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WASHINGTON (AP) — The three young Americans who thwarted a gunman on a Paris-bound passenger train last month got their moment in the White House on Thursday — and they dressed for it.
Barack Obama, Alek Skarlatos, Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler
President Barack Obama poses for a photograph with Oregon National Guardsman, from left, Alek Skarlatos Air Force Airman 1st Class Spencer Stone, and Anthony Sadler, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 17, 2015, to honor them for heroically subduing a gunman on a Paris-bound passenger train last month.
President Barack Obama praised Alek Skarlatos, Spencer Stone and Anthony Sadler for teamwork, courage and quick-thinking actions that averted "a real calamity." He celebrated them as three friends who had been headed for a fun reunion in Paris when they "ended up engaging a potential catastrophic situation and pinning down someone who clearly was intent on doing a lot of harm to a lot of people, inflicting terror on the French people."
The three sat attentively on an Oval Office couch and chair as Obama praised them as "the very best of America." They previously had been awarded France's highest honor by President Francois Hollande. They showed up for that hastily scheduled ceremony at the ornate Elysee Palace a little underdressed, in polo shirts and khakis.
This time, Oregon National Guardsman Skarlatos and Airman 1st Class Stone were in military uniform, and Sadler, a senior at Sacramento State University, wore a sport coat and open-collared dress shirt.
"It's these kinds of young people who make me extraordinarily optimistic about the future," Obama said. The three last month subdued a man with ties to radical Islam who boarded the train with a Kalashnikov rifle, a pistol and a box cutter. A British businessman and a French-American also have been praised for their efforts to stop the gunman.
As for what the future holds, Obama said Stone, whose hand was injured in the attack, is "making real progress" and intends to pursue work in medicine, Sadler is studying sports medicine and therapy, and Skarlatos, "as soon as he's finished on 'Dancing with the Stars,' plans to get into law enforcement."
"Whatever they do," the president added, "they're going to do it well." After visiting the White House, the three were off to the Pentagon to pick up more honors. Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James presented Stone with the Purple Heart in recognition of the injuries he suffered, and he also received the Airman's Medal. Skarlatos was awarded the Soldier's Medal, and Sadler was given the Secretary of Defense's Medal of Valor.
"When some took cover and ran, when others were unsure what to do, these three friends said, 'Let's go,'" Defense Secretary Ash Carter said. Carter said their rallying cry recalled the stirring words of those aboard the hijacked airliner on Sept. 11, 2001, who shouted, "Let's roll," before charging the cockpit and forcing the plane to crash in a Pennsylvania field before it could reach its intended target.
It's been a head-snapping month for the three twenty-somethings since their quick actions on the train transformed them into instant celebrities. In addition to their official honors, the three have appeared in a California parade, Sadler had a turn on "The Tonight Show" with Jimmy Fallon, and Skarlatos is "DWTS" material on ABC.

In a 2012 interview for his autobiography, hard-living Ministry frontman Al Jourgensen said there would be three men standing when the rest of the world comes to an end: him, Keith Richards, and Motörhead frontman Lemmy Kilmister.
For decades, Kilmister has boasted about his affinity for wine, women, and song… Actually, he’s been more of a posterchild for sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll. He’d roll out of bed in the early afternoon, don his cowboy hat, light a cigarette, and pour a half glass of Jack Daniel’s with a splash of Coke. Then he’d repeat the process throughout the day, frequently at one of his favorite hangouts, the Rainbow Bar and Grill in Hollywood. Pity those who have tried to keep up with his imbibing.
“I meet all these guys in bands who are fans, and so many of them think they can go drink-for-drink with me,” he says in a raspy, at times indecipherable English accent. “I don’t know why they do that. So many of them have wound up on the floor or throwing up all night.”
Recently, the 69-year-old rock legend has cut back substantially on the partying, and some recent health scares have left fans worrying about their hero. On Aug. 27, just three songs into Motörhead’s set in Salt Lake City, Kilmister felt ill and had to cancel the rest of the gig.
“My back was killing me and I got short of breath,” he reveals in a rare interview over the phone, the day before a concert at Jones Beach in Wantagh, New York. “It’s just one of those things, you know?”
Motörhead put the kibosh on an Aug. 28 show in Denver as well. A statement from the band’s management said the high altitudes in those two cities affected Lemmy’s ability to breathe. Kilmister took the stage on Sept. 1 in Austin, but a few songs in he told the crowd, “I can’t do it,” and walked off. Shows scheduled for Sept. 2, 4, and 5 in San Antonio, Dallas, and Houston, respectively, were canceled as well.
“I feel really badly about that, but it couldn’t be helped,” Kilmister says. “We’ll have to go back and redo those shows.”
The string of cancelations was alarming to fans because of the medical conditions Kilmister experienced two years ago. Suffering from an irregular heartbeat, he went under the knife and doctors inserted a mini-defibrillator, which jumpstarts his heart if it doesn’t seem to be beating normally. In reaction, Kilmister cheekily named Motörhead’s blistering 2013 album Aftershock.
Kilmister didn’t bounce back as doctors had hoped, due to complications from diabetes, with which he was diagnosed in 2000. He also suffered a hematoma, which caused the cancelation of several European festival shows. He gave up smoking for two years and switched from drinking whiskey and Coke to vodka and orange juice, which contains a more easily digested type of liquor and a healthier mixer. He also smokes a pack of cigarette per week. “Those are harder to quit than heroin,” he insists.
Despite the setbacks, Motörhead’s ringmaster says he’s feeling pretty good for a man his age and that fans should relax and get ready to enjoy upcoming shows. The band is currently touring behind 22nd studio album Bad Magic, which came out Aug. 28 and debuted at #17 on the Billboard 200, marking the band’s best-charting album in the U.S. The record, a barreling, bluesy rock 'n’ roll excursion, with a brief stopover for the reflective ballad “Till the End” and a full-fisted cover of the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy for the Devil,” should keep fans bounding through the moshpits at least until Motörhead return to the studio.
LEMMY KILMISTER: Well, it means we get played a little more, and that’s good. We’ve never been a hit band in America. We’ve never been in the charts. So it’s good for the band and it’s good for the business
You’re playing summer sheds and larger venues than you’ve played in recent years. Is it satisfying to see that there’s more of a demand for fans to see Motörhead live?
Yeah, we played Jones Beach before with Judas Priest, but we were opening. It’s nice to be doing our own show there. It just seems like we get more popular every eight years or so. For some reason, it becomes cool to like Motörhead again.

