Archive for December, 2007

JANUARY:

Darrent Williams, 24. Denver Broncos cornerback. Jan. 1. Shooting.

Teddy Kollek, 95. Six-term mayor of Jerusalem; tried to balance needs of Jewish and Arab populations. Jan. 2.

C. William Verity Jr., 89. As secretary of commerce, he pushed to recognize quality. Jan. 3.

Vincent Sardi Jr., 91. Consummate host of Sardi’s, famed Broadway watering hole. Jan. 4.

Bobby Hamilton, 49. NASCAR driver who won the 2001 Talladega 500. Jan. 7. Cancer.

Yvonne De Carlo, 84. The vampire mom on “The Munsters.” Jan. 8.

Carlo Ponti, 94. Italian producer who discovered — and married — Sophia Loren. Jan. 9.

Robert Anton Wilson, 74. Co-author of science fiction cult classic “The Illuminatus! Trilogy.” Jan. 11.

Larry Stewart, 58. Anonymous philanthropist known as Secret Santa. Jan. 12. Cancer.

Michael Brecker, 57. Versatile tenor saxophonist; won 11 Grammys. Jan. 13.

Art Buchwald, 81. Pulitzer-winning humorist who skewered Washington’s elite. Jan. 17.

Denny Doherty, 66. Member of 1960s folk-rock group the Mamas and the Papas (“California Dreamin’.”) Jan. 19.

George A. Smathers, 93. Three-term Florida senator, friend to presidents. Jan. 20.

Abbe Pierre, 94. Beloved French priest praised for devotion to the needy. Jan. 22.

E. Howard Hunt, 88. He helped organize the Watergate break-in. Jan. 23.

Charlotte Reid, 93. Four-term Illinois congresswoman, then Federal Communications Commission member. Jan. 24.

Eleanor McGovern, 85. George McGovern’s wife; outspoken campaigner in his 1972 presidential run. Jan. 25.

The Rev. Robert Drinan, 86. Priest who represented Massachusetts in the U.S. House during the 1970s. Jan. 28.

Gordon S. Macklin, 79. A founder and longtime president of Nasdaq stock market. Jan. 30.

Sidney Sheldon, 89. Stage and screen writer turned best-selling novelist (“The Other Side of Midnight.”) Jan. 30.

Molly Ivins, 62. Best-selling author, columnist, a sharp-witted liberal who referred to President Bush as “Shrub.” Jan. 31.

FEBRUARY:

Gian Carlo Menotti, 95. Pulitzer-winning Italian composer (“The Consul,” “Amahl and the Night Visitors”); founded Spoleto arts festivals. Feb. 1.

Barbara McNair, 72. Pioneering black singer-actress; had her own TV variety show. Feb. 4.

Lew Burdette, 80. MVP of the 1957 World Series when he pitched the Milwaukee Braves. Feb. 6.

Frankie Laine, 93. Big-voiced singer; one of the most popular entertainers of the 1950s (“That Lucky Old Sun.”) Feb. 6.

Anna Nicole Smith, 39. Model and sometime actress. Feb. 8. Accidental overdose of medication.

Rep. Charles Norwood Jr., 65. Blunt-spoken Georgia Republican congressman. Feb. 13.

Robert Adler, 93. Co-inventor of the TV remote, the 1956 Zenith Space Command. Feb. 15.

Maurice Papon, 96. Former French Cabinet minister convicted of complicity in World War II crimes. Feb. 17.

David Berger, 94. Class-action lawsuit pioneer who won major cases in the Three Mile Island nuclear accident. Feb. 22.

Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., 89. Pulitzer-winning historian; Kennedy administration “court philosopher.” Feb. 28.

MARCH:

Marjabelle Young Stewart, 82. Etiquette authority; co-wrote “White Gloves and Party Manners.” March 3.

Thomas Eagleton, 77. Former senator who resigned as George McGovern’s running mate in 1972 after it was revealed he had been hospitalized for depression. March 4.

Ernest Gallo, 97. With his brother, he built the world’s largest winemaking empire. March 6.

Betty Hutton, 86. Singer-actress who brought brassy vitality to Hollywood musicals (“Annie Get Your Gun.”) March 11.

