Wednesday, May 26, 2010

who won Dancing with the 2010 Stars

who won Dancing with the 2010 Stars:
"Dancing with the Stars" winner 2010, Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger and her partner Derek Hough. "Dancing with the Stars" 2010 is ending, a show that pairs up celebrities with professional ballroom dance to dancers in a contest.
This week all couples have opted for Argentine Tango. The competition was tough, but Nicole and Derek always positioned among the favorites not only because of the great dancing skills shown by the Pussycat Dolls singer, but the chemistry between Scherzinger and Hough, which made their Argentine Tango exceptional.
Nicole Scherzinger was competing in the finals of "Dancing with the Stars' Evan Lysacek against Van and his partner Anna Trebunskaya, and Erin Andrews and her partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy.


The Nicole Scherzinger, Derek Hough pair won the match with a perfect score for their jive, so they took the Mirror Ball trophy.

Jovial 'after Kobe' Game 4 loss

Jovial 'after Kobe' Game 4 loss:
After the Laker's Game 4 lost to the Phoenix Suns Kobe Bryant made one thing is clear, it was the defense that lost the game, his team is not able to score points.


"We have a much better job defensively do," Bryant said quietly at the beginning of his post game press conference Tuesday in Phoenix.


Bryant took only four shots in the fourth quarter, making three shots. Each of his shots were made with less than a minute and half remaining in the game.


He added that the Lakers had so much focus on attacking the newly implemented zone Suns, they lost focus on the defensive end, "which you win championships."


"Offensively, we scored enough points, we did a better job defensively to do, period," an irritated Bryant repeated when pressed by reporters on the cause of defeat.


When a reporter asked Bryant how he felt, he replied with one word, "Jovial."
Almost in disbelief the reporter asked Bryant to repeat what he said and said again sarcastically said, "Jovial." Listen to Bryant's reaction.


Kobe scored 38 points in the 115-106 loss. Game 5 will be Thursday at 9 am in Los Angeles.



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Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Dell Streak will be available in June

Dell Streak will be available in June: 


Tin box flogger Dell has announced that it will collaborate with mobile operator O2 Streak tablet device launch in the UK. 
The five-inch touchscreen tablet device was first shown at CES in January running Google's Android open source operating system. Since then Dell has managed to tidy things up a bit and interest O2 and Carphone Warehouse mobile phone vendor to peddle the unit since June. 
Below the screen is a 1GHz Snapdragon processor, the same found in Google's Nexus One and other smartphones. With WiFi, Bluetooth and 3G, the out of the box connectivity options Apple's IPAD to shame. A 5 megapixel autofocus camera with flash along with an expandable microSD card of 2 GB of storage to the device built round out the specifications below. 


Dell was unable to get back to us by the time pressure on the Android version of the line will be executed, but it was post an update saying that Android 2.2 will be pushed into the air later this year, which would result in support for Adobe's Flash. 
The second-largest PC brand has managed to steal a march on to its traditional rivals, Acer and HP, with Streak. Acer looks to be a state of denial regarding its commitment to obtaining one tablet at the door, while HP has been sending mixed signals about whether it will WebOS loading on a device. 


five-inch screen, the stripe is actually a lower number of pixels per inch than some Android smartphones. Whether consumers will consider the extra two inches or so from the physical size of the screen enough to carrying around another device remains to be seen. 


With the bundled 3G-connectivity of the Streak, O2 is likely to subsidize the device and use it to entice gamblers to sign up for the overpriced data rates. 


Pricing has not yet been released, but expect that the leadership of Apple's IPAD, which will be launched in the UK later this week.



Saturday, May 22, 2010

Air India crash kills at least 160

Air India crash kills at least 160:

Air India Express flight from Dubai A passenger plane crossed a runway and crashed outside an airport in South India on Saturday, with at least 160 people in one of the worst air accident in India in years.

The accident happened near Mangalore in Karnataka state airport. There may be five or six survivors, said local media.

Air India said the plane was a Boeing 737-800 with 166 people aboard, including six crew members.

Air India Express is a budget airline owned by the state-run carrier Air India.

"At least 160 passengers died in the crash," U.S. Acharya, Interior Minister of the southern state of Karnataka, told reporters. "At least five to six people were taken to the hospital. Their condition is unknown."

TV pictures showed firefighters battle burning wreck in a wooded area near the airport.

Friday, May 21, 2010

SAT Scores | College Board releases results


SAT Scores | College Board releases results
:-

Getting used to mean SAT scores at the mailbox waiting to tear open the letter from the College Board. Now, the days Sat scores are released, all students need to do is log onto the website of College Board. Important as they are, though, there is disagreement about whether SAT scores are really the indicator of success in their schools. SAT scores online:- If the SAT test you on or before May 1 of this year, the College Board has your SAT scores online. The scores are available on SAT.Collegeboard.com. Sat scores are released simultaneously online, your test scores are released to your pre-selected courses, and to your high school and a paper report.

Want to increase your SAT scores?


It is possible to re-take the SAT test if you want your SAT scores increase. The Executive Board, however, and many test-prep companies admit that the re-test that does not necessarily raise scores. Some test-prep companies costs $ 2,000 - cost a lot of students or their parents arrive to find personal loan companies to pay. Princeton Review used to say that the test-review program would increase by scores 255 points or more. According to research by the Better Business Bureau and others, Princeton Review has stopped making that claim.

College Board SAT scores are not always necessary:


It may seem like SAT scores - or less used ACT scores of the College Board - are needed. Yet there are 844 accredited colleges in the United States that do not require SAT scores. Some schools have decided that SAT scores are not simply a student success in the future for their school. Re-hashing the majority of the old arguments about standardized tests, these schools have simply decided it was not worth it. These schools, known as "test optional" schools, focusing instead on the performance of students in and outside the classroom to determine admission.



Related searches:
sat scores online, what is a good sat score, college board, collegeboard, ruc sunat

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Dancing with the Stars Results 05/18/2010 - 100th elimination (DWTS):

Dancing with the Stars Results 05/18/2010 - 100th elimination (DWTS):
Dancing with the Stars Results 05/18/2010 - 100th elimination. Last night was the 100th episode of DWTS elimination of any Dancing with the Stars show. The popular reality competition is in its 10th season, and we are ready for the last three look down to the last two. Last night, the four members left - Erin Andrews, Chad Ochocinco, Nicole Scherzinger, and Evan Lysacek learned their fate.

Evan was told he was safe right out of hand, so that made his night a little more fun. After everything he did not have to sit with baited breath whether he would go home (though almost everyone knew he would not be.)

The night of the show was the complete performances of dance squads college and the world premiere live performance of "Can not be tamed" by Miley Cyrus.

Nicole Scherzinger - Pussycat Doll one - discovered that she was safe and elimination. That left the bottom two to Erin Andrews and Chad Ochocinco. Now if your effort and by improving you should say that Chad was hands-down winner of the night. He looks much more graceful on the dance floor than he used to when he started dancing.

Erin, on the other hand, has a broader fan base, and got more of the votes of viewers. She joins the top three, and next week we will know who the finalists are.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Wise connect to Google I / O conference: What's Brewing?

Wise connect to Google I / O conference: What's Brewing?
Connect Wise will host user group meetings in several cities. But CEO Arnie Bellini has an additional event on his agenda this week: the Google I / O conference that starts today (May 19) in San Francisco. Why Connect Wise - Professional Services Automation (PSA) software provider VARs and MSPs - spending time at Google I / O? Here are some clues.

The Google I / O conference is expected attracted more than 5,000 of developers, many of whom examine the presentation of applications to support Google Android, Google Chrome, Google APIs and Google Apps. The event is aimed at participants' talk shop with the help of engineers building the next generation of Web, mobile and enterprise applications. "
Now let's shift gears to Connect Wise. CEO Arnie Bellini has multiple trips to Google last year or so. And during the Connect Wise Partner Summit in November 2009, Bellini describes how the company would channel cloud-friendly solutions forward. As part of this strategy is Wise Connect working on various Google-oriented integration. "Specifically, agenda management integration", says Jeannine Edwards, Director of Community Connect Wise. "We have our preview Droid mobile app, while we [at Google I / O]."

Google Android has undoubtedly gained critical mass - which recently surpassed Apple's iPhone as the second most popular smartphone platform. There are also about 22 percent of the top MSPs embrace Google Apps for potential reseller opportunities, according to our MSPmentor 100 research results for 2010 (survey conducted in Q4 2009).

Meanwhile, there is another trend to note: Connect Wise will show up on industry conferences that are not necessarily designed for MSPs. In addition to Google this week's I / O event is expected to surface on the Juniper Connect Wise Americas Partner Conference (May 24 to 26, Phoenix). It's all part of an effort to push far beyond the reach Connect Wise MSPs and extra long tail niches within the IT channel.


Related searches:
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Democrat Blanche Lincoln has trouble voting in Arkansas. Been in Washington too long?

Democrat Blanche Lincoln has trouble voting in Arkansas. Been in Washington too long?
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As Democratic Senator Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas went to the polls in Little Rock on Tuesday to its vote, there was a problem.
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As Democratic Senator Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas went to the polls in Little Rock on Tuesday to its vote, there was a problem.


Election officials informed her that she had already voted absenteeism. So she had her license and voter ID card and had to produce a provisional ballot - which will be counted after the elections officials to verify that they had not already voted.

"They can pretend to vote, but they can not put a vote in that box," 88th Precinct Chief Judge Arlette Miller told Fox News. "Our administration says she already voted."

True, military families and frequent travelers often absentee ballots to file as a precaution. But in a year when the incumbent has an obligation to his constituents and punish anyone who looks like they've been in DC too long, it's a radioactive bug. Without explaining why she thought she was out of town, Lincoln tried to make the best face on this miscalculation.
"We normally do this, you just need a form to ensure that they do not know you voted twice," Lincoln told reporters, explaining that she is always one years worth of absentee voting applications to ensure that they can vote in all of Arkansas' election - even fewer published ones, as the school board.

