Wednesday, June 6, 2007

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Carmen Electra Attributes Slim Body To Bedroom Workout

Los Angeles, CA (BANG) - Carmen Electra knows how to keep her body looking good, while showing women how to strut their stuff and the secret to keeping men breathless in bed.

Carmen Electra keeps in shape by having sex and lapdancing.

The former "Baywatch" star - who plays a porn actress in new British film "I Want Candy" - credits her incredible body to yoga, sex and stripteases.

Carmen said in an interview with Britain's FHM magazine, "I do a lot of yoga and aerobics. Plus, you can burn a lot of calories in the bedroom too. I get a lot of guys coming up to me who have bought my striptease DVD and they thank me because their girls have learned how to give them amazing lapdances."

But despite her slim figure the model-and-actress still gorges on calorific treats.

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GM plans smaller cars for urban buyers

General Motors Corp., the world's largest automaker, plans to produce new, smaller Chevrolet cars that would compete with DaimlerChrysler AG's Smart models for younger buyers in North American cities. GM will unveil prototypes of the Trax and two other of the smaller cars April 4 at the New York International Auto Show, spokesman Michael Albano said today in an interview. The Detroit- based company hasn't decided which of the cars it will build, when they might be sold or where they would be produced. The so-called subcompacts will be about a foot shorter than the Chevrolet Aveo, which at 12.5 feet is the smallest model GM sells in North America. The Trax has a 1-liter engine, compared with the standard 1.6-liter on the Aveo. .

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Movers: Morgan Stanley reports record 70% rise in profit

NEW YORK: Morgan Stanley, the U.S. securities firm, said Wednesday that its first-quarter profit rose 70 percent to set a record thanks to trading gains and a jump in investment banking fees.

Net income climbed to $2.67 billion in the three months that ended Feb. 28 from $1.57 billion a year earlier. Profit exceeded the highest estimate of 16 analysts surveyed, and the company's stock rose the most in three years.

The chief executive, John Mack, guided Morgan Stanley to record earnings last year and first-quarter results benefited from a 35 percent increase in trading revenue, a 25 percent jump in fees from advising companies and a nearly tripled rise in investment gains. Earnings growth beat Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns.

"Extremely strong," said Bill Fitzpatrick, an analyst at Johnson Asset Management, about the best quarter at Morgan Stanley since it went public in 1986.