Amini says his son deatined Police deny claim

Islami Oikya Jote chairman Fazlul Haque Amini on Sunday alleged that detective branch police had arrested his son in the Old Town of Dhaka without reason.

Amini said police had picked up his younger son, Abul Hasanat from Dolaikhal in Sutrapur area where he had gone at about 11:00am to

have his car repaired at a motor workshop.

But the police denied they had arrested the son of Amini, also chief of Islamic Law Implementation Committee which had enforced a daylong hartal across the country on April 4 in protest at the National Women's Development Policy branding it anti-Islamic.

Addressing a briefing at his party office at Lalbagh on Sunday afternoon, Amini, an ally of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, alleged that the government had detained his son to destroy his family.

'We will not retreat from our stand against the women development policy which is against Islamic laws,' he said.

He also demanded immediate release of his son and all activists of his party, who, he said, were arrested during the April 4 hartal.

Islamic Law Implementation Committee publicity secretary Moulana Ahalullah Wasel said, 'Two companions of Hasanat had told us that the people who had picked him up were carrying firearms and walki-talkies.'

  Deputy commissioner of detective branch Monirul Islam flatly denied the charge. 'The police did not arrest any son of Amini,' he told New Age.

Source: New Age

PM for attaining regional food security

The prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, has called for concerted efforts to tackle the challenges in the agriculture field in South Asian region.

The prime minister made the call when she was addressing as chief guest the opening ceremony of the three-day SAARC Seed Congress and Exhibition 2011 at the city's Bangabandhu International Conference Centre Sunday.

Agriculture scientists, representatives of various national and international research institutions and high government officials from the SAARC member countries are participating in the seed congress and exhibition which will continue till April 12.

The slogan of the SAARC congress is 'Good seed, good crop'.

'As it is not possible for one single country to face all the agricultural challenges, I had proposed to establish SAARC Seed Bank at the last SAARC Summit,' the prime minister said.

Hasina said if the Seed Bank was established, the member countries would be able to exchange quality seeds easily which will ultimately increase food production in the region.

'Balance will also come in the laws on seeds in the countries which will make exchange of seeds and germplasm much easier,' she added.

The prime minister hoped that the proposed Seed Bank would be established soon and will make significant contribution to attain regional food security.

She said Bangladesh had to attain food security as it was not possible to remove food crisis only through importing.

The prime minister laid emphasis on using hybrid seeds, modern technology and effective strategy to attain food security for all.

'At the same time we have to be highly careful so that our environment and ecology are not harmed by any means,' she cautioned.

The prime minister further asked the scientists to invent such crop verities that would achieve maximum production on limited land.

She said when Bangladesh attained independence in 1971 its population was seven and half crore while population had become more than double now.

'But agricultural lands had decreased gradually. So we have to produce maximum crops at limited lands,' the prime minister asserted.

She said every year some one lakh hectares of land was being out of agriculture sector due to industrialisation, housing and river erosion.

The prime minister asked all authorities concerned to keep in mind the interests of all marginal farmers so that no modern technology becomes threat to their livelihoods.

'We have to keep it in mind that most of our farmers are small and marginal,' she said.

Referring to local varieties of rice, the prime minister said many of the local varieties were now almost abolished just because these were not highly productive.

'But we have to invent the methods how to turn these local varieties into hybrid,' she said.

At the same time, gene of the local crop varieties have to be preserved so that these do not get vanished, she said.

'It has to be ensured that the intellectual property of the crops does not go to others' hand,' she said.

The prime minister also issued strong warning against cheating the farmers with low quality seeds.

'Due to modern technology, the control of seeds does not remain in the hands of farmers, rather they have to depend on the seeds produced by various companies. In many cases, the farmers have to suffer a lot,' she said.

Agriculture minister Matia Chowdhury, foreign minister Dipu Moni, regional business line leader of IFC, South Asia William Trant Beloe, joint director, Research of Indian Agriculture Institute and member of SAARC Seed Forum Malavika Dadlani, convenor of Bangladesh Seed Association Mahbub Anam also spoke at the function.

Director general of seed wing of agriculture ministry Anwar Faruque presented keynote paper at the function presided over by secretary to the agriculture ministry C QK Mustak Ahmed.

The prime minister later visited the stalls of the exhibition.

Source: New Age

3 injured as cops, villagers clash

The police fired a barrage of gunshots leaving three villagers injured when the law enforcers came under attack at a remote village of Bijoynagar upazila Saturday midnight.

Rafia Begum, 45, Sunny Mia, 12, and Bachhu Mia, 40, were admitted to the sadar hospital with bullet wounds.

Informed sources said a police team led by Assistant Police Super Sanjay Sarker raided the house of Kabir Hossain at Kashinagar village at 12 midnight, purportedly to arrest him, an accused in criminal case.

As the police started ransacking the house the inmates suspecting them robbers raised a hue and cry. Soon the villagers thronged the house and attacked the police team.

Finding no alternative the police fired about 25 gunshots to scare away the angry villagers leaving three persons wounded. And the police retreated safely.

Source: New Age

Fakhrul accuses govt of grave HR violations

The acting secretary general of Bangladesh Nationalist Party, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, on Sunday said the US state department's assessment of the human rights situation in Bangladesh reflected what his party had been saying about incidents of rights violations here.

'Now, our prime task is to restore democracy. The government's interference and politicisation has called the independence of the administration and judiciary into question. Human rights are being grossly violated,' said Fakhrul after placing wreaths at the grave of the party's founder Ziaur Rahman.

Fakhrul visited Zia's grave after taking charge of the BNP's acting secretary general. The party's top policymaking body, the standing committee, on April 6, gave him the charge after the death of its secretary general Khandaker Delwar Hossain.

The party standing committee member, Moudud Ahmed, alleged that the judiciary was being used as a tool for human rights violation. He cited the eviction of BNP chief Khaleda Zia from the cantonment house and removal of Grameen Bank managing director Muha-mmad Yunus by putting the gun on the court's shoulders.

Source: New Age

ASI suspended for sexual harassment

An Assistant sub-inspector of detective police was suspended for sexual harassment of a young housewife in the town Sunday.

