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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!Buckingham Palace traditionally releases its list of New Year's honorees every Dec. 31, celebrating a group of Brits who have made a difference in a variety of arenas, from the charitable to the musical. British media buzzed that the infamously sharp-tongued British music mogul Simon Cowell might be knighted this year for contributions in the entertainment and philanthropic spheres, but when Buckingham Palace announced the honorees on the final day of 2010, Cowell's name was absent. Annie Lennox of the Eurythmics is the best-known entertainer to be recognized this go-round. Queen Elizabeth ...
WASHINGTON (Dec. 12) -- President Barack Obama helped ring in the holidays Sunday night with musical stars Mariah Carey, Annie Lennox and Maxwell at the annual "Christmas in Washington" concert. The festivities, hosted by comedian Ellen DeGeneres, took place at the National Building Museum and benefited the Children's National Medical Center. The entertainers sang Christmas songs and performed for the Obama family - including first lady Michelle, daughters Malia, 12, and Sasha, 9, and First Grandmother Marian Robinson - in a packed auditorium. In remarks to the crowd, Obama talked about the ...
What do Shakira, Annie Lennox, Bono, Sir Bob Geldof and Antonio Banderas have in common? They are all goodwill ambassadors, or, really, foot soldiers in a battle that most Americans aren't aware has been fought since the turn of this century. Starting Monday, those celebs -- along with almost 150 heads of state, former heads of state and a cross section of the globe's most impressive leaders -- hope to change that, focusing attention on a campaign that parts of the world are relying on to shape their future. These luminaries will attend (or, in the case of Bono and Lennox, both ultra-involved ...
Ashley Judd. Former President Michelle Bachelet of Chile. Former Prime Minister Helen Clark of New Zealand. Former Irish President and former U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson. Journalist Christiane Amanpour. Model Christy Turlington. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon. Singer Annie Lennox. Philanthropist Melinda Gates. All in Washington to discuss one thing: No woman should die giving life. And yet they are dying, in droves. Some 350,000 women lose their lives each year giving birth or through complications of childbearing. It's a number that the 3,500 attendees, from ...
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