NEWS LITE : MEAT LOAF IS SO MUCH `GRAY DUST'.Ruth Reichl Ruth Reichl (born January 16 1948 in New York City) is an American food writer, the editor-in-chief of Gourmet magazine, and culinary editor for the Modern Library. , Gourmet magazine editor in chief, writes in American Heritage American Heritage can refer to:
As to the most underrated traditional dish, Reichl names the peanut butter and jelly sandwich "PB&J" redirects here. PB&J may also refer to Peter Bjorn and John. The peanut butter and jelly sandwich, also known as a peanut butter and jam sandwich in the UK, is a sandwich that includes a layer of peanut butter and either jelly or jam between two slices of bread. . Relegating this wonderful invention to the school lunch is a terrible waste.'' Jackson plagiarized pla·gia·rize v. pla·gia·rized, pla·gia·riz·ing, pla·gia·riz·es v.tr. 1. To use and pass off (the ideas or writings of another) as one's own. 2. , judge says An Italian judge ruled Tuesday in Rome that Michael Jackson Noun 1. Michael Jackson - United States singer who began singing with his four brothers and later became a highly successful star during the 1980s (born in 1958) Michael Joe Jackson, Jackson , in composing his ``Will You Be There,'' plagiarized an Italian songwriter. Judge Mario Frigenti immediately suspended a $2,200 fine, but ordered the American pop star to pay court costs court costs n. fees for expenses that the courts pass on to attorneys, who then pass them on to their clients or, in some kinds of cases, to the losing party. , likely to be considerable since the case has taken years to progress through the slow-moving Italian court system, Italian state TV reported. Trial began in 1995, two years after Al Bano, a veteran songwriter and singer, claimed Jackson stole part of the musical motif of his song ``I Cigni di Balaka'' (The Swans of Balaka), produced in 1987. Cindy disrobes to show tummy Cindy Crawford has gone all Demi Moore and posed her naked, pregnant body for the cover of the June issue of W mag, out Friday. The photographs, by Michael Thompson, were taken in April when the model was nearly seven months pregnant. Moore was eight months along when her famed shot was taken for the cover of Vanity Fair in 1991. But Crawford, 33, due at the end of next month, looks a lot trimmer trimmer see resco nail trimmer, toenail scissors. than Moore did. Indeed, 11 days ago she covered 44 blocks in Manhattan's Revlon Run/Walk for Women. ``I don't want this to sound bad,'' said Crawford, who on the cover stands sideways, one hand on her hip, the other concealing her left breast, ``but for some women who may not be comfortable with their bodies, pregnancy can be an excuse to be Mother Earth. . . . I'm comfortable with my body. I work hard at keeping it. When my body first started changing, it felt like a science project.'' Editors initially planned to pose Crawford in a gown to show ``the utter chicness of being pregnant.'' But dressed, she didn't look preggers. ``She looked like she might have had too many beers the night before,'' noted Thompson. Asked to go nude, she did. She didn't get paid for the shoot. News Lite is compiled by Karen Duffy from Daily News staff and wire reports CAPTION(S): photo Photo: no caption (W magazine cover with Cindy Crawford) |
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