
Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. left, shake hands with republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., after their presidential debate Friday, Sept. 26, 2008 at the University of Mississippi in Oxford, Miss. Republican presidential candidate, (AP Photo/Chip Somodevilla, Pool)

U.S. President George W. Bush delivers a nationally televised address from the White House to discuss a $700 billion financial rescue plan that he feels is needed to shore up the U.S. economy. (Photo: Reuters)

US President George W. Bush (C) makes remarks on the economic crisis during a meeting with bipartisan and bicameral members of congress including the Presidential candidates Republican John McCain (L) and Barack Obama (R) in the Cabinet Room on September 25, 2008 at the White House in Washington, DC. (TIM SLOAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

Protestors march past the New York Stock Exchange during a rally against the Wall Street bailouts. (The Associated Press)

Dara Blumenthal, of Brooklyn, holds up a sign during a rally against Wall Street bailouts, Thursday in front of the New York Stock Exchange in New York.Associated Press Photo by Mary Altaffer

A woman holds up a sign while watching the Rev. Jesse Jackson speak near Wall Street in the Financial District September 22, 2008 in New York City. Jackson, a founder of the National Rainbow Coalition, spoke critically about a culture of greed on Wall Street and how the current financial crisis is adversely affecting middle class and poor Americans. (Getty Images North America | Spencer Platt)
Anthony Hervey waves a Mississippi state flag as he calls on the citizens of Oxford, Mississippi, to exercise their voting rights. (AFP/Paul J. Richards) 
A
pool report from CNN shows that during the "grip and grin" photo op between Sarah Palin and Asif Ali Zardari at the UN, the president of Pakistan could not conceal his admiration for the Republican VP nominee. Mr Zardari, who was widowed but nine months ago, called her "gorgeous" and made it clear he was happy to carry on gripping for some time. (CNN photo)

Crew members and their partners hug upon the arrival of USS George Washington at Yokosuka U.S. Navy Base on Thursday, Sept. 25, in Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan. The nuclear aircraft carrier is deployed to Yokosuka base as the replacement of the decommissioned USS Kitty Hawk, against Japan's three antinuclear principles. (JUNKO KIMURA, GETTY IMAGES)

Galveston resident Patricia Cooper, cries after cleaning out debris from her home Monday, Sept. 22, 2008, in Galveston, Texas. Cooper's home was heavily damaged by flood waters from Hurricane Ike.(AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

Amanda Cavazos hangs her sister's wedding dress after it was found in the debris at her mother's badly damaged home Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2008, in Galveston, Texas. Cavazos saw her home for the first time today since Hurricane Ike struck nearly two weeks ago. AP / Rick Bowmer

Kateri Santos, center, a paramedic, asks for more equipment as authorities work frantically to free the pilot of a small plane that crashed into a wooded area near the Air Museum in Glenville, N.Y. Police Sgt. Stephen Janik said the pilot was conscious and trapped in the cockpit when rescuers arrived. The engine was on fire and firefighters from the airport's Air National Guard unit as well as those from the nearby Thomas Corners Fire Department put the fire out and freed the pilot. (AP photo-Peter Barber)

Visitors gather Tuesday at the Ocean Spray plant in Wisconsin Rapids during a special tour of the new, 125,000-square-foot expansion. (Tom Loucks/For the Stevens Point Journal)
Yogi Berra during the pregame ceremony at the final game played in Yankee Stadium last Sunday.
Photo: Jim Mcisaac/Getty Images

Cowboys wide receiver Miles Austin beats Packers cornerback Tramon Williams on a 52-yard touchdown pass during the fourth quarter on Sunday, Sept. 21, 2008, at Lambeau Field. Evan Siegle/Press-Gazette

Do you need to ask?
If you must, she's Abigail Klein of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders.(Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images, courtesy of NFL.com)

Photo: John R. McCutchen/ San DiegoUnion-Tribune
Jyles Tucker brings down Brett Favre on the San Diego 24 yard line for a 12-yard loss Monday during San Diego's rout of the Jets.

