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Miss Universe Voted Off Celebrity Apprentice
Miss Universe got voted off Celebrity Apprentice. With the calm and coolness that defied the behavior of her teammates, a ferocious woman comedienne and an unassuming Clay Aiken, Miss Universe bided good bye as one of the final six contestants.
During one episode of Celebrity Apprentice, Miss Universe attempted to perform her job as project manager writing a commercial jingle but got shooed away mercilessly and disrespectfully. Throughout the TV reality show, the sixty-something year old woman commedienne belittled Miss Universe doutbing her intelligence and her misunderstanding of American music.
The bitter woman comedienne claimed that Miss Universe was clueless about American music and the lone male on the team, Clay Aiken agreed. Miss Universe recanted that her job as project manager would have been performed easier if both team members had shown her some respect for the position.
Donald Trump’s daughter said that Miss Universe should have supported the woman comedienne and the former American Idol 2 nd place winner even if the two showed dissenting strong personalities. The woman comedienne did not allow Miss Universe to participate in the commercial jingle performed to advertise an automobile alert service company, Mr. Sam. Clay Aiken did not allow Miss Universe as the project manager to help with the choreography.
Donald Trump asked Arsenio Hall, a former night talk show host on the opposing team, if he would replace Miss Universe with his pop star female project manager. Arsenio Hall said that he did not know enough about Miss Universe to make that decision. Then Arsenio Hall stated that he would not use Miss Universe on his team after much prodding from Donald Trump, which aided in her being voted off Celebrity Apprentice.
Miss Universe stated as she drove away in the waiting limousine that she was working for good and was disappointed that she did not win for her charity. Miss Universe showed poise, calmness and was quite cool choosing to hug the woman comedienne and Clay Aiken at the end of the television program.
Miss Universe stated that she would not stoop to disrespect and the use of swear words that the woman comedienne used to fight with her even in front of Donald Trump’s son. Never did Miss Universe burst into tears or break emotionally on camera as the woman comedienne and Clay Aiken hammered at her performance as the project manager.
Arsenio Hall team won because of the liveliness of the performance promoting the automobile alert service company. The owner of the company said the jingle was catchy and easy to remember in contrast to the conservative performance of Miss Universe’s team. None of the team members of either team was surprised when Miss Universe got voted off Celebrity Apprentice as Donald Trump allowed the bantering to continue increasing TV ratings.
Miss Universe did not appear visually in the commerical jingle until the end of the program. Her participation only included thanking the audience for watching and listening. Donald Trump praised Miss Universe on her classy cool demeanor. He stated that Miss Universe had a strong character as well as the two other team members who had shunned her throughout Celebrity Apprentice.
Although, Miss Universe got voted off the popular TV reality show, Celebrity Apprentice, Donald Trump and the TV viewing audience understood that she had won her title not only for her beauty. Miss Universe class act can not be easily followed because of her ability to control her emotions as the other team members offered only their animosity.
Miss Universe, a stunning beauty, showed the TV audience and Donald Trump her ability to articulate logically and to stay classy while getting voted off of Celebrity Apprentice beset in an hostile work environment that included Clay Aiken.
Tagged Apprentice, Celebrity, Miss., Universe, Voted
Miss Molly’s Adoption from the Ross County Humane Society
There have been few times in my life when I didn’t have a dog (or three) at my feet, and adopting a puppy was the first thing on my list after I bought my home in Ohio. I have a few favorites, but I wasn’t committed to adopting a specific breed when I headed out to the Ross County Humane Society in Chillicothe, mainly because I didn’t know what would be available. I thought I wanted a younger dog or puppy, but knew that no matter what I planned on in advance, it wouldn’t matter a lick once a certain four-legged friend captured my heart.
Ross County Humane Society has separate rooms for puppies, larger dogs, and cats, as well as a space set aside for those animals recently acquired that are in holding for quarantine purposes. I started in the puppy room and two lively mixed-breed pups caught my eye right away so I took them both out to see how they acted when out of the cage.
Both dogs were adorable, but one was a little more skittish and not as sociable. The other was a pretty red-head who crawled in my lap and washed my face, so it didn’t take long to decide who was going home with me. It was all over except for signing her emancipation papers.
Adopting a pet from your local shelter is almost always a better deal than even free puppies you might find in the newspaper or online. For a $ 63 fee, you can adopt a puppy from the Ross County Humane Society that has had all shots required to date and has been wormed. The price also includes the $ 10 fee for the county dog license, and a spay/neuter certificate that can be honored by one of several local veterinarians who do it for low cost. Even a ‘free’ dog will cost you more than that for first shots and physical exam.
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Hotel provides no-frills Miss. blues experience
The Associated Press
CLARKSDALE, Miss. — It’s not the Heartbreak Hotel or the Ritz, and George Washington didn’t sleep there.