ASI Sharif, 30, married and has two minor daughters, was living in a rented house on Court Road in the town. He sneaked into a neighbour's house at noon and tried to defile Reshma Begum (not the real name), 18, when her husband was out on business purpose. She raised a hue and cry. Sharp came the neighbours and rescued the poor woman.

Sharif was kept confined and police super Akkas Uddin Bhuiyan was informed by phone. The SP went to the spot and suspended ASI Sharif on spot investigation.

Source: New Age

Imam sued over fatwa banning prayer call on PA system

The imam of a mosque was sued at Gaurnadi in Barisal on Saturday in connection with a clash over fatwa on banning prayer call on PA system.

The Gaurnadi police officer-in-charge, Mezbahuddin, said Esahuq Melkar of Kamalapur at Gaurnadi filed the case against eight people including Maulana Sobhan Sheikh, the imam of Sardar Bari Jame Masjid and Fazlul Huq Sardar alias Fazle Huq, a local leader of the Tabligh Jamaat.

According to the case papers, Sobhan recently issued a fatwa banning prayer call on PA system.

The fatwa angered the people and Esahuq Melkar, one of the villagers, protested at the fatwa. The imam and his associates then beat up Esahuq on Friday after Juma prayer, the complainant said.

After that incident, supporters of Esahuq also rushed to the place and clashed with the imam and his associates.

At least seven people from both groups were injured in the clash, local people said.

The police later controlled the situation.

Source: New Age

RAB men sued over Limon issue

Mother of Limon Hossain filed a case with a Jhalakathi court on Sunday against six Rapid Action Battalion personnel for the sensational shooting and maiming of her 16-year old son a college student who worked at a brickfield at spare time to support the educational expenses of his elder sister and brother as well as himself.

The incident exposed by newspapers sent shockwaves across the nation.

Limon's dreams to support graduation of elder siblings and his own higher education now turned into a nightmare as he faces two cases, one for illegal possession of arms.

His brother and sister are studying in a college for graduation.

The complainant told reporters in an interview, that the earnings of her husband Tofazzal Hossain, who worked at a fruit shop at Savar, was too paltry to support the family and bear the educational expenses of three children.

She said that Limon was appearing in the ongoing Higher Secondary Certificate Examination under the Bangladesh Technical Education Board when the tragic incident took place.

The RAB personnel shot at and crippled Limon without caring to verify his identity when he was taking cows to grazing field in his village Saturia in Rajapur upazila in Jhalakathi district in the afternoon of March 23.

His mother, Henoara Begum, lodged the lawsuit with the court of Jhalakathi senior judicial magistrate Nusrat Jahan.

Source: New Age

Dev partners ask govt to include judiciary, HR issues

Jasim Uddin Sarker

Lenders and development partners on Sunday asked the government to include the issues of freedom of the judiciary and human rights violation in the draft of the sixth Five Year Plan.

They also asked the government to address concerns over reducing the independence of oversight institutions and regulatory bodies, increasing politicisation of the civil service, lack of clarity in local government rules and responsibilities in the draft SFYP.

The lenders and partners placed their recommendations on the SFYP at a meeting with government high-ups including finance minister AMA Muhith and planning minister AK Khandaker in the National Economic Council's conference room on Sunday.

The lenders came up with the recommendations two days after the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, on April 8 in Washington released the 2010 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices expressing serious concerns over the human rights situation in Bangladesh including extrajudicial killings, custodial deaths, politicisation of the judiciary, discrimination against women, and violence against women and children.

Representative of lending agencies and foreign diplomats, led by Ellen Goldstein, country director of the World Bank and co-chairman of the Local Consultative Group (a body of development partners in the country), observed that if the judiciary becomes fully independent the incidence of human rights violation would be reduced.

So they asked for an unambiguous commitment to the independence of judiciary in the SFYP.

They also asked for more specific strategies for key areas like civil service reform, combating corruption, strengthening of local government bodies and promoting e-governance.

They recommended reviewal of the plan's growth target in response to the less favourable global environment which is creating pressure on balance of payment and fuelling inflation.

The General Economics Division of the Planning Commission has formulated the sixth Five-Year Plan with the objective of cutting poverty by 10 percentage points and boosting the economy at an average rate of 7.3 per cent during the five-year period till financial year 2015.

The lenders pointed that the strategy to accelerate growth depends critically on more effective use of public resources, which require strengthened public financial management system.

'The document [plan] should underscore the main challenges to public resource use. Increasing the domestic revenue mobilisation, improving the quantity and quality of public investment are necessary,' the lenders opined.

Representatives of lenders like the World Bank and Asian Development Bank and development partners including Japan, USA and the United Kingdom were present at the meeting.

They also recommended that private sector investment needs to be increased to 4 per cent of the GDP, and targets should be set for investment, climate reform, promotion of regional trade and skill development.

A strategy to capitalise on agglomeration economies is needed to remove regional disparity and decentralise growth, they said.


Food security needs to get greater attention and a more holistic approach is needed to strengthen governance with specific strategies in key areas, suggested the development partners.

'Development partners made six suggestions after scrutinising the draft SFYP. We will consider them if they are beneficial to the country,' planning minister AK Khandaker told reporters after the meeting.

He said the government asked the development partners to provide import financing for tackling inflationary pressure and concessional loans for maintaining the balance of payment.

'We have asked development partners for more import financing to tackle the growing inflation fuelled by the high prices of commodities in the international market,' he said.

Member of the Planning Commission, Shamsul Alam, said that they had also sought concessional loans to help the country to maintain the balance of payment in the face of rising import bills.

Bangladesh will require Tk 13.3 trillion to execute the Five Year Plan which will be finalised by the May 31, he said.

Source: New Age

8 lakh litres of diesel stolen from Padma Oil

Nearly eight lakh litres of diesel worth about Tk 3.5 crore has been stolen allegedly by officials of the Padma Oil Company, a senior official of the state-owned distributor of petroleum products told New Age.

'Three officials of the company were involved in

removing eight lakh litres of diesel from reserve tanks and selling it on the black market,' he said.

