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Elaine Low Singaporean woman donates $1M to Japan


SINGAPORE - A SINGAPOREAN woman has generously donated S$1 million to help the Japan quake victims.


Ever since the massive 8.9-magnitude earthquake shook northeast Japan last Friday, Singaporeans have been showing empathy and pouring in support for the battered nation through donation drives, practical help and so on.

Philanthropists are doing their part too, reported Lianhe Wanbao.

At a donation ceremony held yesterday afternoon at the Embassy of Japan in Singapore, Ms Elaine Low, 24, presented the cheque to Ambassador Yoichi Suzuki.

Ms Low is the daughter of Datuk Low Tuck Kwong, 63, who is the founder of Indonesia-based coal mining company Bayan Resources. Mr Low is the third richest man in Indonesia, according to Forbes magazine.

Mr Low said his company has business ties with Japan, and added that his family has friends and relatives in Japan. The family also has fond memories of Japan's Tohoku region, one of the regions worst hit by the earthquake and tsunami.

plane crash new jersey


All 5 Aboard Plane Die as It Crashes on an Interstate in New Jersey
A single-engine plane on its way to Atlanta spun out of control over northern New Jersey and crashed onto a busy highway on Tuesday, killing all five people aboard — two investment bankers, and the wife and two children of one of the bankers.
No one on the ground was injured, the authorities said, though the plane, which crashed on Interstate 287 in Harding Township, in southern Morris County, almost hit a southbound pickup. A dog aboard the plane was also killed.

They did not officially identify the victims, but Greenhill & Company, an investment bank based in New York, said it believed that two of its managing directors, Jeffrey F. Buckalew, 45, and Rakesh Chawla, 36, were aboard the plane, as were Mr. Buckalew’s wife, Corinne, their son, Jackson, and their daughter, Meriwether.

Mr. Buckalew was a pilot and owned the plane, according to Federal Aviation Administration records.

The airplane, a Socata TBM-700, left Teterboro Airport at 9:51 a.m., bound for DeKalb-Peachtree Airport near Atlanta. A few minutes after takeoff, the pilot spoke with air-traffic controllers about icing, said Robert Gretz, a senior air safety investigator for the National Transportation Safety Board. The pilot did not sound distressed, he said, and it was unclear if he was reporting ice on his wings or asking about icy areas.

The plane disappeared from radar screens at 17,500 feet. The crash occurred 14 minutes after takeoff.

Michelle Bellog, 43, was in the upstairs dining room of her two-story house about a block away when she heard the plane, with its engine sputtering.

“This plane was very loud because it was so close, and its engines would stop and start,” she said. “And the pilot was trying to rev it to keep the engines going.”

She said she rushed to her window and saw the small plane, now at treetop level, “engulfed in dark, gray smoke” and flying northeast, toward the Interstate and Morristown Municipal Airport.

Ms. Bellog said she heard an explosion, which shook her house, as the plane began falling apart; pieces of the aircraft fell from the sky onto her neighbors’ lawns. Moments later, she saw the plane crest over the retaining wall that separates her neighborhood from the highway.

A split second after that, she heard a bigger explosion and saw a plume of black smoke rise from the road. “The smoke was rising up, just billowing up,” she said. “I was terrified.”

The plane hit the southbound lanes, crashed through the wooded median and continued into the northbound lanes. Pieces were scattered across half a mile. All lanes of I-287 were closed immediately after the crash, though they were reopened by the evening.

“It’s a very traumatic crash,” said Lt. Stephen Jones of the New Jersey State Police. “There is no cockpit to be seen.”

The Socata, which is considered relatively powerful for a single-engine aircraft, did not have a black box, but investigators were trying to recover its GPS device.

Greenhill’s chief executive, Scott L. Bok, said the men had been flying south for a short business meeting, after which Mr. Buckalew and his family planned to stay in the area for the holidays. Mr. Chawla was scheduled to take a commercial flight back home after the meeting, Mr. Bok said.

Mr. Chawla joined the firm in 2003 after stints at Credit Suisse and the Blackstone Group and advised clients like the Treasury Department and Charles Schwab. His wife, Cathleen, is a fellow graduate of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Chawla had three young daughters, Mr. Bok said.

Mr. Buckalew was the head of Greenhill’s North American Corporate Advisory activities. He had joined the firm in 1996 after three years at Salomon Brothers and two years with the leveraged finance group of Chemical Bank.

An avid fan of the basketball and football teams at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he received a bachelor’s degree and an M.B.A., Mr. Buckalew was also a formidable golfer. He tied for 94th on Golf Digest’s list of “top golfers in finance” in 2007, and often won Greenhill’s annual summer golf outing, Mr. Bok said.

“He was almost the polar opposite of a Wall Street banker,” Mr. Bok said. “He was very comfortable in his own skin.”

Mr. Buckalew, who served on the board of directors for his alma mater’s Arts and Sciences Foundation, flew his plane to the board meetings in North Carolina, said James W. May, the foundation’s executive director. “It was clearly something he enjoyed,” Mr. May said of the flying hobby. “It brought a smile to his face.”

Ms. Buckalew, 45, was a visual artist and was on the board of the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Amherst, Va., according to the center’s Web site.

She and the two children had moved this year to Charlottesville, Va., where the family had a home, said Landis C. Best, a friend of Ms. Buckalew. They had wanted to be closer to relatives in North Carolina, Ms. Best said, and provide opportunities for their son, Jackson, 9, to play lacrosse.