This is not only embarrassing, it could prove politically fatal. Facing a June 8 primary against Lt. Gov. Bill Halter, Lincoln will have to scramble to beat Halter. Lincoln has the backing of the White House and former President Bill Clinton. Halter has the support of labor unions and liberal advocacy groups like moveon.org.

Plus he votes in Arkansas.

Representative Joe Sestak Pennsylvanis is a strong supporter of health reform


Representative Joe Sestak Pennsylvanis is a strong supporter of health reform:


Representative Joe Sestak
defeated Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Spector a long time in the primary yesterday and was the Democratic candidate for the Senate by-elections. Sen. Spector is a victim of the anti-establishment voters are voting in Spector, who is 80, known as switched parties last year and the long time Republican became a Democrat. Arlen Spector has survived both cancer and a brain tumor, but he could not survive the wrath of an electorate that clearly wants to send a message to Washington.
Joe Sestak
is half-term U.S. Congressman representing Pennsylvania seventh Congressional District. But in this election, Sestak ran as an "outsider" in his victory speech, he told his followers that he was a "victory for the people of the establishment, the status quo, even Washington, DC". Both Rep. Sestak and Senator Spector have similar views on the issue of healthcare and healthcare reform. At the first congress elected Rep. Sestak was clear that one of his first priorities for the nation's health care reform. Rep. Sestak voted to protect the patient and affordable health care (PPACA Act), the reconciliation Act of 2010. In addition, the Congressman said: "With this legislation, Congress finally the problem of increasing health care costs and health insurance not to protect enrolled in the plans for addressing this growing burden." Rep. Sestak's born and raised in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. He served in the Navy for 31 years and retired with the rank of 3-star admiral. He was reported to the highest military officers chosen to serve in Congress. Rep. Sestak also holds a doctorate in political economy and government from Harvard University.


Related searches: arlen specter, rand paul, blanche lincoln, sestak, bill halter .
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Arlen Specter The result SUPER SENATE TUESDAY:


Arlen Specter The result SUPER SENATE TUESDAY:


The New York Times
says that the races in Pennsylvania and Kentucky, and one in Arkansas, "again illustrated the serious threats to both parties face candidates who are able to portray itself as an outsider and eager to shake the system."

The Washington Post, "Tuesday's results were the strongest indicator to date of voter anger and dissatisfaction, which has the shape of the political climate throughout the year."

Politics adds, "The anti-establishment, anti-incumbent fever on display Tuesday are not new. The ideological activists consider their muscles in the primary this week showdowns are the same race as primary voters who four years ago stripped the Democratic nomination away from Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, who later won as an independent. What is now clear, in a way that was not, it is that these results are a true national phenomenon reflects not only isolated spasm in reaction to some topics or local circumstances. "

The A1, above-the-fold headline in The Boston Globe: "Tea Party triumphs in primary Ky."

The New York Daily News cover:

"Ugly asked Bam's husband Specter shown door in Pa., Palin Tea Party PAL disrupts GOP regulars in Ky"

The Daily News' DeFrank:
"Tuesday vote marks a fresh reminder of what all fighters have understood months: It's a lousy year as a Democrat, an incumbent or President Obama. At the very least, the Democratic majority in the Senate and the House will significantly shrink in November this year. "(That, despite Sestak is stronger than at the polling Toomey Specter and Democrats win in PA-12, a place Republicans must win if they hope to take back the House.)

Arkansas:
Republican John Boozman won the Republican Nomination Senate, "Arkansas Senator Blanche Lincoln a majority of the votes to win in the Democratic primaries Tuesday and now faces a three-week battle with Lt. Governor Bill Halter for a nomination of its party, "writes the AP.

KENTUCKY:

"Democratic leaders were the primary victory of Republican candidate Rand Paul Tea Party benefit, he suggests an easy target for them in November for Kentucky U.S. Senate seat to be," wrote AP.

Senate Mitch McConnell Minority Leader, who endorsed Secretary of State Trey Grayson over Rand Paul said Paul's victory: "Dr. Paul ran an excellent campaign clearly struck a chord with voters Kentucky and I congratulate him on his impressive victory. Now Kentucky Republicans will unite in standing against the overreaching policies of the Obama Administration. We are also turned into an unsustainable debt and Kentucky needs Rand Paul in the U.S. Senate because he will work everyday to stop crippling agenda. "Time writes: Paul said that he might not his fellow Kentuckian, McConnell, support for a new term as party leader. And no sooner had the results posted Tuesday than Richard Viguerie, a former conservative warrior said McConnell step aside. "

"In his acceptance speech [Democratic candidate Jack] Conway directed all national and international attention on Republican state primary, where Tea Party Favorite Rand Paul was the victor, WFPL reports." It is my understanding that the eyes of national media descended on our beloved Commonwealth of Kentucky tonight. I have news for them: both Jack Conway and Dan Mongiardo won more votes than tonight ... Paul Rand. "

Pennsylvania:
Sen. Arlen Specter, "known as an electoral Houdini, finally found himself in a tight spot, he could not escape - standing for election within one year of the voter hostility to Washington incumbents. Not even his surprise switch parties 13 months ago could save him, "writes the Philadelphia Inquirer.

"Sestak, half-term congressman from suburban Philadelphia and a former Navy admiral, will be against Pat Toomey Republican candidate in a campaign are expected to focus on wallets, purse and kitchen tables from the opposite ends of the political spectrum," writes AP .

"The role of chief endorser does not work so good for President Barack Obama," writes AP's Babington. "Senator Arlen Specter, the fourth Democrat in the seven months to a high-profile race to lose, despite the active involvement of the president, raising doubts about the ability of Obama's to fellow democrats to help the elections in November this year. "

PA2010 on Mark Critz's victory in the 12th District special election: It "was a victory for the Democrats to find savings on the story that the national political climate is against them, one immediately greeted by the party of the leaders of Harrisburg to Washington. "

Roll Call on PA-12: Democrat Mark Critz won a special election Tuesday in southwestern Pennsylvania, a symbolic victory and caused damage that buoy the spirits of a party competing dozens of districts, the defense in the midterm elections this fall . ... Democrats promoted Critz victory as a heavy blow to the Republican campaign for a majority of House seats to win, noting that Pennsylvania Sen. McCain voted narrowly 12th (John R-Ariz.) in the presidential elections of 2008 and Republicans would have a hard time getting dozens of seats as they could not win Murtha's Seat. "

"Rep. Joe Sestak's defeat of Senator Arlen Specter in the Democratic Senate primary and special election Democrat Mark Critz victory took the lion's share of attention in the polls Tuesday in Pennsylvania, but the voters in a handful of the Keystone State districts also set competitive House matchups for November, "Roll Call notes.

miranda kerr gq


Miranda Kerr GQ:


For Miranda Kerr, it’s all about the koalas when it comes to stripping down…because if it ensures they have a habitat that makes them want to procreate with an overzealous commitment it will have all been worth it (Kerr, who is the face of the Australian Koala Foundation’s ‘No Tree, No Me’ campaign, was chained to a tree for an entire day for the needs of the Australian Rolling Stones shoot -mag due to come out Wednesday).

“It’s a sad thing. There are only about 100,000 koalas left in Australia,”
the Aussie model tells Rolling Stones. “Something like 80 percent of the koalas’ habitat has been destroyed since Europeans arrived in Australia.”

“I believe every effort we make now has a reaction – if we’re making positive changes, if we’re all doing the simple, small things we can do to help the environment, it makes a big difference,” said Kerr, who tries to eat only organic food.

Shrugging off her clothes once again, Kerr is also getting ready to pose nude for Marc Jacob’s ‘Protect The Skin You’re In’ skin cancer awareness campaign, joining the likes of Eva Mendes, Heidi Klum, Dita Von Teese, Victoria Beckham and Naomi Campbell.

“The great thing about having people recognise you is you can try to make a positive difference – that’s what I’m trying to do, especially for young women,” Kerr said.

Hey, Orlando, when you’re trying to have sex with her and she’s asking whether the sheets you’re rolling around in are made of hemp, just silently repeat this mantra: she’s hot, she’s really hot, she’s really, really hot........