In Michigan, they're calling it a comeback for the ages. University of Michigan Head Coach Rich Rodriguez sang hail to the victors with the cheer leaders and his team after their 27-25 win over Wisconsin in Ann Arbor, MI on Saturday September 27, 2008. (JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/DETROIT FREE PRESS)

After throwing out the first pitch Morgan Hamm (left) and twin brother Paul Hamm, both members of the U.S. gymnastics team, do back flips before a game between the Giants and the Diamondbacks. Several members of the U.S. gymnastics team were on hand for the game, won 3-2 by the D'backs. (AP photo)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Blake DeWitt, left, laughs at Hiroki Kuroda as they sign autographs after their Major League Baseball game against the San Diego Padres in Los Angeles. Both had to wear costumes as part of rookie hazing. The Dodgers clinched the National League West championship before the game started after Arizona lost.(MARK J. TERRILL, ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Actors Neil Patrick Harris and Kristin Chenowith present Don Rckles with an Emmy for the Best Individual Performance In A Variety Or Music Program for " Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project," at the 60th Primetime Emmy Awards Show at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on September 21, 2008. Phoro: Kevin Winter, Getty Images/North America

Paul McCartney signs autographs in Tel Aviv, a day before his first ever show in Israel. McCartney, who has faced criticism from both Arab and Jewish extremists, was expected to perform before some 50,000 people as part of the celebrations to mark Israel's 60th birthday. (Getty Images)
In this image released by FreeCreditReport.com, former "Tonight Show" sidekick, Ed McMahon is shown on the set of a rap video for FreeCreditReport.com, a financial Web site owned by credit bureau Experian. (FreeCreditReport.com, Susan Goldman / AP)

Women wearing traditional Bavarian clothes clink their beer glasses at the 'Theresienwiese' of the Oktoberfest beer festival in Munich, southern Germany on September 21, 2008. Organisers of the world's largest folk festival running until 05 October expect up to six million visitors to enjoy Bavarian beer in huge tents and fun rides on the fairgrounds. Photo: THOMAS LOHNES/AFP/Getty Images

(JOEL RYAN, ASSOCIATED PRESS) U.S. burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese sits on a giant Wonderbra, to celebrate a new collection of lingerie she designed which was inspired by her love of the burlesque scene and 1940's glamor, in central London, Tuesday Sept. 23.

Japanese wave after modeling the latest styles of adult diapers during a show in Tokyo Thursday Sept. 25, 2008. The show was organized to display the latest styles of adult diapers and to raise awareness of some of the issues facing the county's rapidly aging population.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/David Guttenfelder

Yves Ross is soaked in Champagne by his team members after landing at The South Foreland Lighthouse on September 26, 2008 near Dover, England. Former Swiss Air pilot Yves Rossy crossed the English Channel tracing the route first flown by French aviator Loius Bleriot in 1909. Rossy used his homemade jet wing, launched from a plane 2.5 KM high, to cross the 35 KM of The English Channel in 12 minutes. (Getty Images)

(DOUGLAS C. PIZAC, ASSOCIATED PRESS) An image of American Idol television star David Archuleta provides the design for the 13th Annual Cornbelly's Corn Maze and Pumpkin Fest at Thanksgiving Point on Wednesday, Sept. 24, in Lehi, Utah. The design process and planting of the corn began in May.

A corn maze rendering of Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin at Wheeler Farms in Whitehouse near Toledo, Ohio. The 16-acre cornfield has been carved up in the likeness of the candidate. (DUKE WHEELER/ASSOCIATED PRESS)

(AP/Herbert Knosowski, file / March 23, 2007)
In this March 23, 2007 file picture Knut, the polar bear cub, has its first public appearance in the Berlin Zoo accompanied by zookeeper Thomas Doerflein. The zookeeper who gained fame for hand-rearing the beloved polar bear Knut was found dead in his Berlin apartment Monday. Doerflein was 44 years old.

A koala rests in a tree at Sydney Wildlife World September 26, 2008. The Australian Koala Fundation celebrated "Save the Koala" day on September 26 in an attempt to raise funds to save the koala's environment. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz (AUSTRALIA)

A grizzly bear stands up at the St-Felicien Wildlife Zoo in St-Felicien, Quebec September 24, 2008. Parks Canada estimates that up to 20,000 grizzly bears remain in western Alberta, the Yukon and Northwest Territories and British Columbia. The Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada lists the grizzly bear as a "Special Concern". (Photo: Reuters)