Bowie Kuhn, 80. Baseball commissioner during development of free agency, multimillion-dollar contracts. March 15.

John Backus, 82. Developer of Fortran programming language that changed how people interacted with computers. March 17.

G.E. Patterson, 67. Presiding bishop of 6 million-member Church of God in Christ. March 20.

Walter Turnbull, 62. Founded acclaimed Boys Choir of Harlem. March 23.

Robert E. Petersen, 80. Publisher whose Hot Rod, Motor Trend magazines helped shape car culture. March 23.

Tosiwo Nakayama, 75. First president of Federated States of Micronesia as it emerged from U.S. control. March 29.

APRIL:

Herb Carneal, 83. Broadcast Minnesota Twins games for 45 seasons. April 1.

William Becker, 85. Co-founded the Motel 6 chain. April 2.

Eddie Robinson, 88. Longtime Grambling coach; transformed small college into a football power. April 3.

Nina Wang, 69. Hong Kong businesswoman; one of world’s richest women. April 3.

Darryl Stingley, 55. New England Patriots player paralyzed during on-field collision in 1978. April 5. Complications of paralysis.

Johnny Hart, 76. Cartoonist whose “B.C.” showed the Stone Age’s humorous side. April 7.

Sol LeWitt, 78. Influential abstract painter, sculptor. April 8.

Kurt Vonnegut, 84. Novelist who captured the absurdity of the world in darkly humorous works such as “Slaughterhouse-Five.” April 11.

Don Ho, 76. Hawaiian crooner (“Tiny Bubbles”); entertained tourists. April 14.

Frank Westheimer, 95. Eminent chemist; former science adviser to President Johnson. April 14.

Kitty Carlisle Hart, 96. Singer-actress; career spanned Broadway, opera, television and film (“A Night at the Opera.”) April 17.

Helen Robson Walton, 87. Widow of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton; philanthropist. April 19.

Rep. Juanita Millender-McDonald, 68. Seven-term California congresswoman; advocated electoral reform. April 21.

David Halberstam, 73. Journalist whose books included towering study of Vietnam War, poignant portrait of aging baseball stars. April 23.

Boris Yeltsin, 76. Former Russian president who helped bring demise of Soviet Union. April 23.

Warren Avis, 92. Founded Avis Rent A Car. April 24.

Jack Valenti, 85. Film industry lobbyist; instituted modern movie ratings system. April 26.

Mstislav Rostropovich, 80. Ebullient master cellist who fought for the rights of Soviet-era dissidents. April 27.

Tom Poston, 85. The tall, pasty-faced TV comic whose characters were clueless. (“Newhart.”) April 30.

MAY:

Walter M. Schirra Jr., 84. An original Mercury Seven astronaut, who combined the Right Stuff with a pronounced rebellious streak. May 3.

Yahweh Ben Yahweh, 71. Former cult leader in Miami linked to nearly two dozen gruesome killings in the 1980s. May 7.

The Rev. Jerry Falwell, 73. Evangelist who used the power of television to transform the religious right into a mighty political force. May 15.

Yolanda King, 51. Actress and activist; daughter of the Rev. Martin Luther King. May 15.

Fannie Lee Chaney, 84. Mother of one of three civil-rights workers killed in 1964 “Mississippi Burning” case. May 22. (Carolyn Goodman, one of the other two mothers, died Aug. 17 at 91.)

Charles Nelson Reilly, 76. Tony Award winner; known for ribald TV game show appearances. May 25.

Homer J. Stewart, 91. Rocket pioneer; helped develop first successful U.S. satellite, Explorer I. May 26.

Paul Yost, 87. Pioneer of hot-air ballooning. May 27.

Barbara Cox Anthony, 84. Heiress to Cox media fortune; one of world’s richest women. May 28.

Preston Martin, 83. Top Federal Reserve official; helped create Freddie Mac. May 30.

JUNE

Charles William Maynes, 68. Longtime editor of Foreign Policy magazine. June 2.

Wiley Mayne, 90. Four-term Iowa congressman; one of 10 Republicans who voted not to impeach President Nixon. June 3.