The stealing and embezzlement, a regular case but hardly traced, took place when the country is in dire need of fuel for irrigation during the ongoing boro season.

The Padma Oil authorities initially transferred the three officials for their alleged involvement in the corruption but were yet to take any punitive measure against them or any step to realise the money.

Admitting the allegation of such huge pilferage of diesel, Padma Oil managing director Mohammad Shamsuddoha, however, told New Age that the matter was under investigation.

'We will take necessary steps against the officials involved in the theft if they were found guilty in the investigation,' he said.

A Padma Oil official, however, in a written complaint to the energy ministry said that a three-member investigation committee, headed by Naresh Chandra, deputy general manager of the company, found evidences against three officials being involved in misappropriating about Tk 3.52 crore by selling eight lakh litres of diesel.

Quoting the recommendation of the investigation report, the official in his complaint said that the authorities should take necessary steps to realise the money from the alleged officials and take punitive measures against them.

In the complaint it was alleged that the officials together were involved in taking away eight lakh litres of diesel from the company's reserve tank and sell them in the black market between December 10, 2010 and February 20, 2011.

 According to the written complaint, the three alleged officials are of the ranks of deputy general manager of operation, assistant general manager of maintenance and manager of operation respectively in Padma Oil.

Through an official order, the first alleged official was transferred to Dhaka office, and the two others were transferred to Chittagong head office and Guptakhal office respectively.

Such huge theft occurred when the country is passing through an acute crisis of fuel supply while the government is trying to meet the demand of diesel for irrigation during the current  Boro season, supplying fuel at a subsidised rate, sources in the energy ministry said.

Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation is currently supplying diesel through its three petroleum marketing companies at Tk 44 for a litre while the actual cost of the fuel is Tk 60 to Tk 68 per litre.

Insiders in BPC, who wanted not to be quoted, told New Age that the corporation would need Tk 5,000 crore as subsidy to supply petroleum products at a subsidised rate.

There is allegation that the state-owned petroleum distribution corporation counts additional losses worth crores of Taka each year due to pilferage of diesel and other petroleum products.

Officials of the agriculture department said that diesel-run pumps cover 60 percent of Boro irrigation.

Nearly 45 lakh farmers in the country's northern districts are involved in Boro cultivation. Among them, 16 lakh are dependent on electricity-run pumps and 29 lakh on diesel-run pumps for irrigation.

They said that yearly demand of diesel in the country is around 38 lakh 20 thousand tonnes, most of which are being used during January-April period for Boro cultivation.

It has been alleged that farmers of the northern districts are not getting adequate supply of diesel for irrigation of Boro crops this year.

Source: New Age

The Judds let the secrets fly in TV documentary

Reuters, NASHVILLE, Tennessee, April 11: Wynonna Judd grew up in front of her fans as half of the country singing duo The Judds. Now she and her mother, Naomi, are revealing some of their secrets on television in a documentary on Oprah Winfrey's OWN network.

"I hope this show can be a testimony to what happens when you are ready to show up and roll your sleeves up, and get real and let secrets fly and lift the veil and be known," Wynonna Judd told Reuters.

The six-part series, starting on Sunday, was filmed as the sometimes warring duo teamed up in 2010 for their first concert tour together in 10 years.

The mother-daughter duo had no creative control over the series. "We had to allow them to take us for who we are, and boy did they! I know there are going to be moments where the viewers will say they can relate to me or my mom," Wynonna said.

The Judds dominated country music in the 1980s, winning five Grammy Awards, selling more than 20 million albums, and having a string of hits including "Mama's He's Crazy," and "Love Can Build a Bridge."

But behind, and often in front of, the scenes, life was far from rosy. Wynonna didn't always get along with her mother, and there was talk of arguments and disagreements on the road.

Naomi, now 65, was not honest with her oldest daughter about her real father, and Wynonna battled weight issues. Last week, both women revealed they had been sexually abused as children, and Naomi's younger daughter, actress Ashley Judd, released a memoir with details of her own painful childhood.

Wynonna, 46, credits her life coach for talking her into the TV documentary.

"The coach said, 'If there are any two people that I know, to know how far you guys have come, you have to do this because you deserve to celebrate where your relationship is now.' So we said yes," the flame-haired singer said.

SECRETS AND LIES

Wynonna, who has a solo career and hits like "She is His Only Need" and "No One Else On Earth," said some of the hardest moments during filming were watching her mother talk about her own, long-concealed sexual abuse as a child.

"She told me about it when we went on tour, but to see her talk about it in front of the cameras...It was so hard to watch. I wanted them to shut the cameras down.

"Then Ashley sends us her book and I wanted to say, 'Mom don't read it until the tour is over.' But she's going to read it whether I tell her to or not. I'm very protective of her, yet it's between her and Ashley. I just have to figure out a way to deal with the dynamics," she said.

Wynonna said she has not read Ashley's memoir, published last week, but added; "It's like if three people are on a car trip, and when they get back they each have their own version of the trip. I have to accept that and let her present her story."

Wynonna admitted she has vulnerabilities of her own. "I've struggled for years with performer's anxiety and have worked hard to accept myself personally. When I'm dealing with the music, I'm very comfortable and I know what I want. When I'm off by myself in the woods, I look up and go 'God, am I okay as a mother, and am I a good daughter and sister?'"

She did not learn the name of her real father until she was 30, and said that for years she had found it hard to appear vulnerable toward her mother.

"I think for so long I was good at being more sarcastic and rebellious and tough on her...(Now) I'm 46 and I can no longer blame my mom and talk to her the way I did. She is 65 and now I'm totally protective of her. There were moments when she would get emotional and I'd want them to turn the cameras off of her, let her have a moment."

One of the more poignant scenes in the TV documentary is when Wynonna sings a song she wrote recently for her mother. "It's hard to sing it knowing it's so personal and so many people will see it," she said.

But amid the drama and chaos, there is plenty of humor in the series. "Like when my mom is being her usually silly self and I want to pull her hair out.

"There was a lot of joy and laughter. I told the director I wanted him to put a lot of those moments in too."

Tributes pour in for film-making great Lumet

AFP, NEW YORK, April 11: Woody Allen and Martin Scorsese led the tributes as the film world mourned Sunday the loss of director Sidney Lumet, a master film-maker identified strongly with his beloved New York.

