical teenage rebellion issues, but we are extremely close now,” Ms. Capalbo said in a telephone interview Wednesday.

In 2006, Ms. Dupré changed her legal name, according to records in Monmouth County Superior Court, from Ashley R. Youmans to Ashley Rae Maika DiPietro, taking her stepfather’s surname since she regarded him as “the only father I have known.” But in the interview, she referred to herself as Ashley Alexandra Dupré, which is how she is known on MySpace.

On the Web page is a recording of what she describes as her latest track, “What We Want,” a hip-hop-inflected rhythm-and-blues tune that asks, “Can you handle me, boy?” and uses some dated slang, calling someone her “boo.”

“I know what you want, you got what I want,” she sings in the chorus. “I know what you need. Can you handle me?”

Her MySpace biography says she started singing professionally after a musician she was living with heard her singing the Aretha Franklin hit “Respect” in the shower and burst into the bathroom with his lead guitarist. She says she toured and recorded with them, then moved to Manhattan in 2004 and “spent the first two years getting to know the music scene, networking in clubs and connecting with the industry.

“Now it’s all about my music, it’s all about expressing me.”

In the affidavit, the woman the Emperor’s Club called Kristen is described as “an American, petite, very pretty brunette, 5 feet 5 inches, and 105 pounds.” She apparently was booked at about $1,000 an hour, placing her in the middle of the seven-diamond scale by which the prostitutes were paid up to $4,300 an hour.

Ms. Capalbo said that she was “shell-shocked” when her daughter called in the middle of last week and told her she had been working as an escort and was now in trouble with the law. She said she was not sure that Ms. Dupré realized who Mr. Spitzer was when he was her client.

“She is a very bright girl who can handle someone like the governor,” Ms. Capalbo said. “But she also is a 22-year-old, not a 32-year-old or a 42-year-old, and she obviously got involved in something much larger than her.”

Benjamin Weiser contributed reporting.

Aspiring Model and Actress Found in California Apartment Apparently Died of Blunt Force Trauma

An aspiring actress and model whose body was found over the weekend in her Santa Monica apartment apparently died of blunt force trauma, police said Wednesday.

Detectives were still piecing together what may have happened to 21-year-old Juliana Maureen Redding, who was found dead in her Centinela Boulevard apartment Sunday evening.

Police believe Redding was the victim of an assault, and they are handling the case as a homicide. There were no clear signs of forced entry, and they have no suspects.

"We're still hoping that somebody will come forward and provide us with information that will lead us to the suspects or person responsible for her death," Santa Monica police Lt. Alex Padilla told FOX News on Wednesday. "We’re looking for the public’s assistance."

Padilla said that investigators are testing blood found on the sidewalk in front of Redding's ground-floor apartment, but aren't sure where it came from or whether it's connected to the investigation.

Police are still in the early stages of the probe, he said.

"At this point, we have not made any arrest," Padilla told MyFOXLa on Monday. "This is an ongoing investigation, and we are interviewing family, friends and neighbors to [garner] as much information as possible."

The Arizona native's body was discovered after her mother notified authorities that she hadn't been able to reach her daughter for several days.

A neighbor told The Los Angeles Times this week that she heard a loud noise coming from Redding's apartment, followed by the sounds of someone running past her door.

An autopsy was conducted Tuesday, but police have asked that the results "be released at a later date," Los Angeles County coroner's Assistant Chief Ed Winter told the Times.

"The preliminary investigation has revealed no bullet or stab wounds," Winter told the paper, though he declined to elaborate on Redding's injuries or disclose a cause or time of death.

KABC reported that the autopsy results won't be released for 30 to 60 days.

Police said they were working with DNA taken from the scene.

"We have collected some evidence at the crime scene that we're looking at, both DNA and other," Padilla told KABC. "And so any of that information will certainly be evaluated."

He added that police were conducting extensive interviews and were not ruling anyone out, including an ex-boyfriend in Arizona.

Redding lived in the one-bedroom apartment since November 2006, according to the Times. She paid $1,800 a month in rent and had a Yorkshire terrier named GiGi.

"She was a very lovely, young girl, and the dog was as lovely as she was," a neighbor, Tom Baxter, 59, told the newspaper.

The dog is now in a shelter, according to KABC.

Redding was working to make ends meet as a hostess at a tapas restaurant and wine bar in Venice, Calif., between modeling and acting gigs, the Times reported.

She had gotten a few small parts in films and briefly appeared in a music video. But recently, a former actor boyfriend told FOX News, she had also begun working as a waitress in a Hollywood strip club in order to make more money.

