HYANNIS PORT, Mass. – The greatest heights eluded Ted Kennedy over a lifetime of achievement and pain. No presidency. No universal health care, chief among his causes.
Instead, Kennedy built his Washington monument stone by stone, his imprint distinct on the Senate's most important works over nearly half a century. He toiled across the Potomac River from the graveyard of his fallen brothers.
The last of the Kennedys who fascinated the nation with their ambition, style, idealism, tragedies — and sometimes sheer recklessness — Edward Moore Kennedy died late Tuesday night at 77. A black shroud and vase of white roses sat Wednesday on his Senate desk, which John Kennedy had used before him.
So dropped the final curtain on "Camelot," the already distant era of the Kennedy dynasty.
The Massachusetts senator's extended political family of fellow Democrats and rival Republicans, steeled for his death since his brain-tumor diagnosis a year ago yet still jarred by it, joined in mourning. Kennedy was the Senate's dominant liberal and one of its legendary dealmakers. Just last year he jumped into a fractious Democratic presidential nomination fight to side with Barack Obama, giving the Illinois senator a boost that had the air of a family anointment.
"For his family, he was a guardian," Obama said Wednesday. "For America, he was a defender of a dream."
The president, vacationing in Martha's Vineyard, was awakened after 2 a.m. and told of Kennedy's death. He spoke soon after with the senator's widow, Victoria, and ordered flags flown at half-staff on all federal buildings.
Kennedy will be buried Saturday at Arlington National Cemetery after a funeral Mass in Boston, where Obama is to deliver a eulogy.
Kennedy will lie in repose at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston before that.
Also buried at Arlington, the military cemetery overlooking the capital city, are John and Robert Kennedy; John Kennedy's wife, Jacqueline; their baby son, Patrick, who died after two days, and their stillborn child.
To Americans and much of the world, Kennedy was best known as the last surviving son of the nation's most glamorous political family. Of nine children born to Joseph and Rose Kennedy, Jean Kennedy Smith is the only one alive.
To senators of both parties, he was one of their own.
"Even when you expect it, even when you know it's coming, in this case it hurts a great deal," said Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont.
Politicians also calculated the consequences for Obama's push for expanded health coverage. For several months, at least, Kennedy's death will deprive the Democrats of a vote that could prove crucial for his signature cause of health reform.
His illness had sidelined him from an intense debate that would have found him at the core any other time. Conservative Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, his improbable Republican partner on children's health insurance, volunteerism, student aid and more, said the Senate probably would have had a health care deal by now if Kennedy had been healthy enough to work with him.
"Iconic, larger than life," Hatch said of his friend. "We were like fighting brothers."
He was the last of the famous Kennedy brothers: John the assassinated president, Robert the assassinated senator and presidential candidate, Joseph the aviator killed in action in World War II when Ted was 12.
He lost his sister, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, less than two weeks ago, saw the bright promise of nephew John F. Kennedy Jr. end in a plane crash in 1999 and struggled with excesses of his own until he became a settled elder statesman.
Like Obama, Kennedy was a master orator. But the words that live for the ages seem to be those he uttered in tragedy or defeat.
Older Americans remember his eulogy of Robert Kennedy, when he asked history not to idealize his brother but remember him "simply as a good and decent man who saw wrong and tried to right it, saw suffering and tried to heal it, saw war and tried to stop it."
Remembered, too, is his speech conceding the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination to the incumbent Jimmy Carter. "For all those whose cares have been our concern, the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives and the dream shall never die," he said.
By then, his hopes of reaching the White House had been damaged by his behavior a decade earlier in the scandal known as Chappaquiddick.
On the night of July 18, 1969, Kennedy drove his car off a bridge and into a pond on Chappaquiddick Island, on Martha's Vineyard, and swam to safety while companion Mary Jo Kopechne drowned in the car. He pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident; a judge said his actions probably contributed to the young woman's death. He received a suspended sentence and probation.
Kennedy's legislative legacy includes health insurance for children of the working poor, the landmark 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act, family leave and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. He was also key to passage of the No Child Left Behind Education law and a Medicare drug benefit for the elderly, both championed by Republican President George W. Bush.
In the Senate, Republicans respected and often befriended him. But his essential liberalism marked him as a lightning rod, too. He proved a handy fundraising foil motivating Republicans to open their wallets to fight anything he stood for.
In 1980, Kennedy's task of dislodging a president of his own party was compounded by his fumbling answer to a question posed by CBS' Roger Mudd: Why do you want to be president?
"Well, I'm, uh, were I to, to make the, the announcement, to run, the reasons that I would run is because I have a great belief in this country," he began.
It's a question that all savvy politicians ever since make sure won't catch them unprepared.
In his later years, Kennedy cut a barrel-chested profile, with a swath of white hair, a booming voice and a thick, widely imitated Boston accent. He coupled fist-pumping floor speeches with charm and formidable negotiating skills.
"I think that once he realized he was never going to be president — that that was not the legacy he had to follow — he really worked at becoming the best senator he possibly could," Leahy said. "And he did."
He was first elected to the Senate in 1962, taking the seat that his brother John had occupied before winning the White House, and he served longer than all but two senators in history.
Kennedy was diagnosed with a cancerous brain tumor in May 2008 and underwent surgery and a grueling regimen of radiation and chemotherapy.
He made a surprise return to the Capitol last summer to cast a decisive vote for the Democrats on Medicare. He made sure he was there again in January to see his former Senate colleague sworn in as president but suffered a seizure at a celebratory luncheon afterward.
His survivors include a daughter, Kara Kennedy Allen; two sons, Edward Jr. and Patrick, a congressman from Rhode Island, and two stepchildren, Caroline and Curran Raclin.