Lumet, who died Saturday from cancer, was nominated four times unsuccessfully for a Best Director Academy Award with "Dog Day Afternoon" and "Network" numbering among his more than 40 movies.

"He was definitely the quintessential NY film-maker, although ironically his finest film, 'The Hill,' was shot elsewhere," Allen said in a statement released to Entertainment Weekly.

"I'm constantly amazed how many films of his prodigious output were wonderful and how many actors and actresses did their best work under his direction. PS. Knowing Sidney, he will have more energy dead than most live people."

Lumet, who burst onto the scene at the age of 33 with "12 Angry Men" in 1957, was eventually rewarded for a career that spanned five decades with an honorary Oscar in 2005.

"The death of Sidney Lumet really marks the end of an era," said fellow New York film-maker Martin Scorsese. "I admire so many of his movies."

"He had a unique gift with actors, an unusually dynamic feeling for drama, and a powerful sense of place, of the world of the picture," Scorsese said, describing Lumet as a "New York filmmaker at heart."

"Our vision of this city has been enhanced and deepened by classics like 'Serpico', 'Dog Day Afternoon' and, above all, the remarkable 'Prince of the City.'

"It's hard to imagine that there won't be any more new pictures by Sidney Lumet. All the more reason to take good care of the ones he left behind."

Al Pacino, who starred in the bungled bank robbery flick "Dog Day Afternoon" as well as Lumet's gritty police drama "Serpico," said the director's passing was a "great loss."

"Sidney Lumet will be remembered for his films. He leaves a great legacy, but more than that, to the people close to him, he will remain the most civilized of humans and the kindest man I have ever known."

Lumet may be best remembered for "Network," the poignant 1976 drama about American media depicting a frustrated television anchor, played by Peter Finch, who struggles to resuscitate a flagging television career and eventually goes mad on the air after being sacked.

"He was a true master who loved directing and working with actors like no other," said Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who starred in Lumet's final film, the 2007 melodrama "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead."

Lumet worked with some of the silver screen's biggest stars, including Marlon Brando in "The Fugitive Kind" (1960) and Katherine Hepburn in "Long Day's Journey Into Night" (1962).

"Sidney gave me my start in film composing in 1963 with 'The Pawnbroker' and I was privileged to work with him on four additional films including 'The Wiz,'" recalled composer Quincy Jones.

"Sidney was a visionary filmmaker whose movies made an indelible mark on our popular culture with their stirring commentary on our society," he said.

"Future generations of filmmakers will look to Sidney's work for guidance and inspiration, but there will never be another who comes close to him."

Directors' Guild of America president Taylor Hackford paid tribute to a dedicated and skillful director whose films "often depicted the grittier side of New York, the city he loved."

"Known for making adult dramas that quickly became modern classics, Sidney forged a special rapport with his actors which came through to the audience in the honesty of the performances," Hackford said.

There was praise too from Spike Lee, who said on Twitter: "We all lost a Master Filmmaker yesterday, the Great Sidney Lumet. There could have been no INSIDE MAN without his superb DOG DAY AFTERNOON."

Bob Dylan makes debut in Vietnam

AFP, HO CHI MINH CITY, April 11: Legendary American musician Bob Dylan, whose songs became anthems of the anti-Vietnam war movement, played a symbolic first-ever concert in the communist country on Sunday.

A hero for the West's ageing "counter-culture" generation, Dylan and his protest songs are less well-known among the young population of the communist nation, who have no memory of the years of war with the United States.

But that didn't stop a number of young Vietnamese, as well as foreigners, from turning out for the gig in Ho Chi Minh City and cheering for Dylan, who made no comment on Vietnam or the significance of his appearance there.

"We all really enjoyed it," said a 29-year-old banker, who gave his name as Quan, as he and his friends left the concert in the former Saigon, Vietnam's largest and most westernised city.

As was the case in Beijing, where Dylan also made his debut on Wednesday, he did not play two politically-charged songs that are among his most well-known: "The Times They Are A-Changin'" and "Blowin' in the Wind".

After reportedly banning a concert by Dylan last year, Beijing agreed he could perform if his songs were vetted by censors.

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Nguyen Phuong Nga could not say whether Dylan's songs would have to be checked by Vietnamese authorities, but a review by censors would be normal procedure.

Dylan's voice sounded on good form as he performed, dressed in a white hat, black suit and pink shirt, ending the set with an encore that included "Like a Rolling Stone".

One concert-goer, 37-year-old Hoang Quoc Tuan, described himself as a "big fan" of Dylan, having listened to him when he was studying in the UK.

"Some of his songs remind me of what my family told me about the war. The meaning is hard to explain -- it's like an uncle telling you from the other side," he said.

"He was an inspiration to Trinh Cong Son," said 20-year-old female student Tru Hong Ngoc, referring to the singer known as Vietnam's Bob Dylan when he sang about peace at the height of the war.

Son died ten years ago this month in Ho Chi Minh City and Vietnamese singers opened Dylan's concert by performing some of Son's love songs.

The landmark gig by Dylan forms part of his Asia-Pacific tour marking 50 years since his first major performance on April 11, 1961.

Organisers estimated a turnout of 5-6000 at the open-air concert after a number of late sales, with a mixed crowd of locals and foreigners.

Washington and the European Union this week expressed concern over human rights and free expression in Vietnam after a high-profile dissident was jailed for anti-state propaganda activities.

Brad Adams, an executive director at Human Rights Watch, accused Dylan of allowing censors to choose his playlist.

"Dylan should be ashamed of himself," he said.

Since poverty-stricken and isolated Vietnam began to embrace the free market 25 years ago it has developed rapidly and become increasingly integrated with the rest of the world.

Chuck Searcy, a Vietnam War veteran who has lived in the country since 1995, saw the Dylan gig as part of this process, significant for the Vietnamese because he is a major international artist, rather than for his anti-war associations.

About half of Vietnam's 86 million-strong population is aged under 30.

"They don't have any political connection with the era in which Bob Dylan became famous," Searcy said.