Bill France Jr., 74. Transformed NASCAR from a small Southern sport into a billion-dollar conglomerate. June 4.

Sen. Craig Thomas, 74. Three-term Senate Republican; reliably represented conservative Wyoming. June 4.

Edwin Traisman, 91. Food scientist; helped develop Cheez Whiz. June 5.

Sembene Ousmane, 84. Father of Senegalese cinema; one of the pioneers of the art in Africa. June 9.

Ray Mears, 80. Winningest men’s coach in Tennessee basketball history. June 11.

Don Herbert, 89. Television’s “Mr. Wizard.” June 12.

Donald Clancy, 85. Eight-term Ohio congressman; Cincinnati mayor. June 12.

Baron Guy de Rothschild, 98. Managed his family’s French banking empire. June 12.

Ruth Graham, 87. Rev. Billy Graham’s closest confidante, providing a solid foundation for her husband’s evangelism career. June 14.

Kurt Waldheim, 88. U.N. secretary-general; Austrian president; was revealed to have been in German army unit that committed atrocities in World War II. June 14.

Gianfranco Ferre, 62. Italian designer known as “architect of fashion.” June 17.

Bob Evans, 89. Created namesake restaurant chain. June 21.

Guy Vander Jagt, 75. 13-term Michigan congressman; led House GOP election strategy. June 22.

Charles W. Lindberg, 86. Helped raise first American flag over Iwo Jima. June 24.

Chris Benoit, 40. World Wrestling Entertainment star. Found June 25; apparent suicide after killing wife, 7-year-old son.

Liz Claiborne, 78. Her fashion designs became a cornerstone of career women’s wardrobes. June 26.

Joel Siegel, 63. “Good Morning America” movie critic. June 29.

JULY

Beverly Sills, 78. Opera diva with a dazzling voice, bubbly personality. July 2.

Boots Randolph, 80. His spirited saxophone made “Yakety Sax” a hit. July 3.

Kathleen E. Woodiwiss, 68. Pioneer of the modern historical romance novel (“The Flame and the Flower.”) July 6.

Doug Marlette, 57. Pulitzer-winning editorial cartoonist, creator of comic strip “Kudzu.” July 10. Car accident.

Lady Bird Johnson, 94. Former first lady who championed conservation, worked tenaciously for the political career of her husband, Lyndon B. Johnson. July 11.

Kai Siegbahn, 89. Shared 1981 Nobel Prize in physics. July 20.

Tammy Faye Messner, 65. Helped then-husband Jim Bakker build a TV evangelism empire that later collapsed in disgrace. July 20.

Laszlo Kovacs, 74. Influential cinematographer (“Easy Rider,” “Five Easy Pieces.”) July 22.

Norma Gabler, 84. Influential Texas crusader against what she saw as anti-American errors in textbooks. July 22.

Mohammad Zahir Shah, 92. Afghanistan’s last king, who oversaw four decades of peace before a 1973 coup. July 23.

Albert Ellis, 93. Influential psychologist, founded a renowned therapy institute. July 24.

Alan Pottasch, 79. PepsiCo. exec whose ’60s ads dubbed baby boomers “the Pepsi Generation.” July 27.

Tom Snyder, 71. Late-late night TV talk show host with a robust laugh, trademark cloud of cigarette smoke. July 29.

Bill Walsh, 75. San Francisco 49ers coach; won three Super Bowls. July 30.

Ingmar Bergman, 87. Swedish filmmaker; one of the greatest in cinema history (“The Seventh Seal,” “Cries and Whispers.”) July 30.

Michelangelo Antonioni, 94. Italian filmmaker whose depiction of modern-day malaise made him a symbol of art-house cinema (“Blow-Up,” “L’Avventura.”) July 30.

AUGUST:

Atle Selberg, 90. Renowned mathematician; worked on the properties of prime numbers. Aug. 6.

Irene Morgan Kirkaldy, 90. A black woman whose refusal to give up her bus seat led to a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in the 1940s. Aug. 10.

Merv Griffin, 82. Singer turned TV host turned impresario who parlayed game shows into a multimillion-dollar empire. Aug. 12.