The Story of Sergey Brin, Founder of Great Google




The Story of Sergey Brin, Founder of Great Google:-


How the Moscow-born entrepreneur co-founder of Google, and changed the way the world is looking.
It takes a little searching to find Sergey Brin's office at the Googleplex. Tucked away in a corner of Building # 43 on this vast campus near the southern tip of San Francisco Bay, past rows of cubicles and colorfully furnished dormitory-style meeting spaces, Office-211 has a discreet exterior and sits far from the public eye. Although it takes some turns and to get there, his office is not protected, as you would expect for the co-founder of a $ 150-billion company by a Russian nesting doll is worth of doors and gatekeepers.
Sergey, 33, shares the space with his co-founder of Google, fellow Stanford Ph.D. failure and billionaire PAL, 34-year-old Larry Page, a scheme that began eight years ago in the first of the company in a modest headquarters from Menlo Park, Calif., garage. Since then, Google has grown from just another Silicon Valley startup to the largest in the world media group, in fact, based on its recent share price of $ 513 per share, Google, which is searching the Web easy and even fun, is bigger than Disney, General Motors and McDonald's combined. It had this lofty heights achieved by revolutionary way people surf the Internet: Before Sergey and Larry analyzed the links between Web pages to provide fast search results according to relevance, the search for information on the web was a shot in the dark.
Strengthening of the sliding glass door to their office is like walking into a playroom for the tech-savvy adults. A row of sleek flat-screen monitors lining one wall displays critical information: e-mail, calendars, documents, and, of course, the Google search engine. Various green plants and an air purifier to keep the oxygen flow, and medicine balls to give the correct kinetic seats. Furthermore, a private mezzanine with Astroturf carpeting and an electric massage chair afford Sergey and Larry a comfortable perch from which to entertain visitors and the survey of the carnival of innovation going on below. And there is ample space for walking, which is essential for Sergey, who just can not seem to sit still.
Trim and boyishly handsome, with a low sloping shoulders, which he continued a relaxed atmosphere, Sergey bounces around the Googleplex with seemingly endless energy. He has dark hair, piercing eyes and a mischievous sense of humor that often catches people off guard. A typical day finds him in jeans, sneakers and a fitted black T-shirt, though his casual manner belies a serious, even aggressive meaning. This strategy reflects the intensity at the weekly meetings, where Sergey and Larry share, the title of president command the final word on approving new products, new hires and review of funding long term research. Sergey also has power over the unscientific, but all major areas of people, policy and politics. Google's employees enjoy this family-friendly extras such as three free meals per day, free home delivery of food for new parents, designated private spaces for nursing mothers, and a full on-site medical care, all of which recently led Fortune magazine in the holding rank as the # 1 place to work in the country.
The co-chairs of the share management duties with Eric Schmidt, a seasoned software executive whom Chief Executive Officer recruited in 2001 to the day-to-day aspects of oversight on Google's business-in short, the "adult" in the playgroup are. But they have no intention to cede control. Since day one they have opposing external interference, prefer to do all their own way to choose to work piece computers on the cheap (and building a computer case out of Lego blocks) for flouting Wall Street on an unconventional IPO. Blazing your own trail comes naturally to Sergey. The Moscow born entrepreneur and his parents are doing all their lives. On December 16, 2005, 16 months after the high-flying company closed its initial stock sale Google deal biggest yet: a $ 1 billion advertising partnership with America Online, the popular Internet service provider. That night, by chance, I meeting with Sergey's parents at their home in the suburbs of Washington, DC. Michael Brin, wearing a black fleece vest emblazoned with the colorful Google logo greets me in the driveway. I ask whether he has heard the big news. "We spoke with Sergey earlier today and he said nothing," he told me. "He said that he on his way home from yoga." Michael, 59, a professor of mathematics at the University of Maryland, and his wife, Eugenia, 58, a scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, gracious and down-to-earth, and still somewhat surprised by the success of their son. "It's amazing," marvels Genia, such as family and friends call her. She speaks slowly, with a viscous, Russian-English accent, which accelerates when they compete with her husband. "It is difficult to understand, really. He was a very capable child in mathematics and computers, but we could never have imagined this." Michael, milder in his accent, adding with typical pragmatism, "Google has saved more time for more people than anything else in the world. " They sit me down at the dining table, clearing off papers to make room for a spread of cheese and fruit. The room itself is simply decorated, even scarce, the only signs of wealth are everywhere I see a big-screen TV in the living room and a Lexus in the driveway. The Brin has a compact, young-looking couple, Michael skeptical attitude is an accurate way of speaking and Genia gentle and caring. Both have a sincere, easy laughs. We talk a couple of hours, occasionally interrupted by Michael cigarette breaks, which he heads out with the dog, Toby. Smoking is a habit he brought with him from the Soviet Union in 1979, when he emigrated to the United States with his mother, Maya, Genia, and Sergey, then six. (A second son, Sam, was born in 1987.) One of the stories of Michael seems to me. In the summer of 1990, a few weeks before 17th birthday Sergey, Michael led a group of gifted high school students in mathematics on a two-week exchange program of the Soviet Union. He decided to bring the family, despite concerns about the welcome they could expect from Communist authorities. It would give them a chance to relatives still living in Moscow, including Sergey paternal grandfather, like Michael a Ph.D. Visit mathematician. It did not take long for Sergey, a precocious teenager about to enter university, tailored to his former surroundings. The Soviet empire was crumbling and in the drab, cinder-block landscape and the people stony mien of resignation, he saw first hand the dismal future that would have been. On the second day of the trip, while the group toured a sanatorium in the countryside near Moscow, Sergei took his father aside, looked him in the eye and said, "Thank you for taking us all from Russia. " "There were only two times when my children were grateful to me," Michael said dryly, and I get the sense that he is very serious. The other occasion, he said, the younger brother Sergey, Sam, and repairing a broken toilet. Genia, seated beside him, protests. "Misha, what are you talking about?!" She cries as she rarely, if their recollections differ, or when they feel Michael's sketches. As Sergey recalls the trip awakened his childhood fear of authority. His clear tenor voice, tinted with a faint accent that is no longer recognizable Russian, came to me via satellite phone as he flew to Asia last November. Teens have their own way of transforming fear in Defiance, Sergey reflects, recalling that his impulse to fight against Soviet oppression had been throwing stones at a police car. The two officers sitting inside the car stepped out of "excited", he says, but, fortunately, his parents were able to ward off the case.
"My rebelliousness
, I think, came from his born in Moscow," Sergey said, adding, "I would say this is something that followed me into adulthood." On a bagel shop to the other side of campus, Maryland, where he has taught statistics and dynamical systems for 25 years, Michael speaks of the discrimination that drove him to take his family from Russia. It's a bitter cold day in College Park, reminiscent of the winter in Moscow. Over a lunch of soup and sandwiches, Michael explains how he was forced to his dream of becoming an astronomer, even before he reached college left. Officially, anti-Semitism did not exist in the USSR, but in reality, Communist Party chiefs barred Jews from the top professional ranks by denying them access to universities. Jews were excluded from the Physics Department, especially at the prestigious Moscow State University, because Soviet leaders can not be trusted with nuclear rocket research. Unfortunately for Michael, astronomy fell under the umbrella of physics. Michael chose to study mathematics instead. But acceptance of the mathematics department of Moscow State University, home to perhaps the brightest mathematicians in the world, also proved extremely difficult. Discrimination has been administered through an entrance examination for the Jews tested in different rooms of other applicants-morbid nickname of "gas chambers", and stricter evaluation. Nevertheless, with the help of a good friend of the family connected, Michael was accepted and graduated cum laude in 1970 with a diploma. "I did all A's except for the three classes where I B's: history of the Communist Party, military training and statistics," he says. "But no one would even consider me for graduate school because I was Jewish. That was normal." So Michael was an economist for Gosplan, the Central Planning Agency. "I tried to prove that in a few years, living standards in Russia would be higher than in the United States," he says. "And I proved. I know enough about math to prove what you want."
He continued to study mathematics on his own
, steals the evening courses at the university and research papers writing. After a few were published, Brin started a thesis. The moment a student in the Soviet Union would earn a doctorate without going to graduate school, where he passed certain examinations and an institution agreed to consider his thesis. Michael took two advisers, one official advisor, an ethnic Russian, Jewish and an informal mentor. ("Jews could not Jewish advisers," he says.) With their help, he successfully defended his thesis at a university in Kharkov, Ukraine, but life did not change much even after he received his Ph.D. He remained in his daily work of Gosplan and received a 100-ruble increase. "I thought I was rich. Life was beautiful, "he says with a wry smile. For Genia, life in Moscow was comfortable enough. She had also managed to overcome obstacles from Moscow State, graduated from the School of Mechanics and Mathematics. In a research laboratory of the Soviet Oil and Gas Institute, a prestigious industrial school, she collaborated with a number of other Jews. "I was happy in my work and had many friends," she says. Brin The "institutional encounters with anti-Semitism does not extend to days-to-day interactions with colleagues and neighbors. Highly assimilated into Russian culture, they were part of the intelligentsia and had a circle of university-educated friends. Located in a small three-room apartment in downtown Moscow, 350 square feet in all shared with the mother of Michael, they were better off than many Muscovites who still lived in the shared apartments. After Sergey was born on August 21, 1973, in the courtyard of their colossal five-story building became his playground. In accordance with Russian tradition, Sergey spent two hours in the morning and evening each day outdoors, whatever the season. As we talk to the bagel shop, Michael keeps a close eye on the time. Every so often he jumps from his chair and dashes outside. This is not just for a smoke, though he highlighted. He is also closely monitor the parking meters, his and mine, and care as the time passed to drop in more quarters. The history of Russian Jewish emigration in the mid-1970s can be neatly summarized in a joke from the era: two Jews in the street, one third goes through and says to them: "I do not know what you speak about, but yes, it's time to get out of here! " "I have some time that my father was unable to the career he wanted to pursue," says Sergei me. As a young boy, though, Sergey had only a vague sense of why his family wanted to leave their native Russia. He picked up the ugly details of the anti-Semitism they faced years later, little by little, he says. Nevertheless, he felt early on, all the things he was not: He was not Russian. He was not welcome in his own country. He was not going to get a fair chance to promote through its schools. Further complicating his understanding of his Jewish identity was the fact that, under the ardent atheist Soviet regime, there were few religious or cultural models of what was Jewish. The negatives were all he had. Sergey, too young to remember the days in the summer of 1977, when his father came home and announced that it was time for the family to emigrate. "We can not stay here anymore," he told his wife and mother. He came to his decision, while attending a conference in Warsaw mathematics. For the first time he had been able to freely mix with colleagues from the United States, France, England and Germany. Discovering that his intellectual brethren in the West "were not monsters," said he listened as she described the opportunities and conveniences of life beyond the Iron Curtain. "He said he does not would continue, he had seen what life could be, "says Genia. The couple knew, of course, the dangers of applying for an exit visa. They could