The concert comes after two much-hyped shows by American 90s boy band Backstreet Boys, who reportedly drew about 30,000 fans last month.

French director brings swashbuckler to US

AFP, LOS ANGELES, April 11: Award-winning French director Bertrand Tavernier says he became a filmmaker because of his love of American Westerns -- as he visited the home of the classic genre to launch his latest movie.

The 69-year-old, whose romantic swashbuckler "The Princess of Montpensier" is released in the US on April 15, says the golden age of Hollywood cowboy movies filled him with the "physical pleasure" of filmmaking.

"I became a director because of my admiration for westerns like 'She wore a Yellow Ribbon' (1949 by John Ford), '3:10 for Yuma' (1957 by Delmer Daves), 'Bend of the River' (1952, by Anthony Mann) or 'Pursued' (1947 by Raoul Walsh).

"Suddenly I felt again what these directors must have felt, when they filmed cavalcades, landscapes," he told AFP in Beverly Hills. "It was like going back to my roots, to what I felt when I was 15.

"I saw myself again, a young cinema lover, discovering the fantastic sword fights in 'Scaramouche' by George Sidney (1952)," he added.

Indeed, after his "In the Electric Mist" in 2009, made in the United States with Tommy Lee Jones and John Goodman, the Gallic cinema veteran has returned to his early passions: duels and horses.

"The Princess of Montpensier," starring Lambert Wilson and Melanie Thierry, tells a story of passion and rivalry set against the savage Catholic/Protestant wars that ripped France apart in the 16th century.

"There is one thing I have tried to show very strongly in my latest films," said Tavernier, who has won a number of French Cesar film awards, as well as a BAFTA in Britain for his 1989 movie "Life and Nothing But."

"That is, how happy I am on the set, how much I love filming, and how much I want to make the public know how much pleasure I have in making these films."

But while full of admiration for Hollywood's golden age, he is dismissive of many Gallic attempts at the sword-fighting genre, notably any including French actor Jean Marais.

"The sets were useless. Nobody took any care over the choice of exterior locations. Horse scenes were filmed against sad plains, with no sky. The colors were ugly, horrible to watch," he said.

"The French took a long time to use color. You had to wait for the 1960s and 70s and the new generation .. to finally get films which were magnificently photographed. Before that it was botched, everything was over-lit."

"La Princesse de Montpensier" was presented at last year's Cannes film festival, and the English version was well received when screened at the American Cinematheque in Los Angeles in March.

"They said the film was modern and audacious," said Tavernier. "That was different from some reactions in Cannes, where they told me the film was too classic. I couldn't understand that reaction.

"But Claude Chabrol told me, a few years ago," he said, referring to the French New Wave pioneer filmmaker who died last year. "He told me: 'If you make a film with candles and oil lamps, people will say it's classic and academic.

"'If you make the same scene with a flash light, it will be modern,'" he added.

'Hop' keeps top spot as Brand pulls double duty

AFP, LOS ANGELES, April 11: British bad boy Russell Brand dominated the North American box office, with a starring turn in the top-earning "Hop," as well as in the remake of the 1980's classic "Arthur," the number two weekend film, industry estimates showed Sunday.

"Hop," a partially animated Easter-themed romp, remained atop the box office for a second consecutive week, with a weekend gross of $21.7 million, bringing its two-week total to $68 million. Brand voices the character "E.B." in the film, the wayward son of the Easter Bunny.

In "Arthur," which debuted in second place with $12.6 million, he plays the lovable but irresponsible billionaire Arthur Bach in a role originated by Dudley Moore in the 1981 hit.

"Hanna," a thriller about a teenage assassin, pulled in an estimated $12.3 million for third place in its debut, according to box office tracker Exhibitor Relations. Saoirse Ronan stars as the 16-year-old girl raised by her widowed father (Eric Bana) in the wilds of North Finland.

In fourth place was "Soul Surfer," starring AnnaSophia Robb as a churchgoing teenage surfer who returns to the ocean after losing an arm in a shark attack. It's based on the true story of Bethany Hamilton. It earned $11.1 million.

Horror flick "Insidious," in which a family finds itself living in a haunted house, picked up $9.7 million in fifth place.

"Your Highness" debuted in sixth place, earning $9.5 million. The comedy stars Danny McBride, who was the munitions expert in "Tropic Thunder" (2008), and James Franco as as princes on a mission to save their land. It was directed by David Gordon Green ("Pineapple Express").

Jake Gyllenhaal's sci-fi thriller "Source Code" fell five spots to number seven, with $9 million in its second week. Gyllenhaal's character is part of a government experiment to find the bomber of a Chicago commuter train.

"Limitless," in which Bradley Cooper plays an author who samples a revolutionary new drug, was eighth with $5.7 million.

Rounding out the top 10 were "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules," with $4.9 million, followed by Matthew McConaughey' drama "The Lincoln Lawyer," which grossed $4.6 million.

David Cassidy, Danny Bonaduce play Partridge song

AP, ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., April 11: And to think they did it without any help from Reuben Kincaid!

A mini-Partridge Family reunion was held Saturday in Atlantic City when David Cassidy and Danny Bonaduce played a song onstage together. They say it was only the second time in 40 years they've done so.

Bonaduce, a Philadelphia disc jockey, portrayed Cassidy's younger brother on the '70s TV hit, but lip-synched and only pretended to play the bass guitar on the show. On Saturday, after he did a standup comedy routine to open the show at Resorts Casino Hotel, Cassidy got him to play "Doesn't Somebody Want To Be Wanted." Bonaduce learned that song for real when they played it together last October in suburban Philadelphia.

"We did it five, six months ago," Cassidy told The Associated Press. "He learned it — and then he put the bass away and didn't touch it. I know him."

"That's not true," Bonaduce insisted. "I just dusted it the other day."

"The Partridge Family" ran on ABC from 1970 through 1974. It centered on a musical family led by veteran actress Shirley Jones and her children playing light, infectious, hook-laden pop. Jones and Cassidy sang for real; the other actors on the show lip-synched and pretended to play instruments, including Susan Dey, who went on to star in the '80s legal drama "L.A. Law," Suzanne Crough, and Jeremy Gelbwaks and Brian Forster, who split the role of the band's drummer.