Ralph Alpher, 86. Physicist; did key work on underpinnings of the “Big Bang” theory. Aug. 12.

Brooke Astor, 105. Philanthropist who gave millions to New York City institutions, large and small. Aug. 13.

Phil Rizzuto, 89. Hall of Fame Yankee shortstop; sportscaster much loved for exclaiming “Holy cow!” Aug. 13.

Max Roach, 83. Jazz drummer whose rhythmic innovations defined bebop. Aug. 16.

Dr. Leslie Lukash, 86. Medical examiner who helped identify the remains of Nazi Josef Mengele. Aug. 16.

Michael K. Deaver, 69. Adviser to Ronald Reagan who directed the president’s picturesque public appearances. Aug. 18.

Leona Helmsley, 87. Ran a $5 billion real estate empire with her husband but became known as the “queen of mean” during her 1989 tax evasion trial. Aug. 20.

Grace Paley, 84. Acclaimed poet and short story writer. Aug. 22.

Butch van Breda Kolff, 84. Led the Los Angeles Lakers to two NBA finals appearances, won 482 games as a college coach. Aug. 22.

Rabbi Judah Nadich, 95. Military chaplain who advised Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower after the discovery of Nazi concentration camps. Aug. 26.

Hilly Kristal, 75. His Manhattan club CBGB served as birthplace of punk rock. Aug. 28.

Paul MacCready, 81. Designed the Gossamer Condor flying machine, which in 1977 made the first sustained, controlled flight powered solely by human muscle. Aug. 28.

Miyoshi Umeki, 78. Oscar-winning actress (“Sayonara.”) Aug. 28.

Richard Jewell, 44. Former security guard wrongly linked to 1996 Olympic bombing in Atlanta. Aug. 29. Heart disease.

Charles Vanik, 94. Ohio congressman who co-sponsored law to get Soviet Union to allow more Jews to emigrate. Aug. 29.

SEPTEMBER:

Rep. Paul Gillmor, 68. 10-term Ohio congressman; strong proponent of the military. Sept. 5.

Jennifer Dunn, 66. six-term Washington state congresswoman. Sept. 5.

The Rev. D. James Kennedy, 76. Megachurch pastor; prominent Christian broadcaster. Sept. 5.

Luciano Pavarotti, 71. Opera superstar hailed as “king of the high C’s.” Sept. 6.

Madeleine L’Engle, 88. Author who captivated children with “A Wrinkle in Time.” Sept. 6.

Jane Wyman, 90. Won Oscar as deaf rape victim in “Johnny Belinda”; later in TV’s “Falcon Crest.” Ronald Reagan’s ex-wife. Sept. 10.

Anita Roddick, 64. Founded eco-friendly beauty retailer The Body Shop. Sept. 10.

Joe Zawinul, 75. Jazz keyboardist; one of the creators of jazz-rock fusion with Weather Report (“Birdland.”) Sept. 11.

Gene Savoy, 80. Explorer who discovered lost Inca and pre-Inca cities in Peru. Sept. 11.

Abdul-Sattar Abu Risha, late 30s. Iraq sheik who helped American strategy of enlisting aid of Sunni tribes. Sept. 13. Bomb.

John E. Swearingen, 89. Executive who led Standard Oil Co. of Indiana. Sept. 14.

Colin McRae, 39. Britain’s best-known rally driver, former World Rally champion. Sept. 15. Helicopter crash.

Robert Jordan, 58. Author of “Wheel of Time” fantasy novels. Sept. 16. Blood disease.

The Rev. Rex Humbard, 88. His televangelism ministry once spanned the globe. Sept. 21.

Marcel Marceau, 84. French master of pantomime who transformed silence into poetry. Sept. 22.

William Wirtz, 77. Longtime Chicago Blackhawks owner. Sept. 26.

Harry Dent, 77. Former top adviser to President Nixon; helped him win the South. Sept. 28.

Wally Parks, 94. Founded National Hot Rod Association, helping turn drag racing into legitimate sport. Sept. 28.

Ralph Sturges, 88. As Mohegan chief, helped develop tribe’s hugely successful Mohegan Sun casino. Sept. 30.