easily end up refuse nothing, unable to find employment, shunned, in eternal oblivion. Nobody promised Michael a position abroad, but he was sure he could find work in the West intellectually stimulating and would support the family. Genia, was not convinced. They had lived their entire lives in Moscow. They had decent jobs and a young son. Was it worth it to try to leave? "I would not go," she says. "This took a while for me and his mother to agree. I had a lot more attachments." It was up to Michael to do the convincing. "I was only in the family who decided that it was really important to leave, not a distant future", he says. The Brine 'story gives me a clue to the origin of entrepreneurial instincts Sergey's. His parents, academics and on, denying any role in shaping their son great business sense "He did not teach us, not our area," says Michael. Yet Sergey's willingness to take risks, his sense of who trust and ask for help, his vision to see something better and the conviction to go after, these properties are reflected in many of what Michael Brin has in circumventing the system and work twice as hard as others for the doctorate to earn, let the Soviet Union. For Genia, the decision ultimately came down to Sergey. While her husband admits that he thought much about his own future as his son, for her, "it was about 80/20 Sergey. They formally requested an exit visa in September 1978. Michael was immediately fired. Genia, who had obtained her job through a relative, she had to stop its isolation from all accusations. "When he got a whiff of our intentions," she says, "he said," Take it away as soon as possible. " It was a secret from everyone at work, my real reason to leave. So I lied to all my colleagues was that I just my job to leave because I got another job where I would only be at work three days per week and the salary would be higher. I was completely up-up-the name of a place where I planned to work. "There was no other job, of course, and suddenly they came with no income. To Michael translated technical books into English, but it was drudgery. He also began to teach himself programming, without expectation of getting an academic position as they ever got out. If Genia found temporary work, again lying about her situation, she shared responsibility for care of Sergey, who stayed at home instead of living a miserable Soviet pre-school. And then they waited. To many Soviet Jews, never came for exit visas. However, in May 1979, the paper Brin were awarded to the Soviet Union "We hoped it would happen to leave," Genia says, "but we were completely surprised by how fast did it." The timing was coincidental: They were among the last Jews allowed to leave until the Gorbachev era. Sergey, who six years that summer, remembers what followed was just as "worrying" literally true. "We were in different places from day to day," he says. The trip was a blur. First Vienna, where the family was met by representatives of HIAS, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, which helped thousands of Eastern European Jews to establish a new life in the free world. Then, in the suburbs of Paris, where Michael's "unofficial" Jewish Ph.D. advisor, Anatole Katok, had arranged a temporary research position for him at the Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques. Katok, emigrated with his family last year, looked after Brin and paved the way for Michael to teach at Maryland. When the family finally landed in America on October 25, they were in New York's Kennedy Airport by friends from Moscow. Sergey first memory of the U.S. was sitting in the backseat of the car, amazed at all the huge cars on the highway as their hosts, she was driving home to Long Island. De Brin found a home in Maryland, a simple, cinder-block structure into a lower-rent district near the middle of the university campus. With a loan of $ 2,000 from the Jewish community, they bought a 1973 Ford Maverick. And, on a proposal by Katok programs, she enrolled at Paint Branch Montessori School in Adelphi Sergey, Maryland. He struggled to adapt. Bright-eyed and shy, with only a rudimentary knowledge of English, Sergey spoke with a heavy accent, when he went to school. "It was a difficult year for him, the first year," says Genia. "We were constantly discussing the fact that we had told the children as a sponge, they immediately understand the language and have no problem, and that was not the case." Patty Barshay, the school director, was a mentor and friend Sergey and his parents. She invited them for a party at her home by December 1 ("a bunch of Jewish people with nothing to do on Christmas Day") and wound up teaching Genia how to drive. Everywhere she turned, there was so much to take in. "I remember her inviting me to dinner one day," says Barshay, 'and I asked Genia,' What is this kind of meat? She had no idea. They had never seen so much meat "as American supermarkets offer. When I ask about her former pupil, Barshay lights, obviously proud of Sergey's achievements. "Sergei was not particularly outgoing child," she says, "but he always had the confidence to pursue what he had put on his heart." He was attracted toward puzzles, maps and math games that taught multiplication. "I really enjoyed the Montessori method," he tells me. "I could grow my own pace." He adds that the Montessori environment, which gives students the freedom to choose activities that suit their interests-helped foster his creativity. "He was interested in everything," says Barshay, but adds, "I never thought it any clearer than anyone else." One thing that Brin shared with thousands of other families emigrating to the West of the Soviet Union was the discovery that, suddenly, they were free to be Jews. "Russian Jews lacked the vocabulary to even articulate what they feel," says Lenny Gusel, the founder of a San Francisco-based network of Russian-Jewish immigrants, he encounters many newcomers struggle with this fundamental change. "They were considered Jews back home. Here they were regarded as Russians. Many just wanted to assimilate as Americans." Gusel the group, which he calls the "79ers," after the peak year of immigration in the 1970s , and the New York cousin, RJeneration, attracted hundreds of 20 - and 30-something immigrants who struggle with their Jewish identity. "Sergei was the absolute symbol of our group, the number one Russian Jewish immigrant success story," he says. The Brin was no different from their fellow immigrants who was Jewish in an ethnic, not a religious experience. "We felt our Judeo-different ways, by keeping kosher or synagogue. It's genetic," explains Michael. "We were not very religious. My wife does not eat on Yom Kippur, I do." Genia interrupts: "We always have a Passover dinner. We have a seder. I have the recipe for Gefilte fish from my grandmother." Religious or not, on arrival in the suburbs of Washington, Brin were determined by a synagogue, Mishkan Torah of Green Belt, Maryland, which helped them to acquire furnishings for their home. "We did not need much, but we saw how the community helped many other families," Genia says. Sergey attended Hebrew school Mishkan Torah for the better part of three years, but hated the language classes and everything else. "He was teased by other children and he begged us not to send him anymore," said his mother withholds. "Eventually it worked." Conservative congregation was too religious for Brin and they drove. In a three-week trip to Israel 11 years old Sergey's interest in everything Jewish awakened, informed the family of another synagogue about restarting studies to prepare for a bar mitzvah. But the rabbi said it would be more than one year to catch up and Sergey who do not want to wait past his 13th birthday, leaving the chase to take. If a Jewish family, the value of the Brin accepted without reservation, Michael says, is the scholarship. Sergey programs in his brother-younger years was more fond of basketball than homework, even the idea that advanced degrees were required for all professions have. "Sam never asked us, 'Is it true that before you play in the NBA you have to get a doctorate?" ", Recalls his father. Which the professor could not resist replying: "Yes Sam that is!" Sergey attended Eleanor Roosevelt High School, a public high school in Greenbelt. He drove round in three years, gathering one year's worth of college credits that would enable him to university to finish in three years well. At the University of Maryland, he majored in mathematics and computer science and graduated near the top of his class. When he was a prestigious National Science Foundation scholarship for graduate school won, pushed for Stanford. (MIT had rejected him. Apart) from the physical beauty of the campus of Stanford, Sergey knew that the school's reputation for supporting high-tech entrepreneurs. At the moment however, his focus was on obtaining his doctorate square. Handsome, with a relaxed smile, Sergey sparkles with a healthy self-consciousness which at times spills over into arrogance. At Stanford, he became known for his habit of bursting in the professors without knocking. One of his advisers, Rajeev Motwani, recalls: "He was a brutal young man. But he was so smart, it just radiated from him. "His abiding interest was science, particularly in the areas of data mining, or how meaningful patterns extract from the mountains of information. But he also took time out from Stanford social life and various sports: skiing, skating, gymnastics, enjoy even trapeze. His father once remarked, "I asked him if he had any advanced courses, and he said, 'Yes, advanced swimming."
What is Google
, the following legend. In the spring of 1995, during a prospective student weekend, Sergey met a stubborn computer science student at the University of Michigan Larry Page. They talked and argued during the two days, each finding the other cocky and annoying. They were also a direct connection, enjoyed the intellectual combat. Like Sergey, Larry is the son of high-powered intellect steeped in computer science. His father, Carl Victor Page, a computer science professor at Michigan State University until his death in 1996, received one of the first doctors awarded in the field. His mother, Gloria, has a master's degree in computer programming and has taught college classes. The two young graduate students also shared a Jewish background. Larry's maternal grandfather made aliyah and lived in the desert town of Arad near the Dead Sea, working as a tool and die maker, and his mother was raised Jewish. Larry, however, brought up in the form of his father, whose religion was technology, not easily identifiable as a Jew. He also never had a bar mitzvah.
Larry and Sergey soon began working on ways to utilize information on the World Wide Web,
spending so much time together, they have a common identity, "LarryandSergey." By 1996, Larry had had the idea of using the links between web pages rank their relative importance. Borrowing from the academic world the concept of citations in scientific publications as a measure of the timeliness and value, he and Brin applied that thinking to the web: as a page linked to another, it was actually "quote" or casting a vote for that page. The more votes a page had the more valuable it was. The concept seems rather obvious afterwards, and today most search engines operate on this principle. But at the moment, it was groundbreaking. To call their new invention a Google spelling of a very large number in mathematics, Larry and Sergey shopped it around to various companies for the price of 1 million U.S. dollars.
Nobody was interested. In the technology boom of the late 1990s
, conventional thinking was that the so-called portals like Yahoo and AOL, that e-mail, news, weather and much more offered, it is the most money. Nobody cared to look. But Sergey and Larry knew that they're on to something, so they decided to leaves of absence from Stanford to take a firm and self build. Sergey's parents were skeptical. "We were definitely angry," says Genia. "We thought that everybody had in mind to get a PhD" Ask for funds from teachers, family and friends, Sergey and Larry scraped together enough to buy and rent some servers that famous garage in Menlo Park. Their venture quickly bore fruit: After viewing a quick demo, Sun Microsystems co-founder Andy Bechtolsheim (himself a Jewish immigrant from Germany) wrote a $ 100,000 check "Google Inc." The only problem was, "Google Inc. 'yet There, the firm had not been included. For two weeks, when they handled the paperwork, the young men had nowhere to deposit the money.
It is difficult to pinpoint the moment when Google became a true American phenomenon.
Traditional measures such as gracing the cover of Time magazine or be profiled on 60 Minutes, seem irrelevant when it comes to the rapidly evolving world of the Internet. But there is no doubt about the date that Wall Street started the quirky California company seriously. It was April 29, 2004, when Google formally filed paperwork for its initial public offering of shares. Two things shocked the investment world that day. First, the company's astounding sales and profit figures, which until then closely monitored secrets. Nobody had dreamed that the subtle text ads placed alongside Google search results, which many web users do not even recognize them as ads can be, so profitable. Second, the ruthlessly serious "founders" letter "that Sergey and Larry had included with the submission, which began by saying that Google was not" a conventional company "and does not intend to become one. They followed up that show of chutzpah.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Syria Turned Down Peres peace offer