Since the show ended, Cassidy has enjoyed a long show biz career, including a solo singing stint during his teen idol phase, a starring role in the police series "David Cassidy: Man Undercover," and a critically acclaimed role on Broadway in "Joseph And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" in 1982.

Cassidy also appeared on the current season of NBC's reality show "The Celebrity Apprentice." He was the first contestant "fired" by Donald Trump.

Bonaduce is a radio personality on Philadelphia station WYSP and has starred on several reality TV shows. He has also engaged in celebrity boxing and wrestling matches, including bouts against former "Brady Bunch" actors and retired baseball player Jose Canseco.

Last fall, Cassidy, who has been touring regularly, told Bonaduce, "It's time you learned how to play the Partridge Family hits." Actually, he dared him.

"He knows I don't take dares lightly," Bonaduce said.

So he learned the five or so notes from the song, practiced a few times, and pulled it off. Then he put the red-and-white bass in its case and forgot about it.

"I have these guitars that I kind of collect," he said. "They're in the house so it looks like a musician lives there."

Because Bonaduce works only an hour or so away from Atlantic City at his Philadelphia radio job, Cassidy asked him to join him onstage for Saturday night's show.

"It's an easy song to play, but I don't know how to read music," Bonaduce said. "I asked a guy in the band, 'What the ... do these things mean? He said, "This means 'repeat, this means pause' and so on. When I realized I was going to get through it without screwing it up, I had a great time."

Introducing the song, Bonaduce asked the crowd, "You wanna see something nobody has ever seen before? Me, plugging in a bass guitar!"

Steve Jobs authorized biography coming in 2012

AP, NEW YORK, April 11: Apple CEO Steve Jobs has finally agreed to participate in a book about his life.

Simon & Schuster announced Sunday that Walter Isaacson's "iSteve: The Book of Jobs" will be published in early 2012. Isaacson has been working on the long-rumored biography since 2009 and has interviewed Jobs, members of his family, colleagues at Apple and competitors.

Spokeswoman Tracey Guest of Simon & Schuster said no further details were available and that neither Jobs nor Isaacson would be commenting.

Many Jobs biographies have been written, but not with his authorization. He reacted to at least one book with active disapproval. In 2005, Apple banished works by John Wiley & Sons from its stores because the publisher had signed up an unauthorized biography, "iCon: Steve Jobs, The Greatest Second Act in the History of Business," by Jeffrey S. Young and William L. Simon.

Few biographers are better connected than Isaacson, a former top executive at CNN and Time magazine who has written best-sellers about Benjamin Franklin and Albert Einstein. He is currently the president and CEO of the Aspen Institute, a "nonpartisan educational and policy studies institute" in Washington, D.C.

"This is the perfect match of subject and author, and it is certain to be a landmark book about one of the world's greatest innovators," Jonathan Karp, publisher of Simon & Schuster, said in a statement. "Just as he did with Einstein and Benjamin Franklin, Walter Isaacson is telling a unique story of revolutionary genius."

Jobs, 56, has had numerous health problems and announced in January that he would take his third leave of absence in seven years. During that time, he has survived a rare but curable form of pancreatic cancer and undergone a liver transplant. He appeared at a press conference in early March to announce the iPad 2.

US filmmaking great Sidney Lumet dies in NY at 86

AP, NEW YORK, April 11: Speaking in his office above the Broadway theaters where he performed as a child, director Sidney Lumet was typically unpretentious in discussing his films, a body of work numbering more American classics than most have a right to contemplate.

"God knows I've got no complaints about my career," Lumet said in 2006. "I've had a very good time and gotten some very good work done."

An eminent craftsman, Lumet always referred to his more than 40 films as simple, understated "work." Raised as an actor and molded in live television, he was a pragmatic director, eschewing ostentatious displays of style for sure-handed storytelling.

He rarely did more than two or three takes and usually cut "in the camera" — essentially editing while shooting — yet his efficient ways captured some of the greatest performances in American cinema: Al Pacino as Sonny Wortzik in "Dog Day Afternoon," Peter Finch as Howard Beale in "Network," Paul Newman as Frank Galvin in "The Verdict."

His actors, with whom he always rehearsed for at least two weeks before starting production, were nominated for 17 Oscars for their performances in his films; several, including Faye Dunaway and Ingrid Bergman, won. The director was, in four nominations, always shut out until he was given a lifetime achievement award in 2005.

"I guess I'd like to thank the movies," the director said in accepting the award.

Lumet, 86, died early Saturday in his Manhattan home after suffering from lymphoma.

He was always closely associated with New York, where he shot many of his films, working far from Hollywood. The city was frequently a character in its own right in his films, from the crowds chanting "Attica!" on the hot city streets of "Dog Day Afternoon" to the hard lives and corruptibility of New York police officers in "Serpico," "Prince of the City" and "Q&A."

Mayor Michael Bloomberg called Lumet "one of the great chroniclers of our city."

"It's not an anti-L.A. thing," Lumet said of his New York favoritism in a 1997 interview. "I just don't like a company town."

Fellow New York director Woody Allen called Lumet "definitely the quintessential New York filmmaker," though Allen noted he considered one film Lumet made elsewhere — 1965's "The Hill," shot in Spain — his finest.

"I'm constantly amazed at how many films of his prodigious output were wonderful and how many actors and actresses had their best work under his direction," Allen said Saturday. "Knowing Sidney, he will have more energy dead than most live people."

Martin Scorsese said Lumet's death "marks the end of an era." Scorsese said Lumet "was a New York filmmaker at heart, and our vision of the city has been enhanced and deepened by classics like `Serpico,' `Dog Day Afternoon' and, above all, the remarkable `Prince of the City.'"

He said it would be difficult to imagine "there won't be any more new pictures by Sidney Lumet."

"All the more reason," he said, "to take good care of the ones he left behind."

Lumet also was a deeply moral filmmaker, who often made films crackling with social justice. His first feature film, 1957's "12 Angry Men," used the plodding reason of Juror no. 8, played by Henry Fonda, to overturn the prejudices and assumptions of his follow jurors. His 1964 film "The Pawnbroker" was one of the early U.S. dramas about the Holocaust. His "Fail-Safe," also from 1964, was a frightening warning on nuclear bombs.