Mr. Buckalew, who also owned an apartment on East 69th Street, often flew to and from the Virginia home, said Frances Buckalew, his 100-year-old great aunt.

She said the family had named Meriwether, 6, after her husband.

“When they married, she fell in love with my husband and loved his name,” she said of Corinne Buckalew. “She said, ‘If we ever have a little girl, we’ll name her Meriwether.’ ”

Frances Buckalew, who lives in Richmond, Va., said she recently received a holiday card from the family.

“It said they hope to see me during Christmas,” she said.

Michael J. de la Merced, Winnie Hu and Nate Schweber contributed reporting

the hobbit movie release date


Director: Peter Jackson
Writers: J.R.R. Tolkien (based on a story), Fran Walsh (screenplay), and 3 more credits »
Stars: Cate Blanchett, Luke Evans and Elijah Wood
Bilbo Baggins, a Hobbit, journeys to the Lonely Mountain accompanied by a group of dwarves to reclaim a treasure taken from them by the dragon Smaug.

Debra Messing splits from husband


Debra Messing has split from her husband Daniel Zelman.
The Will And Grace star - who has seven-year-old son Roman with the actor and producer - "privately separated" from Daniel earlier this year after 10 years of marriage.


Debra's representative told People: "The decision was mutual, and they remain supportive of one another and committed to raising their son as a family."
Debra, 43, and Daniel first met when they were both students at New York University and dated for eight years before they tied the knot.
She revealed in an interview in 2004: "I want my child to be like my husband. He is sensitive, really intelligent, really funny... but solid. He has a good sense of perspective."
The award-winning comic actress will next be seen starring in NBC's new musical drama Smash.

Debra Messing & Husband Split After 10 Years


NEW YORK, N.Y. -- CaptionDebra Messing and her husband of more than decade, actor/producer Daniel Zelman, have split.


“Debra Messing and Daniel Zelman privately separated earlier this year after a 10 year marriage,” a rep for the star of NBC’s upcoming series “Smash” said in a statement to Access Hollywood on Tuesday.

“The decision was mutual, and they remain supportive of one another and committed to raising their son as a family,” the statement continued.

Debra and Daniel are parents to son Roman, 7.

The former “Will & Grace” star announced her engagement to the “Damages” executive producer in 1999. The couple married the following year.

The pair actually met a decade before their wedding, when they were both pursuing post-graduate studies at NYU.

A rep for the actress did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Access Hollywood.

HBO yanks 'Hung' and 'Bored to Death,' picks up 'Enlightened'


So long Hung, Bored to Death, and How To Make It in America!
HBO has canceled the sleeper comedies to make way for more fresh programming coming down the pipeline. Hung and Bored each ran for three seasons, and America ran for two.
In the meantime, the pay cabler ordered a second season of Enlightened, the Laura Dern starrer that just earned Golden Globe nods for best TV series (comedy/musical) and for best actress.
In 2012, HBO will roll out Luck, a new drama from Michael Mann and David Milch that stars Dustin Hoffman; as well as Aaron Sorkin’s series about life behind the scenes of a cable-news show. The network will also premiere Veep, starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Girls, Life’s Too Short, and Angry Boys.

'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,' 'Drive' Lead London Critics’ Circle Nominations


'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,' 'Drive' Lead London Critics’ Circle Nominations
Jessica Chastain and Octavia Spencer from "The Help" will go head-to-head in the supporting actress of the year category.

LONDON – This year’s London Critics’ Circle nomination list is a tale of two Scandis with Tomas Alfredson’s Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and Drive, directed by Nicolas Winding Refn leading the charge with six shots at glory apiece.
This year’s nominations also put Jessica Chastain and Octavia Spencer from The Help head-to-head in the supporting actress of the year category, both up against Sareh Bayat (A Separation), Vanessa Redgrave (Coriolanus) and Jacki Weaver (Animal Kingdom) in the battle to win the trophy.
Alfredson and Refn, both Scandinavian, find their films vying for the London Critics’ Circle’s top accolade, film of the year.
But both Drive and Tinker Tailor find themselves in heady competition with The Tree of Life, The Artist and Iranian drama A Separation also tilting at the top prize.
Alfredson misses out on a berth in the director of the year category with Refn going up against Lynne Ramsay (We Need To Talk About Kevin), Asghar Farhadi (A Separation), Michel Hazanavicius (The Artist) and Terrence Malick (The Tree of Life) for the nod.
Voted for by over 120 U.K. film critics, broadcasters and writers, this year’s actor of the year will be one from George Clooney (The Descendants), Jean Dujardin (The Artist), Michael Fassbender (Shame), Ryan Gosling (Drive) and Gary Oldman (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy).
Kirsten Dunst(Melancholia), Anna Paquin (Margaret), Meryl Streep (The Iron Lady), Tilda Swinton (We Need to Talk About Kevin) and Michelle Williams (My Week With Marilyn) all take nomination slots for actress of the year.
The Critics’ choice of supporting actor will be from Simon Russell Beale (The Deep Blue Sea), Kenneth Branagh (My Week With Marilyn), Albert Brooks (Drive), Christopher Plummer (Beginners) and Michael Smiley (Kill List).
The 32nd London Critics' Circle Film Awards will be dished out its annual awards at a ceremony on January 19 at BFI Southbank.
This year’s nods will be in aid of its charity partner, the British Film Institute, to help with the preservation and restoration of British film, in particular Hitchcock's nine silent features, as part of the BFI's landmark 'Rescue the Hitchcock 9’ campaign.