"Syria hit Peres peace offer ':
President Assad says Golan offered in exchange for moderate Iran ties.
President Shimon Peres sent a message to Syria, the offer of the Golan Heights to return in exchange for a promise that Damascus's ties with Iran and various terrorist groups, Syrian President Bashar Assad told As-Safir Lebanese breaking paper an interview published Tuesday.

Assad was quoted Peres as saying that the message by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev during a visit to Russia last week. Medvedev began a visit to the Middle East later that week. He visited Turkey and Syria, where he met with Hamas officials and Syrian ones.

The Office of the President issued a clarification after the publication of the interview, stating that Peres had indeed sent a message to Assad through Medvedev, but he had not offered for control of the Golan Heights.

According to the clarification, Peres stressed in his message to his Syrian counterpart that "Israel does not intend to attack Syria, nor does it plan to an escalation [of tensions] in the northern cause. "

His message further stated that Israel was interested in peace and "ready to immediately the peace talks with the Syrians." He added, however, that Jerusalem would not "be in Syria to Israel twice to continue by requiring that a withdrawal from the Golan Heights on the one hand, while the establishment of Iranian missiles on the mountains of the North .

Peres also said that Israel would not "enter into peace negotiations, while threatened," urging Damascus to support Hamas and Hezbollah terrorist activities cease.

"It's a mistake to write off the option of resistance"

"We do not trust the Israelis ... we are ready for war or peace at any moment," Assad told the newspaper. "Some people make the mistake to write off the possibility of resistance (a term used in the Arab world to connote militant warfare, especially against Israel), and turn them into prisoners of the peace option. They must be fully prepared for both , "he said.

Assad added that Syria had brokered negotiations with Israel in 2008 to plan a "clear and definitive" solution has been found, but it seemed the opposition was necessary to achieve peace. "If you're not strong, you are not respected," said Assad. He stressed that peace is not merely a symbolic olive branch, but a very real and tangible way to sort the balance of power in the region. He then described the positive effects of resistance, citing his performance in recent years - among them renewed ties with the U.S. and the West and Syria "rich, strong national unity" - as manifestations of the success of Syria.

When asked what the position of Syria would be the case that Israel Lebanon, Assad attacked smiled and told his interviewer: "I think the Israelis want the answer to that question to hear, and I will not meet their needs'' . Threats of war, he said, are about as likely as a reality of peace proposals have become.

In April, according to the Kuwait Al-Rai newspaper reported that Syria had ballistic Scud missiles to Hezbollah. According to the report, the missiles were recently transferred to Lebanon, prompted a strong Israeli warning that it would consider to belong to both Syrian and Lebanese targets in response.
The Syrian president stressed that he would press the Palestinian Hamas and other terrorist movements to disarm, or act against their will to continue. Regarding the gap between Hamas and Egypt, Assad said his country does not "seek to play a role at] cost [of Egypt" and that despite the differences between the two countries, there were no serious problems between them, but rather a basis for improvement. He added that unlike the former U.S. President George W. Bush, the Arab states do not employ a policy he described as "he is not with me is against me."

Asked about the regional interests of Syria, Assad said that his country was "vital interests" were "unity in Iraq, stability in Lebanon and the dialogue with the U.S.." In describing how the relationship between Damascus and Washington had changed in recent years, Assad referred to his ties with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who had changed to "mutual respect."

Bo's financial disclosure forms released Obama. Bo Obama only worth $ 1,600



Bo's financial disclosure forms released Obama. Bo Obama only worth $ 1,600:


Bo Obama, a gift from the late Senator Ted Kennedy a value of $ 1.600, between millions of dollars in book royalties earned in 2009 and included in income President Barack Obama's report. President Barack Obama pulled in millions of dollars in book royalties in 2009 and was a very special gift $ 1,600 - his dog, Bo. The Portuguese water dog, which was a gift from the late Senator Ted Kennedy, was quoted on the annual financial information the White House released Monday. Royalties from his books, "Dreams From My Father" and "Audacity of Hope", was on between $ 1 million and 5 million U.S. dollars each. In pictures: Obama Bo, fill me Obama also listed a number of safe investments in Treasury bonds and retirement and college savings accounts. Including funds held jointly with his wife, Michelle, those assets were worth between approximately $ 2,200,000 and $ 7,500,000 in 2009. Assets are included in wide ranges on the disclosure forms, making it difficult to precisely determine their value. There was also $ 1,400,000 from winning the Nobel Peace Prize, which the President donated to charity. Obama also sold two legacies of his grandmother, Madelyn Dunham, who died in the last days of his campaign. He made less than $ 1,000 from the sale of a tax-free trust. A second legacy - the shares in Bank of Hawaii, where his grandmother, a secretary has risen to a vice-president - sold for between $ 250,000 and $ 500.000. Obama's tax returns, made public earlier in the year, show that he took a loss on that investment. Obama's salary is $ 400,000. He listed no debts. Michelle Obama has a number of its own assets, including pension funds and a deferred compensation package from the University of Chicago Hospitals where she worked as an executive. Michelle Obama shares a curiosity with other recent first ladies, she gets the "pin money", an old term for spending money that a husband would his wife to spend the confidence of a man named Henry G. Freeman Jr. Freeman is deceased in 1917, showing that after the last relatives in his will were deceased, an annuity of $ 12,000 would be paid annually to each first lady during her husband's term as president. The reason he gave was that, in his opinion, presidents were poorly paid. His last family does not die until 1989.

Singh moves into the world top 50 rankings


Singh moves into the world top 50 rankings:


The World Golf Ranking has no Vijay Singh is among the top 50 for the first time in almost 18 years.

Singh dropped to number 51 in the world rankings published Monday after he did not qualify for the final 36 holes at the Texas Open. It was his fifth consecutive tournament without earning ranking points. The last time Singh was ranked in the top-50 was August 16, 1992. He won the German Open next week and is in the top 50 each week ago. Singh is the only other player besides Tiger Woods at No. 1 in the world during the past decade, reaching the summit for the first time in 2004. The timing could not have been worse. Singh has one week to get back in the top 50 or he will have to qualify for the U.S. Open.

Hello Jell-O! Bill Cosby and Jell-O are back together



Hello Jell-O! Bill Cosby and Jell-O are back together:


It's been 10 years, but Bill Cosby and the Jell-O brand back together in a "hello Jell-O" campaign. Kraft Foods is to refresh the image of its brand Jell-O by combining with an old friend. Comedian Bill Cosby joins the gelatin and pudding brand again after a break of 10 years, but this time he will be behind the camera as part of the largest in the brand marketing effort ever. The comedian, whose work with Jell-O data for 1974, an executive producer for the "Hello Jell-O" campaign, which begins with national ads on Monday. In return, Jell-O is the sponsor of the presentation of the Cosby's new weekly web series called "OBKB." On the show he interviews the children in the style of the classic show "Kids Say the darndest Things." "You watch TV, all those reality shows and blasphemy and stuff like that, we have the heart and the smile that children have shown," he said in an interview. Cosby last appeared in an ad Jell-O in 1999 but still hears from people around the clutch and adults who played with him as children. He and Jell-O decided that he would be behind the scenes in the new campaign. Cosby will help the start of a 22-city tour next month in Los Angeles to the country's best giggle, which will be presented in a TV ad. He will also be doing radio interviews to promote the Tour, said Cindy Chen, director of Jell-O Kraft. The first of the 10-minute episodes of "OBKB" will air on channel 31.5 Cosby's USTREAM, http://www.ustream.tv/billcosby. The title comes from the friend how he modeled the character "Mush Mouth" to say "okay." Jell-O's multimillion-dollar campaign is the largest ever. It is also updating its logo with a smiling new face will appear in print, online, and in TV ads that show people interfere with everyday activities such as working with Jell-O cups. Kraft, based in Northfield, Illinois, is trying to breathe new life into and jelly market, which dominates. Shoppers his move from branded to store brands and to cut corners to save money on purchases. Sales volume fell more than 6 percent each for Jell-O gelatin and pudding in the period of 52 weeks ending in mid April, with the exception of sales in Wal-Mart stores and the club, according SymphonyIRI Group, a Chicago market research.

Costello cancels Israel shows


Costello cancels Israel shows:

No peace, love and understanding from Elvis. Only two weeks after British rock icon Elvis Costello told The Jerusalem Post that the only answer to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is “dialogue and reconciliation,” he decided to take himself out of the equation by cancelling his two shows scheduled for June 30 and July 1 at the Caesaerea Amphitheater. Costello posted an announcement on his Web site over the weekend explaining his decision to join the boycott of Israel. “There are occasions when merely having your name added to a concert schedule may be interpreted as a political act that resonates more than anything that might be sung and it may be assumed that one has no mind for the suffering of the innocent,” he wrote. Saying he couldn’t imagine receiving another invitation to perform in Israel, Costello wrote that since the conflict was “actually too grave and complex to be addressed in a concert, then it is also quite impossible to simply look the other way… sometimes a silence in music is better than adding to the static.” Costello was set to make his Israeli debut with his new folk/bluegrass band The Sugarcanes, and in his conversation with the Post two weeks ago, he said that he had given much thought to playing in the country, but decided that he was against efforts to boycott performances. “I know from the experience of a friend who is from Israel and from people who have worked there that there is a difference of opinion there among Israelis regarding their government’s policies. It seems to me that dialogue is essential. I don’t presume to think that my performance is going to be part of the process,” Costello told the Post.
“The people who call for a boycott of Israel own the narrow view that performing there must be about profit and endorsing the hawkish policy of the government. It’s like never appearing in the US because you didn’t like Bush’s policies or boycotting England because of Margaret Thatcher.”
Alive Productions, which was promoting the Costello shows, said in a statement that they were shocked by Costello’s letter to them, which he later posted on his Web site. “In the continuous contact we’ve had with Costello’s management, there was never even a shred of a clue that he was considering cancelling,” the statement said. In a written response to Costello, Alive Productions appealed to him to reconsider his “sudden and extreme” decision.
“Back in February, when you confirmed the performances in Israel, you were surely aware of the situation in the Middle East, and the existing long conflict between the two nations with different wants and dreams''.
You are probably familiar with the history and the global reality that we in Israel are confronted with,” the letter stated. “Perhaps there, it is easier to bury one's head in the sand and again use prejudice as a conduit to cultural discrimination of a large culture-loving public… music should be a voice of peace and brotherhood, a unifying force and should not be turned off merely because the background noises seem too loud. “It is impossible to understand how your participation in a music concert, that is totally apolitical, can be interpreted as a political act. However, there can be no doubt that cancelling a performance for political reasons, and refusing to perform in Israel, can only be interpreted as a very strong political statement. Your decision will only push people further apart and enabling those wrong-doers to win through cultural terror.” Alive Productions, which is also bringing Costello’s wife, singer/pianist Diana Krall to the Ra’anana Amphitheater on August 4th, reassured fans that they had received word from her management (which she shares with Costello) that she had no plans to cancel her concert.