Lumet remained very active into his 80s, saying he wasn't geared for retirement and couldn't imagine giving up the life of making movies.

His last film was 2007's "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead," in his beloved genre, melodrama.

"He was a true master who loved directing and working with actors like no other," said Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who starred in it. "He was and is valuable on so many levels the thought itself overwhelms. I adored him. God, we're going to miss him."

The director was born June 25, 1924, in Philadelphia to a pair of Yiddish stage performers, and he began his show business career as a child actor, appearing on radio at age 4.

He made his Broadway debut in 1934 with a small role in Sidney Kingsley's acclaimed "Dead End," and he twice played Jesus, in Max Reinhardt's production of "The Eternal Road" and Maxwell Anderson's "Journey to Jerusalem."

After serving as a radar repairman in India and Burma during World War II, Lumet returned to New York and formed an acting company. In 1950, Yul Brynner, a friend and a director at CBS-TV, invited him to join the network as an assistant director. Soon he rose to director, working on 150 episodes of the "Danger" thriller and other series.

The advent of live TV dramas boosted Lumet's reputation. He directed the historical re-enactment program "You Are There," hosted by Walter Cronkite. Like Arthur Penn, John Frankenheimer, Delbert Mann and other directors of television drama's Golden Age, he transitioned to feature filmmaking.

Later, when Lumet directed the 1976 TV news satire "Network," penned by Paddy Chayefsky, he would winkingly insist the dark tragicomedy wasn't an exaggeration of the TV business but mere "reportage." The film proved to be Lumet's most memorable and created an enduring catch phrase. The crazed newscaster Howard Beale — "the first known instance of a man who was killed because of lousy ratings" — exhorts people in his audience to raise their windows and shout: "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it anymore!"

Beale is ultimately assassinated by his network bosses (Dunaway, Robert Duvall) on live television. Lumet called such a scene — the live broadcast of a murder — "the only part of `Network' that hasn't happened yet, and that's on its way."

The film was nominated for 10 Academy awards and won four.

Lumet immediately established himself as an A-list director with "12 Angry Men," which took an early and powerful look at racial prejudice as it depicted 12 jurors trying to reach a verdict in a trial involving a young Hispanic man wrongly accused of murder. It garnered him his first Academy Award nomination.

His other nominations were for directing "Network," "Dog Day Afternoon" (1975) and "The Verdict" and for his screenplay adaptation for 1981's "Prince of the City."

"I'm also not a competitive man, but on two occasions I got so pissed off about what beat us," he later said. "With 'Network,' we were beaten out by 'Rocky,' for Christ's sake."

That year, the field also included "Taxi Driver" and "All the President's Men."

"The Verdict" lost to "Gandhi" in 1983, a year in which "E.T." also finished as an also-ran.

Early on, Lumet showed a nimbleness in material and a reluctance for showy directing. In his 1995 filmmaking guide "Making Movies," he called style "the most misused word since love."

"Good style is unseen style," wrote Lumet. "It is style that is felt."

Although Lumet was best known for his hard-bitten portrayals of urban life, his resume also includes some of the finest film adaptations of noted plays: Eugene O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey into Night," Arthur Miller's "A View from the Bridge," Chekhov's "The Sea Gull" and Tennessee Williams' "Orpheus Descending," which was made into "The Fugitive Kind," starring Marlon Brando.

In an interview with director Peter Bogdanovich, Lumet compared filmmaking to "making a mosaic."

"You take each little tile and polish and color it, and you just do the best you can on each little individual tile, and it's not until you've literally glued them all together that you know whether or not you've got something good," he said.

Some did not turn out well, such as 1992's "A Stranger Among Us," with Melanie Griffith, and perhaps his greatest bomb, 1978's "The Wiz," an adaptation of "The Wizard of Oz" featuring black actors.

The composer Quincy Jones, who scored music for five of Lumet's films, said he was devastated to learn of his death. He said that Lumet gave him his start in movies with "The Pawnbroker."

"Sidney was a visionary filmmaker whose movies made an indelible mark on our popular culture with their stirring commentary on our society," Jones said. "Future generations of filmmakers will look to Sidney's work for guidance and inspiration, but there will never be another who comes close to him."

Lumet received the Directors Guild of America's prestigious D.W. Griffith Award for lifetime achievement in 1993.

Pacino, who produced memorable performances for Lumet in "Dog Day Afternoon" and "Serpico," introduced the director at the 2005 Academy Awards.

"If you prayed to inhabit a character, Sidney was the priest who listened to your prayers, helped make them come true," the actor said.

He said he would remember the director as "the most civilized of humans and the kindest man I have ever known."

Other popular Lumet films included "Running On Empty" and "Murder on the Orient Express."

In 2001 he returned to his television roots, creating, writing, directing and executive-producing a cable series, "100 Centre Street." It was filmed in his beloved New York.

In 2006, he brought out "Find Me Guilty," starring Vin Diesel and based on a true story about a mob trial in New Jersey.

Lumet once claimed he didn't seek out New York-based projects.

"But any script that starts in New York has got a head start," he said in 1999. "It's a fact the city can become anything you want it to be."

His first three marriages ended in divorce: to actress Rita Gam, heiress Gloria Vanderbilt and Lena Horne's daughter, Gail Jones. In 1980, he married journalist Mary Gimbel.

He is survived by his wife, daughters Amy and Jenny Lumet, stepchildren Leslie and Bailey Gimbel, nine grandchildren and a great-granddaughter. Jenny Lumet wrote the screenplay to 2008's "Rachel Getting Married." Amy Lumet also works in the film business, as a sound editor.

School founded by Blue Man Group gets new stage

AP, NEW YORK, April 11: In the 20 years since they became a performance art sensation, the Blue Man Group has taken its men with blue heads on the road to stages in New York, Las Vegas and Europe.

The trio is now headed to center stage in the classroom. Blue Man founders Chris Wink, Matt Goldman and Phil Stanton are the co-founders of Blue School, a private preschool and elementary school that they started so they could send their own children to a school that was creative enough for them.

