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Saturday, April 30, 2011 4:01 AM By dwi

Little Girl Covers Her Ears as Prince William and Princess Empress touching after their wedding Prince William and Princess Empress share a touching on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after their ceremony at borough Abbey on Friday, April 29, 2011. Prince William's goddaughter Grace van Cutsem, age 3, covers her ears because of the noise. She was one of the authorised bridesmaids. UPI /HugoPhilpott 

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WILL & KATE: Britain's Queen Elizabeth II hosted a meal getting for the newest stag couple, William and Catherine, the duke and duchess of Cambridge.

The world watched William and Kate exchange vows and rings at borough Abbey, ride in an open posture to Buckingham Palace amid cheers and flags, then touching twice from the palace balcony to roars of approval. But the afternoon ceremony getting was held behind winking doors at the palace.

About 650 guests, culled from the 1,900 grouping solicited to the wedding, were solicited to the getting to desire William and Kate well and dine on canapes, sweet treats and champagne and other beverages, the authorised stag ceremony Web place said.

Canape toppings included Cornish crank salad, pressed score terrine, smoked salmon, quail eggs, goat mallow and an assortment of vegetables.

The ceremony block and a groom's block of drink biscuit also were served at the reception. The eight-tier ceremony cake, designed by Fiona Cairns, was prefabricated from 17 individualist fruit cakes, the Web place said.

Adorning it were up to 900 individually iced edible flowers and leaves of 17 varieties.

The groom's block was created by McVitie's Cake Co. using a stag kinsfolk recipe at the request of William.

Entertainment was provided by Claire Jones, authorised harpist to Prince Charles, ascendant of William.

SUPERMAN: Conservative U.S. commentators are criticizing the latest "Action Comics" issue for a plot involving Superman threatening to relinquish his U.S. citizenship.

Superman, the DC Comics superhero who has long proclaimed his commitment to "truth, justice and the dweller way," proclaimed in Wednesday's issue of Action Comics he would be willing to relinquish his citizenship before the United Nations after intervening in a oppose against the Persian government, Britain's The Guardian reportable Friday.

"I'm bushed of having my actions construed as instruments of U.S. policy," the Man of Steel says in the issue.

The story ends with Superman not going finished with the plan, but U.S. conservative commentators including Jonathan Last, a grownup illustrator for The Weekly Standard, hit objected to the story.

"Does he conceive in nation interventionism or land neutrality?" Last wrote in a blog post. "You see where I'm going with this: If Superman doesn't conceive in America, then he doesn't conceive in anything."

Posters in online comic aggregation forums hit branded the commentators opposed to the plot "Earthers," a pun on the "birthers" label for conservatives who conceive President Barack Obama may not be a U.S. citizen.

CHARLIE SHEEN: Charlie Sheen says he will donate the proceeds from goods oversubscribed at his initiate exhibit in San Francisco Sat to support a critically scraped baseball fan.

The grapheme of the films "Major League" and "Young Guns," and former lead of the TV sitcom "Two and a Half Men," is to perform his one-man show, "My Violent Torpedo of Truth/Defeat is Not an Option," at San Francisco's Nob Hill brother Auditorium Saturday.

CNN reportable weekday the actor has committed to donate the profits of goods oversubscribed at the exhibit to support Brian Stow, a 42-year-old San Francisco Giants follower badly maltreated terminal period at Dodger Stadium after a Los Angeles Dodgers game.

No arrests hit been prefabricated in the assault, personnel said.

Stow has been in a medically evoked coma since the incident, CNN reported.

OPRAH WINFREY: U.S. media mogul Oprah Winfrey was interviewed by her former protege for an episode of "The Nate Berkus Show" ordered to expose incoming week.

The syndicated show's producers said Winfrey gave the designer and TV personality an hint tour of the repast house, lavender field and rose garden at her Montecito, Calif. home. She also sat for an interview with Berkus to expose Tuesday.

"Well this is a new day, you interviewing me … . How weird is this?" Winfrey said during their sit-down chat.

Berkus was a regular guest on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" before he started up his own series, which is co-produced by Winfrey's Harpo Productions and Sony Pictures Television, terminal year.

Winfrey's exhibit is rotation up its 25th and test season.


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