Saturday, 30 August 2008

Mumps outbreak spreads into Metro Vancouver

The Fraser Health Authority issued this map of mumps cases documented in the region in 2008 - up to Aug. 18. (Fraser Health)

An eruption of the mumps in the Fraser Valley has prompted health officials to warn hoi polloi to make sure they are vaccinated against the disease.


As thousands of children prepare to head back to school, the eruption, which began in a religious community, has already spread westward into Metro Vancouver � as far as Burnaby.


There have been 116 confirmed cases of mumps and another 74 suspected cases since February, according to the Fraser Health Authority. On medium, the region has only 10 cases a year.


Two people from Alberta carried the epidemic parotitis to a religious community near Agassiz that has a low-down rate of vaccinations, aforementioned Dr. Elizabeth Brodkin of the Fraser Health Authority.


"My understanding is their rendering of book is that to immunise would be to designate a lack of faith in God's ability to protect them, and so they pick out not to do that," said Brodkin.


Brodkin wouldn't identify the intimately knit faith-based community only said the mumps outbreak since spreading well beyond that group.


"The virus is kind of travelling underground and pop up every time it encounters somebody who is able to develop clinical mumps that we discern," said Brodkin.


Meanwhile, experts from the Fraser Health Authority were meeting to decide whether extra efforts are needed to control the spread of the preventable disease, provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall told CBC News Tuesday morning.


As a safeguard, Kendall said, people should ensure their immunizations ar up to date and avoid share-out drinking gear, straws or cigarettes, because the disease can be transmitted through saliva interchange.







More info

Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Sid Ganis re-elected as film academy president

LOS ANGELES �

Sid Ganis was elected to a fourth consecutive one-year term as president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the mathematical group announced Wednesday.


The 68-year-old Ganis, who has served as academy president since 2005, calls the job "a privilege."


"It's a dynamic time for our organization and our artwork form," he said. "I'm incredibly gallant to be part of it."


He has produced films such as "Akeelah and the Bee," "Big Daddy" and "Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo." He's also worked for Sony Pictures, Paramount Pictures and Lucasfilm.


Ganis has been a member of the film academy since 1968.


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On the Net:


http://www.oscars.org










More information

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Tribal Ink

Tribal Ink   
Artist: Tribal Ink

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Surrounded By Freaks   
 Surrounded By Freaks

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 12




 






Wednesday, 2 July 2008

Grasshopper Takeover

Grasshopper Takeover   
Artist: Grasshopper Takeover

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Elephant Dreams   
 Elephant Dreams

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 19




 





Juan Gabriel

Sunday, 22 June 2008

Giacomo Puccini, La Boheme

''They meet, they fall in love, they split, she returns, she dies'' – that's Rolando Villazón's ten-second plot summary of Puccini’s La Bohème. And the obvious draw of Deutsche Grammophon's new recording of the work is its Mimi and Rodolfo, the aforementioned 'they'. But any opera recording is about more than two singers, however talented Villazón and his Mimi Anna Netrebko may be. What elevates this one to great heights is not just the theatrical talents of opera's current 'golden couple', but a fine overall ensemble performance supported by detailed and accomplished choral and orchestral performances which match the fizzing dramatic intensity of the doomed lovers.



Whether or not the 'Netrebzon' factor galvanised the rest of the company into a compelling performance, the two are undeniably inspiring. Both voices are dramatic, thick and colourful; Netrebko’s perhaps even a touch treacly against some lighter, more innocent Mimis. And for some further pedantry, she occasionally over-eggs her climaxes and appears top-heavy, to the detriment of the overall musical phrase. But her voice is quite an instrument, built for soaring atop luscious Puccinian orchestrations which it does here with ease, whilst retaining formidable dramatic focus. Villazòn is nigh-on impossible to fault. His sure-footed tenor has a wonderfully vulnerable edge. He clothes the most painful dramatic moments in tears, and the effect is heart-stopping; dripping in Puccinian melodrama and every-bit musical.



One of the best duets in Bohème arguably goes to Mimi and not Rodolfo but the painter Marcello – here sung touchingly by Boaz Daniel – as he counsels the distraught heroine at the start of Act II. There are impressive moments too from former Cardiff Singer of the World Nicole Cabell who conjures a cheeky, colourful Musetta. Conductor Bertrand de Billy paces things briskly, creating a sense of cold and desolation when needed, though trotting hurriedly through some of the more interesting orchestral and vocal moments. But the orchestral detail and sensitivity is there, and with a Mimi and Rodolfo like these, you can forgive the conductor for leaving the tear-jerking to them.


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Saturday, 14 June 2008

Why Jason Lewis Loves Acting

The Sex and the City movie is one of the biggest film of the summer at the moment, but co-star Jason Lewis isn't letting the movie's success go to his head.

"There�s probably more recognition on the streets right now. For the moment. Not vastly different," he says. "I think these things move in increments and I don�t really pay attention that much to that aspect of my life."

Jason reprised his role as Smith Jerrod in the film, but admits he's ready to move on to something new now.

"I�m looking at a few different things," he says. "I just want to make sure the next thing is fun and interesting. I live my life that way. I should be reading scripts [now]!"

Good writing is what entices the 36-year-old the most and, unlike most actors, Jason doesn't have an ideal role in mind.

"I think that�s kind of the fun thing about my job, there�s not a singular thing to it, it�s the difference of it all," he says. "You get to play a jerk, you get to play a nice guy, you get to explore parts of yourself that you don�t really get to live in day-to-day."

By Lindsey Hunter




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Sunday, 8 June 2008

"Deadliest Catch" captain is fined

Anchorage—The owner and captain of a fishing vessel featured on the Discovery Channel's popular reality show "Deadliest Catch" has pleaded no contest to a single count of illegally possessing undersized crab, according to Alaska State troopers.



Richard Quashnick, 51, owner of the Maverick, was fined $1,500 after an Alaska wildlife trooper inspecting his catch over the winter discovered some of the Maverick's bairdi tanner crab were smaller than the 5.5 inches required by law, trooper spokeswoman Beth Ipsen said.



Quashnick, reached by phone in Warrenton, Ore., said he was hauling some 45,000 pounds of crab at the time and troopers found only a few that were undersized. "It was an accident," he said. "It was just a mistake that my crew made, and we took care of it."



Seattle Times news services







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