OCTOBER:

Al Oerter, 71. Discus great who won gold medals in four Olympics. Oct. 1.

James W. Michaels, 86. Transformed business journalism as Forbes magazine editor. Oct. 2.

Rep. Jo Ann Davis, 57. Virginia congresswoman; made servicemen’s needs a key issue. Oct. 6. Breast cancer.

Sri Chinmoy, 76. Indian-born spiritual leader; inspired followers to perform athletic feats. Oct. 11.

Vernon Bellecourt, 75. Fought use of Indian nicknames for teams as a leader of the American Indian Movement. Oct. 13.

Deborah Kerr, 86. Actress who kissed Burt Lancaster on a beach in “From Here to Eternity” and danced with Yul Brynner in “The King and I.” Oct. 16.

Barbara West Dainton, 96. Englishwoman believed to be one of the last two survivors from the Titanic. Oct. 16.

Joey Bishop, 89. Stone-faced TV and nightclub comedian; last of the Rat Pack. Oct. 17.

Catherine Roraback, 87. Attorney who won 1965 Supreme Court that established the right to contraceptives and privacy. Oct. 17.

Teresa Brewer, 76. She topped the charts in the 1950s (“Till I Waltz Again With You.”) Oct. 17.

William Crowe, 82. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, ambassador to Britain. Oct. 18.

Max McGee, 75. Hero of first Super Bowl in 1967, helping Green Bay beat Kansas City 35-10. Oct. 20.

R.B. Kitaj, 74. A key figure in the British Pop Art movement. Oct. 21.

Hans Stern, 85. Founded H. Stern jewelry empire. Oct. 26.

Dr. Arthur Kornberg, 89. His test-tube synthesis of DNA earned a 1959 Nobel Prize. Oct. 26.

Porter Wagoner, 80. Grand Ole Opry star; helped launch the career of Dolly Parton. Oct. 28.

Thomas J. Meskill, 79. Connecticut congressman and governor; later a federal judge. Oct. 29.

Robert Goulet, 73. Baritone made Broadway debut in “Camelot;” won Tony in 1968 for “The Happy Time.” Oct. 30.

NOVEMBER:

Paul Tibbets, 92. Piloted the B-29 that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Nov. 1.

Igor Moiseyev, 101. Choreographer who transformed folk dance into a legitimate art, showcasing Russian culture. Nov. 2.

Luis Herrera Campins, 82. Former Venezuelan president; part of a generation of leaders who helped usher in democracy in the 1950s. Nov. 9.

Norman Mailer, 84. The pugnacious prince of American letters. Nov. 10.

Augustus Hawkins, 100. California’s first black congressman, elected in 1962. Nov. 10.

Delbert Mann, 87. Directed “Marty,” classic lonely-guy teleplay that became Oscar-winning film. Nov. 11.

Charlie Brady “C.B.” Hauser, 90. College professor who took a stand against segregation in 1947 by refusing to give up a bus seat to a white. Nov. 11.

Ira Levin, 78. Best-selling novelist (“Rosemary’s Baby,” “The Boys From Brazil.”) Nov. 12.

The Rev. John H. Cross Jr., 82. Pastor of church in Birmingham, Ala., where four girls died in a 1963 racist bombing. Nov. 15.

Joe Nuxhall, 79. Youngest major leaguer ever at age 15; later a Cincinnati sportscaster. Nov. 15.

Dick Wilson, 91. Played the fussy, mustachioed grocer who begged customers “Please, don’t squeeze the Charmin.” Nov. 19.

Milo Radulovich, 81. Serviceman championed by Edward R. Murrow when the military threatened to decommission him during the anti-communist crackdown of the 1950s. Nov. 19.

Ian Smith, 88. Rhodesia’s last white prime minister; his attempts to resist black rule brought isolation and civil war. Nov. 20.

Herbert Saffir, 90. Engineer; created the five-category system to describe hurricane strength. Nov. 21.

Maurice Bejart, 80. Avant-garde French choreographer. Nov. 22.

Silvestre Herrera, 90. Awarded Medal of Honor for a one-man assault on an enemy position during World War II. Nov. 26.