Kanye West will be performing at the iHeartRadio Music Festival, held at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas Sept. 18-19 and streaming on Yahoo Live. Click HERE to watch!
Do you remember that time Kanye West took the stage and nothing controversial happened? That’s exactly the point. No one remembers a tame Kanye moment. Despite his artistic genius and legitimately G.O.O.D. music, he has set a precedent that every time he takes the platform, fans should expect the unexpected.
Who knows what will happen Friday night, when Kanye headlines the 2015 iHeartRadio Music Festival in Vegas? To prepare, we’ve compiled a list of his nine craziest onstage moments. Maybe whatever happens in Vegas will end up rounding a future list of Kanye’s top 10.
9. Up in Smoke at the Billboard Music Awards (May 2015)
It was pretty difficult to review Kanye’s 2015 Billboard Music Awards performance because, frankly, it was tough to see it, even for those in the live audience (which was also at Vegas’s MGM Grand). The stage was engulfed in so much smoke as he performed “All Day” and “Black Skinhead” that he was barely visible. This stunt prompted many angry complaints on Twitter, and many boos from the crowd.
8. In Beyoncé’s Defense, Again (February 2015)
Kanye was unanimously elected the president of the Beyoncé stan club in 2009, when he objected to her music video for “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)” losing to Taylor Swift’s “You Belong With Me” for the Best Female Video MTV Video Music Award. Nearly six years later, he was almost as passionate when Beck’s Morning Phase beat out Beyoncé’s self-titled set for the 2015 Album of the Year Grammy. Kanye instinctively launched into protest mode, rising from his seat and approaching the Grammys’ microphone as Beck received the honor. Fortunately, Kanye stopped, played it off as a joke, and apologized to Beck weeks later via Twitter.
7. Mic Stand Optional (Feb. 2013)
By no means is Kanye the first artist to drop the mic at the end of a performance. But the gesture felt disturbing when Kanye did it to wrap his February 2013 concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London. Before concluding the show with his song “Touch the Sky,” he began to repeatedly scream the lyric “top of the world,” appeared angry, and slammed the microphone on the ground so hard that it went spiraling into the audience.
6. No Justice for Justice vs. Simian (November 2006)
Just a couple months after Kanye slammed President George W. Bush on national television (more on that later), he traveled to Copenhagen to get his dis on, international-style. Apparently he was none too pleased that the MTV Europe Music Awards only presented him with the Best Hip-Hop artist trophy and held back the top honor: Video of the Year. Kanye could not contain his fury when France’s Justice vs. Simian’s “We Are Your Friends” won that award instead, so of course he interrupted their humble acceptance speech with “Oh hell naw!” and proceeded to explain why his amazing Evel Knievel-themed “Touch the Sky” video should have won: It “cost a million dollars, Pamela Anderson was in it. I was jumping across canyons!” He did have a point, but still.
5. Kanye Doesn’t Like His Own Medicine (December 2013)
For someone who clearly has no qualms when it comes to interrupting other artists, Kanye sure doesn’t like it when the roles are reversed. One outspoken fan caught ‘Ye’s wrath when she dared to scream at him during an otherwise somber Auto-Tuned moment at a San Antonio concert. The attendee was not a fan of his fancy Maison Martin Margiela wardrobe and repeatedly pleaded with him to take off his “creepy mask.” After he explained that he hid his mug because “when I don’t have the mask, I have to worry about if my face is the right way for the camera,” the complaints ensued, so Kanye gestured for security to escort the heckler out of the venue.

There were plenty of poignant moments during the Republican presidential debate in Simi Valley, Calif., on Wednesday — and plenty of awkward ones too.
Let’s start with Florida Sen. Marco Rubio’s self-introduction, during which he joked that he was doing his part to battle California’s historic drought.
“That’s why I brought my own water,” Rubio said to near-silence from the audience — which may or may not have realized he was referring to his infamously parched response to President Obama’s 2013 State of the Union address.
Then there was Donald Trump’s ill-fated attempt to high-five (or perhaps fist-bump) Ben Carson over their shared opposition to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Or how about the oddly hard hand-slap Jeb Bush delivered to Trump when the real estate mogul commended the former Florida governor’s choice of “Ever-ready” as his Secret Service code name.
“It’s very high energy, Donald,” Bush said.
But perhaps the most awkward (or awkwardly awesome) moment was when CNN’s camera zoomed in on Trump the first of many times he was attacked by his GOP rivals.
As Trump would say, “Whatever!”

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