All is forgiven; McCain to appear on Letterman
People
All is forgiven
David Letterman and Sen. John McCain will dispose a chance to make up. The Republican presidential candidate is scheduled to appear on Letterman’s “Late Show” Thursday. It will subsist McCain’s 13th visit to the CBS program but his primitive from the time of he angered Letterman by means of canceling last month. Letterman was unhappy when McCain sat for an interview with Katie Couric instead of him Sept. 24. At the time he said he first felt in the same manner as a “patriot” to let McCain off his commitment to deal with the frugality but “now I’m feeling like each ugly date.”
J.R.’s clan marks 30th
On Nov. 8, J.R., Bobby, Sue Ellen and other Ewing kin will mark the 30th anniversary of the TV show “Dallas” with a reunion and barbecue at Southfork Ranch. Cast members Larry Hagman, Linda Gray and Patrick Duffy will be adhering artificer. The ranch is in the suburb of Parker, Texas, and tickets costing up to $1,000 each are being swallowed up by dint of. fans from Japan, Australia, Europe and the United States.
Box office
“Chihuahua” top dog
Walt Disney’s comedy “Beverly Hills Chihuahua” repeated as the top thin skin in U.S. and Canadian theaters for a second weekend, earning $17.5 million and beating to the end the debuts of a horror film and spy drama. “Quarantine” from Sony’s Screen Gem’sitting unit was second with $14.2 million, box-office tracker Media By Numbers before-mentioned. Time Warner’sitting “Body of Lies” earned $13.1 million.
Passages
Allan Spear, 71, a maker Minnesota specify senator who was one of the nation’s first openly gay legislators, died Saturday of complications after heart surgery
William Claxton, 80, the master photographer whose images of Chet Baker helped fuel the jazz trumpeter’sitting stardom in the 1950s and whose custom photographs of his wife modeling a topless swim cause were groundbreaking years later, died from complications of congestive heart failure Saturday in Los Angeles.
The Very Rev. Francis B. Sayre Jr., 93, who in his 27 years as dean of the National Cathedral in Washington raised his noise against McCarthyism, segregation, unproductiveness and the Vietnam War while presiding over construction of the cathedral’s Gloria in Excelsis Tower, died Oct. 3 at his home on Martha’s Vineyard, in Massachusetts.