Dr. J. Robert Cade, 80. Inventor of Gatorade. Nov. 27.

Bill Hartack, 74. Hall of Fame jockey; one of only two to win five Kentucky Derbys. Nov. 26.

Bill Willis, 86. Hall of Fame guard with the Cleveland Browns; Ohio State’s first black football All-American. Nov. 27.

Sean Taylor, 24. Washington Redskins’ star safety; known as one of the hardest hitters in the NFL. Nov. 27. Shot in his home.

Henry Hyde, 83. Illinois congressman steered impeachment proceedings against President Clinton. Nov. 29.

Roger B. Smith, 82. Led General Motors Corp.; was subject of Michael Moore’s documentary “Roger & Me.” Nov. 29.

Evel Knievel, 69. Motorcycle daredevil known for spectacular jumps and bone-crushing crashes. Nov. 30.

DECEMBER:

Robert O. Anderson, 90. CEO of Atlantic Richfield Co. when it announced the discovery of North America’s largest oil field. Dec. 1.

Elizabeth Hardwick, 91. Leading intellectual author (“Sleepless Nights”) and critic. Dec. 2.

Karlheinz Stockhausen, 79. Avant-garde German composer; pioneer of electronic music. Dec. 5.

Roger M. King, 63. CBS and King World Productions executive; helped bring such stars as Oprah Winfrey to television. Dec. 8.

Rene J. Cappon, 83. Longtime Associated Press editor; the word master behind some of its best writers. Dec. 9.

Freddie Fields, 84. Colorful Hollywood agent, producer (“Glory”), studio executive. Dec. 11.

Ike Turner, 76. Rock innovator who teamed with wife Tina Turner (and denied abusing her). Dec. 12.

Rep. Julia Carson, 69. First black and first woman to represent Indianapolis in Congress. Dec. 15.

Dan Fogelberg, 56. His gentle, poignant hits (“Longer,” “Leader of the Band”) helped define soft-rock. Dec. 16. Cancer.

J. Russell Coffey, 109. Oldest known surviving U.S. veteran of World War I. Dec. 20.

Ken Hendricks, 66. His ABC Supply Co., a roofing and siding supply company, made him a billionaire. Dec. 21.

Michael Kidd, 92. Choreographer whose athletic dances (“Seven Brides for Seven Brothers”) won him five Tonys and a special Oscar. Dec. 23.

Oscar Peterson, 82. Jazz pianist whose hard-driving swing and melodic improvisations were hugely influential. Dec. 23.

Benazir Bhutto, 54. Former Pakistan prime minister who returned from exile to challenge the current leader, Pervez Musharraf. Dec. 27. Assassinated.

Thanks for the loan of the song Meli – prayers and positive wishes for jobs and peace for you and yours…

Welcome to my first nonsensical ramblin’ blipflip or flipblip he he whateva…;o) As I keep sayin’ HAPPY FLIPPIN’ NEW YEAR!!! YA YA!!!

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george w bush letterman top10

Posted Apr 05, 2006


The MANY FUNNY FACES of George W. Bush

Posted Jan 25, 2007

See the crazy faces
Bush has made.


George Bush

Posted Feb 12, 2006

George Bush sure can motivate a crowd with his words (laughing really hard).

When she came back a short time ago – I told a friend – they will murder her – OMG I wanted to be wrong – I was sadly NOT!!!…

obhutto_p1.jpgBhutto’s death rocks Pakistan

The assassination of the former prime minister raises questions about the Musharraf government’s security measures.

By Shahan Mufti | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
and Mark Sappenfield | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN; AND NEW DELHI
The assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto by a suicide bomber Thursday threatens to bring to a halt Pakistan’s stuttering steps toward democracy.

It is the starkest evidence yet that the forces aligned against law and order, once contained to the remote border region with Afghanistan, are now spilling into the heart of Pakistan, disrupting the country’s ability to function.

The death of Ms. Bhutto, one of Pakistan’s most beloved leaders and head of its largest political party, is an emotional event for many. Rioting broke out in several cities late Thursday night. The unrest could lead to the declaration of martial law, experts say, and the postponement of parliamentary elections scheduled for Jan. 8, 2008.