The 50 most influential Jews in the world

The 50 most influential Jews in the world:

The Jerusalem Post's first annual list of those who are shaping the future.
The story is told, in several cultural variations, of a Jewish man spotting a friend reading an Arabic newspaper. “Moshe, have you lost your mind?” he says.

“Well, I used to read the Jewish papers, but what did I find?” Moshe replies. “Jews being persecuted, Israel being attacked, Jews disappearing through assimilation, Jews living in poverty. So I switched to an Arab newspaper. Now what do I find? Jews own the banks, Jews control the media, Jews are all rich and powerful, Jews rule the world. The news is so much better!”

In what is planned as an annual media event, The Jerusalem Post has chosen the world’s leading 50 Jewish “movers and shakers” based on a range of criteria, including personal access to power, ability to exert influence and individual talent.

The Post’s list of the 50 most influential Jews in the world was not designed to feed the anti-Semitic stereotype that Jews control the world. Nor should it be construed as a source of religious or national pride, because while those on the list all identify themselves as Jews, Judaism and Israel are not necessarily central to their careers.

The candidates were chosen from all walks of life for their ability to fashion the face of the future. Many hold positions of power or prestige, while others are prominent personalities who exert extraordinary influence in Israel, the Jewish world or on the wider world stage.

They include an impressive array of high-powered politicians and business executives, top bankers and hi-tech giants, revered rabbis and media moguls as well as thinkers, musicians, movie makers, artists, writers, trend-setters, sports people and comedians.

We sought a good mix of Israelis and non-Israelis, religious and secular, figures from across the political spectrum, men and women. We warmly congratulate those on the list, and thank those who responded to being chosen.

To those who were excluded, either deliberately or unwittingly, we apologize. We omitted New Zealand’s Prime Minister John Key, for example, because although his mother is Jewish, he identifies himself as agnostic – and, with respect, how important is Wellington on the world map?

Our list is headed by Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu has become well known around the world for his political dexterity and eloquence in English. Heading a relatively stable coalition, his actions on the diplomatic track over the next year will inevitably have an enormous impact not only on the troubled Middle East but on the Jewish world at large.

In his response to being chosen by The Jerusalem Post and our Internet readership around the world on jpost.com as the most influential Jew in the world, Netanyahu told our reporter, Herb Keinon: “The fact that the Prime Minister of the State of Israel is viewed as being the world’s most influential Jew is a historic vindication of the miracle of Zionism.”

It may be no historic accident that the leader of the most powerful nation in the world, Barack Obama, recently approved a second term for Ben Bernanke as Federal Reserve chairman, and chose Jews to be his closest advisers: Rahm Emanuel, the tough White House chief of staff, David Axelrod, his savvy political adviser and Dan Shapiro, the top Middle East expert on the National Security Council.

He also happens to be friendly with several Jewish leaders, including Alan Solow and Lee Rosenberg, who are both on our list.

Second on the list is Bernanke, the man who holds the purse strings of the richest nation on the planet and is credited with steering the US out of a severe financial crisis. He is followed by Emanuel, who arguably has the most influence on the American president – and certainly has his ear whenever he needs it.
AS WE CELEBRATE Shavuot, when the Jewish people received the Torah on Mount Sinai from Moses, the most famous Jew in history, we can only pray that those on our list use their influence to better the world and help Israel and the Jewish people serve as a light unto the nations.

It is on Shavuot that we read the Book of Ruth, perhaps the most famous convert in the Bible. Ruth’s acceptance of Judaism is based on her acceptance of the Torah, and King David is believed to be her great-grandson. Jewish tradition has it that David, one of the greatest figures in the Bible, was born and died on Shavuot.

Coincidentally, two of our top 50 personalities are named Ruth – Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court, and Prof. Ruth Arnon, a renowned Israeli biochemist credited with developing a drug against multiple sclerosis.

Considering their small numbers, Jews have fared disproportionately well in lists of the world’s most powerful and richest people, as well as in Nobel Prizes.

The world Jewish population is estimated at being 02. percent of the total populace – some 13.5 million, with just over 5.7 million in Israel, 5.6 million in the US, half a million in Russia and France, 280,000 in the UK and 200,000 in Germany.

Yet in Vanity Fair’s latest list of the 100 most powerful people in the world, 51 are Jews. Ten of the 50 people on this year’s Forbes’ annual billionaires list are Jewish. Of the 802 Nobel prizes handed out to date, 162 have gone to Jews.

In Michael H. Hart’s book, The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in History, seven are Jews.

Jews have also featured prominently on Time’s annual list of the world’s 100 most influential people, and in 1999, the magazine named Albert Einstein person of the century.

IN A SHORT story by Philip Roth, a talent scout sends a letter to Einstein proposing that the renowned scientist host a weekly radio show to help reduce anti-Semitism.

“I would like them to know that the genius of all time is a Jew,” he writes. “The world must know and soon... that when it comes to smart, we are the tops.”

Four years ago, John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt shook the Jewish world by writing a paper, The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy, on what they perceived as the exaggerated influence of the Jewish lobby.

After being named by the pair as a key member of the media wing of the Israel lobby, Mortimer Zuckerman – a former head of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations – replied sardonically: “I would just say this: The allegations of this disproportionate influence of the Jewish community remind me of the 92-year-old man sued in a paternity suit. He said he was so proud, he pleaded guilty.”

Asked by reporter Greer Fay Cashman for his response on being chosen for our list, President Shimon Peres said that he tells both religious and non-religious Jews that the best example to follow is that of the Rambam (Maimonides), “who was great in his Jewishness and great in medicine without one contradicting the other.”

How much influence do Jews wield in the world, and how influential are those on our list? We leave you to judge.


1. Binyamin Netanyahu
Prime Minister of Israel

Serving his second year in his second term, Netanyahu, 60, is the first premier to have been born after the state’s creation. Netanyahu has arguably gone further than any of his predecessors in easing the plight of Palestinians in the West Bank and freezing settlement construction. In his seminal Bar-Ilan University speech last year, the Likud leader accepted the idea of a Palestinian state for the first time, and is currently overseeing proximity talks with the Palestinians that he hopes to galvanize toward a final settlement to the Middle East conflict.

Netanyahu’s ratings soared this month as Israel was accepted to be a member of the OECD.

Netanyahu responds:
The fact that the Prime Minister of the State of Israel is viewed today as being the world’s most influential Jew demonstrates the historic change that Zionism has brought about in the condition of the Jewish people.

A scattered, powerless people has been able to reassert its national life in its own sovereign state, in its ancestral homeland. From being mere spectators on the international stage, today the Jews control their own destiny and have returned as a people to the family of nations. Free, democratic and able to defend itself against threats and adversity, Israel doesn’t just survive, it flourishes. Today, within the State of Israel, the creativity and genius of the Jewish people are bursting forth in every area: in science; in technology; in entrepreneurship; in medicine; in the arts.

When Israel was established in 1948, only some 5% of the world’s Jewish population lived in the new state. Today, Israel contains the largest Jewish community in the world.

This honor awarded to the Prime Minister of the Jewish State is a testament to the profound transformation that has occurred in the reality of life for the Jewish People over the last 62 years.

2. Ben Bernanke
The chairman of the US Federal Reserve.

In announcing his second term until 2014, President Obama said Bernanke’s background, temperament, courage and creativity helped prevent another Great Depression. Time named him person of the year last year. Bernanke, 56, wrote his doctoral thesis at MIT in 1979 on “Long-term commitments, dynamic optimization, and the business cycle” and his thesis adviser was none other than Stanley Fischer, the current governor of the Bank of Israel.

3. Rahm Emanuel

White House chief of staff.

Emanuel is believed by some critics to be a key player in Barack Obama’s more critical stance on Israel – an adviser with the expertise to strongly influence the president. He is believed by others to be a crucial bulwark, limiting Washington-Jerusalem frictions.

His father, an Israeli doctor, caused a stir by telling Ma’ariv after his appointment by President Obama: “Obviously, he’ll influence the president to be pro-Israel. Why wouldn’t he? What is he, an Arab?” Known as a tough guy, Emanuel flew to Israel as a volunteer during the first Iraq war and is said to be the model for Josh Lyman on the popular TV series, “The West Wing.”

4. Sergey Brin
Founder of Google

Together with Larry Page, whose maternal grandmother was Jewish, the Russian-born Brin founded Google, the world’s largest Internet company, and they are often referred to as the “Google Guys.” Brin, 36, and Page, 37, met at Stanford, where they suspended their doctoral studies to start up Google in a rented garage.

The Economist calls Brin an “Enlightenment Man” who believes that “knowledge is always good, and certainly always better than ignorance” and in the Google mantra, “Don’t be evil!” (Board chairman Eric Schmidt famously quipped that “Evil is whatever Sergey says is evil.”) The duo have visited Israel several times, once for the 80th birthday of Shimon Peres.

