Retired Formula One Champion Michael Schumacher Now A Taxi Driver

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Dec 122007
 

It looks like you can take Michael Schumacher out of racing, but you can’t take racing out of Michael Schumacher.

Schumacher may be Germany’s fastest taxi driver


Michael Schumacher may well be the fastest taxi driver in Germany after the seven-times world champion shocked a cab driver by taking over the wheel in order to be on time for a flight.

Schumacher, 38, flew into the aerodrome at the Bavarian town of Coburg on Saturday and took a taxi to the village of Gehuelz, 30 kilometres away, to pick up a new puppy – an Australian Shepherd dog called “Ed”.

But when the former Formula One ace, plus his wife and two children, caught a taxi back to the airport they were short on time and, after a polite request, cab driver Tuncer Yilmaz watched in wonder as Schumacher took the wheel.

“I found myself in the passenger seat, which was strange enough, but to have “Schumi” behind the wheel of my cab was incredible,” Mr Yilmaz told the Muenchner Abendzeitung.

“He drove at full throttle around the corners and over-took in some unbelievable places.”

Mr Yilmaz was well rewarded for the unusual journey – on top of the 60 euros (88 US dollars) fare, he was also given a 100 euros (146 US dollars) tip.

Schumacher’s spokesperson Sabine Kehm later confirmed the story.

The German track ace, who now lives in Switzerland, retired from Formula One in 2006 after a glittering career and, despite test drives for his old team Ferarri, has insisted there is no chance of a return to racing.


Dec 032007
 

Celebrity Plastic Surgery Disasters: Joan Van Ark
Celebrity Plastic Surgery Disasters: Joan Van Ark
When will these celebrities learn it’s just better to age gracefully, and look natural?

Knots Landing star Joan Van Ark’s shocking look reveals her failure to turn back time


If actress Joan Van Ark of Knots Landing fame could turn back time – it’s safe to say the actress might think twice before ruining her once stunning looks with cosmetic surgery

Van Ark, 64, was seen at a benefit in Hollywood wearing a sober suit, and mask-like make-up which failed to hide the fact that she has appeared to have been under the surgeon’s knife. Several times.

The actress’ shocking appearance was not aided by her painted on eyebrows and heavy eye make-up which failed to conceal her blotchy skin.

And bizarrely she appeared to have forgotten to add lipstick to her highly-plumped lips – which had the effect of making her look cadaverous.


Related:
The 15 Worst Celebrity Plastic Surgery Disasters You Will Ever See
Where Are They Now: Brigitte Bardot
Priscilla Presley Victim Of An Unqualified Plastic Surgeon

Can Somebody Tell Mahmoud Ahmadinejad That George Bush Isn’t Running For President Again In 2008?

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Nov 272007
 

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says the darndest things.

If you judge Mahmoud Ahmadinejad by appearance alone, you would think he descended from monkeys but when he opens his mouth that confirms it. He may be as dumb as a box of rocks. Apparently he thinks George Bush is running for President again in 2008.

Ahmadinejad offers to be an observer at US presidential election


He denounces it as the “Great Satan” and frequently dismisses its power, but the overtures of the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to the US seem to grow ever more extravagant.
Having failed to win a response with an 18-page letter to President George Bush or to a request to visit the site of the September 11 2001 attack on New York, Ahmadinejad has offered himself as an observer in next year’s presidential election.

The proposal came in a speech to volunteers with the Basij, a pro-regime militia. He said he was prompted by a belief that Americans would vote against the current administration in a truly free poll.
However, the terms of Ahmadinejad’s offer appeared to betray some confusion about the potential candidates.

“If the White House officials allow us to be present as an observer in their presidential election we will see whether people in their country are going to vote for them again or not,” he said. The US constitution prevents Bush from seeking a third consecutive term, while no member of his administration is expected to be in the running in next November’s poll.

Bush and international human rights groups voiced doubts about the legitimacy of Iran’s 2005 presidential election, which brought Ahmadinejad to power. More than 1,000 potential candidates were disqualified by the guardian council, a powerful body of clerics and judges.

Some domestic critics pointed out yesterday that Ahmadinejad’s idea clashed with his government’s opposition to allowing independent observers at Iranian elections. The interior ministry, controlled by one of the president’s most hard-line allies, has rejected pressure for party representatives to be allowed to oversee proceedings at polling stations for next March’s parliamentary poll.

The election is expected to provide a major test of Ahmadinejad’s popularity. Leading regime figures, including two former presidents, Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami, have warned against possible attempts to rig it through mass candidate disqualifications and other measures.


The Waltons: Where are they now?

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Nov 162007
 

Amazingly, unlike other child stars, the original cast of The Waltons is train-wreck free.

The Waltons: Where are they now?


“The Waltons” premiered in the fall of 1972, and the television drama about a rural family living in the mountains of Virginia in the 1930s was such a hit that it endured until 1981. TODAY’s Lester Holt recently sat down with most of “The Waltons” cast to talk about their experiences filming the show, and to find out what the actors are doing now. Here’s an update on each member of this beloved television family.

Olivia “Livie” Walton (Mom)
Michael Learned recently wrapped up a national tour of the stage version of “On Golden Pond,” co-starring Tom Bosley of “Happy Days” fame. Learned says her husband, three sons and five grandchildren are currently keeping her busy. You might have spotted her on the small screen last year when she guest-starred in a recurring role as Mrs. Wilk on the hit show “Scrubs.”