Edward Jr. lost a leg to bone cancer in 1973 at age 12. Kara had a cancerous tumor removed from her lung in 2003. In 1988, Patrick had a non-cancerous tumor pressing on his spine removed. He also has struggled with depression and addiction and recently spent time at an addiction treatment center.
Atlantis Paradise Island (The Bahamas), Aug 24 (IANS) Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez was crowned Miss Universe 2009 here Monday, beating 84 contenders in the 58th edition of the annual pageant.
Miss Universe 2008 Dayana Mendoza of Venezuela placed the glittering $120,000 crown on 18-year-old Fernandez who looked pretty in a red evening gown.
Miss Dominican Republic Ada de la Cruz was crowned the first runner up, while Miss Kosovo Marigona Dragusha was declared the second runner up.
The five contestants in the final round, selected from 84 candidates worldwide, competed for the crown at a grand show in which American singer and TV artist Heidi Montag performed live.
An Argentine rally driver evades injury after ramming straight into a herd of horses that had wandered on to the track, sending one of them flying into the air.
National champion rally driver Federico Villagra and his navigator Diego Curletto were competing in the second leg of the Argentine Championship(Campeonato Argentino in Spanish) rally tournament in Rio Negro (August 17), when they came over a small hill and were surprised by a herd of horses crossing over the track.
Unable to avoid the animals, driving at such great speeds in the rally vehicle, Villagra struck one of the horses, sending it flying into the air.
Neither Villagra or Curletto were hurt. The animal survived but was severely injured.
Though his warts return, he says : "I feel much better now"
BANDUNG - The latest news from Dede as we know as Tree Man, has to return again to surgery room for another operation. Dede who was once hospitalized for 9 months in Hasan Sadikin Hospital in Bandung, West Java, few months ago, went for another surgery. The warts which have been taken from Dede's body, grew again. Dede went for surgery on last 12 February 2009 in the same hospital.
Dede can't recover totally, 100%. Indonesia covers all of the expenses cost $50.000
The team leader of doctor who handled him, dr Rahmat Dinata, said, "we have tried our best, our effort so far to Dede was only to reduce his suffer toward the illness, Dede can't recover totally, 100%. This is because Dede's immune system in his body, can't fight against viruses attacked him". Even though the team of doctor have explained it to him, Dede feels so happy because he has better condition than the first time he had. Warts that previously have been removed, grew again.
Dede's condition is observed by the doctors for every 6 months. Besides warts removal operation, team of doctor gave Glizigen (spray) and Visuid which can increase Dede immune system, they also give cedovovir intermittently to Dede, to suspend the virus' growth which given by dr Antony Gaspari, a dermatologist from Maryland University, US. All the operation expenses for doctors and medicine are fully covered by Indonesian government which cost up to Rp. 500 million (US$50.000)
BANDUNG (SuaraMedia) Apa kabarnya Dede, warga Bandung yang sempat membuat geger karena memiliki kutil yang menyerupai akar di sekujur tubuhnya.
Dede yang pernah dirawat di Rumah Sakit Hasan Sadikin Bandung selama 9 bulan hingga 25 Agustus 2008, akan kembali menjalani operasi. Warga Desa Tanjung Jaya Kecamatan Cihampelas Kabupaten Bandung Barat ini rencananya Kamis 12 Februari besok akan menjalani operasi pembuangan kutil dan lapisan tanduk di kedua tangannya.
Ketua tim penanganan Dede RSHS dr Rahmat Dinata mengatakan upaya ini hanyalah upaya tim dokter untuk membantu meringankan beban Dede, sebab penyakit yang dideritanya tidak bisa sembuh secara total.
Kutil yang dulu dibuang tim dokter kini sudah menebal lagi. Namun demikian dr Rahmat mengungkapkan meski tidak dapat sembuh total, Dede yang selama ini dikenal dengan julukan manusia akar ini, cukup senang karena kondisnya jauh lebih baik dari dulu.
"Memang penyakit Dede ini tidak bisa sembuh 100 persen karena sistem imun Dede lemah tidak bisa melawan virus yang masuk ke tubuhnya," ujar dr Rahmat, Rabu (11/2/2009).
Perkembangan Dede terus dipantau tim dokter setiap 6 bulan sekali. Selain operasi pengangkatan kutil, tim dokter juga memberikan cedovovir, obat penahan virus yang direkomendasikan ahli dermatologi dari Maryland University AS dr Antony Gaspari.
Untuk persiapan operasi Kamis besok, Dede sejak hari Senin lalu sudah dirawat di ruang Bogenvile RSHS dan dalam kondisi baik. (okz)
NEW YORK – Few if any of the deals retailers have offered online during the recession have been as good as Best Buy Inc.'s sale price of $9.99 on a 52-inch TV Wednesday. But it quickly turned out the offer was too good to be true.
The electronics retailer said it will not honor the $9.99 price posted Wednesday morning on its Web site for a 52-inch Samsung flat-screen TV. By early afternoon, the TV was listed at $1,799.99, almost half off the original $3,399.99 price.
Bloggers and Twitterers lit up the Internet with posts about the offer, some insisting Best Buy must honor it, others making jokes.
Best Buy, based in Richfield, Minn., said it has corrected an online pricing error and will not honor the incorrect price. Orders made Wednesday morning at the incorrect price will be canceled and customers will receive refunds, the company said.
Best Buy did not immediately return a call for additional comment.
Shares fell 27 cents to close at $36.50 Wednesday.
G.I. Joe Official Trailer. Said to come out fall of 2009. Trailer introduces the characters of the new incoming movie like Cobra Commander, Snake Eyes, and many others.
This Egyptian bust has become a popular attraction at Chicago's Field Museum because it's a spitting image of Michael Jackson, complete with a tweaked nose. It was carved between 1550-1050 BCE and depicts a woman.