5. Shai Agassi
Founder of Better Place

Agassi, 42, has become a pioneer in alternative energy under the auspices of the company he founded in 2007.

After being endorsed by the Israeli government in 2008, Better Place has negotiated contracts on electric cars with more than two dozen countries. The Israeli entrepeneur was named by Time as the world’s most influential businessman in 2003 and one of its 100 most influential people last year.

6. Dominique Strauss-Kahn
Head of the International Monetary Fund

Strauss-Kahn, 61, was professor of economics at the University of Paris, where he obtained his doctorate, and became a member of parliament for the Socialist Party in 1986. He was chosen as managing director of the International Monetary Fund in 2007 and is expected to run for president of France in 2012.

The IMF played a key role in the recent European decision to pass a trillion-dollar plan to aid Greece.

7. Shimon Peres
President of Israel

Peres, who is 86, arguably wields more power and prestige than any of his predecessors. After a career marked by controversy and confrontation, in which he gained the reputation of being a serial loser, Peres has finally emerged as a consensus figure admired not only by the outside world but by the majority of Israelis too.

He maintains a more than correct relationship with the prime minister, who appreciates the international credibility and access offered by the Nobel peace laureate, even as he asserts a greater Palestinian willingness for compromise than Binyamin Netanyahu believes exists.

Peres responds:
“I would like to discover ways to enter the New Age while being Jewish and modern at the same time. Traveling is not such a big deal today, and I imagine that many of the Jewish people who do not live in Israel can develop a way of life which they can share in two places. I would like to see a Jewish lifestyle which on the one hand is as old as the Ten Commandments and on the other is as modern as nanotechnology.”

8. David Axelrod
Senior White House Adviser
Barack Obama’s top political adviser helps the president craft and communicate his policy, and calmed tempers during the latest spat between the US and Israel.

Before entering the White House, Axelrod, 55, was a political writer for the Chicago Tribune and founded AKP&D Message and Media. He managed Obama’s presidential campaigns in 2004 and 2008.

In an Israel Independence Day address in Washington this year, Axelrod said: “Let’s not confuse the occasional dispute over policy with the fundamental relationship that has guided our two nations for so long and will continue to guide our two nations.”

Axelrod responds:
“My father was a Jewish immigrant who fled the pogroms and came to America in search of freedom and opportunity. I carry the memory of my family's miraculous journey with me every day.”

9. Alan Dershowitz

Law professor, Israel advocate

Dershowitz, 71, is an internationally respected jurist who has served as an attorney in several high-profile cases, including that of OJ Simpson. At 28, he became the youngest law professor in Harvard’s history. Married to a psychologist from Israel, Dershowitz has become famous for his eloquent advocacy for Israel and commentary on the Middle East conflict.

Dershowitz responds:
My career has generally been reactive to where I think the great crises of human rights are, and the unfair attacks. So in the 60s I was very active in the civil rights movement. I went down south. I spent my time defending lots of African Americans and other discriminated-against groups. Then in the late 60s and 70s I was very active in the anti-war, ant-Vietnam movement, defending lots of people who were prosecuted for their views on Vietnam – the Pentagon Papers case, the Chicago Seven case, those cases. In the mid-70s, I turned my attention to Soviet dissidents and Soviet Jews, because they were the ones who were mostly in need. And then when the world started to really turn against Israel, and particularly when the hard left started to turn so heavily against Israel, it was perfectly consistent with my career and my commitment to human rights to turn to Israel. The case against Israel has increased both in the court of public opinion and real courts. So I suspect I will be spending more and more time in Israel.

10. Elena Kagan

US Supreme Court nominee

Kagan, 50, is the first woman to be solicitor general of the US, and has just been named as Barack Obama’s nominee to the Supreme Court, where she would become the third woman and third Jew to sit on the court. Kagan, a liberal Democrat, was formerly the dean of the prestigious Harvard Law School and a professor at the University of Chicago, as well as serving as associate White House counsel under Bill Clinton.

A Democrat and supporter of Obama, she is capable of swinging the court to the left, while making key judicial decisions on the freedom of religion and choice.

11. Alan Solow
Chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations

Solow, 55, is a charismatic Jewish leader, top Chicago lawyer and friend of President Barack Obama.

Tablet Magazine calls him “the Go-Between” – the putative spokesman for American Jewry played a key role in resolving the recent crisis between the US and Israel.

Solow responds:
“This recognition by he Jerusalem Post in reality reflects the critical role played by the Conference, especially during a time period when we have seen transitions in the leadership of both the United States and Israel. Our goal as always, whether working publicly or in private (and we do both), is to promote the strongest possible relationship between two democratic allies. We have also been extremely active in raising public awareness and urging swift action to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons capability. To the extent that my work has made a contribution to these efforts, I am delighted. In my capacity as Conference Chair, I often interact with senior American and Israeli officials, and I have had the opportunity to meet with President Obama and advocate directly to him. I am pleased to report that our access to government officials in the United States and Israel is excellent.

It is certainly humbling to be included in such outstanding company. Moving forward, we will work relentlessly to make certain that a clear Jewish voice is heard where policy is made and implemented.”

12. Ehud Barak

Defense Minister

Barak, 68, in his second term, has proved to be an adept diplomat and master strategist. He is involved not only in safeguarding Israel from its enemies, including Iran, but in the diplomatic process with the Palestinians and Arab states as well. He is arguably the most senior Israeli minister with whom the Obama administration is most comfortable, being perceived as relatively dovish, capable, worldly and calm.

13. Irwin Cotler

Canadian MP, human rights activist

Cotler, 70, is a member of the Canadian Parliament for the Liberal Party and a former justice minister and attorney general. He was previously a professor of law at McGill University and the director of its Human Rights Program, becoming an expert in international and human rights law.

A staunch defender of Israel from a human rights vantage point, and a very frequent visitor here, he is widely credited with having influenced Canada’s current supportive stance on the Jewish state.

14. Michael Bloomberg

Mayor of New York

Bloomberg, 68, founder of the Bloomberg media company, successfully campaigned to change the law and win a third term as mayor last year. As mayor, he is currently having to deal with an apparent renewal of terrorism in the city. Listed by Forbes as the eighth richest person in the US, Bloomberg declines to receive a city salary, accepting remuneration of $1 annually for his services.

15. Bernard Kouchner
Foreign Minister, France

Although he is currently serving in a right-wing government, the French foreign minister was previously considered a center-left politician. Kouchner, 70, was a co-founder of Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders).

At the forefront of the international struggle against Iran’s nuclear program, he once stated that while France was committed to a diplomatic resolution and that no military action was planned, an Iranian nuclear weapon would pose “a real danger for the whole world.”

16. Gabi Ashkenazi
IDF Chief of General Staff

The 56-year-old IDF chief is credited with restoring pride in the military and has a good relationship with his US counterpart, Michael Mullen, who awarded him the prestigious Legion of Merit.

He emphasized a quiet back-to-basics approach in the IDF that saw it fight far more effectively in Operation Cast Lead against Hamas in 2008-9 than it had in the Second Lebanon War against Hizbullah in 2006.

17. Stanley Fischer
Bank of Israel Governor

The 66-year-old Bank of Israel governor, who began a second five-year term this year, is credited with stabilizing Israel’s economy during the international financial crisis. He has also maintained a relationship
with his former protégé, Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, that has helped enable Palestinian economic growth of some 10 percent in the
West Bank over the past year.

18. Avigdor Lieberman

Foreign Minister

The Soviet-born foreign minister, 51, is a key player in Middle East peace negotiations. As the founder and leader of the Israel Beiteinu Party, he believes that all Israeli citizens should have to sign a loyalty oath.

He is currently being investigated by police for alleged corruption, but has a huge political following, especially among FSU immigrants and on the Right.

19. Sheldon Adelson
Entrepreneur and philanthropist

The wealthy American casino king, 76, is a big supporter of the Republican Party and Israel, and has been a key philanthropic funder behind Yad Vashem, Birthright and other causes. The owner of Israel’s biggest free daily, Yisrael Hayom, which, while derided by critics of the prime minister as a “Bibiton” – a slavishly pro-Netanyahu publication – has diversified and revolutionized the Hebrew tabloid market.

20. Dorit Beinisch

Supreme Court President

Beinisch, 68, is the first woman to serve as president of the Supreme Court. In her judicial rulings, Beinisch has focused on combating government corruption and ensuring that state institutions and security services follow the law. In a landmark ruling ten years ago, she said corporal punishment by parents is “forbidden,” because it infringes on the child’s rights and harms his dignity as a human being.

21. Natan Sharansky

Jewish Agency Chairman

As chairman of the Jewish Agency, the 62-year-old former prisoner of Zion now heads the largest Jewish NGO in the world. After trying his hand in politics, forming the Israel Ba’aliya political party and serving as a cabinet minister, Sharansky is currently spearheading a campaign to reform the Jewish Agency and focus on Jewish identity. He is also introducing a plan to hand out Jewish Nobel prizes.

22. Ruth Bader Ginsburg
US Supreme Court Justice

Bader Ginsburg, 67, is the first Jewish woman to be a jusice of the US Supreme Court, and the second woman. An associate justice, she is considered part of the liberal wing of the court. In her previous career as a law professor, she became an outspoken advocate for women’s rights. In a 2009 New York Times interview, in which she said regarding abortion that “the basic thing is that the government has no business making that choice for a woman.”

23. Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook Founder

The 36-year-old American entrepreneur who five years ago co-founded the massively popular social networking site, Facebook with three other Harvard students, one of whom, Dustin Moskovitz was also Jewish. Three years ago, Microsoft (whose CEO, Steve Ballmer, is also Jewish) bought a 1.6% stake to Microsoft Corp. for $240 million. A film about Facebook is due to be released this year.