A six-toed cat named "Hairy Truman," walks on a table Thursday, Sept. 25, 2008 in Ernest Hemingway's one-time study at the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum in Key West, Fla. Hemingway Home officials announced Thursday that the United States Department of Agriculture had granted the museum an Animal Welfare License to permit legal exhibition of about 50 resident cats. The license culminates an almost five-year dispute between the USDA and the museum that might have resulted in the loss or caging of the famous felines, many that have six toes and descended from a cat given to Hemingway in 1935. (AP Photo/Florida Keys News Bureau, Rob O'Neal)

A white-tailed deer is part of Diana Moyer's exotic animal farm at N4920 Moriah Road in Dodge County. Earlier this month officials from the town of Calamus issued Moyer two citations for possessing two exotic animals — a fox and a cavy — in violation of the town ordinance. Town officials say the citations are tentative, based on the outcome of future, surprise inspections and Moyer securing permission from the town chairman before bringing any new animals onto her property.(The Fond du Lac Reporter photo by Patrick Flood)

I thought State Fair was over and done with.
(WILLIAM WEST, AFP/GETTY IMAGES) Pork Chop leads Ham Bone through the first corner as part of the racing and diving pig show which is on exhibition the the Royal Melbourne Show, on September 23, 2008. The show pigs named Ham Bone, Bacon Bone, Pork Chop and Miss Porky Pig, are one of the show favorites pulling in hundreds of people for their four shows a day. The show has had the pigs racing for 15 years and the diving for nine years though each pig only lasts a season.
The jackal-headed god Anubis, 25 feet and weighing 5 tons, is erected Monday on the midway at the State Fair of Texas next to Big Tex in Dallas. The Dallas Museum of Art is making final preparations for the Oct. 3 premiere of ìTutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs, an extensive collection of more than 130 treasures from the tomb of King Tut and other Valley of the Kings tombs. Anubis is believed to be the guide and protector of the dead in ancient Egypt. (Reuters-Mike Stone) 
A tourist takes a picture of her husband as he slides down the Leap of Faith chute at the Atlantis resort built on an artificial island off the coast of Dubai

USA Weekend reports the light bulbs in this $2,200 pair of shoes actually work. (Photo: theshoedish.com)

Prison inmate Alexandra Amazo, center, parades along with other contestants during the Carcel Reinado prison inmate beauty pageant, at the Buen Pastor medium-security female prison, in Bogota, Friday, Sept. 26.(FERNANDO VERGARA, ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Print advertisements for the new Dentyne campaign, called “Make face time.” By borrowing phrases from the realm of electronic communication, the campaign is trying to question whether new technologies are bringing people closer together. The ads feature happy people embracing and kissing — their breath presumably freshened by Dentyne — as an alternative to pounding their BlackBerrys or sending electronic messages to their Facebook friends. (NY Times photo)

A security guard tries to take away a sign from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) campaigners Ashley Fruno, right, and Christina Cho, left, during a protest in Guangzhou, in southern China Thursday Sept. 25 2008. The two wore outfits made of real lettuce leaves and held signs reading:'Turn over a new leaf. Go vegetarian' as they encouraged locals to become vegetarians. (AP Photo/Color China Photo)
AND FINALLY,

As Fast Eddie Felson in "The Hustler" (1961). Mr. Newman later won his only competitive Oscar when he reprised the role a quarter-century later in "The Color of Money" (1986). Mr. Newman "violently plays" the young Fast Eddie, Bosley Crowther wrote in The Times on Sept. 27, 1961, "with a master's control of tart expressions and bitterly passionate attitudes." Photo: 20th Century Fox

With Mr. Redford in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." Photo: Warner Brothers

As Henry Gondorff in "The Sting" (1973), which won Oscars for Best Picture and for its director, George Roy Hill. About the actor, the film critic Pauline Kael wrote: "His likableness is infectious; nobody should ever be asked not to like Paul Newman." Photo: Universal Pictures

As the convict in "Cool Hand Luke" (1967). "Mr. Newman is excellent," Bosley Crowther wrote in The Times, "at the top of his sometime erratic form in the role of this warped and alienated loner whose destiny it is to lose." Photo: Warner Brothers

Paul Newman's famous smile always seemed as relaxed as his life in Connecticut, where he and Ms. Woodward lived. He is survived by Ms. Woodward and five daughters, including two from his first marriage. Photo: Jim Cooper/Associated Press