From the Wires
Mick Jagger gets first hosting gig at ‘SNL’ finale
Topics: From the Wires
FILE - In this Sept. 21, 2011 file photo, SuperHeavy member Mick Jagger attends the release party for the band's new CD, "SuperHeavy", in New York. Jagger will host the "Saturday Night Live" finale on May 19. (AP Photo/Charles Sykes, file)(Credit: AP) NEW YORK (AP) — Mick Jagger will test his comic chops later this month as host of the “Saturday Night Live” season finale.
The Rolling Stones frontman has been a musical guest twice before on the long-running NBC show, and the network said Thursday he will perform musically on the May 19 finale. But he has never been host before, a job that usually requires participation in several comic skits.
The Rolling Stones mark their 50th anniversary as a band this year, but have yet to announce any activities to commemorate the occasion.
Jagger last year put out a disc as part of a group called SuperHeavy, which also included reggae singer Damian Marley and former Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart.
‘Housewives’ actress Kathryn Joosten dies at 72
Topics: From the Wires
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kathryn Joosten, a veteran character actress who played the crotchety, nosey Karen McCluskey on ABC’s “Desperate Housewives,” has died. She was 72.
Publicist Nadine Jolson said Joosten, who had battled lung cancer for years, died Saturday in Los Angeles.
A veteran Emmy-winning character actor, Joosten was lauded for her portrayal of Mrs. McCluskey, who kept a close eye on her Wisteria Lane neighbors. The hit show ended its run on ABC last month with a series finale in which Joosten’s character passed away.
Joosten also appeared on “The West Wing” as Mrs. Landingham, the president’s secretary.
Long-sealed Watergate documents may be released
Topics: From the Wires
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Department of Justice says at least some sealed documents in the 1972 Watergate burglary case should be released.
The department responded Friday to a request by a Texas history professor who is seeking access to materials he believes could help answer lingering questions about the burglary that led to President Richard Nixon’s resignation.
Luke Nichter wrote a judge in Washington to ask that potentially hundreds of pages of documents be unsealed. The judge earlier this year ordered the Justice Department respond with any objections.
Department attorney Elizabeth Shapiro said in a court document that the office would not oppose the release of at least some documents.
Big tip: Ohio waitress gets feds’ check for $434K
Topics: From the Wires
CINCINNATI (AP) — If only it was a tip.
Veteran Cleveland waitress Ginny Hopkins grabbed her mail on her way to work and found a federal tax refund check for nearly $435,000. She “laughed out loud,” then took the check with her to Johnny’s Downtown Restaurant to show around.
She enjoyed the speculation for a couple days about what she could do with the apparent windfall. Her granddaughters were thinking tickets to see the popular boy band One Direction. She had other ideas.
“Grandma hasn’t had a vacation in 28 years,” she said. “I would have gone to Hawaii.”
Continue Reading CloseMexico suspends, probes judges of key drug cases
Topics: From the Wires
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexican court authorities have suspended two judges while investigators look into possible irregularities.
The Federal Judiciary Council says it is temporarily suspending appellate Judge Jesus Guadalupe Luna and district Judge Efrain Cazares.
It did not describe the allegations being investigated.
But Luna acquitted the son of Sinaloa drug cartel chief Joaquin Guzman of money laundering. And he also upheld a lower court ruling that cleared Sandra Avila Beltran of organized-crime charges despite efforts by Mexico and the U.S. to prosecute the woman nicknamed “Queen of the Pacific.”
Federal authorities say Cazares ignored credible evidence when he released some of mayors detained in a mass arrest of officials in the western state of Michoacan in 2009
The council said in a Friday statement that a separate agency is conducting the investigation.
Federal bill would give nation’s hens bigger cages
Topics: From the Wires
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — The animal welfare advocates that gave egg-laying hens more room in California are trying to expand chicken coops across the nation with an unlikely ally — a group that previously had been its biggest opponent.
The effort to increase cage sizes for the 270 million laying hens in the U.S. is a compromise bill working its way through Congress supported by the Humane Society of the United States and the United Egg Producers, the industry’s largest advocacy group.
The improbable alliance has formed amid a nationwide push by some consumers, grocers and restaurants to improve living conditions for farm animals that provide food for the table.
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