"She was one of the most beautiful angels that has ever walked on the planet," Greg Cipes told FOX. "She was truly breathtaking."

Cipes and Redding met while making a 2005 comedy film called "Kathy T Gives Good Hoover."

Friends and family were devastated about the young woman's death.

"She's one of the most beautiful people inside and out," pal Sherri Hoffman told the Times through tears. "This is really terrible."

Anyone with information on Redding or her death is asked to call the Santa Monica Police Department at (310) 458-8451, or (310) 458-8427 after hours, or the "WETIP" hotline: 800-78-CRIME.

Maundy Thursday: Christians Commemorate Holy Thursday

Today the Christians around the world that follow the Gregorian Calendar commemorate the Maundy Thursday, better known as Holy Thursday remembering the day when Jesus Christ was betrayed by Judas after the Last Supper in which He mandated his disciples to love one another and washed their feet as a sign of love.

Maundy Thursday is the Thursday before Easter known as Holy Thursday. Christians remember it as the day of the Last Supper, when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples and established the ceremony known as the Eucharist. The night of Maundy Thursday is the night on which Jesus was betrayed by Judas in the Garden of Gethsemane.

The word maundy comes from the command given by Christ at the Last Supper, that we should love one another. In Roman Catholic churches the anthem Mandatum novum do vobis (a new commandment I give to you) would be sung on Maundy Thursday. In many other countries this day is known as Holy Thursday.

Maundy Thursday ceremonies
In Britain, the sovereign takes part in the Ceremony of the Royal Maundy.

This ceremony, held at a great cathedral, involves the distribution of Maundy money to deserving senior citizens (one man and one woman for each year of the sovereign’s age), usually chosen for having done service to their community. They receive ceremonial red and white purses which contain coins made especially for the occasion. The white purse contains one coin for each year of the monarch’s reign. The red purse contains money in place of other gifts that used to be given to the poor. In the 17th century, and earlier, the King or Queen would wash the feet of the selected poor people as a gesture of humility, and in remembrance of Jesus’ washing the feet of the disciples. The last monarch to do this was James 2. The ceremony of the monarch giving money to the poor on this day dates back to Edward 1.

Pedilavium: the washing of the feet

Roman Catholic church services feature a ceremony in which the priest washes the feet of 12 people to commemorate Jesus’ washing the feet of his disciples. It was common in monasteries throughout history for the Abbot to wash the feet of the monks in a similar gesture. Some other churches nowadays also have foot-washing ceremonies as part of their Maundy Thursday services.

The consecration of holy oil

In Roman Catholic churches, Maundy Thursday or Holy Thursday is usually the day on which the supply of anointing oil to be used in ceremonies during the year is consecrated.This is done at a special Chrism Mass.

Even better than today's hybrid

Even better than today's hybrid
Laura Ballance
Special to The Province

Behold, the car of the future will be powered by fuel vapour and sip the juice at a miserly rate of about three litres for every 100 kilometres driven.

And an example of a car using the revolutionary technology will be on display at the 2008 Vancouver International auto Show, later this month.

It is a three-wheeled single-seat vehicle and has been named the Alé (alay) by its creator, George Parker of the company FuelVapor Technologies.

The Alé's new technology is able to increase the fuel efficiency of any gas engine by up to 20 per cent while at the same time decreasing CO2 emissions by 30 per cent, all without a catalytic converter.

Furthermore, it emits 75-per-cent less CO2 than your average hybrid vehicle.

Conventional cars mix up air and gasoline at a ratio of 14.7:1.

That's mostly air, indeed, but this design takes that a step further, mixing that ratio up to 20:1 of air to gasoline, making it a lot more efficient.

The Alé can actually drive from Vancouver to San Francisco without refuelling and it's capable of zipping from zero to 60 in five seconds.

Plans for a limited production (hand-built) run of these cars is slated for this year with an estimated cost of $75,000.

Mass production for the Alé is predicted to bring the price down to less than half that inside five years.

FuelVapor Technologies will be entering the Alé in the "Automotive X-Prize" (aka Richard Branson's competition for the most fuel-efficient production vehicle in the world).

The prototype will make a second appearance in the city in April at EPIC -- The Sustainable Living Expo (April 18-20).

But check it out first at the 2008 Vancouver International auto Show, March 31-April 6 at BC Place Stadium.

For more information on the 08 Show visit: www.VancouverInternationalAutoShow.com.

© The Vancouver Province 2008