John Walton, Sr. (Dad)
Ralph Waite just finished filming “Ace Ventura 3,” a prequel, in which he plays a 12-year old Ventura’s grandfather. He also guest-starred in a recent episode of “Cold Case.” Waite says he waited all his life to play King Lear on the stage, and thought he should be in his mid-70s to do so. He’s now played the role three times. In the 1990s you might have seen Waite on the big screen in “The Bodyguard” with Kevin Costner and “Cliffhanger” with Sylvester Stallone. Waite also ran for Congress in the 1990s — he lost that bid, and says he “learned his lesson” and doesn’t plan to run for office again.

John “John Boy” Walton, Jr.
Richard Thomas is currently touring the country in the Roundabout Theater’s stage production of “12 Angry Men.” Caution: The following information will make you feel old: Thomas now has not only children, but grandchildren. Since leaving “The Waltons” Thomas has made more than 40 television movies and played numerous stage roles, including Hamlet and Richard II. Click here for more information on his current project, Twelve Angry Men.

Jason Walton
Jon Walmsley says music has always been his first love, an interest that was actually written into the show for his character. He now spends most of his time as a guitarist, performing live and making recordings. He was actually playing a gig the day we filmed the interview with his cast mates. His band is called The Ravers — they play British rock music from the 1960s.

Mary Ellen Walton Willard
Judy Norton spent eight years writing and directing more than 40 shows for two theater companies in Canada. Norton is now raising an 11-year-old son and recently started her own stage show called “Judy Norton and Friends.” Norton says she’s rediscovered her love of singing, and recently recorded a demo. See her Web site for more information.

Ben Walton
Eric Scott left acting behind not long after “The Waltons” ended to pursue a career in business. He’s now the vice president of a messenger service in Los Angeles, and the proud father of two daughters and a son.

Erin Walton
Mary McDonough can be seen in a recurring role as Mrs. Wilhoite in “The New Adventures of Old Christine,” and in the upcoming Hallmark Channel movie “Cadillac Jacks,” which will air December 23rd. Through the years she’s appeared on “ER,” “Will and Grace,” “Boston Legal,” and has been a special correspondent for “Entertainment Tonight.” She’s currently working on a book about her life. McDonough struggled with complications from silicone breast implants in her 20s, and has since started a non-profit organization called In the Know, which is dedicated to educating women about their own health.

Elizabeth Walton
Kami Cotler, the youngest of the clan, decided acting was fine as a kid, but wanted to pursue a different career as an adult. She became a teacher, and in a twist of fate, found a teaching job in Nelson County, Virginia — the area in which Waltons creator Earl Hamner grew up, and based the series on. She’s since become a mother of two, and moved back to the Los Angeles area, where she spent the last four years running a charter elementary school.


 
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The Number One Hazard For US Soldiers In Iraq Now: High Blood Pressure, Bad Backs and Bum Knees

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Oct 312007
 

Does anybody remember when Harry Reid said the war in Iraq “is lost” and the US troop surge is failing? Well where is your defeatism now Harry?

Things are so bad in Iraq now that the number one hazard for US soldiers is high blood pressure, bad backs, knee pain and other mundane health problems. Here is more proof that the surge is working.

Non-combat injuries, illnesses are No. 1 hazard in Iraq


High blood pressure, bad backs, bum knees and other mundane health problems put three and a half times more troops on planes to hospitals in Germany or the United States than do snipers and roadside bombs, say front-line experts in Iraq .

“There’s nothing about being deployed or being in an austere environment that protects you from the normal maladies that people encounter in the United States ,” said Lt. Col. Ron Ross , a preventive medicine officer with the U.S. Army’s 62nd Medical Brigade in Iraq .

From the invasion in March 2003 through Oct. 1, 2007 , more than 36,000 U.S. troops were evacuated from Iraq . More than 77 percent of those were for illnesses or non-combat injuries, according to data from the Department of Defense , Deployment Health Support Directorate.

Most eventually return, said Ross, but the illnesses and accidents still cut into troop strength.

This is nothing new. Traditionally, such problems— which the military lumps together as Disease and Non-Battlefield Injuries (DNBI)— take more troops from the battlefield than combat injuries do, though modern medical care and public health techniques have cut the rate suffered by U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan to 10 percent of what it was in World War II and Korea.

An example of that success is the U.S. fight against leishmaniasis, a parasitic disease spread by sandflies that causes festering wounds and can attack the organs.

When the British army came to Iraq in the 1930s, leishmaniasis incapacitated up to 30 percent of the troops, said Lt. Col. Ray Dunton , a trained entomologist who’s in Iraq serving as chief of preventive medicine for the 62nd Medical Brigade.

In 2004, hundreds of U.S. soldiers also were infected. Preventive medicine teams went into action, spraying insecticide and urging troops to use insect repellant. Infestations dropped from an average of 140 a month to nearly zero. Only 10 people have been diagnosed with leishmaniasis this year.

Still, the proportion of troops hospitalized for illness and non-combat injuries compared with combat injuries hasn’t changed much since the wars in Korea and Vietnam . In part, that’s because of a more aggressive philosophy about treatment, Ross said.

“Our evacuation statistics and our medical care statistics reflect that we have ratcheted up the standard of care,” he said,

Evacuations also are spurred by the military’s rule that anyone who won’t recuperate within seven days of being hospitalized must be flown out of the country. That keeps beds open in case of a major casualty incident.

No illness or injury dominates the list of non-combat evacuations, Ross said. Injuries from vehicle accidents are a big cause of evacuations, as are hypertension-related illness, respiratory problems, kidney stones and back and joint problems.

In some cases, troops are clearly glad to get out. For many, though, the notion of leaving their unit and buddies over a problem unrelated to combat is frustrating.

“People work hard to get back. That’s one of the big reasons we get so many people back,” he said.


Previously:
Cemetery Workers In Iraq May Go Hungry Thanks To The Surge