In this Aug. 3, 2011 photograph, photographs of bluesmen, musicians and gospel groups who have stayed at the Riverside Hotel since the doors were opened in 1944 adorn the entrance of the Clarksdale, Miss., lodging. The hotel, initially an eight room hospital for blacks, evolved into a 21-guest room facility that over the years provided long term housing for artists such as Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker and Ike Turner. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

In this Aug. 3, 2011 photograph, a painting of “The Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith, lies on the bed in the room that had been the emergency room of the then G.T. Thomas Hospital in 1937 in Clarksdale, Miss. Smith died there from injuries sustained from a car accident near Clarksdale. The room, part of an eight-room hospital for blacks only was later renovated and made part of the Riverside Hotel, a 21-guest room facility that over the years provided long term housing for artists such as Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker and Ike Turner. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

In this Aug. 3, 2011 photograph, a painting of “The Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith, lies on the bed in the room that had been the emergency room of the then G.T. Thomas Hospital in 1937 in Clarksdale, Miss. Smith died there from injuries sustained from a car accident near Clarksdale. The room, part of an eight-room hospital for blacks only was later renovated and made part of the Riverside Hotel, a 21-guest room facility. The painting was a gift by a guest, said the owner, Frank Ratliff. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
But The Riverside Hotel in Clarksdale is widely regarded as a history exhibit of blues music.
And, oh yes. Muddy Waters did sleep there and Bessie Smith died there.
Waters and other blues icons roomed at the Riverside from the 1940s to early 1960s as they made their names in clubs throughout the South. For decades before that, the building was a hospital that served black people during segregation, and it was there that Smith died after an auto accident in 1937.
The former G.T. Thomas Hospital re-opened as the Riverside in 1944 and has established a loyal group of fans who love its authenticity as a “bluesman” hotel.
It’s a simple place: Rooms have single or double beds and there are bathrooms on each of the two floors, one for women and one for men. But there’s no cable TV or Internet access.
“I run a nice, clean and comfortable place,” the hotel’s owner, 71-year-old Frank “Rat” Ratliff, says matter-of-factly.
Mitch Goldstein, who manages the South African musical group Ladysmith Black Mambazo, extolls the hotel’s simple authenticity and says Ratliff definitely underrates the property’s appeal.
“It’s not just a museum, but it is a place that you can sleep in,” said Goldstein, of Cedar Grove, N.J. “Just to know that I spent a night in a room that Muddy Waters slept in is very cool.”
The two-story building consists of the original eight-room former hospital and additional rooms built on, for a total of 21 guest rooms.
“In 1943 my mother, Z.L. Ratliff Hill, bought the property and had it expanded,” Ratliff recalled. “She drew the plans of how she wanted it.”
Ratliff said his mother was a seamstress and arranged to rent the hospital, which was later renovated into the hotel by Thomas, the hospital’s namesake. She later purchased the hotel from Thomas’ widow in the summer of 1957.
The Ratliffs’ living quarters were the former hospital’s rooms and offices, but some of those were made into guest rooms, as well. All of the rooms are equipped with dressers and bed frames that have been around since the first day the doors opened as a hotel. Ratliff has also provided some creature comforts like a small refrigerator, microwave and a television.
“If I put new furniture or change the rooms, it would not appear to be the place the musicians stayed,” Ratliff said. “That’s the way the building was built. It stays like that. If I change it, I might as well close them doors because people want it that way.”
Blues fan and part-time musician Michael Waugh, of Lawrenceville, Ga., agrees. He brought his wife and two young children to spend the night there last December.
“I thought it was incredible,” Waugh said. “I am a huge fan of the blues and was looking for a blues experience.”
The Waughs spent the night in the room used by Waters, and while it took a little time to adjust to the shared bathroom idea, the family took it in stride.
“For me to play my guitar where Muddy Waters played is pretty special. It provides me a bigger connection to the music,” said Waugh, who plans to return to the hotel this year, around the Christmas holidays.
It costs between $ 65 and $ 70 per room, per night. “This is a family business and I only go up on the fees when the taxes go up,” Ratliff said.
He also said the bluesmen who stayed at the hotel had their favorite rooms. And while he has no plans to label the rooms, he tells each guest the history of each room and the history of the musicians who stayed there.
Ratliff said he gives each new guest a tour of the hotel and allows them to pick a room at check-in. “When they return, they just go to their rooms, and if they leave something there, it is still there when they return,” he said.
Among the who’s who of blues musicians who have spent time at the Riverside are Ike Turner, Robert Nighthawk, Sonny Boy Williamson II and, of course, Muddy Waters, who lived on the property for several years. The Blind Boys of Alabama also stayed there when passing through the state.
“My mother rented by the week and by the night,” Ratliff said. “She helped them out when they had no money. She fed them or gave them a place to stay when they was broke. And when they needed someone to co-sign on a loan, my mother did that. They always paid her back.”
But even with all that musical talent at the hotel, none of it rubbed off on either him or his mother.
“My mother loved music and tried to play piano. She bought a piano but just pecked on it. She even got me music lessons when I was a kid, but I was not musically inclined,” Ratliff said, laughing.
Ratliff, who worked for 23 years for Wonder Bread bakery, fully took over managing the hotel in 1997 when his mother died. He’s currently grooming his daughter, Zelina L. Ratliff, 40, to continue the tradition.
Clarksdale Mayor Henry Espy is glad to hear that.
Although the building is rough in appearance, and surrounded by shuttered shotgun houses, it is one of the cornerstones to the town’s resurgence, he said.
“When festival times come around, you cannot get into the place,” Espy said. “Tourism is now the driving engine for not only Clarksdale but the Delta.”
And along that line, the city hopes to redevelop property surrounding the hotel to include a park, walking trails, and even a catfish pond. The city is also seeking a grant to help rebuild the housing adjacent to the hotel.
“But we dare not mess with history. We want to keep it authentic,” Espy said. “It is what it is, is how we describe the hotel. So many historic things are gone, and the place has not had a makeover. That would undermine the place, its authenticity.
“People come from all over the world to feel how things were then, to see the river, to see the cotton in the fields and feel the 112 degree heat. They want authenticity,” Espy said. “It is what it is.”
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If You Go…
RIVERSIDE HOTEL: 615 Sunflower Ave., Clarksdale, Miss.; 662-624-9163. Rates: $ 65-$ 70 room, shared bathrooms.
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September 06, 2011 11:36 AM EDT
Copyright 2011, The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.