After renting space in several Manhattan locations, Blue School is moving to a permanent home near South Street Seaport in the fall. The three original Blue Men will appear on stage Wednesday for the first time in 11 years to raise money for the school.

No blue greasepaint was in evidence during a visit to Blue School's current home in the East Village, but there were non-traditional touches like a "soft room" with padded walls and foam structures to climb and a hallway drenched in trippy black light.

After a drumbeat summoned parents and kids to sit on the floor, a class of 4-year-olds shared what they had learned about the Chrysler Building and the Empire State Building. A first-grade group left to explore the neighborhood, outfitted with cameras and reflective vests.

Teachers addressed their charges not as "children" or "boys and girls" but as "friends," as in, "Friends, can we move to the rug for meeting?"

Three fish and the severed head of a fourth rested on plates in a kindergarten class; the children took turns touching them.

"If you put these fish in water would they swim?" asked teacher Molly DeGesero.

The children were unsure. The smallest fish was dropped into a bucket of water. It did not swim.

DeGesero explained later that the children had developed an interest in the life and death of fish after the inhabitants of a classroom aquarium died during winter vacation.

Kindergartner Beatrice White said she liked touching the fish. "The long one was slimy," she said. "The medium one was, like, scaly."

The children's role in focusing on fish illustrates Blue School's philosophy of student-directed learning.

"Children who either choose what they're learning or are part of choosing what they're learning do better academically," said Goldman, the Blue Man founder who is the most involved with the school.

Goldman and his wife, Renee Rolleri, are on the school's board of directors and are the parents of Rhyus, a first-grader.

With his wire-rimmed glasses and unassuming manner, Goldman looks more like a graduate student than a showman.

Blue School began in 2006 as a play group when Rhyus was a toddler.

"Within six months after we started there was so much momentum and interest from our community we realized we needed to keep moving," said Rolleri, who has studied art therapy and child development.

Blue School currently has 155 students from 2-year-olds through second-graders and plans to add a grade each year up to at least fifth grade.

The school's permanent home is being designed by star architect David Rockwell, who designed the nearby Imagination Playground, an interactive play space with giant foam blocks, as well as many of the city's hottest restaurants.

From its countercultural beginnings, Blue School has evolved into a sought-after private school that receives six applications for every available space.

Students entering at kindergarten take the same $510 aptitude test that New York's other top private schools require. "It's really just part of the child's profile," Rolleri said.

The $28,500 tuition is "the exact average of all the private schools in the city," Goldman said.

The money buys a student-teacher ratio that public school parents can only dream of, with two teachers for each class of 14 to 18 children.

Because it is new, Blue School cannot tout the percentage of its graduates who go on to attend top high schools and Ivy League universities.

Other schools do boast about their successful alumni, and Cornelia Iredell, co-director of Independent School Placement, a head-hunting service for private schools, said some parents exert pressure on schools to stress academic rigor at an early age.

But Iredell said the city's top private schools "really focus on nourishing the child in every area."

"The arts are not considered extras," she said.

Blue School parents said their school stands out.

Lawyer Angela Badamo said she and her husband chose Blue School for their 4-year-old son after visiting at least 10 schools, public and private.

"It was a place where from our observation the kids were having a lot of fun," she said.

Badamo said the connection with Blue Man Group was "kind of intriguing" though she has never seen the show.

Eric Huang, also a lawyer and the father of a Blue School first-grader, has never seen the stage show either. He said he loved the school's "community feel."

In an effort to share the school's philosophy, Goldman and Rolleri traveled in January to Bhutan, where they met with the minister of education and led a workshop for teachers.

Mark Shriver, senior vice president of Save the Children, which is exploring working with Blue School, said the school's emphasis on viewing students, parents and teachers as a team is not just rhetoric.

"When a school has got that comprehensive approach, if we can learn anything from them, we want to learn that," he said.

The school has set a goal of raising $750,000 at the April 13 benefit, with ticket prices topping out at $10,000 and Dave Matthews as the opening act.

"Yes it's a high ticket price," Goldman said, "but it's 300 seats."

Folk singer, Highwaymen member Gil Robbins dies

AP, LOS ANGELES, April 11: Gil Robbins, a folk singer, guitarist and member of the early 1960s group the Highwaymen, has died. He was 80.

Robbins died Tuesday at his home in Esteban Cantu, Mexico, Tracey Jacobs said Saturday night in an email to The Associated Press. Jacobs is a publicist for Robbins' son, the actor and director Tim Robbins.

Shortly before Gil Robbins joined the Highwaymen, the group had a major hit with "Michael," its version of "Michael, Row the Boat Ashore." When Robbins joined in 1962, he took the group in a more political direction, playing and singing baritone on five albums until their 1964 breakup. (A country music supergroup with Willie Nelson and Johnny Cash later shared the same name.)

Tim Robbins, star of "The Shawshank Redemption and director of "Dead Man Walking," said in a statement to the AP that Gil Robbins was "a fantastic father," "a great musician" and "a man of unshakeable integrity."

"His commitment to social justice was evident to us from an early age, as was his infectious mischievous sense of humor," Tim Robbins said. "His passing has created great sadness for all of us and our mother but we take comfort in knowing that the angels will soon be soothed by the songs coming from his beautiful baritone voice."

Father and son worked together on the 1992 film "Bob Roberts." Tim Robbins directed and played the title role of a right-wing, folk-singing U.S. Senate candidate from Pennsylvania. The actor's brother David Robbins wrote and recorded the film's ultra-conservative folk songs, and Gil Robbins was listed in the credits as a vocal coach and choral consultant.

Robbins was born in Spokane, Wash., and raised in Southern California, where he studied music at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Before joining the Highwaymen, he was already a well-known musician in the folk scene that surrounded New York's Greenwich Village as a member of the Cumberland Three and the Belafonte Singers, and as a friend to famous folkies like John Stewart and Dave Van Ronk, according to The New York Times, which first reported his death.

After the Highwaymen, Robbins managed the Gaslight Club on Greenwich Village's famously musical MacDougal Street.