24. Moshe Kantor

ECG President

The president of the European Jewish Congress, Kantor this month opened the Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry at Tel Aviv University. The center will study existing legislation on anti-Semitism in Europe and draft an “ideal law” for combating the growing phenomenon.

Kantor responds:
“I am honored to be in a position where I can advocate for European Jewish interests and the State of Israel amongst senior political, religious and influential figures in Europe and beyond. This is a testament to the re-ascendancy of European Jewry on the Diaspora world stage. It is my firm belief that the influence and significance of European Jewry will only continue to rise, as will its role of support for the state, people and government of Israel in a continent where understanding of the challenges that Israel faces is sometimes lacking. Also, because of our history, I am convinced that Jews need to play a more prominent role in achieving greater tolerance in Europe. As the President of the European Jewish Congress and Chairman of the European Council on Tolerance and Reconciliation, an organization of elder European statesmen, I assist in preparing practical recommendations for governments and international organisations to improve interreligious and interethnic relations on the continent.”

25. Michael Steinhardt

Investor and philanthropist

The 59-year-old New York investor is a big political donor in the US, giving to both the Democrats and Republicans. Steinhardt, who owns a home in Jerusalem, is better known here for sponsoring the Birthright Israel program together with Charles Bronfman.

Steinhardt responds:
I am honored, and I hope in the coming years I can merit this honor. I have devoted so much of my life, especially over the last 15 years, to the Jewish future and I think I’m stuck with that preoccupation for the foreseeable future.

26. Mortimer Zuckerman
Publisher

Zuckerman, 72, a former chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, is the owner of the New York Daily News and U.S. News & World Report and co-founder of Boston Properties. He is a strong supporter of Israel and Jewish causes.

27. Ronald Lauder

WJC President

President of the World Jewish Congress and son of Esthee Lauder, the 66-year-old Lauder, is a wealthy businessman who is a strong support of the Republican Party in the US and the Likud in Israel. In the past, he has mediated contacts between Prime Minister Netanyahu and Syrian President Assad. Last month published an open letter to President Obama urging the administration to "end our public feud with Israel."

28. Larry Ellison

Oracle founder

The 65-year-old magnate who founded and is CEO of the world’s second largest software company, Oracle, is listed by The Marker as the world’s richest Jew, and by Forbes as the sixth richest person in the world.

On a visit to Israel three years ago, he praised the country’s intellectual talent and hi-tech achievements, and related how excited he had been to watch Israeli jets fly over Auschwitz – signalling that the Holocaust would never happen again.

29. Ruth Arnon
Biochemist

Prof. Arnon, currently the Paul Ehrlich Professor of Immunology at the Weizmann Institute of Science and vice president of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, is a veteran biochemist and codeveloper of the multiple sclerosis drug, Copaxone. It is one of the few medications invented in Israel, and is manufactured and sold by Teva, the world’s largest generic medicine company.

30. Elie Wiesel
Writer

Wiesel, now 81, is the world’s most famous living Holocaust survivor, having written 57 books and won a Nobel Prize. In April, Wiesel took out full-page ads in US newspapers defending the Jewish rights to Jerusalem, and later dined with President Obama in an attempt to defuse the tension they caused.

31. Steven Spielberg
Filmmaker

America’s most famous film maker, who is now 63, has won three Academy awards, including the epic Schindler’s List about how German businessman Oskar Schindler saved over 1,000 Jews during the Second World War. He has also established a historically important Holocaust film and video archive.

32. Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
Chief Rabbi, UK

The chief rabbi of the British Commonwealth was knighted in 2005, and is well respected in the UK as an articulate leader and spokesman of the Jewish community. He has also written several best-selling books, one of which – The Dignity of Difference – was awarded the Grawemeyer Award for Religion.

33. Jeff Zucker
CEO of NBC Universal

President and CEO of NBC Universal, the premier television network in the US for the past three years. New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd wrote that in Hollywood “there has been a single topic of discussion: How does Jeff Zucker keep rising and rising while the fortunes of NBC keep falling and falling?” Many of Hollywood’s honchos are Jewish, including executives from CBS, Walt Disney, Warner Brothers, News Corp., Sony Pictures Chairman and CBS, whose CEO, Leslie Moonves is a great-nephew of David Ben-Gurion.

34. Joseph Lieberman
US Senator

The Connecticut senator still commands respect in Washington as a straight shooter and an ardent supporter of Israel. Despite backing John McCain in the 2008 elections, Lieberman maintained his chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, apparently with the support of President Obama.

35. Eric Cantor
US Congressman

The Virginia representative is currently serving as Republican whip, and is the only Jewish Republican in Congress. An ardent backer of Israel, he has co-sponsored legislation to cut off all US taxpayer aid to the Palestinian Authority unless it stops unauthorized excavations on the Temple Mount.

36. Lee Rosenberg
President of AIPAC

Rosenberg, 53, is a leading Chicago venture capitalist with long-standing ties to Barack Obama. A jazz veteran and venture capitalist, he this year became president of the most influential pro-Israel lobby, AIPAC.

The Chicago Tribune reported that Rosenberg, according to more than a dozen friends, is a master at building relationships with powerful people.

Rosenberg accompanied Barack Obama during his trip to Israel before becoming president and helped him during his presidential campaign, but didn’t refrain from reprimanding the US for its treatment of Israel during the recent dispute over east Jerusalem housing.

37. Richard Goldstone

International jurist

Goldstone, an internationally renowned jurist and former South African judge, created a storm of protest in the Jewish world after his report last year as head of the UN Human Rights Council mission on the Gaza conflict in which he charged Israel (and Hamas) with alleged war crimes.

This year, he again became the subject of controversy after Yediot Aharonot published a report showing that, as an appellate judge in apartheid South Africa, he sanctioned death sentences against 28 black men.

Today, Goldstone is a board member of several NGOs that promote justice and human rights, including Human Rights Watch, and is a trustee of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

38. Thomas Friedman
Columnist

Friedman is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist whose column in The New York Times has a huge readership.

In a column this year in the midst of the US-Israel spat over east Jerusalem housing, he wrote that while “President Barack Obama was 100 percent right to call out Israel on its settlement expansion... he also needs his own clear strategy to exploit the opportunities inherent in this moment.”

39. Haim Saban
Media magnate

The Israeli American media mogul is one of the largest donors to the Democratic Party, supporting Hillary Clinton in the last election. He is also a staunch backer of Israel, telling The New York Times once: “I’m a one-issue guy and my issue is Israel.”

40. Jeremy Ben-Ami
J Street Executive Director

Ben-Ami is executive director of J Street, a left-wing pro-Israel lobby group in the US which endorses and raises money for federal candidates. After initially being shunned by the government, Ben-Ami recently had a reconciliatory meeting with Ambassador Michael Oren and brought a large delegation to Israel that met President Peres and other leaders.

41. Shari Arison

Bank of Hapoalim owner

The owner of Bank Hapoalim is Israel’s wealthiest citizen and listed by Forbes as the richest woman in the Middle East. Last year, she sponsored a “Good Deeds Day” which inspired Israelis to volunteer to perform mitzvot across the country.

42. Simone Veil
French politician

Veil, 83, is a Holocaust survivor who became a respected French lawyer and politician. She previously served as president of the European Parliament and was inducted into the Academie Francaise this year.

43. Irving Moskowitz

US tycoon, settler supporter

The Florida-based tycoon is considered the leading supporter of Jewish construction in east Jerusalem and hands out a prize for Zionism to settler leaders.

44. Gill Marcus
Bank Governor, South Africa

The former ANC activist now serves as governor of the South African Reserve Bank - the first woman to hold the position.

45. Bernard-Henri Lévy
Philosopher

A French philosopher and one of the leaders of the Nouvelle Philosophie movement who said that Jews ought to provide a unique moral voice in the world.

46. Bob Dylan
Musician

The veteran singer was cited by the Pulitzer Prize jury for his profound impact on popular music and American culture, “marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic power.” Several of his songs have become anthems for the human rights movement, including “Blowin’ in the wind.”

He made Michael Shapiro’s list in The Jewish 100: A ranking of the Most Influential Jews of all Time.

Dylan has performed five times in Israel, but contrary to press reports, will not be coming here during his European tour this summer.


47. Roman Abramovitch

Investor, Chelsea FC owner

The Russian oligarch who now lives in London and owns the private investment company, Millhouse LLC, got a big boost this year with Chelsea, the English soccer club he owns, winning the Premier League.

48. Sacha Baron Cohen
Comedian

The British actor who played three crazy journalists, Ali G, Borat (left) and Brüno, has created an international controversy over his comic characters – and become a household name around the globe.

In the much-touted Simpsons’ tour of Israel episode recently aired on television, Baron Cohen plays Jacob, an angry tour guide. When Marge accused him of being pushy, Jacob retorts: “Try living next to Syria... and see how laid back you are!”

49. Lucian Freud
Artist

The grandson of Sigmund and brother of Clement, Lucian lives in London and is arguably the most famous and influential living Jewish painter. Freud has painted a series of famous portraits, including those of fellow artists and Queen Elizabeth II.

Two years ago, his portrait, Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, was sold by Christie's for $33.6 million, setting a world record for sale value of a painting by a living artist.

50. Omri Casspi

Basketball player

The first Israeli to play in the NBA, the tall basketball player has emerged as a star for the Sacramento Kings and one of the greatest Jewish sportsmen in history. In January, he set a new career record with 24 points against the Phoenix Suns. Last year, he won fourth place in the FIBA Europe Young Men’s Player of the Year and was named Jerusalem Post sportsman of the year, and this year played in the NBA All-Star Weekend. Soft-spoken and well-mannered, he is liked and respected in the NBA and serves as a goodwill ambassador for Israel abroad.

Casspi responds:
"It means a lot to be the first Israeli in the NBA. I don’t just represent myself. I represent Israel and the Jewish people in the states. It might be something that comes with it, but I’m really not trying to think about it. I’m trying to play basketball and focus on that. Because at the end of the day I have to give the best I can on the court.”
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