It is the sort of instability that Western nations had sought to avoid by persuading President Pervez Musharraf to allow Bhutto back into the country – hoping her vows to tackle terrorism would help in the fight against Taliban militants and put Pakistan on a more moderate path. Now, they appear to have made her a target. Her death marks a moment of decision for Pakistan’s leaders and lays bare the terrorists’ capabilities.

“Her death in such a manner – when the government had taken responsibility for her security – tells a lot about the situation in Pakistan,” says Hassan Abbas, a Pakistan expert at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. “What is evident is a complete lack of command and control.”

It brings a close to a year drawn in persistent, violent turmoil. Details of Bhutto’s death – the Muslim world’s first female prime minister – were not yet confirmed at press time, but reports suggest she was shot before a suicide bomber blew himself up. The attack took place minutes after she had finished her address at a large rally in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, near the capital, Islamabad.

The killing of Bhutto leaves a question mark over whether elections can go forward. A political field without her will profoundly affect the larger political dynamic that Mr. Musharraf has been carefully crafting to remain in power. But more immediately, the death of one of Pakistan’s most prominent political leaders has shaken the country. “The country has been pushed into another dark period of uncertainty,” says Rasul Baksh Rais, a political scientist at the Lahore University of Management Sciences.

Riots erupted in Rawalpindi soon after the news of her death was confirmed. The city has been the site of several suicide bombings in past months, though most have targeted security forces. Private television channels also reported riots in major towns across the country, especially in Sindh, Bhutto’s home province.

The magnitude of Bhutto’s death obscured another act of political violence Thursday. Four supporters of Bhutto’s opposition, the Pakistan Muslim League–Nawaz (PML-N), were shot dead at a political rally in Islamabad.

“I think the elections will be canceled,” says Ahmed Rashid, a Pakistani security analyst and author of “Taliban.” “We can’t have elections when the country is in this state of violence. We may see the imposition … of extraordinary measures like martial law or a state of emergency.”

In an interview with the BBC, PML-N leader Nawaz Sharif also hinted that elections could be postponed: “None of us is inclined to think about the election.”

It is unclear who was responsible for the attack, but initial anger turned against Musharraf’s government.

Supporters outside the hospital where Bhutto’s body was taken chanted “dog, Musharraf, dog,” the Associated Press reported.

It is an instinctive reaction born of generations of mutual mistrust between Bhutto and the Army, which Musharraf led until last month. Bhutto’s father, also a prime minister, was hanged after being deposed by one of Pakistan’s previous military rulers, Zia ul-Haq.

Certainly, the threat was not unforeseen. When Bhutto returned from exile in October in a triumphant procession through Karachi, she narrowly escaped a suicide bombing that left 150 dead. Moreover, Baitullah Mesud, a Taliban commander in Waziristan, had several times openly threatened her life.

The circumstances of Bhutto’s death, and the failure of security, will be a subject of immense scrutiny. “There are going to be very big questions asked,” says Najmuddin Shaikh, who served as foreign minister during one of Bhutto’s terms as prime minister.

Bhutto was the only major political figure whose campaign included a strong stance against extremism. “Benazir Bhutto may have been killed by terrorists, but the terrorists must not be allowed to kill democracy in Pakistan,” British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Thursday. But Dr. Abbas at Harvard predicts “fewer people will challenge extremism openly.”

Bhutto’s life and career followed a trail of tragedy in her political family comparable to that of the Kennedys, or Gandhis of India. Bhutto died just a few miles from where her father was hanged. One brother died from poisoning, and another was killed in a police shootout. Her two tenures as prime minister (1988 and 1993), neither of which she could complete, were marred by charges of corruption and fraud. She went into exile after Musharraf came into power in 1999 before returning in October.

Bhutto declared herself lifetime chairman of the party she inherited from her father. Observers are unsure who might take over the reins of the party now.

“It may take months for the party to decide their new leader,” says Hassan Aksari Rizvi, an independent political scientist in Lahore. “I don’t see how they can contest an election scheduled in a few days without a coherent leadership.”

www.csmonitor.com | Copyright © 2007 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.

Larry shot - looking at me looking at him and so forth... ;o)

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